<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16387" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/16387?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T00:04:37+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49523">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/2d4b05706856da783af010ded1586c00.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f05375b4d86d90d99a0b4e4a2596c1d1</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="52402">
                  <text>•

.11-The O.UySentlnel,Mlddle~P&lt;IIleroy, 0 ., Wednesday,Ort. 6, 1976 ·

.

Fiv.e .fined 'by. Hoffman l:;~r'i' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' i:'.'i;~~''ri:::'
·'~' ::;::;;;:~::;:::''' i :&lt;':' ' '~''ili;:i Hosp~tal News
,

ftve defllldantl were fined by
Middleport · Mayor Fred
Hollman Tuesday night.
Henry Doer!er, Jr., 34,
Pomeroy, forfeited a •100
bond posted for U88Ult.
Fined were Sammy LitUe,
311, Mlddlepurt, •10 and coala,
dlalrderly maMer: Roberta
Ann Johnson, 41, West
Columbia, t5 and costs,

Bonds forfeited
Three banda were for!elfed
and three delendantl were
fined In the Pomeroy Mayor's
Court Tuesday night when
· Council President Ralph
Werry presided. Forfeiting
banda pooled for speeding
were
Jared
Pratter,
Pomeroy, $30; Russell L.
~Rouah, Pataskala, $25, and
'Dennis Ray Flinner, Bidwell,

t=. .

.,

.

Fined were Carl Sauvage,
Route 3, Pomeroy, $25,
speeding; Iferi' HayiJilln,
Pomeroy, open flask, $50·•nd
coats, and Bill Reeves,
Pomeroy, $50 and costs,
lntoi!catlon.

1

--------.

.MEIGS
CLOSED FOR
· VPl.AnON
WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

'50

Mrs. Reed of ·..

Reedsville dies

War.n

~

~
~

j:

I

• Patented
Power Sentry

Voltage

·

Individual game, Don Nelson ,

21J .

High series, Ed Voss, sao,
second h igh series, Bert
Bodimer, 569, third hiQh
series, 1; . L.Phelps, Jr., 569 .
Team high game. Eagles
Club, 965, team high series,
Eagles Club 2,597 .

SVAC STANDINGS
ALLGAMES ·.
Team ·
w L P ·op

Kyger Creek
Gall Ia
Southern
Eastern
Southwestern
Hannan Trace
Symmes Valley
Nod~

187 38
136 35
3 1 110 18
2 2 74 50
4 0
4 0

2 2 BA 60
0 4 4 165

o

~RIDGE, MAINE - EDWARD _YOST DRIFTED .
over New Brunswick early today In the gondola ol a balloon be
bopea wW carry hbn acr011 the Atlantic Ocean to a point
somewhere between Scandanavls and Spain. The l»Uoon, tbe •
"SUver Fox", waa last seen late Tuesday by a chaae plane, •·
about four hours after laking off from a aectioo of ahoreland •
here oWned by Mrs. Geraldine Bothe.
"The plane tracking him last night lllld goodnight to him _
at about 10:30 p.m. over Macadam, N. B.," Mrs, Bothe 88ld. ~
. "He was on an easterly course, traveling at 4,500 feet on,tbe :
edge of an Inversion, which Is ahead of a low pressure areil', •
That 'a what he \"anted. "He was In very good aplrlta, be was:
doing fine, there were no problema," abe said.
· ;

56995

C o n tomi)OI'tll 3 t ~ l lld lowbO~ console betuiiMiy llnls htll In t lmul"''" 9ra1nct Walnut
with g•• cell.ll y tapered Iell' ot ••nJJietl:l(! wood In matdll1'19 color. Solid· SI111 Super
VICioo Range Tu ning Svstem. Syncf1r omallc 70· Polruon UHF Ch1nnet Selector
ChrOITIIIIIC Olll!·buUon l.&lt;Jnl!"lg. ol.utomallc Flnt · lunlng Control. VHF/ UHF Delue
Spotlllt Panels.

Mineable

~ THE QUALITY GOE~ IN BEFORE THE NAMIO 'GOES ON :

J 12th ANNIVERSARY SALE

"TORTLEY" CUSTOM MADE DRAPPERIES
SAVE 30%

' I

ON SALE AT THE -HOME. FURNISHINGS ANNEX
'

..'

·I_;.ttz.zm
·INGELS FURNITURE
10&amp; N.ZND Ail

.

:

IIIOOIUOIII, OH. I

- PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY......OCTOBER 9th
UNTIL 5 P,M.

.

"FAMILY OUTING"
I.A.M. &amp; A. W. ·
LOCAL LODGE NO. 598 ·
SO. CHARLESTON
SUNDA f.;_OCTOBER 10th
CAMDEN PARK'S
ANNUAL

• • II

Suj)er-fine
Precision-tailored

:~eADY·IVIADB

Frigidaire
Laundry .
Pair • .
Wash one piece or up to
an 18·1b load in this
Frigidaire Heavy Duty ,
Washer, Matching Dryer
· offers a 2·position Fabrics .
selector. Timed and
No Heat cycles,

DRAPERIES

·. · madejusHor you to · ~ "
~xact lengths, in standard or
deluxe pleatl~ for ultra bea~:·
.··

.

.

.

SAVE
NOW , DURING OUI 1 12th ANNIVERSARY
SALE \
.
.
:uNUSUAL BARGAINS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT
,
MAIN: STORE, ANNEX_and MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

'

NEW YORK- SEN. HUBERT H. HUMPHREY under
went radical surgery today for cancer of the bladder. A
spokesman for Memorial Sloan·Kettering Cancer Center said
the operation on the former vice president began about 9 a.m.
and was expected to last "six to eight hours."
· ·The Minnesota Democrat entered the hospital ~ast Monday
after routine tests showed a maltgnant tumor which Dr. Willet
F. Whibnore, tiis doctor, said was "not amenable to simple
removal." Whitmore told a press conference that "in all
probability" the bladder would have to.he completely removed
during the operation.
WASHINGTON- PRESIDENT FORD PROMISED that
the, names of American companies whicli aided In the Arab
boycott of Israel will he released today by the Conunerce
Department.
However, a Commerce corrunittee spukesman said it was
the department's understanding that Ford did not mean oo
would release the names of companies that have participated
lntheboy\!ottlnthepast - onlythose.companlesthat. dosoin
tl)e future . The spokesman also said the Ford pledge, during
lbe Wednesday night debate with Democrat Jimmy Carter
came as a surprise to tlle department
'
.
,
.
·
BRIDGETOWN, BARBADOS - A MYSTERIOUS
explosion that sent _a Cuban .jetliner crashing· Into the sea
1\'ednesdaywas the third airline-related blast in the caribbean
In the past three months. The crash ktlled all 73 persons
aboard.
.
.
.
The·two earlier expl~1ons. we~e believed too work of an
anti-Castro Cuban grof:ll' m Mtarru that warne~ m August, of
new airplane attscks If certain countri~ continued trading·
with Cube; There wu no ~edlate indtcation that sabotage
was mvolved In Wednesdays crash.
•
WASHINGTON - EDWARD YOST, ABOARD his black
and silver heUum balloon, was crulsl!lg eastward off the coast
of Newfoundland tqday with no api&gt;arent problems in the third
dayofhlsattemptUicrosstheAtlanUcOcean.
"He's In pretty good shape," reported · one of Yost's
111180ciates Wednesday night from a listening staUon here in
radio contact with the balloonist. The associate said Yost was
about "BO mlles north of the center of Newloundland and a
Uttle bit east" about Up.m. EDT Wednesday, and wasmovlfig '
In an easterly direction.

PRESIDENT~.~.

DETROIT"':' GENERAL MOTORS
"Pete" Estes Wedneaday attacked a key tlme&lt;off provision of
the . United Auto Workers' tentative contract agreement
covering 170,000 Fort Motor Co. workers who have been on
strike from 23 days.
'
.
ThetiAW's l75-rnemberNatlonaiFordCouncilwasasked
(~ntlnu~ on page IO)

.

APPRECIATION DAY"

•
Last Day of 1976 Season
RIDE ALL DAY-11 .m. til

1-

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY.

•

F lltem1 Cents
Vol. 2K, No. 121

discuss two different but viable sites lor Ute proposed facility .
C&amp;SOE said in its Letter of Intent that, although the Great
Commission before Cllmmencing construction on the plant. Bend si)e in Meigs County woUld be its alternate , they prefer
Later. an applicatiQII describing the project and its assorted tlle Newbury site in Washington County . According to the
impacts will be submitted to the OPSC. C&amp;SOE sai&lt;j , in the company's letter, there are no significant engineering or
Letter of Intent, that it Intends to file that application in early environmental differences lx!lwcen the Newbury and Great
1978.
Bend sites. The Cominission must act upon the Company 's
The Letter of Intent can also be used by a utility company waiver request within 60 days.
to request waivers (deviations) from Commission rules and,
C&amp;SOE said that because of the postpone1nent of Unit 2 of
regulatioru;. C&amp;SOE, in this' instance, has asked that the nile the Zimmer Newclear Power Plant, which it will jointly own
requiring that the application include fully ·developed witlJ the Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric and Ute Dayton Power &amp;
In!ormation on at least two alternative sites be waived.
Ugfit Companies, C~OE determined that ''it would be unwise
Commission statute and rule require the application to to plan foc no capacity additions lor 19B:i and the two or tlJree

BWODMOBILE DAY
Monday, Oct. Ills ,Bloodmobile Day in Meigs Co. The
Bloodmobile will be at the Pomeroy Elementary School In
f'!lmeray !rom I to 6 p.m. Your blood Is needed 110 matter
wbkb type you bave. Our qu~ta Is 100 units so help !'lake up
· our ~uota.

years thereafter."
The Letter of Intent Is available for lru;peetlon nt too
Commission 's offices. Once the application Is filed, copies will
be placed in libraries In the area of the two sites. tlcuriiiKS,
wltlJ public particl)l11lion, wlll be held In the area of the fuclllty
after the application has been reviewed by the Staff. .
The Commission Is composed of the diiectors of the
Department of Health, the Environmental Protection AKenc:y,
Ute Department of Economic and Community Development,
the chairman of the Public Utlllties Comnllsslon and u public
member, appointed by the Governor with the advice and
consent of -the Senate, The director of Ute Envlronmentai
Protection Agency serves as chalnnan,
·

Inflation ·rate
stands at ·10.8%

By United Pre" lnternattonal
EAST LIVERPOOL, OHIO · A THREE MEMBER
arbitration panel Wednesday· ordered the East Liverpool
Board of EdUcation to Increase the pay of teacP.,rs by $500 a
year and to pay 90 per cent of their hospitalization Insurance.
The pay Increase means that teachers with no experience and
a bachelor's degree wlll rtl'elve $8,400 a year beginning Jan. I, ·'
1977.
The three member panel was named by Cohunbiana
CountyOlmmoo Pleas Court Jadge Warren Bettis to resolve a
coolract dispute that resUlted in a strike by most of the school
system's 250 ·teachers. The strike started Sept. 18 and ended'
Tuesday, The school system has 5,000 students.

I

.

e

industrial site in Great Bend of Meigs County, today made it,
........ official that its proposed 750 megawatt coal.fired puwer plnnt
wW be built in Washington County near Belpre.
. , ~ ¥tility hasnot\fit!d the Ohio Power Siting Commission
of its Intention to, b\111&lt;\ tlie. two ~75 megawatt units in Belpre
Township which is deSignated the "Newbury site" by the
Company. The first unit is schedUled to begin service in
, January, 1965, with the second uitlt to begin two or three years
later.
'
The Ohio Power Siting Commissio~ was notified of
C&amp;SOE's proposal throngh a Letter of Intent which begiru;the

.

DIVORCE ASKED
Robert D. Wllllamll, Rt. I,
RuUand and Patricia Ellen
Williams, same address,
have filed for divorce In
Meigs Cowrty Common Pleas
Court. The marriages of
RDI\ald Spurlock and Karen
,Spurlock and Ronald Leslie
Cart and Mary Frinces cart
were dissolved by court or·
.der.

...•

LANDS BIG BASS-Olris Baer, Rt. 3, Recine, six year old son of Jocelyn Baer, Rnclntt,
and Blll Baer, Minersville, landed a SV. pou~ buss In a local pond. He could not be
persuaded to tell ; xacUy whjchpond. (and who would blameJtlm ). The bass was.2llnches.
long.
·
·
-

COLUMBUS - The Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric process by which C&amp;SOE must obtain a certificate of

5

Tht ASHBURY • GU4~W

,J

01., which has purchased approximately 600 acres of prime envirorunental Cllmpatibility and public need from the

Regulat ing
S~s1em

students and peoplt .
Rep, James re&lt;'•i v c~ a round of all:
Jllause from those attending 'the Cllnferend
upon the completion or his talk which was a
resume of actions of the lllth General
Assembly in providing a better medical
atmosphere In Ohio.
Rep. James said one bill has been
passed to help doctors with the problem or
medical malpractice setting up Rrocedures
tu be followed· In such matters. ·
Another itci provides for ihe estabfish·
ment of health maintenance organizations
·to provide medical services.
Another Is the pathway program which
·relaxes earlier requirements for persons
who have· completed medical training In
foreign countries to practice medicine in
Ohio.
,,
The greatest step, however, Rep, James
said, has been the establishment of 'the
training school In osteopathic medicine at
Ohio .University.
Rep. James closed, urging hospital
board of trustee members, the medical staff
• and others attending the meeting to advise
him of their problems.
.·.
•
Ronald A. Black, assoclatit dean for
planning and prograin implementation of
Ohio University's school, outlined aspects of
(Eontin~ed- on page lO) ·

a1 y entine
Meigs loses C&amp;SOE plant tO Belpre

KATMANDU, NEPAL -'l'HE AMERICAN CLIMBERS of:
SVACONLY
Team
W L P OP Mt. Everest, blessed by good weather, have advanced their ·Eastern
2 0 67 8 summll assault date and hope to p~t two men oo tbe peak of tbe
Kyger Creek
2 0 87 18 world's talle~J~ ·mountaln Friday, a U.S. Embassy source lllld
North Gall Ia
2 0 70 29 today. .
• ·•
'
Southern
1 o 42 0
The
first
1188ult
team
wW
COII8Iat
of
Chris
Chandler,
a 'll-·
Southwestern 0 2 22 60
Symmes Valley o 2 7 71 year~ld physician !1'001 Seattle, and Robert Qlnnack, 30, a .
Hannan Trace
0 3 26 135· gUder pilot from Boulder, Colo. Alao In the team wW be Sberpa
Totals
7.. 7.321.321 guide Ang Pburba. ''They.'re on schedule lor tl)la," lbe source •
said after talking with the expedition's baae camp Tuellday
evening and Ibis mor.nlng. "They've got suwllea up tbe
REPORTS DENIED
THE HAGUE, The Netber- ~ountaln."
landa (UP!) -Queen Juliana
has told 'reporters "I have
SHOPPER ILi.
never given a thought to
' The Pomeroy Emergency
abdication and I'm not yet
Squad anawered a call to
giVIng It my mind ."
'
Powell's Super Valu at 1:40
(Continued from page I)
The comment following rep.m.
Tueaday for. Robert
portl Juliana might step contains the Plttaburgb coal W~, Xenia, wbo became
down because of husband, ' seam, which accounts for 25 lll. He Wl!lllaken to Veterans
Prince Bernhard's per cent of the state's 81Ul118! Memorial Hoapltll where he
Involvement with Lockheed p-oductim," Smith added. wu admitted.
and other " unacceptsble" "'lbls seam has been conaldered lbe single most
deallngs.
important mineral deposit In
the world."
Two Rio Grande Lions - Although coal In the coal mined In Ohio and In the
attending as guests were Dan northern .field has a higher Dllnols Coal Basin (Western
Henderson and Earl Thomas. sulfur content, Smith uld tbe Kentucky, Indiana and:
content Is not as higl) u In Dllnols), '

;

The clinics will meet the special In·
terests and needs of southeastern Ohio
residents, offering a great variety of
medical services. They will he located close
to appropriate . backup bases, such as
hospitals, and ideal locaUons for medical
,. students to practice country doctoring, the
speaker said.
'
·•
.
He slated that Uie· -clinics are not
designed to make profit and he-is,personally
opposed to fees ·which deny servll:o to the
needy , He said that training doctors thmugli
the Athens school for rural prbctlce should
also reduce the physlclan·patient ratio in
Southeastern Ohio far belbw the present
some 2,1100-1 figure.
Dr. Favennan reported that five percent of the present enrollment at the Athens
medical school is from southeastern Ohio
and BO P.rcent from Ohio. The student. are
conunitted to serve in Ohio following the
completion of their training, he said.
By 1985, five clinics, all of which must be
with an hour aJK) one-half traveling distance
from Athens, are expected to be established.
Much, of' course, Dr, · Faverman, pointed
out is subject to the legislative and
executive branches support in Ohio. Dr.
Faverman conunented that the Athens
program can provide a quality program
with a total effect upon Sou!iJeastern .Ohio -

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Thursday, OCtober 7, 1976

•

19 158

4

*

Chassis

.

,

Carter told r~ters Tuesday "l feel good about it," and his
press secretary, Jody Powell, said lbe Democrat now bad a
paycbologlcal edge that bad favored Ford before the first
debate when carter was on the defensive because of the
Pl{lyboy Interview and cmtroverslnl statements on tax
' reform.
. ~ advance of the debate, pollster Louts Harris predicted
tlJi!t Ford had the most to gain tonight because many voters
bad doubts about his ability In forefgn policy.
Despite crtUclsm that the first debate was duU In many
respects, the format wW be unchanged tonight. Three jour·
naUats will submit questions to each of the candidates, who will
have three mlrutes to respund. Two moce minuteS wW be
allowed to reply to a foUowup question and another two for
rebuttal by the opponent.
. The proceedings wiU be witnessed by an audience of guest.
Invited by the League of W~men Voters, which will also
sponsor the final debate Ort. 22- open to any subject- and
ooe Oct. I&amp; between vice presidential candidates Bob Dole and
Walter Moodale.
CBS-TV,' handling broadcast pool arrangements lbls ·time,
were using three audio systems, Including two fall ...fe
backups, to avert a rerun of the audio !allure that forced a
minute interruption In the first debate.
The questioners wW he Richard Valerian! of NBC, Henry
Trewhitt of the BaiUmore Sun and MaX Frankel of The New
York Times. The moderator Is Pauline Frederick of National
Public Radio.
•

Tltan·300v

'

BANGKOK, T!IAILAND - ·AMIIJTAIIY-LED 1JWP took
over
the government of Thailand tonlgbt and deelared ~
.
Pameroy
ll!w, climaxing a day ol claabea between right and leftwingen ·
Bawling Lanes
1-21-71
that kWed an eatimated three dozen persons and ln)ured 200
Tri Countv
'Team
f'ts. others. Abrtel broadcaat lllld a "cOUIICil !!X' the reform ol tbe ·
.Eagles Club .
•
28 admlnlstraUon" bad taken ovel' the government IJid,would be
Strikers
21
beaded by the newly.eppolnted defense mlnl8ter, reUred
Pomeroy Cem4!1nt Block co 17
Computers Services
16 Admiral Saligad Ch!X'lyoo.
·
.
·
H&amp;R Fires ton e
14
"We wW do everything ... to maintain the ldng, tbe throne,
Team One
--o
High lndhi ldual game, Bert
th~ country, delllocracy," tbe broadcast said. It aald lhe
Bodlmer, : '245, second high
Individual game , A. L. councU WOUld retain the 279-rnember parUiment elected in .
March.
Phelps, Jr ., '235, third high

aMounced Rio Grande Uons
sold $350 worth of bulbs for
the GalllpoUa club. In return,
GalllpoUa Lions wlll help sell
advance tickets for a l'l!anlcsglvlng Holiday Basketball
Tournament at Lytle Center,
Involving the Rlo Redlnen
and three other college
teams. 'l'lckets are M for
adulu and $2 for students and
are good for all sessions
during the two·day tournament, slated Nov. 26-27.
Guests last night Included
Doyle Spangler, senior
district deputy governor,
Clrclevlllet Butch Roberts,
Introduced by B.S. Priyanalb
and Mark Bailey,· by Tom
White.

(Continued from page I)
haven't been In goverrunent since they gave us the Vietnam

~~ • 100% SolldwSiate

'
ByBobHoetncb
Rur- cllnlca tQ provide better medical
aervlces for southeastern Ohio residents
appear. to be fortbcomlq.
•
This .was made clear Wedneadal' af·
lernoon when tbe first Rural H111lth Core
Clinic meeting was hosted of Veterans
Memorlsl Hospital with llep: Ron James
and staff members f! :Ohio l!niverslty's
Medical School ·oll ' hand to discuss
development of ~lih care in Southeastern
Ohio..
.
.
GerUI A. Faverman, acting dean of the
medle8l school in l).thens, complimented
Veterans Memorial Hospital and Its staff for
the support and Interest shown towarda the
school which bas been esta bUshed to provide
medical training for southeastern. Ohio's
young people who, hopefully, will r~urn to
their home communities to practice family
medicine.
Dean Faverman also commended Rep.
James who, he said, hes headed legislation
which baa been helpfuiln establishment of
the AthenB school and for legislation helpful
In heallh ed.ucation services.
Dr; Faverman aMounced that the
school baa received a .$50,000 federal grant
to plan the development of rural clinics In
southeastern Ohio. The goal lor the first
clinic is September, 1978.

•

ELBERFELD$ IN, PO'MEROY

Ford, UAW

THE MEIGS INN

fil~!

1976 sale. Capt. Gary OwenB,
. whose wife presented him
with a daughter Sunday
(their first child) was unable
to attend last night's "victory
diMer." EarUer in the week,
ho,wever, Owens praised
members of-his squad for an
outstanding effort.
One of the highlights of
Tuesday's. meeting was the
preaentaUon of the "Bow
Wow" award to Lion Max
Tawney. The presentation
was made by Lion Keith
Thomas. Sev~n years ago
Thomas was a recipient of
this award. Tawney was
bitten by a dog last Wednesday. The wound required
nine stitches.
·
President . J\m Bennett

ImprOved health care comzng

;

Local Bowling

Lions bulb sale climaxed
with steak and bean fete

Gary Owens' Rough Riders
enjoyed a steak diMer whlle
Jeriy McManis' MagrUirns
l'&amp;d bean SQUP and cornbread
during Tuesday night's bimonthly meeting of the
Galllpolls Lions Club at
Oscar's.
. ··
The dlllner climaxed this
year's "Llgbt'for-Sight''
llghtbulb sale In which the
Llons grossed ,6,914.85,
second beat effort In the 211year hlslory of the sale. •
Proceeds go toward the
purchase of eyeglasses for
needy school children In both
the city and county schools,
General Cbainnan Richard
(Dick) Turner and Capt
Je.r ry McManis thanked
Lions who participated In the

m

•

'

m

on

~

H

ADJIQTTED - Mlrpret lbe pollcomea, wbo
klllld MOIIdayln lbi' iluq1le J'tCklG.
Gana, Pomeroy; Gary Em,,
AI the end ~ pniJII' .men, polklemen clrried lhe
Pomeroy; Debora Spirea, cofllnaontbeluboulderatlrolllhdowntownMadricllorabout
lAngsville; Patay Spirea, a milo and Ibm loadid lblm Into heara for 1b1 trip to lhe
~beahlre; Okey BillY. c:emetery.
omeroy; Rosa Brady,
Muon; Robert Williams,
JIMMY CAR'f.ER IS STARTING TO GET ORGANIZED
Xenia ; Apna Howard, supportlnl!n Roman C.tbollca, allbougb the dwrcb'a bllbopa
Pomeroy; Richard Norman, dllllkehlJpolltlon on abortion. A group olfacultymemtwnt
~omeroy; Emeatine Werry, the Unlveraity of Notre Dime In Soulb Bend, Ind., endorsed
omeroy.
the Democratic ncmlnee Tuaedly uyiq be hu no "catbollc
, DISfllARGED- Timolby problem" bee- ol bll posiUon' abortiOIII.
Triplett, Delmar _ O!'~[s, -T"" In Waahlngton, D.-, c., a group of Runan ·C.tbollca,
Dorothy Collins; !acob &amp;:Ott, 'prlm8rlly.lnl!n the VIrginia auburbe, lllld they will take an
Herman Ha'ddoz, ·Sharon advertlaement in • Uberal .clmcb publlcat!tin - tbe Na,tiOnal
Spaun, Wilma Riggs, Opal Catbollc Reporter - aiiiiOUIIClng lormatioo of a llltional
Hollon, George Conde, VIcki "Catbollca !!X' Car.ter" fX'ganlzation. The Wublngton group
~ffltt.
s8ld Cllrler'a campalp atanda are cloaer to the aoclalloals ol
the church I!Wl 'Prelident Ford's.

Beginning Jan111ry I, the 111tlon'a millions
In the minda of consumers, and lbe
of Cltllena Band addlcta wW gain aljWe
currenUy avaUible :lkhannel radioe · m
breathing space In their crowded radio
now being viewed u very. quatlonable
space. The Fedederal Communications
Investments by the buylq public.
Commlaaion (FCC) had decided to allocate
This Is £rtlllllte. uya Rice, IInce the
atotalof40cbanne1BtoCB,anlncreaseofl7 23-cbaMel
wW provide more 1ban
over the present 23.
· adequate
unicatlon ability to any
In doing ao, however, the FCC baa !brown purchaser. Although 40-charmelaetnW, of
lndu,atry a curve, and unneceaurlly so, In
coune, have 17 additional channels for
tbe opinion of one concerned oblerver. It Is
conver88Uon, moat people aren't aware that
another ewnple of govenunent regulators . 1be range of the 40-cbaMel sell will not be
regulating without fully considering the . nearly ao great as that of the present 23effect the peopl,e they regulate. says v. J. . charmel radial. .
.
.
.
Rice, president o1 The Anteruia SpeclaUIII · Anyway, he adda, the Idea tbat an tn.
~ Co. In Cleveland.
dlvldual needa 40 channels for conver88tlon
REEDSVILLE _ Mra.
The effective elite of the new ,channela
borders on the ludicroua, IInce moat active
Charles (Mary) Reed, 90, Rl. ahould have been delayed until at least the
CBers normally 'uae only about hall a doun
I Reedavtlle, died Tuesday at middle of, next year, h.e argues, to enable
channels.
the home of her daugbter In manufacturers to clear their,Inventories of
'The president of another company Which
Chester.
~&amp;Mel modela and gear up lor
doea happen to be dlrecUy affected by FCC
Mrs. Reed wu born Jan. production of the new ~haMel models.
declslon·lllllklng agrees with Rice about the
31, IIIII the daughter of the Already, be says, one consequence of the
fulllre of 23-chanoel CB.
late John andEUzabeth Fleek dectalon baa been widespread dlacounting of
Not only will the current 2khannel aet1
Mewell. She waa also 23-dlaMel aetl, with attendant economic
continue to be quite uaeable but thelf.value,
prec~ed In death by her dlalocatlon ·tn tbe Industry.
·
In tenna of less crowding, wlll·lncrease with
huaband, three daughters,
There will be another acramble, he
the addition o( the 17 new channels, '88ys W.
Lola McCain .and ' Vesta predicts, as manufacturers submit new*'
I. Thomas, president of Pace, the largest
Frecker, and an Infant cbannel radios to the FCC for type cer·
suppUet;..of CB radios. They will . become
daughter; one aiater, and tlflcaUon. This Is a process that lakes a
considerably leas congealed and euler to
, three brothers.
mlni1num of a month and could mean that
"get out" on.
Mrs. Reed ;, survived by . only a few lucky makers will have approved
Consumers who are thinking aboul the
one daughter, Enna Cleland, , radios for sale on ~haMel day In, January,
purchue of a CB radio but don't know
Chester; two alslers, Eata . As a colnpany that makes nothing but · whether to walt for the 40-chaMel models
• White, Long Bottom and Nora communications antennas and related
can liiive the best of both worlda. A number
Damewood, Akron; nine acce8aories, and which sells more of them
of manufacturers, including Pace, are of·
grandchildren; 10 great· than any other manufacturer In the COII!ltry,
ferlng customers who buy 23-cbaMel aetlgrandchlldren, five step· AnteMa Specialists Ia nol directly affected
lbe opportunity to have their units factory·
great-grandchildren, and by FCC declslon-malrlng. But as a CBer
modified to 40 chaMela alter January I, for
several !Jieces and nephews. blmael!, and as a person active In the
about 20 per cent of the unit's suggested list
Mr•. Reed was a member electronic Industry's affairs, Rice Is
price.
of the Keno Cburcb of Christ. strongly critical of the commlsslon,'s entire
Amid all the confusion and controvers~.
Funeral services will ·. be performance as regardS ·Citizens Band
two things are certain: The Citizens Band
held Thursday at 1 p.m. at Redlo.
'
phenomenon Is here to ·stay, and the FCC
Ewing Chapel with Charles
At the very least, he points out, the
has not Issued ill last ruling concerning lt.
Russell officiating. Byrlal . decision bas caused quite a bit of confusion
And that's a blg teri four.
wW be In the Tuppers Plains
Christian Cburch Cemetery.
Frienda may ~aU at the
fun'!:al borne at _anyUme.

Visit Our Salad Bar
'
4 oz. Butter topped Newport$295
Crab In Natural Shell
French Fries
Coffee. Tea or Milk
Plus tax

..

}; .

way; Fol'rest W. Marlowe, 48,
Syracuse, U50 and costs and
three daya In jaU, drlvlq
while Intoxicated; Mike
Smllb, 19, Mlddiepurt, $50
and coati, trespassing, and
Richard Swan, 20, Mia·
dlepori,
and coats,
menacing threatl, , and t25
and COlli, dlaorderly malfner.

1'HE INN PLACE
THURSDAY NIGHT
Special

~ews
•• in Briefs
(CGniluued trml!NI

Veferuo Memorial B ......l

~;~

One bond wu forfeited and failure to yield the right of

•
••
•
•

'

· WASHINGTON (UPI ) Wholesale prices jumped 0.9
per cent in September,
returning to a double-&lt;llgil
annual rate lor the first time
in nearly a year, the Labat
Department rep\]l'ted today.
The Inflationary s urg~. re.
fleeting aiO.Bper cent annual
rate, was a drusUc reversal

reversal of recent trend&gt;!,
lnduslrial prices rose 0.9
per cent- the biggest
.Increase In nearly a year.
This compared to overage
monthly increases of 0.6 per
cent over the past three
months, and an average lnt'l'ease of 0.2 per cent In each
of the first five months of the
year.

of a recent cooling trend that
saw whole88le costs decline
0.1 per cent in August. Not
since last October have these
prices risen as sharply.
A sharp rille In farm prices
combined with an unuaually
big Increase for Industrial
conunodltles to produce the
JAMES WELCOMED - Rep . Ron James, left, is
Dr. John Ridgway, chief of staff at Vetera~s Memorial
September Increase, which Is
welcomed to Veterans Memorial Hospital Wednesday
Hospital; Ronald A. Black, associate dean lor planning
f!ertaln In promote fears of a
afternoon when Rep. James spoke at a meeting 'dealing
and program implementation, Ohio University School of
resurgence of Inflation and
with the esteblishment of rural health clinics in south·
Osteopathic Medicine, and Gerald A. Faverman, acting
efnbarass President Ford In
eastern Ohio, From left to right, are Rep. James, Lucas.
dean of the school.
the waning days of hi s
'
campaign,
Ford ~s pegg~ his entire
.
e&lt;:onol.mc program on claims
that his conservative policies
Pomeroy civic leadera,
p p 1 e r a r e controlling Inflation. armed with an offer of five .
·
'
Democratic presidential year loans at iWO per cent
. ·
_..
·
.
·
. candid ate Jimmy Cart.er Interest to property owners
·
continues to emphasize that who want to paint their
,
.
•
.
.
.
Inflation remalru; high by h
1 d wd
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) In an assertiOn that may
Georgetown Untverstty
Following the debate both historical standard&gt;!
ousea, organ ze
e•
, Jimmy Carter says President come back ,to trouble him, professor Lev E. Dobriaru;ky, candidates went to rallies
F
, j
• 1 9.
nesday night Into a Pomeroy
Ford is , condu cting an Ford declared that "there is chairman of the National where supporters who bad
arm ~Ices '::~ ,.,rr Community Improvement
immoral foreign policy and no Soviet domination of captive Nations Committee, watched the confr~ntaUon on ce~t tm tl t~m 1;
~ t'!! Committee.
Ford says Carter advocates a Eastern Europe"
said he was, "shocked to hear closed circuit television su ~ :n0 a t~ Fea d 1
. Walter J. Robb and Dr.
dangerous defense policy.
Carter laughed, Ford President Ford state and ' roared lusty assurances that ~:e ~ 0 monr ~en:'" a\':.ce: Harold Brown were selected
But in their secood televised glared, then declared:
even try to defend this their man had humbled his •
' pe
'
u · ~halnnan to head the
confrontatioo, both rejected
")don't believe ... that the preposterous statement. " opponent.
• project.
isolationism and pictured Yugoslavians· ... Romanians Other Americans of Eastern
cartertoldhlsgroilphefelt
Fred W. Crow, Jr.,
America as a peacemaker i~ .... the . Poles consider European origin echoed . his he put Ford on the Scavenger will
disclosed that Ted Reed of.the
a troubled world.
, . . themselves dominated by the complaint.
defensive,
Farmers Bank and Savings
The debate Wednesday Soviet Union. Each q! those '"i\t the debate's end, carter
"lt'sa horrible adrnlnlstra·
Co., has offered to ·loan
night between the two countries is independent .or shook hands with Ford and tion to try to defend so he was begin on leaves
money for repainting lor five
presidential contenders - the autonomous."
they both left the bare stage on the defensive, f felt, aU the
'years at an interest rate of 2
aggressive Carter and the . Carter suggested Ford •of the Palace of Fine Arts way through the debate," ,.Th~ scavenger In Mid· pe,r cent to help \he painting
recessarlly defensive shoilld c.heck that finding Theater, They meet a fina l carter said , "I think 1 won dleport will begin leaf and cleaning up ol Pomeroy
incllmben\ - was a scrappy wiUt · Amet'icans who have time Oct 22 at William and but I'm sure he feels the same pickups service Monday over VlUBge get underway .
affair of biting sarcasm , far relatives in those countries, . Mary
College
in way ."
the enllre town. Residents
It was suggested that
more combative than their but as soon as Ute debate Williamsburg, Va., when '\,J?ord told reporters: "l felt are asked to rake leavea Into Gerarcl and Elizabeth
first exchange, of economic, epded they were speaking for questions on any topic will be comfortable. I answered the the area of curbing near their . Hllferty and Judge Ma,lnlng
statistics.
themselves.
'taken.
(Continued on•page 10) · homes. The schedule for the Webster serve on the com•
,~
, scavenger Is: Monday, first mlttee ·of restoration of

Paint up,
clean ·up
•
proJect
underway
•

secon. d debate' ·sera·

e

1

A.slile_y _starring,on Grang-e stag
' es ,: - --::~:: .~~~~::~;y:·~~: . ~~

Talented musician Keith D. the state In piano duets and ·
Ashley, a teacher in then ''best ~f show" out.of the
GaUipoUs, a native of Rt. 2 583 competmg categories at
Racine, who owns three wins . the state competition held in
In Ohio .Grange competition Fairfield County,
from last summer,' wiH
Ashley In the plano. solo
perform at both the 104th " competition also took first In
annual state session In the state. He had previously
Columbus ' and the llOth won In the age 21 to ' 30
annual national session of the category in piano solo at the
Grange at -'tlantlc City, N. J. district competition. In July
Ashley and his partner, he' was also the state winner
Randy Wolfe of Piqua in the Grange Bicentennial
County, with a piano duet, public spelking contes\ and
"Exodus", took first place in went on to the Mld·Atlantic

·
Youth Conference in Gettys·
burg, Pa. to iate third place
with his topic "A Birthday
Week for Am~rica".
At the state convention,
De\. 17·20, at the Neil House .
in Columbus, Ashley will
participate on Sunday at the 2
p.rn . program, and then on
Tuesday evening he will be
joined by. Wolfe for a
program at the 6:30 annuai
Grange banquet . Speaker
that nl~ht will be Sen. Robert
Taft. Jr,

ward;
ward.

Thursday,

fourth

On Nov. 1 and 2 Ashley and
Wolfe will be at the National
Grange . Convention in
Atlantic, City tepresentlng
Ohio's "heat of show" 1n
talent.
.
Son of Mr. and Mrs. ~obert
Ashley, Keith 'is the Meigs
County Grange
youth
Cloudy and cool, showers
director. He teaches in tonight and maybe Friday.
Gallipolis City Schools and Is Highs Friday In the lower
working on his master's 60s; lows tonight In the upper
degree at Ohio University 40s. Probability of rain 70 per
and Rio Grande College.
centtoday and tonight,,50 per
· cent Friday.

weather

to 'clean up tbe
weedl along the . riverbank
and between tbe curb and
rallroad traclts along Malri
St. Several realdentl have
agreedto ...lstwlthmatertal
and labor. It waa illao
suggested tbat . Boy $couta
and the Jaycees would U11at
with the program.
Attending were Crow, Leo
". L. Vaughan, ll, Jbn Thomaa,
Larry Wehrung, Paul Kloa,
Blll Y9ung, R. L. Jacobe,
Robb,
Brown, Mayor
Clsrence Andrews, Barbara
Thompson, Charles Bartlea
anti Mr. and Mrs. Hllferty.

.

·'

�"

2- The DaUy Sen~inel ,Mlddleport-Pomi'I'Oy, 0., Thursday, Oct. 7,1976 ·

Rhodes' development pla~s,.set for tU)ice-w,ee.k ly hearings
II)' LEE Ll!lONARD
UPI Slateh.,... Reparler

OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Tile
Ohio Hollie Ways and Means
Ommlt1ee has Gov. James
A. Rhodes' industrial
development legislation
. under study and plans two

bearings a week In prepare
for a final vote by Oct. 27.

The quesUon ia whether
that schedule ls fast enough
In suit the governor, who has

Today ls Thursday, Oct. 7,
the 28lsl day of 1976 with 85 In
follow.
'*Dflf()fJD-fO
DAIV 11Nf4Nfl
· · The moon is in its full
tNI
phase.
~QIUfOI
MIHII·MASON' A•fA
The morning stars are
tHIII'IIL. TANHfHH.&amp;
Mercury,
Sa turn and
I •« •1-1.
.oun HOiftiCH
Jupiter.
Cltrtdlt.,.
1
The evening stars are Mars
..... 11 ......... .,.. . .
a. ........ .,
lhe Otlle Wel'-y I"VWitll&lt;lnt C_,.,a)l.
and Venus.
1l1 Cewt St.,
Ohio 451M.
Those born oo tills date are
•~~~'"'"' Office Piton• tn.Ju•.
t~~tt•._. "'*'-m-lnr.
1 under the sign of Libra.
. a.c.IMII CleM ,oltqil , .... .t
American poet James
~•.,..Ohio.
Whllc6mb Rlley was. born
N.tloMIM•..-thlnt rlpreMnte"'lh.,
w...111 • O•lfflth c_,..,.,, tn(., 1ot. Oct. 7, 11149:
11,.111 """' 0.1 ...... Dl•., ur Thlr!l
On· this day in history :
A. ... N-Tort!, N.T. lMIJ .
i•
luiNcrlptfoll ,.,"1 0.11-r.-4 .,
In 1916, ln the most
con' ..r ......... enl .. ltie U CHit ,_
staggering
football defeat oo
.,..., lr MotiH' loo.tl• w'-ere c.rr!M
record, Georgia Tech
Mrvke " ' •-11•11111. One rttonth.
JUS, ly -11111 Ohio •IMI W. \le •• onj.
humbled Cumberland
Y-. IH.M: II• ...ontht. 111.11: lhr.j.
,.-th,, n .• . • ,..,......,. n•.N .,_: Unlversity, ~.
~I• .....,tM&amp;IJ~II; fhr-~t~ oftNII , U .H .
In 1961, a British airliner
'lu-.ulftiOI'I "'" ·~lu4M h,.,,
• crashd in the French
nm...•· ......
'
Pyrenees and 37 persons
were kiUed.
~.,,

~,

threatened to caU the enUre
General Assembly Into
opedal sesaton to pass tile
jobs-and-economy bllls
before the Nov. 2 electioo.
lndicaUons were after
Wednesday 's first hearing
that the proceas would be too
slow. The next hearing 1s
ocheduled for Oct. 12.
Rep. George D. Tablack,
D-Campbell, cgn\mlttu ·
chairman, sald be would.hold.

two hearings a week and vote assure

action by

both

cn the three Rhodes bills "or chambeTs hef&lt;n the eleclloo.
our alternatives" by Oct. 'll.
Moyer's testimony
That would stlU leave Ho1111e highlighted the lengthy

noor action and Senate hearing, attended by four
considerallon unlll aft~ lbe other staffers from the
elecUoo:·t
governor's office" and two
Thomas
J.
Moyer, cabinet members. II was tile
executive aulstant In tile largest contingent from
governor, urged acceleration Rhodes' ol!lce to attend a
of the hearing&amp; and said legislative hearing since the
Rbodes . stW might cau an gQV.mor began . hls third
·extraordinary
seas ion to .tmn ln January, 1975:
.

.

I

Sport Parade\

CINCINNATI (UP!) - "If in Philadelphia. .
Although Rose agreed
I lhoqght it would M!p,"
chuckled' Pete llalo, "I'd go report.! , of diuenslon
over there and :'ttnock . involving the P!lila' Diet
somebody 1n the' nose."
ADen
probably
were
Rose's tongue.jn.cbeelt .re- overplayed, . he agreed
mart waa bls way of saying dllselllion could definitely
I
hewouldn'lmlndifthePhila· hinder a club.
I'
"II would hurt a team Ute
NEW YORK (UPI) - Tlrey're known u Le AmazzCIIl in delphia Phlllies continued to
lbelr native lt.aly, wblch lranllalellnto lltber "The Am a,1 on be' caught up in the '*"'•becallile we're io clole
•" or ''1bt Hor••amen," 111111 II'• a good thing 8Uly Jeen ~ "dllselllion" that reportedly lmll," be ~· "But yet, the
dldn'lt.rwltatlhey Jrad toay or abe mlght've knocttjl ~m surfaced recently among (Oakland) ,Athletics won
IIODie players.
three world champiOIIIhlps
right 011t of their llllkles.
·
·
:
After aU, Rose figured, a · •nd they were always
Le Amaaanl-.. tlie llldy drivers of Italy. They don't look
Uke ,l.mullnlal aU. They look like relined Italian ladi.. and ~ltle in-118Jrting amooc the fighting among lliemsel¥1!1."
llalo, the oldes\_ man oq the.
lbey Jrave 00111e here l!i' a eerles of !fOiling racee against Phlla could help the Reds
when the Nalimal · League team at age 35 l\'bo still pjays
American women drlwn Ia the neit two weeks.
The Amuona thlnt wcme~~'a Db Is fer the blrda. '11iey aay playofta begin Saturday rJghl lilte be's the young_eet, J)so
Jlllllle ~ Kine, and aU thole ...- who go aloof will) her,
'
can haft lt. The Amazon~ wouldn't cbanp the way the are lor·
lll)'llriJw and the ny lbey _,. II the way Ill women !lied wbe ,
· "A woman baa her own role In life IJII['II'a better that abe
llleb to II or elle abe beccrnea neurollc," said one of the
ltlllu lady driven, Giovanna Slotto.Pintor ol Rome, current
Garber, Ron Schueler !llld
wcrldcllanqtlolllmateur drl'ltl'aa welluatepdaughter ctfthe PIULADELPHIA (UPI) ltlllu amben•dcr to the United NatiCIIII.
,
The · National League .Wayne Twitchell, and some~
'AU the Amar.ona ~It pretty much t!Je ny Giovanna st.otto- championship could be woo limes reliever and starter
Pln~M did.
• · ,,
1
oo the legs of the anctnnati TCDlllly Underwood.
Ozark wW start lellhender
.''TIIere-.. aome women IIi lt.aly who believe they should be Reds or the anna of the
Steve
Carlton, :lll-7, in the
equal wltlr !Mil .In every l'l(!ard, but generally they are Philadelphia Pbilliea.
frustrated,", ofltnd Lo~edanna Moretti, who founded The In the best-Gf.flve game flrsl game and follow with
Amazocut 10 yean ago and now captains' tile Italian. team. playoff 8erles which beglna righthander Jim Lonborg, 18"Mind )'!IU,,I'm llpa8king for. ~If, not for aU the wotpen in Saturday night, the Reds 10, in the second. Both ate
Italy, but I Cion 'lite anythlna wrong With 11 woman staYing a expect to run the PhUIIes intll former Cy Young Award
,.
1;tep behind a man. In Italy, we enjoy being wcmen. 1we•ve • submllsioo as lbey did last winners.
But with the strength iii hls
beard about Billy Jean King and her fight ferJ:en's year In sweeping the
aquaBty, but we'n happy u we are.''
·
Pitlaburgh Pirates thr~ bullpen .and with a . short
series, Ozark BB).'B "you
· Loredana Moretti ls COftlidered the ''Qieen of the
10111" straight games.
.
becauae ltle has been driving trotters lqlaer than any ali them. The Reds' Joe Mgrgan, who might have to go and gel your
Since aU five lllvlled hen by the U.S. Trotting Allociation had 60 stolen bases ln the starter a llttle sooner than
are.amateunanddrlveonlylorfun,notmooey,that'stbeooly regular season, said, "The normal" if they get in
lhlng they will (lei out of their races against the American &lt;11e big thing we have that trouble.
profeaalonslwomen driven. Plenty of fun, but no IIIOney.
they don't ls baSHteallng • "I can bring in Schueler In
Here In the United States, there -.. approtdmajely two ability. It separate&amp; our team . finish an inning," Ourk said,
"hit for him and go w
dozen wcme~~, who are licensed proffilsional jockeys, and from all the others."
countleaa others, who handle hones lq other capadties, but But Phillies' manager T.witchell."
'
Twitchell, who saw Utile
tbert ia oo1y one professional ~ 1n aU of Italy and hetname Danny Ozark beUeves hls
. lsl'lzlanaSoat
...
.· ,
pitching strength, actioo in the first half of the
KettyTabakov wuaptalnlng,alJ lh1s In New York's l:entral p&amp;rlicularly in the lllllpen, season but came back ln the
second half for a 3-1 record
Park where the AmaZOIII were having their picture taken will prevaU.
c!UIIered. around an l11'e&amp;f~ ~· named Wlek.: Carla "I've got five or six guys and a 1.74 earned ,.run
Guicll ot Bolapa, f01111gest of The Anljjjjr11s, had climbed into there who have clone it aU average, would then be uited
the BUlky and when the photographers Ui'ged her lo drive hlm year,'' . Ozark
s•id as long relief. · This would
in an adjacent cinder path,l!be obliged, only whave tile wind Wednesday as the PhUlles leave McGraw, a ~nder,
keep blowing up her skirt.
went through a morning and rlghtllanders Reed and
''0 DiO!" ltle kept eiClaimlllg.
.
workout In the rain and under Garber stiU in the bullpen, or
Upon dismounting, abe explained l!be's the daughter of an the Ughts al Veterans Underwood, a lelthander who
llljiY start the third game.
attorney who owns a stable of trotters. !pbe has been driving Stadium.
Reed. says the bullpip ls
about a year-«nd-a-llalf and has scored seven vic~l~s 1n 20
Ozark was referring to Ron
ready.
"When thai phone
starts.
•
Reed, Tug McGraw, Gene
The Amarooa' lint stop m their tour will be at the ~ MUa
racelntct in Lalag1ca, Ky., where lbey will drive 1n an

Taft campaign-s for support by·labor in Ohio
- ··

~oy ,

COLUMBUS

.

(UP!)

meeting of the council.
Democratic nominee
Mettenbaum drew sharp Melzenbaum appeared in the
dilltinctioils betweeh lh~lr afternoon, afl!lr the podium
campaigns for the U.S. had been decorated with. a
Senate Wednesday in lllge peanut, painted stmnar
separate appearances before • to the U.S. flag, and lettered
the Ohto Slate Building· and "Carter-Mondale."
Construct,ion
Trades ~ "lamhereasklngforlabor
' Council.
support," said Taft, citing hill
RepubUcan nominee Taft, Senate vote in favcr of tile
who is running for reelection commoiHiilua picketing bill
lo a second sil-yea'r tenn, eagerly supported by
spoke before a morning organiZed
labor
and
Robert Tall Jr. and Howard

b

eventually passed by
Congress. President Ford
vetoed the bill.
.
"If he voted ooce in hls We,
I'll give hlm credit for lt,"
said
Melzenbaum
in
ref~rence to Taft's support of
tile lel!islation . "By that one
vote he was obviously
courting you.
11
1 think, however, you
should take the ~otanty of his
votes," added M:etzenbaum,
a former lobbyist for lhe
AFIJ.CIO. "You know where I
starxf.n
Taft also noted hls suwort

for several federal projectS
which he said brought
millions of dollars w Ohio.
"That means jobs -and jobs
are what· we need ln Ohio."
Taft said·one major difference between the two main
candidates in the raee (also
running are .Socialist
W&lt;rkers candidate Mellasa
Singler, Socialist Labor
candidate John O'Neill ,

......
~ .

"

Independent candidate
Enuna Lila Fundaburk and
American Party candidate
Donald Babcock ) was
defense spending.
"My opponent vote4
against the B-1 bombeT and
has proposed wcut $15 bllllon
from the defense budget,",
·said Taft.
Metzenbaum asreed with
the $15 billion figure, but said
''nowhere have I indfcated a
cutin the number of people'in
the military and nowhere
have I indicated approval of a
cut in any weapons system."
Melzenbaum said the
· defense department could
save $15 billion by putting out
defense
contracts
to
competitive bidding and the
elimlnalion of cost ov.erruns.
' Each candidate devoted
most , of hls lime to lbe
economy. Metzenbaum
f a ·v o r s r e d u c i n g
unemployment by using

.

.

"goverilment as an employer
of last resort" Taft thinkB
private induslty production
carl be expanded In absorb
unemployed workers. '
"The number one Issue in
this campaign ls refuellng the
economy without doublMigit
Inflation," said Taft.
Melzenbaum quipped the
"one 'objective in hls We"
was w"get rid of four.:tetter
words in WashingU!n - -like
Ford, Dole and Taft."
At a news conference on the
Statehouse steps before hls
30-minute council speech,
Metzenbaum said he was
against voter adoption of
Issue 6 oo tbe Nov. 2 ballot.
Th a I
p·r o p o s e d
Constitutional amendment
would require the legislature
to hold public hearings and
decide whether w allow the
construction or expansion of
any nuclear powered utility
facility.
.,.
To expect the legislature In

'

.

.

decide the nuclear. aafety
question, said Melzenbaum,
1s to ''fool the people!' He
said tile legislature does not
have the expertLse waddress
that topic.
·
Metzeilbaum sald be favors
tw o other energy-related
·l.isues on the ballot. One
would require utilities -. w
furnish al cost w realdeilUal ..,
customers the first 400
, kilowatts per month of •.
electricty and the flrsl 30,001
cubic feel of natural gas per
mooth.
The second Issue would
establish a , nonprofit
consumer offlce funded
through volunt.ary
contributions In fight utility
rate increases.
All tllree· of the energy
Issues on the ballot·are being
challenged by
Utility
companies who filed all, Ohio
Supreme Court suit to take
the issues off the ballot.

'

destroyers to Iran are much
Jinuny Carter; calling the more highly sophisttcated
United States ••the arms than the Spruance class
merchant of the world," in- · destroyers that are preS.nUy ·
dicaled 1n his debate with delivered to our own Navy.
President Ford that tran 1s ' "This is ridiculous and it
getting prefer enH a 1 ought 10 be changed."
treatment 1n arms sales.
Ford did not challenge
. "Iran," he said, "is going Carter's facts but said be
to get 110 F14s before we even believed Carter failed to
meet our · own Air Force "realize the need and
orders .for Fi4s and the necesslly for arms sales In
shipment of Spruance class Iran."

:!0.

~··­
.......
.........
~.

·- .::
,·
I •

..
= :-·

., .

.
'

',•....-:

~

"Could you slip in something to keep 'em awake 'til
November?"

'

·Butz wanted to dismantle

•

•

"Iran Is bordered very
extensively by the Soviet
Union," he said, "Iran has
Iraq as one of its neighb&lt;rs ...
lt'smyslrongfeellnglhatwe
ought lo sell armil io Iran for
Its own ~ational security and
as an ally, a strong ally of the
United States."
Ford added that the Shah of
Iran did not participate in the
1973 Arab oll eniliargo and ,
thai sales lo Tehran are "for
·

GOP likely to gain just one governorship

WASHINGTON (llPI ) ji
Republlearis, who hold leas
tllan ooe.thlrd of lbe nation's
statehouses, appear likely w
· pick up only one governorship
in' the Nov, 2 elecllons, a
effective enforcement" of United Press International
civi!'rigbts laws pertaining to survey·showed today.
federal hiring and contract
The ' assessment
of
compliance practices.
prospects ln the 14 states
, "The transfer Would electing governors this year
weaken the compliance was baSed oo available polls
enforcement structure by and political esljmales from
breaking the direct line of UP! bureaus.
authority between review
It showed Republicans capofficers and the Director of . luring three statehouses now
OEO who ls chief of civil held by · Democrats, and
rights enforcement and Democrats ousting the GOP
policy development , " in two, with one state rated as
Hawkins wrote to Butt.
a toasup. One GOP net pickup
"They would be placed would.change the lineup of
under authority of the governors to 35 Democrats,
direcwr of tile Office of Audit 14 Republicans and one
who bas no enforcement . independent, James Longley
responsibilities and of Maine.
'
peripheral civil rights policy
The biggest stale expected
involvement," he said.
In turn over ls Illinois, wliere
Congressiooal sources who Republican James Thcmpson
dillclosed the Hawkins letter holds a strong lead over
and the USDA position paper Democrat Michael Howlett.
said "lhe recent charges
Howlett, the Illinois
about Butz' record oo civll Secretary of State, defeated
rights enforcement raises incumbent Democrali" Gov.
some ol these things lo Daniel Walker in a bitter
differ.ent .Jevel than was primary
last spring.
apparent last year."
Th(lllpsoo, the former U.S.

attorney for n&lt;rthern Illinois, __. associates of Chicago Mayor DuPont, a Republican, is
' favored to oust .Democratic·
.made a big reputation iJI' . Richard-J. Daley.
·Chicago for prosecuting·· Otllerl~epubllcan gains'ex- ~ . llberman ,Tribbit,· who·
polilical corruptioll, pected this year are in has had woes with his prison
including a number of Delaware, where Rep. Pierre system in hls first tenn; and
Ulsh, where GOP Att&lt;rney
·.WASIDNGTON (UP!) - USDA, lhe plan would have
General
Vernon Romney
;
Congressional sources said merged OEO's chief complileads Democrat Scott
the Agriculture Department ance section, lnvolvlng 81 of
:
Matheson for the seat of·•
wanled last year In dismantle tile agency's 116 employees,
retiring
Gov.
Calvin
~·
ill! Office of Equal into the Office of Audit.
Ramptnn.
:;.
Opportunity but dropped the
The plan was dropped last
The · Democrats · are
!
plan because of strong Dec. 12 because of strong
expected to cut their losses
·•,.
o-,&gt;position· from some House opposition from Rep .
with wins in North Carolina,
•
and Senate members.
Augustus . F. Hawkins,
where Democratic Ll. Gov.
t-~
:
The disclosure came w chairman of the House
James · Hunt leads David
United Preu Inte,...iliiiuol
;: ' light Wednesday lollowlilg Education and Labor
don't believe that the Flaherty· for the seal of
Stanley· Michalak of Romanians consider
!
other charges that ousted subcommittee on equal
Chicago says President Ford themselves"domlnaled 'by the outgoing GOP Gov. James
,. , Agriculture Secretary Earl opportunities, and Sen·.
is "a foo1 " if he considers Soviet l)nlon. 1 don 't befieve Holshouser; an,d West
: . • · Bulz falled . lo aggressively George McGovern,. 0-S.D.
where Democrat
Poland free of Russian
be PoIes const'der Virginia,
:
pursue federal clvll rights
A posltiop paper obtained
thai.
t
Jay
Rockefeller
•ls believed
domination. Thomas Johnson themselvea dominated by the
: . laws 1n the administration of by UPI on the proposed
ill Cleveland says "I think Soviet ·union. Each of those the front-runner against
:.
USDA programs.
reorganization argued thai
former
Gov.
Cecil
he's fulla ..."
,..
Butz has denied the the merger wouid cut •costs,
countries is independent or Underwood for the seat of
the
second
televized
·After
charges.
autonomous.''
increase ·efficiency, and
debate between Ford "and
None of the early r-.ction fetiring GOP Gov. Arch
:..
The Agriculture curtail overlapping
Jimmy
Carter,
reactions
upheld that view, however. Moore. '·
: ~ . Department's
OEO
is paperwork and investigaUon.
were quick and bitter to And Gen. Brent Scowcroft,
Jl!ew Hampshire, where
11
,responsible for ensuring thai
We expect to save.at least
Ford's
descrlptloo
of
several
Ford's
chief
international
Republican
Gov. Meldrim
'
civil rlghla provisions are a· half-day per job, netting at
Thcmson
ls
challenged by
Eastern
European
countries
:; complied with 1n the depart- least 300 days per year," the
security adviser, told Democratic Slate Sen . Harry
as "independent" of the reporters the Rusaians have
·: ment's hiring practices and proposal said. ·
Soviet Unlon." ·
four divisions of troops ln Spanos, ls regarded as a
·· by those who receive grants · Hawkins, however, in a
Michalak, an engineer -Poland - although he said loasup race.
from, or otherwise do letter to Bulz last Nov. 11,
whose parents immigrated w . that did not contradict the
Slates where Republicans
· business
with,
the said the reorganization would
,
.
are believedaafe are Indiana,
Chicago
from Warsaw, was
·..~ : department.
be " counterproductive to
.President s lhests.
f where Gov. Otis Bowen leads
angered by the remarkS.
., ~ .: Had II been approved by
0
Mrs.
Rose
Wozjecho":)cz
Secretacy of Slate Larry
"The man's a fool if he
·~
10 lbe ' Conrad; Missouri, where
Chicago,
who
has
been
'
think's Poland is free of Uruted Slates 25 years, satd Gov. Christopher Bond 1s
Russian cootrol," he sald. "I Ford was "very wrong."
don't think anybody who
"It's not true. " she said. ahead of Democrat Joseph
thinks eastern Europe ls free "P0 land is litlle Russia. Teasdale; and. Washington,
.
a
where King County (Seattle)
has any business being ,
,EverylhingiSRusai
•
Russia.
Executive
John Spellman
President of the United There is no more Poland.
b h
Slates. He sold out eastern Only the name, the Polish appears to . .". a ead of
oland ..
Democrat Dixie Lee Ray,
Europe in Helsinki, then ian
guage, but no P
·
former chairman ol the
comes on TV and says
. One
recent
Polish Atomic Energy Commission
eastern Europe ls free. He's a· immigrant,
asking not In be. 1 th.
f llrin GO '
or e seat o re
g P
liar or .an idiot."
idenW1'ed ' spoke ln Polish.· . ' l'!ov
Daniel Evans
·.
ByLawreaceE.Lamb,' M.D. subject and there are many Radiologists used to get It size. However, that does not
Johnson, who married lnlo.
"Nobody is free from J•l t' '
'
''1'\'
Democrats
are
leading
for
•.•· . DEARDR. LAMB - fwant dHferenl types. WhBils true because of inadequate change the ultlmale ouUook. a Polish family, said: "I
... And the people ln seats they already hold tn'
• ~.· lo know something about of one does not necessarily protection against X-rays. Relapses occur ·and most think" lie's fulla s-. When Russia
Poland who are praymg thai
.
.
: ~.-~· chronic · myelogenous apply to another type. My
The patient may not have often the disease converts to you speak of Poland you So!neda til will be free Arkansas, where Gov. Dav1d.
.:
leukemia. There Is very little remark! here should not be any symptoms at all to begin a pll!lijre similar to acute cannot speak of an
Y ey
Pryor 'is far ahead of the
ind~ndent nation."
• again, they have to count 011 GOP's
Leon Griffith;
avaUable about II and most of applied generally to aU types with. The diagnosis may he' leukemia.
briansky the United States'? speak for Montana, where Gov.
... : the information Is about of leukemia.
made because of ~b- · Control of the illness
Dr. Lev E. Do
, them. What he sa1d was not Thorn
J dg
1 d
acute leukemia.
- The primary illsease in normal blOOd tell! sliowing aU greatly improves the quality cbainnan of the National
hat th f 1.,
as
u e
ea s
ey ee ·. .
~ubllcan Robert Woodahl;
Thls happens to .be very chronic myelogenous the while cells. Or on a ofWeeventhoughwedonot . Captive Natioos Ommlllee w
Many
Lithuania~- ·Nirth Dakota, where Gov.
close to my heart as ~meone leukemia is . an enonnous routine examination the large have a final cure. 1 wil1h I andprofesaorofeconomlcsat
Americans, qwle vocal m Arthur Link ls
ahead .of
I love dearly has it. He 1s on ~ceasive production of part apleen may be noticed. Pain c6uld give you a, more op- Georgetown University in opposltioo
w
the Helsinki GOP challen•er Ri h · d
medication. It is ' a very 1lf the' white blood cells. You may occur mthe spleen lf an tlmlstic report but we stlU Washington, said be was pact also seemed stunned by
.
o
c ar
frightening lllne!!~ as.lt hu ill&lt; _·no!'!J!I!)y • IIAY_
e. ~l!l_lwo: _ area of the.spleen is damaged havH lll!lg 'IDY tQ,go before "shocked ,to hear President Forcios statement.
Elkin; Rhode Island, where
:i""'" : Upt and dofowns. Ht.r)J-tolaUy major groUIJS ~f. white cells, acutely from the clogging of we .can CIUl' completely many Ford state and even 1ry to
"He's damn crazy," said veterart Ll. Gov. James J.
•unaware w!!J111Mi has.
those aasociated'wt\h. acute 1Jie clrculatjon to part of 11- serious illnesses. Th&amp;t 1s why defend ihls preposterous Vytautas Lapinskas, a Garrahy IS the favorite over
; " .- ..
He got the Wness at age 19 Infections which we 'fllll.,saU ·causing what we call an in· support is needed for study of statement ... "
Chicago resident. "He's up CransiO(l l\18Yor James Taft
; .- , · and now 1s 21. He wa, in a the myelocte group and thii!e. farct of the apleen.
cancer and leukemic
"In my judgment and thai there talking abOut how free U1 succeed~. Philip Noel ,
couple of nlllliasiOJII. Now be produced mostly by lymph
Fatigue may be an early dlseasea.
of millions of Americans thai
And he
. and 1 Vermont,
where
says eastern Secretary of State Stella
1s back on medication and hls gland&amp; or the lymphocytes, 'l)'mptom, but 1 hasten to
Those who want' in· statement was lncredi)tle," we are.
Europe is free. I wonder if he Hackel Is in line w become
spleen Is swollen again. . Ovefproduclion of the !IOinl out again that fatigue ls fonnation on the anemias can he added.
Ford's remark came after ::.ak?,ows what the word tile nallon's second woman
• I am sure there are hun· myelocyte group Is the a symptnm of many, many , send 50 cents for The Health
":j . _dreda of people .wbo are ln· feature of myelogenous disorders, from lung illsease Leiter number 4-3, Un· Democrat Jimmy Carter
Jeanne Kraukas, a Chicago governor· Inner coolest with
: •. ; lerested tn thts type 'of lel!kemia. The slow long term to psychiatric illne9ses. derstandlng the Anemias. criticized him for ceding college student, charged thai Richard SneWng, Ute state's
; ~ '; leukemia and are in the same form is classified as chronic Fatigue alone does not make Send a long, stamped, self· Russian control over Eastern . Ford has "already sold out House Republican leader for
; :• • ; situation as I. Why is II such~ .as opposed lo acute.
a diagnosis of leukemia.
addressed envelope for P.urope when be signed the Lithuania and all of eastern tile seat of retiring Gov.
, ~ · hidden subject? I know lbey
The cause ls not knOwn. II
About 90 per cent of the · mailing .. Address your letter HelSinki accords last. year. Europe and now be's just Thomas Salmon.
; ' ,'!.~ ·. don't know !oo much about it results in about 15 to :&gt;D per ca8es can be treated to to Dr. Lamb In care of this
"I don't belleve ... that the saying it's okay, theylre free
A thought for the day :
, .,•. ; but people Wteme look aU the cent of aU forms of leukemia. control most oflhe symptoms newspaper, ' P. 0. Box 1501, YugoslaY,s consider from Russia.·WeU.JIIat'sbuU
• "' , lime for hope.~
· We do know that excess and reduce the white count. Radio. City.. Station, )lew themaelveil dominated by the _ -. He's doneo.more for American poet James Whit·
PEAR . READER
radiation may cause lt. The spleen will decrease in York,_N\ 100!9': !' ..-·
.' Sovitl Union ," Ford said.. "I Soviet communism than - comb Riley said, "The ripest
Leukemia is a complex
·
peach·ls highest on the' lrS!l~:·
'
Lenin:"

equ~

opportunity office

:t

...

Poles ..find Ford
a liar or idiot

their security as well ·as
lturs.''
·".
Administration sources ac·
knowledged Corter's cbar(!e
as technically correct: Iran
wW gel F14s before tile
~ntagon ·gets aU it wants.
The sources asid, however,
that tile Navy ls getting
planes as ·fast as the
production' 'Schedale set by
Ccingr~ alloios.
Iran can get more planes
because
the
builder;
Grumman. Aerospace ·Corp.,
has facilities for a higher rate ·
of production than the Navy
wants, they said,
" The Spruance class
destroyers·• will'· be .tmpre
·SOJililllticated liecaitse Iran ,is
getting the ships at the end of
the produc !ion line,"' .the
source explained.. "They'D
have a biggerguir -an8inch
instead of a 5 inch. They may
have a missile. We don't have
them
yet
because
development hasn't been
completed. But when we do
get them, the older ships will
be retrofitted:"
.The United Slates ls selling
about $9 bUUm ln weapons,
training and ~onstruction
abroad each year, according
. ' figures.
to -Pentagon
''We have become the arms
merchant of the world. When
l ·his Republican
administration came into
office we were selling about
$1 billion worth of. arms
overseas ," Carter said.
"Now, $10to $12 billion worth
of arms (go) overseas w
countries which quite often
. use these arms wfight each
other."

ctmlng Sundlly evening. Aller that, they'll compete In 1Sarato-

gs Sprtnga, .N.Y.,

Gil the afternoon of Oct. 11; at 'foolters
Raceway, Yooken, N.Y., that same evening; The Meadows
near Pl"•burgh
...
, Oct , 1•., and aI Rooaeve lt Raceway,.,.
Wei.itbuey, N.Y., ()ct. 18. · .
.
... ;
Amotig those who made the trip' from Italy Wjth Tile
Ama·-· was Dr "--to Moretti the L ... band of the team's
ca-~He ia ':ateur drl~r ~who has a deep
IJIPreCiaUon ~ hls wlfe'l atll1 with .the trotters. ;
..,..._!lrl-1n••111 &amp;ently," ,he said, ......... with L.- .. head.
The young.glrll,.lbey go out there and !~rive Ute manjacs, not
knowing wltat they're doing aU the unie, but my ~e drives

an

- ·--

steady,. •. "

"Bellone cares about you" :

Better-Hearing ·
Consultation i
Mr. Jack Radcliffe, highly resptcted
Factory-Trained Hearing Ald Specialist
will be present at this event to be held at:

Lowe Hotel-Pt.
PleC...-nt,
W.Va.
.
. :F
. I
Friday, Oct. I 9 a.m. to 6 ...m.
l

'

Here's your chance to talk over your
hearing problem with a person who is really
an eXpert In his _field. Mr . •~adcllffe will
advise you on how to protect 11\e hearing you
still have and what you can do to co~serve
your ablllty 'to hear. He will also arrange a
modern hearing los~ test forjou to evaj~ate
your heari~Ja ability.• Hearlnt,ald use~s will
. have their aids cleaned and ~ildlusted: (any
make or model) at no cost or obligation.

seen

I

I

Campbell Conference

Patrick Division

Philadelphia

.1 o o 2 ,6

s

0 0 0 o·o 0
NY Islanders
0 00000
Atlanta
·o. 1 o o s 6
Smythe Division
w. 1. t. pis gf ga
Colorado
100242

'

Not even a Bellone aid_ can solve · ~~ery
hearing problem. Bul,--thanks to mqctem
technQ,jogy, most hearing problems ct~t\ be
helped better than ever before. Pli!ln to
attend now. Bring a friend or f11mlly
member with you. II may be the lonty
chanee 'Mr . .Radcllf!e wlllj!~er have toig:lve
you 'the special assls~ance alld attention. he,
personally ,can provide. Phone to ~ an
appointment now to reserve a. time andldate
most convenient for you.
'
j

o 0 ,0 0 0 0

Chl.cago
St. Louis
Minnesota

000000
010056

Vancouver

0100 s9

Wale• Conference ·
Norris DiviSion

w. I. I. pis gf ga
Pitts.
1 o·o 2' 9 s
Washington
1. o 0 '2 6 5
Los Angeles
00 1122
Mqntreal
.0 0 0 0 0 0
Detroit
000000
Adams DivisiOn

Cleve.
Boston'" ·
Buffalo
Toronto
~y

· w. 1. 1. pis gf oa
0 0 ,1 1 2 2

o o0 o oo
~ o"
o·o o o

'

Specialist to attendi

NHL Standings·
United Press tntemlllionat

NY Rangers

I

I

interest, and ln tbe inll!real oi
Israel and ·Iran and Saucli
Arabia to sell arms to those
countries," Ford responded.
"lt'sfor their security as well

w. t. t. pts gf ga

.

r

DR. LAMB

Leukemia is complex disease

.

"

BATTERIES ON~-H-LF PRjCt
.
'

.

".

0 10 02 4
WedhesdaY's Results

For Home Appointment call the hotel.

!

Rangers 6 Minnesota 5
Pittsburgh 9 Vancouver S ·

Los Angeles 2 Cleveland 2
(Only games scheduled)

[

Thursday's Games

·~-·.·

•••

•
••

I

-•

rings, each ooe of us hopes it
is fer him," he .said.·
The former National
Basketball Association
player was effective against
the Reds until the last series
in · Cincinnati, in which the

PhWies lost three out of four, the five days between last
and he ·is anxious lor another Sunday 1s regular season
finale and the Saturday night
crack:
Whatever Ozark does, he ls opening of the playoffs is "too
anlious to gel started doing long a period. It's difficult to
find something to do .
·
il.
"You have five days w
The Phlllles' manager said

•

M~i
artt'.n l'k
l ed W:
•··
KC
'
.. S urass
~!il

~:\::

:~:~::.

Ml
~::~:~

~·~:-:
«·::;
~~~:;

~'t

~~~:

W

e..

:~::j

.

~::::::;

:···:·,·
'·~·=·
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) ln hls right · shou)der, an
- New York Yankee aliment the Yankees'
Manager BWy .Martin says administration did not lind
it's a shame the beat graas ln out about until mid·
the major leagues bas ~ September.
replaced by the American
"He missed ·a turn then
League's only artlflclal turf. when he got a shot and" has
Martin's Yankees open the come back to pitch g'ood
AL playoffs at Kansas City on again," said Martin. "He
Saturday on the artlli~l wasn't tllrowlng with the
surface of Royals Stadium. velocity he normally had bui
"George (Toma, the now bela the catfish of old.';
groundskeeper) uited to haye _ Hunter, who was 7-a ln
the best graas ln baseball Playoff and World Series
right here," Martin said actioo when he was with the
whUe hls team Worked out oakland A's, has had hls .
Wednesday . •'I wish he stW problems at Kansas City. He
did and I bet he does too. I bet has a 1-4 record in Roylls
he wishes ire took· care of Stadium and hlllone win was
green gra., lnsle8ci ctf having a 5-3 slx-llitter on A!l'll3b lhls
to palnlthe stuff lllre he does season. He attribute&amp; hls
now." .
problems w the arliflclal
- The artificial surface was sudace and mound doct«lng
ooe reason lbe Yankees carne by Toma, who makes. the
to town m Wednesday, lrylng mound harder than Hunter
to get in three days of likes.
workouts before the best.Of·
"He fixes lbe mound the
.five playoffs open.
way their pitchers ·want it,"
The Yankees opening-day said Hunter, who pitched in
startlngiBIIignmentwlllgoto Kansas Clty wlth ·the
Jim "Catfish" Hunter, wbo . ~thleUcs before lbey u\Oyed
was 17-15 wlth a 3.53 earned to Oakland. '.'That's the way a
run average. Martin said groundakeeper should do .it.
Hunlllr had some problems That's what be did when I
during the year because he waa bereand thal'slbe ny II
'"Ill! suffering from tendonllls ls supposed to be dme::

,

think about a lot of things,"
he said, "but they (the Reds)·
have tile same thing,
"We can' t wall to gel
started .! don't like the Idea of
silting around and thinking a
lot 1 " he said.

lha
DEEP CB/AUDIO PRICE CUTS!

5
SAVE 30

REALIStiC ®
DELUXE
MOBILE .
'
'
CB RADIO
Reg. 159.95

21·14 5

Lowes t pn co evo 1 0 11 RealiStiC s
TRC-24C 1 lllu m1 na1ed cl1ann el
se lec t o r a nd s , RF me t r w1t h b utlt -1n modula11 011
In dic at or. del ta-tun e sw ttcll A N L and n otse bla nke r.
PA capabilit y . dynam1 c m1ke . a ll crysta ls all c hann els and more '
There s only q ne pl ace yo u ca h find 11 . . Rad1 ~ Shack

'I·"''

.md

1 " "

CHARGE IT
At

R~d lo

Shack

,,.,jof otrh ''" ' thilld •••f .t! l t. tt ', I i l-li&lt;j
h ll ,t • , [••' • :• l_ll11 t •t
" 'II' pl, ~ ' t m.o;
t l~.
II•
, r d ,, t r. •, , 1, ,, . "' '" ·" u-, ,r ,,

II•• ' •

I"

f ~ t·l

'·

SAVE 1%

'

REALISTIC
SPEAKER
SYSTEM

LIGHTWEIGHT
STEREO
HEADSET

Reg. 79,50 Each

Reg . 21 :95

S49EACH

12~~

40-t 982

• Weighs Only 7 ozsl -.., '\..
Adjustable Headband/ • Genuine Walnut Ve••et•r • Soft Sponge Earcushionsl
Enclosure/
Big 10 Foot Cord/

• Floor or Shelf System/

SAVE.SAVE
21% 14%

SAVE
10%

REALISTIC AM . 2 -STATION
IU t·LA,Vl:IRADIOS ' WIRElESS
1N. 6 COLORS

Reg. 6.95

THE .PRICE IS RIG ..TI

5~t~

·. Pln'·am
IN YOUR

SPECIAL
PURCHASE

FREfliR

PRE·RECORDE
8-TRACKS

FRENCH CITY (Choice)

PREMIER BEEF
Cut, Wrapped, F(ozen a!ld Ready for your
·
Freezer.

SiDES ............... 73• lb.
.FRONTS ........... 63• lb•.
HINDS...............19c lb.
"Cut Right By Guy~
Who Know How"

SUPER TAPE®
1" REEL '

1200 FEET
•'•
'

We do custom l)'leat cutting. Call for your ·
appointment.

1" REEL

Rov. 2 6 6

3.99

. 44-1878

Reg. 3 1 9
4

'

79

44· t877

Rov. 4 3 2
8.49
44- '

NY Islanders at Pt111a
Washington at Detroit
Los Angeles at Atlanta
Pittsburgh at Montreal
Minnesota at Boston
· Chicago at St. Louis ,
(Onlyga messi:he&lt;juled l

SUPERTAPE
BLANK 8-TRACkS
45 MIN .
Rov. 2.59
172

44·842

90 MIN.
Rov. 3.29
219

44-843

45 MIN.
, fleg. 2.09

60 MIN.
Reo: 2.•!t

1~~17

.

166
44-815

90 Mlr.t.

--120 MIN.

Rov. 2.99

Reg. 3.59

199
44-816

239 '

2!!1

ANY 4 FOR $1
• ROCK, COUNTRY.
FOLK, POP/
o TOP ARTISTS/
o MAJOR LA BLESI

1976 PRICES ARE ON AVERAGE WITHIN 1" OF OUR LOW 1976 PRICES!
'

SILVER BRIDGE, PLAZA

Fridoy•s Gom" · .

T~NOY

NY RJ ~gets at ' Colorado
r IOnly game scbed~Je&lt;j)

'

••

•

~

,,._.

W1
}!
~t: .
......;.

-p - •
•' i

·

·

F

;;u:::~hne~ ~~~'ta:~~~ =~=~· t,~i;~;l;~;~;~~~;~~~~mmr:~~i~*~;1~;1:~~:l~:~:l=~*~;~t:~;~;~~;m~m~~~~l~~i~~~~~~~Hm;~~~;~~~~~;li~%l~J~~

"I believe that it's ln our

as ·ours."

Rose said he lookB forward
was taking this week's
workouts serloualy . The third w playing ln Philadelphia.
"It's a good ballpark toJdt
baseman fielded as many .
ground balls as be could get ln. The turf's hard, extra
l)l&amp;ch Ted .Kiuszewskl 'w hit hard. The ball goes through
to bini and made sure he got (the infield fo,r base hils)
ood. It's one of my favorite
plenty of time In the baiting
llparks wgo to."
cage.
Joe Morgan stepped into
"You can be a .400 hitter
and stW get in a rut going into the balling cage and rapped a
the playoffs," he said of the long llner.
llve-day layoff between · "Not outla here," ribbed
regitlar season and playoffs. teammate .Da'n Driessen. But
"That's why it's mandatory the ball sailed over the fence .
"What'd ya think," retored
to wcrk out· hard lhls week,"
" Work hard and play the ~fool-7 Morgan, "a liiUe
hard,'' he said, "and it'll' all guy hit it?"
Althou~h- Morgan
is
take care of itself." ·

-

Some of the Reds did
doubl$takes al workouts lhls
week wl\en they spotted a
extremely strong for hls size, man watkinS around the field
it's hls speed that's worrYing wearing a "Go Phlllles Go"
PhUadelphia.
hot clog vendor's hal.
"If I can gel on base, I can
He turned out w be Sian
steal off anybody," boasted Hochman, a sporla columnist
Morgan, who leads a base for the Philadelphia Daily
steallng-mlnded club. "The News, digging up some back·
ooe big thing we have that ground stories on the Reda.
they don't 1s base stealing
"I had the hat saved over
ability: It separates our team from 1964," he said.
from aU the others.
II was in 1964 that the Phlls
"Ii's got to.be an advantage performed lheir"lnfamoua
w be able w 'steal runs' folding act. Leading the
rather than have to get hits," league by 6\t games with just
he figured .
11 games to play , they
In a dozen· regular selison _ proceeded w lose 10 straight
games, the Reds stole a games and handed the
bases against the Phils . pennant loSt. Louts.

Pliils hope to stop Reds with strong pitching -

Iran favored in sales of U. S.. arms
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) _

Dissension may help ·Reds

'I

has artiflclsl resplraUon wblle w mate !IUf1' the industrial
" The governor
submitted these bills because wailing for· the inhalator tu,load-ls not shifted to Inhe thinks state government squad warrive. We ought to dlviduala, and that exlltlnc
can do something about do somethi!tg t8 save these Ohio industries are not hurt
unemployment and Ohio's industries."
by 'ootA!f.olate ftrms moving
economy," Moyer said .in
Wha t
the
governor. ln with an unfair ccmpetillve
rare testimony before a proposes is to grant tu advantage.
Jeglslallve panel.
reductions and limited
"We're looting fer guaran"lt doesn't make sense to exemptions to industries tees that taxeuren't going In
stand ·bY and do nothing," elpBndlng, moving to inner be shifted fmn bulinesl Ul
said the governcr's aide. city areas and purchasing . individuals,"· said Tablact.
'"i'hat's like watching a mall' new capital equipment.
.. · "They're going Ul hav~ U1
drown 'and not giving . Majority Democrat.!· want II'OVe II toll$."
· ,c

PhUadelphla managed only
two steals elf the Reds .

..

COMMNY
'I

"'

PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL

�"

2- The DaUy Sen~inel ,Mlddleport-Pomi'I'Oy, 0., Thursday, Oct. 7,1976 ·

Rhodes' development pla~s,.set for tU)ice-w,ee.k ly hearings
II)' LEE Ll!lONARD
UPI Slateh.,... Reparler

OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Tile
Ohio Hollie Ways and Means
Ommlt1ee has Gov. James
A. Rhodes' industrial
development legislation
. under study and plans two

bearings a week In prepare
for a final vote by Oct. 27.

The quesUon ia whether
that schedule ls fast enough
In suit the governor, who has

Today ls Thursday, Oct. 7,
the 28lsl day of 1976 with 85 In
follow.
'*Dflf()fJD-fO
DAIV 11Nf4Nfl
· · The moon is in its full
tNI
phase.
~QIUfOI
MIHII·MASON' A•fA
The morning stars are
tHIII'IIL. TANHfHH.&amp;
Mercury,
Sa turn and
I •« •1-1.
.oun HOiftiCH
Jupiter.
Cltrtdlt.,.
1
The evening stars are Mars
..... 11 ......... .,.. . .
a. ........ .,
lhe Otlle Wel'-y I"VWitll&lt;lnt C_,.,a)l.
and Venus.
1l1 Cewt St.,
Ohio 451M.
Those born oo tills date are
•~~~'"'"' Office Piton• tn.Ju•.
t~~tt•._. "'*'-m-lnr.
1 under the sign of Libra.
. a.c.IMII CleM ,oltqil , .... .t
American poet James
~•.,..Ohio.
Whllc6mb Rlley was. born
N.tloMIM•..-thlnt rlpreMnte"'lh.,
w...111 • O•lfflth c_,..,.,, tn(., 1ot. Oct. 7, 11149:
11,.111 """' 0.1 ...... Dl•., ur Thlr!l
On· this day in history :
A. ... N-Tort!, N.T. lMIJ .
i•
luiNcrlptfoll ,.,"1 0.11-r.-4 .,
In 1916, ln the most
con' ..r ......... enl .. ltie U CHit ,_
staggering
football defeat oo
.,..., lr MotiH' loo.tl• w'-ere c.rr!M
record, Georgia Tech
Mrvke " ' •-11•11111. One rttonth.
JUS, ly -11111 Ohio •IMI W. \le •• onj.
humbled Cumberland
Y-. IH.M: II• ...ontht. 111.11: lhr.j.
,.-th,, n .• . • ,..,......,. n•.N .,_: Unlversity, ~.
~I• .....,tM&amp;IJ~II; fhr-~t~ oftNII , U .H .
In 1961, a British airliner
'lu-.ulftiOI'I "'" ·~lu4M h,.,,
• crashd in the French
nm...•· ......
'
Pyrenees and 37 persons
were kiUed.
~.,,

~,

threatened to caU the enUre
General Assembly Into
opedal sesaton to pass tile
jobs-and-economy bllls
before the Nov. 2 electioo.
lndicaUons were after
Wednesday 's first hearing
that the proceas would be too
slow. The next hearing 1s
ocheduled for Oct. 12.
Rep. George D. Tablack,
D-Campbell, cgn\mlttu ·
chairman, sald be would.hold.

two hearings a week and vote assure

action by

both

cn the three Rhodes bills "or chambeTs hef&lt;n the eleclloo.
our alternatives" by Oct. 'll.
Moyer's testimony
That would stlU leave Ho1111e highlighted the lengthy

noor action and Senate hearing, attended by four
considerallon unlll aft~ lbe other staffers from the
elecUoo:·t
governor's office" and two
Thomas
J.
Moyer, cabinet members. II was tile
executive aulstant In tile largest contingent from
governor, urged acceleration Rhodes' ol!lce to attend a
of the hearing&amp; and said legislative hearing since the
Rbodes . stW might cau an gQV.mor began . hls third
·extraordinary
seas ion to .tmn ln January, 1975:
.

.

I

Sport Parade\

CINCINNATI (UP!) - "If in Philadelphia. .
Although Rose agreed
I lhoqght it would M!p,"
chuckled' Pete llalo, "I'd go report.! , of diuenslon
over there and :'ttnock . involving the P!lila' Diet
somebody 1n the' nose."
ADen
probably
were
Rose's tongue.jn.cbeelt .re- overplayed, . he agreed
mart waa bls way of saying dllselllion could definitely
I
hewouldn'lmlndifthePhila· hinder a club.
I'
"II would hurt a team Ute
NEW YORK (UPI) - Tlrey're known u Le AmazzCIIl in delphia Phlllies continued to
lbelr native lt.aly, wblch lranllalellnto lltber "The Am a,1 on be' caught up in the '*"'•becallile we're io clole
•" or ''1bt Hor••amen," 111111 II'• a good thing 8Uly Jeen ~ "dllselllion" that reportedly lmll," be ~· "But yet, the
dldn'lt.rwltatlhey Jrad toay or abe mlght've knocttjl ~m surfaced recently among (Oakland) ,Athletics won
IIODie players.
three world champiOIIIhlps
right 011t of their llllkles.
·
·
:
After aU, Rose figured, a · •nd they were always
Le Amaaanl-.. tlie llldy drivers of Italy. They don't look
Uke ,l.mullnlal aU. They look like relined Italian ladi.. and ~ltle in-118Jrting amooc the fighting among lliemsel¥1!1."
llalo, the oldes\_ man oq the.
lbey Jrave 00111e here l!i' a eerles of !fOiling racee against Phlla could help the Reds
when the Nalimal · League team at age 35 l\'bo still pjays
American women drlwn Ia the neit two weeks.
The Amuona thlnt wcme~~'a Db Is fer the blrda. '11iey aay playofta begin Saturday rJghl lilte be's the young_eet, J)so
Jlllllle ~ Kine, and aU thole ...- who go aloof will) her,
'
can haft lt. The Amazon~ wouldn't cbanp the way the are lor·
lll)'llriJw and the ny lbey _,. II the way Ill women !lied wbe ,
· "A woman baa her own role In life IJII['II'a better that abe
llleb to II or elle abe beccrnea neurollc," said one of the
ltlllu lady driven, Giovanna Slotto.Pintor ol Rome, current
Garber, Ron Schueler !llld
wcrldcllanqtlolllmateur drl'ltl'aa welluatepdaughter ctfthe PIULADELPHIA (UPI) ltlllu amben•dcr to the United NatiCIIII.
,
The · National League .Wayne Twitchell, and some~
'AU the Amar.ona ~It pretty much t!Je ny Giovanna st.otto- championship could be woo limes reliever and starter
Pln~M did.
• · ,,
1
oo the legs of the anctnnati TCDlllly Underwood.
Ozark wW start lellhender
.''TIIere-.. aome women IIi lt.aly who believe they should be Reds or the anna of the
Steve
Carlton, :lll-7, in the
equal wltlr !Mil .In every l'l(!ard, but generally they are Philadelphia Pbilliea.
frustrated,", ofltnd Lo~edanna Moretti, who founded The In the best-Gf.flve game flrsl game and follow with
Amazocut 10 yean ago and now captains' tile Italian. team. playoff 8erles which beglna righthander Jim Lonborg, 18"Mind )'!IU,,I'm llpa8king for. ~If, not for aU the wotpen in Saturday night, the Reds 10, in the second. Both ate
Italy, but I Cion 'lite anythlna wrong With 11 woman staYing a expect to run the PhUIIes intll former Cy Young Award
,.
1;tep behind a man. In Italy, we enjoy being wcmen. 1we•ve • submllsioo as lbey did last winners.
But with the strength iii hls
beard about Billy Jean King and her fight ferJ:en's year In sweeping the
aquaBty, but we'n happy u we are.''
·
Pitlaburgh Pirates thr~ bullpen .and with a . short
series, Ozark BB).'B "you
· Loredana Moretti ls COftlidered the ''Qieen of the
10111" straight games.
.
becauae ltle has been driving trotters lqlaer than any ali them. The Reds' Joe Mgrgan, who might have to go and gel your
Since aU five lllvlled hen by the U.S. Trotting Allociation had 60 stolen bases ln the starter a llttle sooner than
are.amateunanddrlveonlylorfun,notmooey,that'stbeooly regular season, said, "The normal" if they get in
lhlng they will (lei out of their races against the American &lt;11e big thing we have that trouble.
profeaalonslwomen driven. Plenty of fun, but no IIIOney.
they don't ls baSHteallng • "I can bring in Schueler In
Here In the United States, there -.. approtdmajely two ability. It separate&amp; our team . finish an inning," Ourk said,
"hit for him and go w
dozen wcme~~, who are licensed proffilsional jockeys, and from all the others."
countleaa others, who handle hones lq other capadties, but But Phillies' manager T.witchell."
'
Twitchell, who saw Utile
tbert ia oo1y one professional ~ 1n aU of Italy and hetname Danny Ozark beUeves hls
. lsl'lzlanaSoat
...
.· ,
pitching strength, actioo in the first half of the
KettyTabakov wuaptalnlng,alJ lh1s In New York's l:entral p&amp;rlicularly in the lllllpen, season but came back ln the
second half for a 3-1 record
Park where the AmaZOIII were having their picture taken will prevaU.
c!UIIered. around an l11'e&amp;f~ ~· named Wlek.: Carla "I've got five or six guys and a 1.74 earned ,.run
Guicll ot Bolapa, f01111gest of The Anljjjjr11s, had climbed into there who have clone it aU average, would then be uited
the BUlky and when the photographers Ui'ged her lo drive hlm year,'' . Ozark
s•id as long relief. · This would
in an adjacent cinder path,l!be obliged, only whave tile wind Wednesday as the PhUlles leave McGraw, a ~nder,
keep blowing up her skirt.
went through a morning and rlghtllanders Reed and
''0 DiO!" ltle kept eiClaimlllg.
.
workout In the rain and under Garber stiU in the bullpen, or
Upon dismounting, abe explained l!be's the daughter of an the Ughts al Veterans Underwood, a lelthander who
llljiY start the third game.
attorney who owns a stable of trotters. !pbe has been driving Stadium.
Reed. says the bullpip ls
about a year-«nd-a-llalf and has scored seven vic~l~s 1n 20
Ozark was referring to Ron
ready.
"When thai phone
starts.
•
Reed, Tug McGraw, Gene
The Amarooa' lint stop m their tour will be at the ~ MUa
racelntct in Lalag1ca, Ky., where lbey will drive 1n an

Taft campaign-s for support by·labor in Ohio
- ··

~oy ,

COLUMBUS

.

(UP!)

meeting of the council.
Democratic nominee
Mettenbaum drew sharp Melzenbaum appeared in the
dilltinctioils betweeh lh~lr afternoon, afl!lr the podium
campaigns for the U.S. had been decorated with. a
Senate Wednesday in lllge peanut, painted stmnar
separate appearances before • to the U.S. flag, and lettered
the Ohto Slate Building· and "Carter-Mondale."
Construct,ion
Trades ~ "lamhereasklngforlabor
' Council.
support," said Taft, citing hill
RepubUcan nominee Taft, Senate vote in favcr of tile
who is running for reelection commoiHiilua picketing bill
lo a second sil-yea'r tenn, eagerly supported by
spoke before a morning organiZed
labor
and
Robert Tall Jr. and Howard

b

eventually passed by
Congress. President Ford
vetoed the bill.
.
"If he voted ooce in hls We,
I'll give hlm credit for lt,"
said
Melzenbaum
in
ref~rence to Taft's support of
tile lel!islation . "By that one
vote he was obviously
courting you.
11
1 think, however, you
should take the ~otanty of his
votes," added M:etzenbaum,
a former lobbyist for lhe
AFIJ.CIO. "You know where I
starxf.n
Taft also noted hls suwort

for several federal projectS
which he said brought
millions of dollars w Ohio.
"That means jobs -and jobs
are what· we need ln Ohio."
Taft said·one major difference between the two main
candidates in the raee (also
running are .Socialist
W&lt;rkers candidate Mellasa
Singler, Socialist Labor
candidate John O'Neill ,

......
~ .

"

Independent candidate
Enuna Lila Fundaburk and
American Party candidate
Donald Babcock ) was
defense spending.
"My opponent vote4
against the B-1 bombeT and
has proposed wcut $15 bllllon
from the defense budget,",
·said Taft.
Metzenbaum asreed with
the $15 billion figure, but said
''nowhere have I indfcated a
cutin the number of people'in
the military and nowhere
have I indicated approval of a
cut in any weapons system."
Melzenbaum said the
· defense department could
save $15 billion by putting out
defense
contracts
to
competitive bidding and the
elimlnalion of cost ov.erruns.
' Each candidate devoted
most , of hls lime to lbe
economy. Metzenbaum
f a ·v o r s r e d u c i n g
unemployment by using

.

.

"goverilment as an employer
of last resort" Taft thinkB
private induslty production
carl be expanded In absorb
unemployed workers. '
"The number one Issue in
this campaign ls refuellng the
economy without doublMigit
Inflation," said Taft.
Melzenbaum quipped the
"one 'objective in hls We"
was w"get rid of four.:tetter
words in WashingU!n - -like
Ford, Dole and Taft."
At a news conference on the
Statehouse steps before hls
30-minute council speech,
Metzenbaum said he was
against voter adoption of
Issue 6 oo tbe Nov. 2 ballot.
Th a I
p·r o p o s e d
Constitutional amendment
would require the legislature
to hold public hearings and
decide whether w allow the
construction or expansion of
any nuclear powered utility
facility.
.,.
To expect the legislature In

'

.

.

decide the nuclear. aafety
question, said Melzenbaum,
1s to ''fool the people!' He
said tile legislature does not
have the expertLse waddress
that topic.
·
Metzeilbaum sald be favors
tw o other energy-related
·l.isues on the ballot. One
would require utilities -. w
furnish al cost w realdeilUal ..,
customers the first 400
, kilowatts per month of •.
electricty and the flrsl 30,001
cubic feel of natural gas per
mooth.
The second Issue would
establish a , nonprofit
consumer offlce funded
through volunt.ary
contributions In fight utility
rate increases.
All tllree· of the energy
Issues on the ballot·are being
challenged by
Utility
companies who filed all, Ohio
Supreme Court suit to take
the issues off the ballot.

'

destroyers to Iran are much
Jinuny Carter; calling the more highly sophisttcated
United States ••the arms than the Spruance class
merchant of the world," in- · destroyers that are preS.nUy ·
dicaled 1n his debate with delivered to our own Navy.
President Ford that tran 1s ' "This is ridiculous and it
getting prefer enH a 1 ought 10 be changed."
treatment 1n arms sales.
Ford did not challenge
. "Iran," he said, "is going Carter's facts but said be
to get 110 F14s before we even believed Carter failed to
meet our · own Air Force "realize the need and
orders .for Fi4s and the necesslly for arms sales In
shipment of Spruance class Iran."

:!0.

~··­
.......
.........
~.

·- .::
,·
I •

..
= :-·

., .

.
'

',•....-:

~

"Could you slip in something to keep 'em awake 'til
November?"

'

·Butz wanted to dismantle

•

•

"Iran Is bordered very
extensively by the Soviet
Union," he said, "Iran has
Iraq as one of its neighb&lt;rs ...
lt'smyslrongfeellnglhatwe
ought lo sell armil io Iran for
Its own ~ational security and
as an ally, a strong ally of the
United States."
Ford added that the Shah of
Iran did not participate in the
1973 Arab oll eniliargo and ,
thai sales lo Tehran are "for
·

GOP likely to gain just one governorship

WASHINGTON (llPI ) ji
Republlearis, who hold leas
tllan ooe.thlrd of lbe nation's
statehouses, appear likely w
· pick up only one governorship
in' the Nov, 2 elecllons, a
effective enforcement" of United Press International
civi!'rigbts laws pertaining to survey·showed today.
federal hiring and contract
The ' assessment
of
compliance practices.
prospects ln the 14 states
, "The transfer Would electing governors this year
weaken the compliance was baSed oo available polls
enforcement structure by and political esljmales from
breaking the direct line of UP! bureaus.
authority between review
It showed Republicans capofficers and the Director of . luring three statehouses now
OEO who ls chief of civil held by · Democrats, and
rights enforcement and Democrats ousting the GOP
policy development , " in two, with one state rated as
Hawkins wrote to Butt.
a toasup. One GOP net pickup
"They would be placed would.change the lineup of
under authority of the governors to 35 Democrats,
direcwr of tile Office of Audit 14 Republicans and one
who bas no enforcement . independent, James Longley
responsibilities and of Maine.
'
peripheral civil rights policy
The biggest stale expected
involvement," he said.
In turn over ls Illinois, wliere
Congressiooal sources who Republican James Thcmpson
dillclosed the Hawkins letter holds a strong lead over
and the USDA position paper Democrat Michael Howlett.
said "lhe recent charges
Howlett, the Illinois
about Butz' record oo civll Secretary of State, defeated
rights enforcement raises incumbent Democrali" Gov.
some ol these things lo Daniel Walker in a bitter
differ.ent .Jevel than was primary
last spring.
apparent last year."
Th(lllpsoo, the former U.S.

attorney for n&lt;rthern Illinois, __. associates of Chicago Mayor DuPont, a Republican, is
' favored to oust .Democratic·
.made a big reputation iJI' . Richard-J. Daley.
·Chicago for prosecuting·· Otllerl~epubllcan gains'ex- ~ . llberman ,Tribbit,· who·
polilical corruptioll, pected this year are in has had woes with his prison
including a number of Delaware, where Rep. Pierre system in hls first tenn; and
Ulsh, where GOP Att&lt;rney
·.WASIDNGTON (UP!) - USDA, lhe plan would have
General
Vernon Romney
;
Congressional sources said merged OEO's chief complileads Democrat Scott
the Agriculture Department ance section, lnvolvlng 81 of
:
Matheson for the seat of·•
wanled last year In dismantle tile agency's 116 employees,
retiring
Gov.
Calvin
~·
ill! Office of Equal into the Office of Audit.
Ramptnn.
:;.
Opportunity but dropped the
The plan was dropped last
The · Democrats · are
!
plan because of strong Dec. 12 because of strong
expected to cut their losses
·•,.
o-,&gt;position· from some House opposition from Rep .
with wins in North Carolina,
•
and Senate members.
Augustus . F. Hawkins,
where Democratic Ll. Gov.
t-~
:
The disclosure came w chairman of the House
James · Hunt leads David
United Preu Inte,...iliiiuol
;: ' light Wednesday lollowlilg Education and Labor
don't believe that the Flaherty· for the seal of
Stanley· Michalak of Romanians consider
!
other charges that ousted subcommittee on equal
Chicago says President Ford themselves"domlnaled 'by the outgoing GOP Gov. James
,. , Agriculture Secretary Earl opportunities, and Sen·.
is "a foo1 " if he considers Soviet l)nlon. 1 don 't befieve Holshouser; an,d West
: . • · Bulz falled . lo aggressively George McGovern,. 0-S.D.
where Democrat
Poland free of Russian
be PoIes const'der Virginia,
:
pursue federal clvll rights
A posltiop paper obtained
thai.
t
Jay
Rockefeller
•ls believed
domination. Thomas Johnson themselvea dominated by the
: . laws 1n the administration of by UPI on the proposed
ill Cleveland says "I think Soviet ·union. Each of those the front-runner against
:.
USDA programs.
reorganization argued thai
former
Gov.
Cecil
he's fulla ..."
,..
Butz has denied the the merger wouid cut •costs,
countries is independent or Underwood for the seat of
the
second
televized
·After
charges.
autonomous.''
increase ·efficiency, and
debate between Ford "and
None of the early r-.ction fetiring GOP Gov. Arch
:..
The Agriculture curtail overlapping
Jimmy
Carter,
reactions
upheld that view, however. Moore. '·
: ~ . Department's
OEO
is paperwork and investigaUon.
were quick and bitter to And Gen. Brent Scowcroft,
Jl!ew Hampshire, where
11
,responsible for ensuring thai
We expect to save.at least
Ford's
descrlptloo
of
several
Ford's
chief
international
Republican
Gov. Meldrim
'
civil rlghla provisions are a· half-day per job, netting at
Thcmson
ls
challenged by
Eastern
European
countries
:; complied with 1n the depart- least 300 days per year," the
security adviser, told Democratic Slate Sen . Harry
as "independent" of the reporters the Rusaians have
·: ment's hiring practices and proposal said. ·
Soviet Unlon." ·
four divisions of troops ln Spanos, ls regarded as a
·· by those who receive grants · Hawkins, however, in a
Michalak, an engineer -Poland - although he said loasup race.
from, or otherwise do letter to Bulz last Nov. 11,
whose parents immigrated w . that did not contradict the
Slates where Republicans
· business
with,
the said the reorganization would
,
.
are believedaafe are Indiana,
Chicago
from Warsaw, was
·..~ : department.
be " counterproductive to
.President s lhests.
f where Gov. Otis Bowen leads
angered by the remarkS.
., ~ .: Had II been approved by
0
Mrs.
Rose
Wozjecho":)cz
Secretacy of Slate Larry
"The man's a fool if he
·~
10 lbe ' Conrad; Missouri, where
Chicago,
who
has
been
'
think's Poland is free of Uruted Slates 25 years, satd Gov. Christopher Bond 1s
Russian cootrol," he sald. "I Ford was "very wrong."
don't think anybody who
"It's not true. " she said. ahead of Democrat Joseph
thinks eastern Europe ls free "P0 land is litlle Russia. Teasdale; and. Washington,
.
a
where King County (Seattle)
has any business being ,
,EverylhingiSRusai
•
Russia.
Executive
John Spellman
President of the United There is no more Poland.
b h
Slates. He sold out eastern Only the name, the Polish appears to . .". a ead of
oland ..
Democrat Dixie Lee Ray,
Europe in Helsinki, then ian
guage, but no P
·
former chairman ol the
comes on TV and says
. One
recent
Polish Atomic Energy Commission
eastern Europe ls free. He's a· immigrant,
asking not In be. 1 th.
f llrin GO '
or e seat o re
g P
liar or .an idiot."
idenW1'ed ' spoke ln Polish.· . ' l'!ov
Daniel Evans
·.
ByLawreaceE.Lamb,' M.D. subject and there are many Radiologists used to get It size. However, that does not
Johnson, who married lnlo.
"Nobody is free from J•l t' '
'
''1'\'
Democrats
are
leading
for
•.•· . DEARDR. LAMB - fwant dHferenl types. WhBils true because of inadequate change the ultlmale ouUook. a Polish family, said: "I
... And the people ln seats they already hold tn'
• ~.· lo know something about of one does not necessarily protection against X-rays. Relapses occur ·and most think" lie's fulla s-. When Russia
Poland who are praymg thai
.
.
: ~.-~· chronic · myelogenous apply to another type. My
The patient may not have often the disease converts to you speak of Poland you So!neda til will be free Arkansas, where Gov. Dav1d.
.:
leukemia. There Is very little remark! here should not be any symptoms at all to begin a pll!lijre similar to acute cannot speak of an
Y ey
Pryor 'is far ahead of the
ind~ndent nation."
• again, they have to count 011 GOP's
Leon Griffith;
avaUable about II and most of applied generally to aU types with. The diagnosis may he' leukemia.
briansky the United States'? speak for Montana, where Gov.
... : the information Is about of leukemia.
made because of ~b- · Control of the illness
Dr. Lev E. Do
, them. What he sa1d was not Thorn
J dg
1 d
acute leukemia.
- The primary illsease in normal blOOd tell! sliowing aU greatly improves the quality cbainnan of the National
hat th f 1.,
as
u e
ea s
ey ee ·. .
~ubllcan Robert Woodahl;
Thls happens to .be very chronic myelogenous the while cells. Or on a ofWeeventhoughwedonot . Captive Natioos Ommlllee w
Many
Lithuania~- ·Nirth Dakota, where Gov.
close to my heart as ~meone leukemia is . an enonnous routine examination the large have a final cure. 1 wil1h I andprofesaorofeconomlcsat
Americans, qwle vocal m Arthur Link ls
ahead .of
I love dearly has it. He 1s on ~ceasive production of part apleen may be noticed. Pain c6uld give you a, more op- Georgetown University in opposltioo
w
the Helsinki GOP challen•er Ri h · d
medication. It is ' a very 1lf the' white blood cells. You may occur mthe spleen lf an tlmlstic report but we stlU Washington, said be was pact also seemed stunned by
.
o
c ar
frightening lllne!!~ as.lt hu ill&lt; _·no!'!J!I!)y • IIAY_
e. ~l!l_lwo: _ area of the.spleen is damaged havH lll!lg 'IDY tQ,go before "shocked ,to hear President Forcios statement.
Elkin; Rhode Island, where
:i""'" : Upt and dofowns. Ht.r)J-tolaUy major groUIJS ~f. white cells, acutely from the clogging of we .can CIUl' completely many Ford state and even 1ry to
"He's damn crazy," said veterart Ll. Gov. James J.
•unaware w!!J111Mi has.
those aasociated'wt\h. acute 1Jie clrculatjon to part of 11- serious illnesses. Th&amp;t 1s why defend ihls preposterous Vytautas Lapinskas, a Garrahy IS the favorite over
; " .- ..
He got the Wness at age 19 Infections which we 'fllll.,saU ·causing what we call an in· support is needed for study of statement ... "
Chicago resident. "He's up CransiO(l l\18Yor James Taft
; .- , · and now 1s 21. He wa, in a the myelocte group and thii!e. farct of the apleen.
cancer and leukemic
"In my judgment and thai there talking abOut how free U1 succeed~. Philip Noel ,
couple of nlllliasiOJII. Now be produced mostly by lymph
Fatigue may be an early dlseasea.
of millions of Americans thai
And he
. and 1 Vermont,
where
says eastern Secretary of State Stella
1s back on medication and hls gland&amp; or the lymphocytes, 'l)'mptom, but 1 hasten to
Those who want' in· statement was lncredi)tle," we are.
Europe is free. I wonder if he Hackel Is in line w become
spleen Is swollen again. . Ovefproduclion of the !IOinl out again that fatigue ls fonnation on the anemias can he added.
Ford's remark came after ::.ak?,ows what the word tile nallon's second woman
• I am sure there are hun· myelocyte group Is the a symptnm of many, many , send 50 cents for The Health
":j . _dreda of people .wbo are ln· feature of myelogenous disorders, from lung illsease Leiter number 4-3, Un· Democrat Jimmy Carter
Jeanne Kraukas, a Chicago governor· Inner coolest with
: •. ; lerested tn thts type 'of lel!kemia. The slow long term to psychiatric illne9ses. derstandlng the Anemias. criticized him for ceding college student, charged thai Richard SneWng, Ute state's
; ~ '; leukemia and are in the same form is classified as chronic Fatigue alone does not make Send a long, stamped, self· Russian control over Eastern . Ford has "already sold out House Republican leader for
; :• • ; situation as I. Why is II such~ .as opposed lo acute.
a diagnosis of leukemia.
addressed envelope for P.urope when be signed the Lithuania and all of eastern tile seat of retiring Gov.
, ~ · hidden subject? I know lbey
The cause ls not knOwn. II
About 90 per cent of the · mailing .. Address your letter HelSinki accords last. year. Europe and now be's just Thomas Salmon.
; ' ,'!.~ ·. don't know !oo much about it results in about 15 to :&gt;D per ca8es can be treated to to Dr. Lamb In care of this
"I don't belleve ... that the saying it's okay, theylre free
A thought for the day :
, .,•. ; but people Wteme look aU the cent of aU forms of leukemia. control most oflhe symptoms newspaper, ' P. 0. Box 1501, YugoslaY,s consider from Russia.·WeU.JIIat'sbuU
• "' , lime for hope.~
· We do know that excess and reduce the white count. Radio. City.. Station, )lew themaelveil dominated by the _ -. He's doneo.more for American poet James Whit·
PEAR . READER
radiation may cause lt. The spleen will decrease in York,_N\ 100!9': !' ..-·
.' Sovitl Union ," Ford said.. "I Soviet communism than - comb Riley said, "The ripest
Leukemia is a complex
·
peach·ls highest on the' lrS!l~:·
'
Lenin:"

equ~

opportunity office

:t

...

Poles ..find Ford
a liar or idiot

their security as well ·as
lturs.''
·".
Administration sources ac·
knowledged Corter's cbar(!e
as technically correct: Iran
wW gel F14s before tile
~ntagon ·gets aU it wants.
The sources asid, however,
that tile Navy ls getting
planes as ·fast as the
production' 'Schedale set by
Ccingr~ alloios.
Iran can get more planes
because
the
builder;
Grumman. Aerospace ·Corp.,
has facilities for a higher rate ·
of production than the Navy
wants, they said,
" The Spruance class
destroyers·• will'· be .tmpre
·SOJililllticated liecaitse Iran ,is
getting the ships at the end of
the produc !ion line,"' .the
source explained.. "They'D
have a biggerguir -an8inch
instead of a 5 inch. They may
have a missile. We don't have
them
yet
because
development hasn't been
completed. But when we do
get them, the older ships will
be retrofitted:"
.The United Slates ls selling
about $9 bUUm ln weapons,
training and ~onstruction
abroad each year, according
. ' figures.
to -Pentagon
''We have become the arms
merchant of the world. When
l ·his Republican
administration came into
office we were selling about
$1 billion worth of. arms
overseas ," Carter said.
"Now, $10to $12 billion worth
of arms (go) overseas w
countries which quite often
. use these arms wfight each
other."

ctmlng Sundlly evening. Aller that, they'll compete In 1Sarato-

gs Sprtnga, .N.Y.,

Gil the afternoon of Oct. 11; at 'foolters
Raceway, Yooken, N.Y., that same evening; The Meadows
near Pl"•burgh
...
, Oct , 1•., and aI Rooaeve lt Raceway,.,.
Wei.itbuey, N.Y., ()ct. 18. · .
.
... ;
Amotig those who made the trip' from Italy Wjth Tile
Ama·-· was Dr "--to Moretti the L ... band of the team's
ca-~He ia ':ateur drl~r ~who has a deep
IJIPreCiaUon ~ hls wlfe'l atll1 with .the trotters. ;
..,..._!lrl-1n••111 &amp;ently," ,he said, ......... with L.- .. head.
The young.glrll,.lbey go out there and !~rive Ute manjacs, not
knowing wltat they're doing aU the unie, but my ~e drives

an

- ·--

steady,. •. "

"Bellone cares about you" :

Better-Hearing ·
Consultation i
Mr. Jack Radcliffe, highly resptcted
Factory-Trained Hearing Ald Specialist
will be present at this event to be held at:

Lowe Hotel-Pt.
PleC...-nt,
W.Va.
.
. :F
. I
Friday, Oct. I 9 a.m. to 6 ...m.
l

'

Here's your chance to talk over your
hearing problem with a person who is really
an eXpert In his _field. Mr . •~adcllffe will
advise you on how to protect 11\e hearing you
still have and what you can do to co~serve
your ablllty 'to hear. He will also arrange a
modern hearing los~ test forjou to evaj~ate
your heari~Ja ability.• Hearlnt,ald use~s will
. have their aids cleaned and ~ildlusted: (any
make or model) at no cost or obligation.

seen

I

I

Campbell Conference

Patrick Division

Philadelphia

.1 o o 2 ,6

s

0 0 0 o·o 0
NY Islanders
0 00000
Atlanta
·o. 1 o o s 6
Smythe Division
w. 1. t. pis gf ga
Colorado
100242

'

Not even a Bellone aid_ can solve · ~~ery
hearing problem. Bul,--thanks to mqctem
technQ,jogy, most hearing problems ct~t\ be
helped better than ever before. Pli!ln to
attend now. Bring a friend or f11mlly
member with you. II may be the lonty
chanee 'Mr . .Radcllf!e wlllj!~er have toig:lve
you 'the special assls~ance alld attention. he,
personally ,can provide. Phone to ~ an
appointment now to reserve a. time andldate
most convenient for you.
'
j

o 0 ,0 0 0 0

Chl.cago
St. Louis
Minnesota

000000
010056

Vancouver

0100 s9

Wale• Conference ·
Norris DiviSion

w. I. I. pis gf ga
Pitts.
1 o·o 2' 9 s
Washington
1. o 0 '2 6 5
Los Angeles
00 1122
Mqntreal
.0 0 0 0 0 0
Detroit
000000
Adams DivisiOn

Cleve.
Boston'" ·
Buffalo
Toronto
~y

· w. 1. 1. pis gf oa
0 0 ,1 1 2 2

o o0 o oo
~ o"
o·o o o

'

Specialist to attendi

NHL Standings·
United Press tntemlllionat

NY Rangers

I

I

interest, and ln tbe inll!real oi
Israel and ·Iran and Saucli
Arabia to sell arms to those
countries," Ford responded.
"lt'sfor their security as well

w. t. t. pts gf ga

.

r

DR. LAMB

Leukemia is complex disease

.

"

BATTERIES ON~-H-LF PRjCt
.
'

.

".

0 10 02 4
WedhesdaY's Results

For Home Appointment call the hotel.

!

Rangers 6 Minnesota 5
Pittsburgh 9 Vancouver S ·

Los Angeles 2 Cleveland 2
(Only games scheduled)

[

Thursday's Games

·~-·.·

•••

•
••

I

-•

rings, each ooe of us hopes it
is fer him," he .said.·
The former National
Basketball Association
player was effective against
the Reds until the last series
in · Cincinnati, in which the

PhWies lost three out of four, the five days between last
and he ·is anxious lor another Sunday 1s regular season
finale and the Saturday night
crack:
Whatever Ozark does, he ls opening of the playoffs is "too
anlious to gel started doing long a period. It's difficult to
find something to do .
·
il.
"You have five days w
The Phlllles' manager said

•

M~i
artt'.n l'k
l ed W:
•··
KC
'
.. S urass
~!il

~:\::

:~:~::.

Ml
~::~:~

~·~:-:
«·::;
~~~:;

~'t

~~~:

W

e..

:~::j

.

~::::::;

:···:·,·
'·~·=·
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) ln hls right · shou)der, an
- New York Yankee aliment the Yankees'
Manager BWy .Martin says administration did not lind
it's a shame the beat graas ln out about until mid·
the major leagues bas ~ September.
replaced by the American
"He missed ·a turn then
League's only artlflclal turf. when he got a shot and" has
Martin's Yankees open the come back to pitch g'ood
AL playoffs at Kansas City on again," said Martin. "He
Saturday on the artlli~l wasn't tllrowlng with the
surface of Royals Stadium. velocity he normally had bui
"George (Toma, the now bela the catfish of old.';
groundskeeper) uited to haye _ Hunter, who was 7-a ln
the best graas ln baseball Playoff and World Series
right here," Martin said actioo when he was with the
whUe hls team Worked out oakland A's, has had hls .
Wednesday . •'I wish he stW problems at Kansas City. He
did and I bet he does too. I bet has a 1-4 record in Roylls
he wishes ire took· care of Stadium and hlllone win was
green gra., lnsle8ci ctf having a 5-3 slx-llitter on A!l'll3b lhls
to palnlthe stuff lllre he does season. He attribute&amp; hls
now." .
problems w the arliflclal
- The artificial surface was sudace and mound doct«lng
ooe reason lbe Yankees carne by Toma, who makes. the
to town m Wednesday, lrylng mound harder than Hunter
to get in three days of likes.
workouts before the best.Of·
"He fixes lbe mound the
.five playoffs open.
way their pitchers ·want it,"
The Yankees opening-day said Hunter, who pitched in
startlngiBIIignmentwlllgoto Kansas Clty wlth ·the
Jim "Catfish" Hunter, wbo . ~thleUcs before lbey u\Oyed
was 17-15 wlth a 3.53 earned to Oakland. '.'That's the way a
run average. Martin said groundakeeper should do .it.
Hunlllr had some problems That's what be did when I
during the year because he waa bereand thal'slbe ny II
'"Ill! suffering from tendonllls ls supposed to be dme::

,

think about a lot of things,"
he said, "but they (the Reds)·
have tile same thing,
"We can' t wall to gel
started .! don't like the Idea of
silting around and thinking a
lot 1 " he said.

lha
DEEP CB/AUDIO PRICE CUTS!

5
SAVE 30

REALIStiC ®
DELUXE
MOBILE .
'
'
CB RADIO
Reg. 159.95

21·14 5

Lowes t pn co evo 1 0 11 RealiStiC s
TRC-24C 1 lllu m1 na1ed cl1ann el
se lec t o r a nd s , RF me t r w1t h b utlt -1n modula11 011
In dic at or. del ta-tun e sw ttcll A N L and n otse bla nke r.
PA capabilit y . dynam1 c m1ke . a ll crysta ls all c hann els and more '
There s only q ne pl ace yo u ca h find 11 . . Rad1 ~ Shack

'I·"''

.md

1 " "

CHARGE IT
At

R~d lo

Shack

,,.,jof otrh ''" ' thilld •••f .t! l t. tt ', I i l-li&lt;j
h ll ,t • , [••' • :• l_ll11 t •t
" 'II' pl, ~ ' t m.o;
t l~.
II•
, r d ,, t r. •, , 1, ,, . "' '" ·" u-, ,r ,,

II•• ' •

I"

f ~ t·l

'·

SAVE 1%

'

REALISTIC
SPEAKER
SYSTEM

LIGHTWEIGHT
STEREO
HEADSET

Reg. 79,50 Each

Reg . 21 :95

S49EACH

12~~

40-t 982

• Weighs Only 7 ozsl -.., '\..
Adjustable Headband/ • Genuine Walnut Ve••et•r • Soft Sponge Earcushionsl
Enclosure/
Big 10 Foot Cord/

• Floor or Shelf System/

SAVE.SAVE
21% 14%

SAVE
10%

REALISTIC AM . 2 -STATION
IU t·LA,Vl:IRADIOS ' WIRElESS
1N. 6 COLORS

Reg. 6.95

THE .PRICE IS RIG ..TI

5~t~

·. Pln'·am
IN YOUR

SPECIAL
PURCHASE

FREfliR

PRE·RECORDE
8-TRACKS

FRENCH CITY (Choice)

PREMIER BEEF
Cut, Wrapped, F(ozen a!ld Ready for your
·
Freezer.

SiDES ............... 73• lb.
.FRONTS ........... 63• lb•.
HINDS...............19c lb.
"Cut Right By Guy~
Who Know How"

SUPER TAPE®
1" REEL '

1200 FEET
•'•
'

We do custom l)'leat cutting. Call for your ·
appointment.

1" REEL

Rov. 2 6 6

3.99

. 44-1878

Reg. 3 1 9
4

'

79

44· t877

Rov. 4 3 2
8.49
44- '

NY Islanders at Pt111a
Washington at Detroit
Los Angeles at Atlanta
Pittsburgh at Montreal
Minnesota at Boston
· Chicago at St. Louis ,
(Onlyga messi:he&lt;juled l

SUPERTAPE
BLANK 8-TRACkS
45 MIN .
Rov. 2.59
172

44·842

90 MIN.
Rov. 3.29
219

44-843

45 MIN.
, fleg. 2.09

60 MIN.
Reo: 2.•!t

1~~17

.

166
44-815

90 Mlr.t.

--120 MIN.

Rov. 2.99

Reg. 3.59

199
44-816

239 '

2!!1

ANY 4 FOR $1
• ROCK, COUNTRY.
FOLK, POP/
o TOP ARTISTS/
o MAJOR LA BLESI

1976 PRICES ARE ON AVERAGE WITHIN 1" OF OUR LOW 1976 PRICES!
'

SILVER BRIDGE, PLAZA

Fridoy•s Gom" · .

T~NOY

NY RJ ~gets at ' Colorado
r IOnly game scbed~Je&lt;j)

'

••

•

~

,,._.

W1
}!
~t: .
......;.

-p - •
•' i

·

·

F

;;u:::~hne~ ~~~'ta:~~~ =~=~· t,~i;~;l;~;~;~~~;~~~~mmr:~~i~*~;1~;1:~~:l~:~:l=~*~;~t:~;~;~~;m~m~~~~l~~i~~~~~~~Hm;~~~;~~~~~;li~%l~J~~

"I believe that it's ln our

as ·ours."

Rose said he lookB forward
was taking this week's
workouts serloualy . The third w playing ln Philadelphia.
"It's a good ballpark toJdt
baseman fielded as many .
ground balls as be could get ln. The turf's hard, extra
l)l&amp;ch Ted .Kiuszewskl 'w hit hard. The ball goes through
to bini and made sure he got (the infield fo,r base hils)
ood. It's one of my favorite
plenty of time In the baiting
llparks wgo to."
cage.
Joe Morgan stepped into
"You can be a .400 hitter
and stW get in a rut going into the balling cage and rapped a
the playoffs," he said of the long llner.
llve-day layoff between · "Not outla here," ribbed
regitlar season and playoffs. teammate .Da'n Driessen. But
"That's why it's mandatory the ball sailed over the fence .
"What'd ya think," retored
to wcrk out· hard lhls week,"
" Work hard and play the ~fool-7 Morgan, "a liiUe
hard,'' he said, "and it'll' all guy hit it?"
Althou~h- Morgan
is
take care of itself." ·

-

Some of the Reds did
doubl$takes al workouts lhls
week wl\en they spotted a
extremely strong for hls size, man watkinS around the field
it's hls speed that's worrYing wearing a "Go Phlllles Go"
PhUadelphia.
hot clog vendor's hal.
"If I can gel on base, I can
He turned out w be Sian
steal off anybody," boasted Hochman, a sporla columnist
Morgan, who leads a base for the Philadelphia Daily
steallng-mlnded club. "The News, digging up some back·
ooe big thing we have that ground stories on the Reda.
they don't 1s base stealing
"I had the hat saved over
ability: It separates our team from 1964," he said.
from aU the others.
II was in 1964 that the Phlls
"Ii's got to.be an advantage performed lheir"lnfamoua
w be able w 'steal runs' folding act. Leading the
rather than have to get hits," league by 6\t games with just
he figured .
11 games to play , they
In a dozen· regular selison _ proceeded w lose 10 straight
games, the Reds stole a games and handed the
bases against the Phils . pennant loSt. Louts.

Pliils hope to stop Reds with strong pitching -

Iran favored in sales of U. S.. arms
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) _

Dissension may help ·Reds

'I

has artiflclsl resplraUon wblle w mate !IUf1' the industrial
" The governor
submitted these bills because wailing for· the inhalator tu,load-ls not shifted to Inhe thinks state government squad warrive. We ought to dlviduala, and that exlltlnc
can do something about do somethi!tg t8 save these Ohio industries are not hurt
unemployment and Ohio's industries."
by 'ootA!f.olate ftrms moving
economy," Moyer said .in
Wha t
the
governor. ln with an unfair ccmpetillve
rare testimony before a proposes is to grant tu advantage.
Jeglslallve panel.
reductions and limited
"We're looting fer guaran"lt doesn't make sense to exemptions to industries tees that taxeuren't going In
stand ·bY and do nothing," elpBndlng, moving to inner be shifted fmn bulinesl Ul
said the governcr's aide. city areas and purchasing . individuals,"· said Tablact.
'"i'hat's like watching a mall' new capital equipment.
.. · "They're going Ul hav~ U1
drown 'and not giving . Majority Democrat.!· want II'OVe II toll$."
· ,c

PhUadelphla managed only
two steals elf the Reds .

..

COMMNY
'I

"'

PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL

�.·

.

•

.

•-The DaUySentlnel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursd•y, Oct,7, 1916

-1be n.tJy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Thursday, Oct. 7, 1971

'

'

· Gura .wants NY

Marauders take on·· winless Waverly
By Grtg Batley
Coach Charles Chancey
and hi! Meigs Marauders
travel to Waverly Friday
evening to do battle with the
charges of Coach John
Burehlnal. Both clubs are 11-1
in league 'a ction ; the
Marauders are I.J overall,
the Tigers are ~ . Waverly
was picked by the leagl·.~·s
r;oaches and sportsca5\er~ to
·finish in the ~llar of the
SEOAL and Meigs wa s
tabbed as proliiible finishers
or.2 place above the Tigers.
Friday's c6ntest should be
a real battle'
La5\ week Waverly fell to
Athens 2M in the league
opener. Thei r ba ckfield
averages 170 pounds, . but
stalwart halfback· Chuck
Thompson iB out with a
broken ankle . He'll be
replaced · by senior Kevin
Silcott, and the re5\ of the
. backfield will consist of
underclasamen. Sophomore
quarterback Lorne Weeter

'

·'

NEW

0

...

..''

Pancakes

.

Danish

,.'

•

.•

'

up agauist Jackson and came will average more than strength.
· and classmate Rob Leffler away empty-handed.
Waverly 's defensive front
Arnold and Wilford will he ·
will be at the other hallhack
At least three starters bad wiil be Allen Stewart and Dan the tackles on defense also,
position. Junior ·letterman not practiced through Granda I on the ends. Stewart and at the defertsive ends will
Randy Thomas will be at Wednesday and may not has been the receiver lor .be Granda! and possibly
wingback.
play ,
A four!~ ·- ls ·mo5\ of Gum'Uerlal!. Senior DeMis Wolle for Wheeler
Four lettermen will be on questionable. Other reserves Ra,o Wilford and jWiior Brent Thomas, who has been ill.
the Tiger line that averages also have been ill.
Arnold will again be at the Rick George and " T!!Jl.
just 160 lba. (Meigs will start
So uthpaw quarterba ck tackle spots while at guards Thomas ·wlll be the cora defensive line against them George Gum will he at his wiil be Duane Weber and nerbacks, and Stewart and
that averages 1~. ) ,
spot, and Rick Johnson will Dave Miller, both sen ior junior Brent Stanley will be
Regular center, Greg be his center. The Marauder lettermen. Arnold has been ill the llnebeckers. Randolph
Williams has been out with offense generated .bar ely · and may be r~li~ved by stan and Coats will go both ways
the flu , so his status as a over 100 yards last week, so . Starcher, from the .defense. as they are also the defensive
starter is still questionable. Coach Chancey will be
On defense will be the same hallhacks. Illness has made
Other ...l~.liWIJ~n besides _ looking to lmprQ~e over that. lineup with two possible Brent Stanley questionable.
Willlams are Craig Towler Wingbeck Steve Randoiph, .. exceptions. , Co-c aptain
Meigsownsa5-ledgeinthe
and Dave Welch at the ends tailback Ron ·Coats, and middle guard Stan Starcher · series between the .two
and at right Iackie wiii be Jlm fullback Dan Buffington were ·wfll be back at his spot after teams, and last year the
Williams. Players getting a stymied last week by the being out for two weeks due to Marauders knocked over the
' 5\al!in~·'·nod ' just this year
Jackson defense, getting jUst a leg injury , He saw some Tigers 37-7. So the Tigers will
wiil be left tackle Tim 54 yards total rushing.
limited action la5\ week, but be looking -to belance up the .
Beeman, right guard Bill
1
On the offensive line that this . week he'll be at full score.
Childers, and left guard Dave
Blaum. Jeff Noble will also
see some action at one of the
ends.
Meigs, if the nu bug abates
. COLUMBUS (UPI)
place mar gin this week previously . unbaaten Uma
· in tlme, could start about the
same offensive team as went R e lentle ss Cin cinnati jumped to 48 points, with Senior 51).6 Friday night.
· Moeller, mowing down Arllngton moving into the No ,
The rest of the AAA top ten
everybody , in iis path, 2position from ils tie lor third consists of Youngstown
continues Ul hold a huge lead last week. Carey, an ~loser Mooney in liftit, Zanesville,
•
over ruMerup Findlay in the to Marion Pleasant, fell from Allian ce, Elyria, · Lorain
AND GOODI
second week of balloting in second weighth, whlle Black Senior and Middletown.
the
United
Press River moved t~to third,
Four of last week's AAA top
lriternational Ohio High Newcomerstown to fourth ten did the disappearing act
School Board of Coaches' and BlufftOn to fifth, all ~ith after suffering their first
Clasil AAA football ratings, 4-0 records. 'I
losses of the season. They
The , Crusaders, 56-0
Rounding ,oul the lllp ten in were Niles McKinley, Warren
winners over Cincinnati Class A are Sandusky St. Haroing, Lakewood St.
WiU1row last Friday night, Mary's in sjxth, followed by Edward and Akron Garfield.
lost some of last week's Cedarville, Carey,
St. Marys Memorial, New
gigantic margin as expected, Ridgemont and South -- Lexington , C.olumbus
but still own a 389-293 edge Charleston Southeastern. Watterson and Urbana hold
over the Trojans.
Ridgemont, playing without lite fourth· through seventh
Moeller' s superiority is star tailback Greg Whetsel, places in Class AA, lite same
shown by the fa ct the lost to Mechanicsburg.
spots they enjoyed last week .
Crusaders picked up 34 of a
GahaMa Lincoln moved,
Unbeaten Shelby moved
possible 41 first place votes, into 'the third spot in AAA into the No . 8 position, Huron
probably a record in the shead of Princeton, even into ninth and Bellaire,
usually regionalized voting , though th e once-beaten falling one spot, claimed
although such records are not Vikings overwhelmed tenth.
kept.
r
Also holding on to their No.
I ratings claimed in last
week 's first balloting of the
year were Cin cinnati
Wyoming tn Class AA and
Newark Catholic in Class A.
All three of the leaders are 4COLUMBU S IUPil - This 39 ; 12. Columbus DeSales Ill

Wyoming tops AA ratings

•'

Bacon
Sausage

Breakfast Now Being Served Mon.
• •
thru Sat., 7:00 till 11 A.M.
••
Sunday, 9:00 A.M. tiJI 1:00 P.M.
"A.Great Way To Start The-Day"
Country Cousins is located at
698 W. Main St. next to
Jones' Boys
I •
f

' •:
,
: '
''
•
•'
&gt;

\

I

•

.•.'

LAST 3 DAYS

) ,

••

nfURS., FRI. AND SAT.
OCTOBER 7-3-9

~·

"'
."''......

...••
~.

••
••
,

..
,. .
,.."'·..
....

,..
''"

.••..

;-.

••
.l:
••
·=
'3•·

,.' .
•

•

0

•

•
•
••

....
,,.
'

'

.,•.,.
,,
I

•,1-:

. ''
.

week ' s Uni ted Pr ess In ternational Ohio High School
~oard of Coaches football
ratings w ith fir st place votes

28; 13. St. Clairsville 26 ; 14.
(1 1e) Reading and M inerva,
22 each ; 16. Oregon Cardinal

Slr ilch Il l 19 ; 17. Orrville Ill

and won -los t record s in

parentheses :
Class AAA

Team
Points
1. Ci ncinn . Moeller (34 4-0) 389

2. Findlay 12 4-0l

· 293

3. Gahanna Lin coln (4 -0)
4. Pr inceton ( 3-1)
5. ·Young stow n Card 1na l

Mooney (4-0I

189
178,

124
103
85

S. Elyria (4-0)
9. Lorain Seni or ( 14-0)

Volleyballers

·-·

'

Wyoming, however, is
getting a strong challenge
from once-beaten Akron St.
Vin cent-St. Mary, which
swept w within four points of
the Cowboys this week, 166162. Ironton, runnerup iast
week, fell to third in AA with
144 points.
Newark Catholic's fir st

6. Zanesv ille ( 1 4-0)
7, Alliance (4-0)

•
'' '
'
' ••
' •
'•
•' ••

•

0.

Class A
Team
I. Newark Calholic
·2. Arlingto~ (3 4-0)

13

Second len : 11 . Cent.er&lt;JI IIe

4: Newcomerstown (3 4·0) 108

62 ; 12. Ni les Mc Kin ley 58 ; 13.
Kettering Fairmont West (1)
49 ; lJ. Warren· Harding 43 ;

break even in·

5. Biufftoo (l' 4-0)

·

3-way match

0l

17. Akron Garfield 32 ; 18 .

0)

each; 20. (lie) Groveport Madison and Walsh Jesuit , 24

Heights 41 ; 12.j,l.elpslc 33 : 13.
Spencer v i lie
32 ;
14.
M echanicsburg
29;
15 .
Centerburg 27 ; 16. Ashtabula

Class AA

I. Wyoming IS&lt; OJ
2. Akron St . Vincent.

St. John Ill 26; 17. Tiffin
Calvert 24; 18. Woodsfield Ill

Points

St. Mary (4 3-ll
J. Ironton (3 4-01

4. St. Marys Memona l (3 4·
0)
.
5. New Lexington (4·0 )

166

20 ;

162
14&lt;

1)

9. Huron I I 4-0l
10. Bellaire I I 3-ll

Portsmouth

19.

Catholic 17 .

98
91

Valley North, Oak Hill. Twin

Valley North, Versa ill es, St.

84

Fostoria

St.

Wendel in ,
Dalton, Fa irport Haber ( l) ,

57

.'

.•

• No appomtment necessa ry • Um1t: One spe cial 8 x 10
per child . Two per family • All ages w~l c o me • Addi·
ljonal pr ints a•iailable at reaso nable pr1ces • Groups at
$1.25 each additional child .
•

. ••·'

.••.••

. • tl

...:,.
•••
• II

48

Berkshire

Second ten : 11 . Brookvil le

Uniled ill.

and

'

I

COLUMBUS IUP II - The

Regi"" 2

l.

Findlay. 33.00 ;

.' '

Frem ont Ross, 28.25.

Class AAA

Region 3

Region 1

1. Stow Walsh Jesuit, 32.00;

2. Akron North, 31.00.

.•·

Region 4
1. Cincinnati Moeller , 39.00;
2. Kettering Fairmon t West,

. ;:

35.00.

tlass AA

'

.
I

:.;.
' tj
.··•)· ~...
1

'

,

1 Philo. 25.50; 2. Uhrichsville Claymonl, 22.00 ; 3.
Bellaire, 21.00; 4. Gallipolis ~

20.00 ; 5. New
,

Le~iogton,

19.00 ; 6. tronton ,,_jft.75 ; 7.

·

2. N.arysville, 24.00.
Class A
· Region 9

J, Itiel Ashtabula Sf . ·John

an.cl Cuyahoga .Heights , ·11.00
each.

69~

Region 10
1. Fostoria St. Wende.l ln,

18.00; 2. Blufflon, 12.50.
· ,: _::·,

pr.

Region 11

2.

J
• J

!1:

2. Elyria

I. Columbus DeSales. 30.00;

JUST IN-

• BUDGETEER
,. -.PANTY HOSE

'

~~;

~

2. Fostoria , 25.00.
Region 7

SALE

. ''

.'

::

l. Girard. 22.00 ;
Catholic, 21 .
Region 6'

Region 8

'

'

2.

1. North College Hill, 28.00 ;

I' I . I

I

contmue

1. Pa r ma Val ley Forge.
36.00 ; 2. Parma Senior , 34.00.

fir st 1976 Ohio High School
Athletic ASso ciation co mputenzed footbal._ ra t ings
with, including poll'l-.....t.Qtals :

I

'

•' • I•

•

Hanoverton

,:' Minerva . IS.ODf B. South
Point, l6.00;_.9."St. Clairsville,
14.25 ; 19-- tlebron Lakewood.
14.00.
'

:t•,.

·

l. Newark Cathol ic, 17.00 ;
Llc ~lng Heights, 16.oo: 3.

N'ewcom erstown, 15.00 ; 4.

PT. PLEASANT
RIPLEY
AnfENS
BELPRE

w ~~f~n~ot~o~H~o~ur~s:~~~1~2-~5~~~·;S~at~· ;1~~1;2~~~·-~~~

(tie) Mingo Junction and Q.lk

Hi ll, 13.00 each; 6. Woods·
field. 12.00; 7. Centerburg,
, ; .:;'\; B. Indian Valley North,

11 :00 · 9. Crooksville,' 10.00;

10. Beallsville, 9.50.
Region 12

1. West .}elferson. 18.00; 2.
(tie) Lewisburg Twin Valley
,•: ,

:-.; ..

:·:::

'•

Golfers
•

•

.. CHECK 'EM OUT
"

i ·:

College Football Forecast
By FRED McMANE
UPISporta Writer
Texas and Oklahoma Is a
sportsriv~lcy that makes Ali·
Frazier seem like a mutual
admiration society.
It begins in the high school
ranks where each college
tries to outrecruit the other in
the other's backyard. Folks
in Texas see red at the mere
mention of the word
"Sooner " and as for a
"Longhorn, " well, the only
place for one of those,
according to O~lahomans, is
hanging over the fireplace.
The fall madness, known as
the Texas.Oklahoma football
game, conies down to Game
No. 11 in the college football
series this Saturday at the
Cotwn Bowl ih -Dallas, and
this is the year Texas fans are
counting
on
Sooners'
dominance to end.
Oklahoma has won lite last
five games in a row, following
a streak in which Texas won
four straight. The series has
been pretty much like that
since lite post ,World War II
era. Texas, for example,
leads tbe overall series 4:1-262, but since 1945 tlje
Longhorns' lead is only 16-15.
The last two contests
between the . school! have
been remarkably close. Two
years ago the Sooners
squeezed out a !6-13 victory
and last year Oklahoma won
by only one touchdown, 24-17,
Which brings us to
Saturday and everyone
anticipating another Sooner
triumph. Oklahoma is 4-0

Midqjefleld Cardi nal, Burton

Region 5

' .

Sal~m .

Henry , West Liberty

77
72

North and Portsmouth Notre
Dame, 15.00 each.

.

wmnmg
The Meigs golf team
continued wiMing this week
with two victories. On
Monday at Ironton they had a
relatively easy time with the
ho5\a as they came out on top
150-171. Dale Browning, who
led the locals, was medalist
with a 37. Chuck Follrod
turned a 38, Lance Oliver a
39, Mark Gilkey a 41, and
Crenson Pratt 43.
Cary Fairchild led Ironton
with a 41, Bob Osbourne had a
42, Dave Ra.tiHf and Kevin
Fairchild each carded a 44,
and J&amp;f Linn had a ~.
.
In a lfiangular match at
Athens Tuesday Meigs won
over host Athens and Logan,
171 to Athens' 174 to Logan's
189. Those two wins put Meigs
all alone in second place in
the league with one match
left I&lt;T play,- that Waverly.
Crenson Pratt this timew&amp;B
the medalist with a 39.
Browning carded a 41, Oliver
a 44, Follrod a 47, and Gilkey
a 48. For Athens Karl Fry
shot a .0, Brian Lawson, a 44,
Steve Hensler and Mark
Finlay each 45, and Kevin
Goldsberry a 49, Logan's
Mike McBroom turned in a 40
while Tom Russell was next
with a 42. Dave Lehman was
at 51, Dave Stillwell ahot a 58,
and Ni\;l.ll.ow Jlll'lled in a 58.
That leaves Meigs' OV!'rall
record at 17-5 while their
league record is 12-.1.

a

'
'

the opening game Saturday.
Herzog said right,ltander
DeMis Leonard a native of
Brooklyn, N.Y..' would start
Sunday's second game. Left·
bander · Andy Hassler, who
earlier this season broke a
personal 18-game losi~g
streak, was expected to go m
the third game on Tuesday at
New York.
·
"I'm oot starting hlm ·be·
cause of lncentive," said
Herzog, "I'm startijtg him
becaUse he's the best.J've got .
It looks like he can stand the
pressure better than the
others.''
~-•.,,.,,,
The f:loyals won only two Of
their last II games and both
victories went to Gura.
Gura feeis he was never
given a chlmce by Martin,
when he played for Tesas.
Martin became the Texas
manager•·in 1973 and he let
Gura pitch one inning in
spring practice before
t&lt;ading hlm to the Yankees.
And when Marlin took over

the Yankees in !l'ldlfM..,
last year, one .li' hll lint
moves was to change the
Yankees' pitching rotaUoo
!r&lt;ll) a five-man rotaUon.to a
lour-man rotadon. Gura wu
the fifth man.
"I knew I was going to get
traded from the start," ~ld
Gura. "I kept bearing I'UIIIOrB
about Milwaukee but then I.
wound up with the Royals.
That was great for me."
Martin makes no bones
about why he got rid of Gura.
"I got rid of him at Texas
because he coUldn't get the
\JI!ll over the. plate," sald
Martin. "And I got rid of him
at New York because I didn't
feel he was as good as our
other starters. U I bad him
now I'd get rid of him again."
Gura can't understand
Martin's feellngs.
"Last year I bed 20 starts
wlth the Yankees and I
pitched poorly in lour of
them," said Gura. 11 He seems
w just remember those four
and forget the others."

Texas picked 20-17
over Oklahoma team

Others with ten or more
points: Columbiana, Indian

WHAT'S HAPPENING!

DASHIKIS!

Notre

Dame Il l 18 ; 20. Marion

6. Columbus Watterson (137. Urbana 12 4-0l
8. Shelly I I 4-0)

44

Second ten : 11 . Cuyahoga

each .

Team

86
51

10 Southeastern Clark (2 4-

and Lak ewood St. Edward; 30

93
87

9. Rldgemonl (3 ~ 11

(tie) Parma · Valley /'FOrge

In a triangular girlS'
volleyball match Tuesday
night, the Meigs girts broke
even. In the first match of the
night Meigs fell to Kyger
Creek in three games when
Kyger took the first one 15-7,
and Meigs bounced back to
take the second game 15-9. In
the deciSive third game,
Kyger finally came out on top
of the. see-saw contest 15-11.
The second match of the
night saw Kyger roll over
Jackson in · two games. 15-9
· and 15-11. Then it was Meigs'
turn for. a crack at Jackson
and the local gals came away
victorious in two games to
take the match. Meigs fell to
Jackson 15-9 in the first one,
but bounced back to tie the
match when they won the
second 15-9. Meigs then had•
an easy time as they coasted
to a 15-8 win the last game.
Meigs travelled to Belpre
for a match Wednesday.

:::
•..

104

6. Sandusky St. Mary' s (4-

IS. (lie ) North Canton Hoover . 7. Cedar vil le 12 4-01
and Fremont Ross, 36 eaCh; 8. Carey II 3·ll

•,

'.,.,

Points

(7 4 ~ 01 186
138
3. Black River (34·01 ·
lll

70
64

10. Middletown ( 3· I)

18; 18 . Cincinnati McNicholas
I I ; 19. El yria Catholic 16 . 20.
Dublin 15.
Other s with ten or more .
pomts :
Martins
Ferry ,
Cl eveland Holy Nam e, West
Brench ( 1), Hamilton Badin
( 1), Hannibal Ri v er , Cir.
devi lle and Bellefontaine .

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI )
- The biggest worry Kansas
City RoyalS left-bander Larry
Gura has about pitching
against the New York
Yankees in the American
League playoffs is that he
might get psyched up enough
wthrow the ball through the
screen behind home plate.
There will be no trouble for
Gura in getting psyched 'uphe.will be pitchijtg against the
YankeeS and Manager Billy
Martin, a man he feel! has
cheated him twice. •
"I wish I could pitch aU
three games again5\ them,"
said Gura. "When I pitched
against the Yankees before,
while I was warming up . I
didn't get one pitch over the
plate but then I setUed down
and did okay. I just hope I
don't throw the ball through
the screen this time."
Ro)\llls' Manager Whitey
Herwg Wednesday named
lite 28-year&lt;Jid Arizona State
University graouate 'to 5\art

thus far while Texas, though
Z-1, has looked unlmpressiV.
in two of Ita games, includin2
a season opening 14-131oss to
Boston College.
· But, the underdog is always
primed for this game and we
think there's a good chance
Coach Darrell Royal,'s boys
can spring an upset Saturday.
Oklahoma has been steady,
bul underwhelming in its four
games, and the time is ripe
for a Texas triumph. We like
the Longhorns to win it, 211-17;
with Texas' Johnny Jones
providing the margin of
victory.
Here's how we see the other
big games across the nation :
The East
Peim St. 17 Army 14-II
Cadets can protect Leaman
'Hall, they could turn this one
arolUid.
.
Syracuse· 23 Tulane 12-0rangemen's offense fiiiaUy
getting untracked. .
West Virginia 22 Temple
15- UniOlJS Mountaineers get
caught loqking ahead to
Boston College,
Pittsburgh 35 Louisville
Ill- Cardinals can't stop onetwo punch of Cavanaugh and
Dorsett.
· The South
Georgia 20 Mississippi 7Bulldogs have eye on that
Southeastern Conference
uue .
Alabama 36 Southern
Mississippi 6-Against the
weak sisters, Crimson Tide
looks very ~ormidable.
· Maryland
23
North
Carolina State 10-Terps'
Atkins outshines Wallpack's
Browi{
· TeMessee 20 Georgia Tech
17 - Vols trying hard w save
Bill Battle's job.
The Midwest
Michigan 37 Michigan St.
10-. Wolverines have too
much of everything for

'-

Spartans.
Dllnois 17 Minnesota 13-lllini more hardened from
tougher schedule to date.
Indiana 24 Northwestern
6- Wildcats should really he
in Ivy League.
Ohio St. 32 Iowa 6Hawkeyes can he beaten with
passes. Well, Woody?
The Midlands
Missouri 25 Kansas St. 3-Tigers' loss to Dllnois seems
more puzzling every week.'
Kansas '!I Oklahoma St. 71'Cromwell's Cru~ders" can
crunch it out.
Iowa St. 30 Utah 14Cyclones' offense is one of
best around.
Nebraska 22 Colorado 16Cornhuskers had better not
get too careless.
'
The Southwest
Baylor 21 SMU 7- Bears'
defense wins another one.
Navy 17 Air Force 10--Last
week's comeback against BC
bed to give Middies JUt.
LSU 18 Vanderbilt 7Tigers hard to beat on own
turLespecially at night.
The Ro&lt;kles
Arizona 30 Texas-EI Paso
7- Wildcats get a breather
before meellng Texas Tech,
Arizona St. 21 Cincinnati
12- Sun Devils might have
more trouble than they
bargained for against
Improving Bearcats.
Brigham
Young
22
Wyomijtg 21-Give Cougars
one-point edge for home field
advantage.
The Far West
California 20 Oregon IllGolden Bears wln on
passes •.
UCLA 31 .Stanford 14Bruins offense should . roll
against defenseless
Cardinal!. .
Southern California 37
Washington St: 6-Trojans
rounding Into top form .

retires McNealey
COJ;iJMBUS ~ The Boafd
ol Directors of Columbus and
Southern Ohlo Electric
Company on Oct. 6 ac:tepted
the realgnatlon of J.
Lawrence McNealey as
~ director and a member of the
,..uecutlve committee ef. ··fective .Nov. 16, 1976. ·. .
"'eNealey baa reached the
.. retirement age lor directors
-,- ~ aa required by company
"'bylaws. Deep appreciation
~ waa espre~sed for Me·
•• Nealey's able leaderahlp and
~ his 53 years of faithful un·
~, selflah service 19 the com: pany. The board further
"'elected McNealey to serve as
·~director emeritus of the

Company,
BenT. Ray, Executive Vice
President, was elected to fill
the poata of dlrecto• and
uecutlve coljlmittee
member upon the resignation
date of McNealey.
A native of Gallipolis,
McNealey received his
education at the Case School
of Applied Science In
Cleveland. He joined the
company in 1923 as a meter
reader and a wlreman in
Gallipolis. McNealey left the
company in 1942 to serve as a
Major in the , U. S. Army
Corps of Engineers and
returned in 1M6 to the post of
assistant ma.nager of the

company's .Outhern divisjon.
Since that time, McNealey
baa served as vice president
of operations, esecutive vice
president, president · and
chalnnan of the board. He
'1-etired from the post of
chalnnan in 1973. He has held
memberahlps and ollic,es in a
number · of professional
groups as well as civic
organizations. ·
Ray, a native of Glouster,
was graduated from the Ohio
State University in 1949 and
joined the company in 19~1 .
He bas served in various
capacities Including vice
president of employee

game.

1

relations and senior vice
president of corporate affairs. Ray was elected w· his
present po5\ of executive vice

. ATHENS - Awards for first recipient of an award to
signiflcant contributions in be presented aMually in
the field of health services in memory of Edward E. Davis
· Southeastern Ohio were the Foundation's only
1 made to five persons at the
president until his death in
eighth annual meeting of the late 1914. An industrialist,
Ohio Valley. Health Services banker, civic leader and
Foundation this week.
humanitarian was a native of
Honored were the four Oak Hill and instrumental in
trustees 'of the Mabel W. the formation of several
Jehklns Trust Fund In regional bodies for promotion
memory of the late and betterment of Southeast
Congressman• Thomas A. Ohio.
Jenkins, and Mrs. Maxine S.
Mrs. Plummer has been
Plummer, of Wellston , active in health and rural
BILL
executive director of the opportunity affairs in Ohio;
•••
Gallia, Jackson, Meigs and
especially
the
•
Community Mental Health Southeastern region, since
"
and Mental Retardation 648 the early 1960s.
Board.
Among
her
recent
The Jenkins Trust Fund achievements were directing
1258 Powell St.
was established in 1964 by the four successful mental health
Middleport, Ohio
will of Mrs. Jenkins. A&lt;i- tax levy campeigns in Galli a ,
ministerijtg the 'fund have· Jackson and Meigs counties;
been Mrs, Cynthia Evans, being the chief drafter of two
Lakewood; Mrs. Helen applications which have
•
Michael and Harold Jenklns, resulted in the construction of
'
Weliston, and Hudson Jef· mental health and mental
ferys, Ironton , The trustees retardation
treatment
beve coritribuied almost $1 facilities in Jackson and
million dollars to hea1th GaUia counties with capital
facilities ln the Foundation's investments of $1.5 million .
~llolleowners
health demonstration area .
The U. S. Department of
These include $327,000 in the
$3.million expansion and
renovation of Lawrence
County General Hospital;
$350,00 in the construction of
the Jenkins Memorial Health
Facility
at Wellston; $150;000
,,.11 u••
in the expansion. of the Oak
Hill flospltal; $40,000 · to
INIU.,N(I
O'Bieness Memo~r.la,Ji~-•
Hospital, Athens, and $125,000 By VERNON SCO'IT
Lit.C aavod acighllor,
toward construction of the
HOLLYWOOD. (UPI)
new
$525,000 Jenkins The ' television cop as prey
• Slale Farm is tltere.
Memorial Health Clinic · at instead of hunter?
S.FnFitttn~~c..lly~
That's
Bob
Stack ' s.
:;· ·
""""Ollr.e: ~ IIMWIII p 7570
Wellston.
.,
Mrs. Plummer became the interesting theory as he

FLETCHER

PH. 992-7155

"Seemdor

'1nsuranet fmm
State Farm- the
world\ largest!'

A

Health , Education and
Welfare kpproved her staf·
ling request for the three
counties in the amount of
$650,000.
Mrs. Plummer is currently
chairperson
of
the
Legislation Committee of
Ohio's Community Mental
Health and Mental Retar·
dation Association;
a
member of the Mental Health
Councils of Ohio Districts 7
and 8; a member of the advisory council of the Dayton
Children ' s Psychiatric
Hospital, and a member of
Meigs County Regional
Plarming COmmission 1
The U. S. Office of Opportunity awarded Mrs.
Plummer its Rural Service
Award in 1968. During 1970,
the Ohio Office of Op·
~ portunity, for which she
served as a regional direct~,)!':
honored her with a " Cer·
tificate of Achievement and
the Ohio Valley Health
Services · Founilation also
recognized her participation
in the Student American
Medical Association
program.

-~,

The bu tl ht: r. th e hahr and 1he ~.:andlt.'"llt.' k
maker wcrc·not trying to ~.· n n ~.: rv ~.: hu t watcr
und na tur al ga s when th l' )' Wl'l' t: in tha t
fablt!d tu b toge thcJ. But. th ~.:y wcr~ nn thr
right tra&lt;.: k.
Lc ~~ Wil ~h: ful u ~c uf h\l l water will wnsa vc natural ga~ AnJ that', nnp unant. he·
c_jme tlvc r half of America\ inJu:- . tr\' run:-.
\Jn na tural ga~. Milli on:- . ui'Jub.. an: at.,takr
BccaU'&gt;l' the , [wrtagc 11t' n ,!lu~;d gj1:- . _1., very
real anJ .g nm11ig. cntii.:aL
\
'
Your wutc r llL' a t~.:r b a gooJ pl &lt;.u:c to ~ t .tn
You call ~ave a lo t of · natu~al ga~ if you
follow j u~ t a fc.: w ~ i m pk ' ug~ I..".., !Hlll...,,
u~e o ne in ch lc~' h tll watl'r in ) 1\ Lif hath .

"I've been wantijtg to play
all along, 001 I understood
that I have to wait my turn,"
St. Clair said. "I've learned a
lot from watching the older
players on the line and beving
them tell me different moves
against different men, and
what not to use.
"I've picked up quite a few
moves and little tricks and
playijtg more will benefit me
and, 1. think, the team. I've
been doing my best on the
special teams, now I'll do my
best on the llne .
"One day I hope to be one of
the greata of lite game,"
Wide receiver Paul
Warfield, the victim of a
hanstring {lUll against the
Bengals, is now llsted as
"probable" for the game
against the Steelers.

~~ r

spend

lc:-.~ tim~

in the

~hu w eJ.

A leaky hnt water faun;- t 1..'&lt;.111 W&lt;.t., tc.: 111 &lt;.111 )
gallon:- . ul'lwt ~\ i.ll t: r. anJ tiH.:,g a" ihat make,
·it 'hot Fi x it with a new w;~ s h~ r.
AvotJ rartial lo&lt;J lb _in your L.: lnthc' wa , hcr
aru.J In )O Ur di ~h wa ~hcr. DDn 't lctlltlt Wi.l ll'r
run·wh!lc sh;wtng. or while ri n:-.in g Ji., hc:-..

Drai n a hul·kct o f W&lt;ll l.' r fr om 1hr. fau l'l:l
.at thc h a~ e nf yo ur .wa!l.:r 'hc dtl! r (,n lc ·"
month to hdp k ~.: e p it working dlki ~.:rHi y.
By u ~_in g lhl\ Wi.l h: r ~ &lt;Hci'ul l y. ytnr 'll l'on ~ crv c natural ga-.;. and ~r kl!cp uur whl)IC

t..:ountry nut of Ill)I ,water.

(

returns to weekly episodic
television in "Most Wanted,"
playing a police detective .
"Ten years ago. the cops
were the hunters/ ' he said.
"Now they've become the
hunted. You read about
·criminal conspiracies to kill
cops. Ambush is. common.
There's
a
different
psychology involved and we
hope to bring it to our new
show."
Stack starred in two
previous series, as sup~r Gman Eliot Ness in "The
Untouchables" and as a
crusaaing newspaperman in
"Name of the Game."
In both shows , Stack
believes, his characters were
counterpoint w the action.
" In 'The Untouchables'
Ness was a straight man '
reacting to the criminals in
the show. In 'Name of the
Game ' I was a reporter, a
spectator, not the driving
force of the stories/' he said.
"This guy's name 'is Line .
Evers, head of the 'Most
Wanl&lt;ld' unit. There's plenty
of action and he's the moving
force . Line is involved in each
story before the villain shows
up. I like the c'\"~Pt.
"I didn't want ID play a
private eye because I don't
believe them. I know cops
from the shooting ranges.
Their involvement gives an
actor a better umbrella, a
re;lSOn for being part of the
action."
Regardless how good , the
con~pt, no matter how 'brllliarit the scripts, Stack is weD
aware the principal criterion
for success is matching the
star with the role ,
"Getting the right acwr
into .the ' right part is the
secret to every top show," be
said. "Other elements
contribute, sure, but without
pe~t castirig it doesn't ·
· matter.
"Look whet happened to
George C. Scolt in 'Eastside,
Westside.' He was wrong for
the part. CarroU O'Connor
was abaolutely perfect for
Archie Bunker. ,
"!'Ieier. Falk In 'l'rilll li
O'Br*l'
IIOIIhtlt. They
fill PN ill '0+ • ' llld the

...nt

mat~

..wt.

"Jim

•
-... . . . . . . . . . . . . ._ _ _ _ _. -~MBIAGAB

.....

llESA).

The agency coordinates a
variety of handicapped and
special education programs
for 27 school districts in
Ath~ ns, Ga ilia, Hock.in g,
Jackson , Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan , Perry, Vinton and
Washington Co unties.
The propolll'{j agenda for
the regional nleetings wiii
begin with discuss ion of
prog ram sta ndards · for
related services at 9 a.m.
followed by standards for
multi-factored evaluation,
least restrictive placement
and the individ ualized
educational plan at 10:15.
The afternoon session wiii
start at I with discussion on
the guidelines for special
edu cation regional resour~
~nters, followed by prograpl
standards for identification of
handicapped children an d
youth at 2. From 3 to 5 there
will be public hearings on tho
state 's special education
plan.

A complete copy of the
Fiscal Yea r 1.977 State Plan
may be obtained by writinK
the Ohio Deportment of
Ed ucat ion, Dlvision of
~peciai Education , 933 High
St reet, Worthington, Ohio
430l\S,

Persons unable to attend
the meeting in persOn may
submit their · commenta in
writing to the Ohio Department of Education by Oct . 21.
Othe r Ohio regional
meeting locati ons and dates
are : Inde pendence High
School, Independence, Oct .
11 :
Founders
Halt
Audit orium , ·Ohio Stat e
University Newark Branch,
Oct . 12; Ceptral Junior High
Schooi,Findtay , Oct. l9; Kent
State Unive rsity Student
Cenler, Kent, ()&lt;.1, 20; and ·
Lebanon High Schoo l,
Lebanon, Oct. 21.
Chillicothe High School is
located at 455 Yoctangce
.. parkway.

Lawn and Garden

_Grooming Aids ·sate
Walls- Lamont

YOUR

WHITE COnON or
BROWN
JERSEY
.
GLOVES

CHOICE
I

a-l"

'

Brown jersey gloves in men's ond lod •es'
sizes or while cotton gl oves w1th blue
knit wr ists for men H0ndy for arou nd-the ·
home w'ork or garden ing.

PAiRS

OR 79' PAI R

Stack's back

· ··

.__. ....._______

. '·

handi&lt;apped child.
- Placement ·of all han·
dicapped children needing
special education in accord.'
ance with a multi.fai:tored
assessment and an individual
educational plan. Provisions
for assuring education of the
handicapped with the nonhandicapped to the extent
possible.
. - Provisions 'by the . state
insuring that handicapped
children and their parents
are guaranteed procedural
safeguards, in cludin g the
right to an impartial due
process hearing and con·
fidentiallty of all information.
"I urge everyone interested
in education, not ju5\ those
persons with handi c app ~ d
children, to attend this lmportant · meeting," said
Robert . L. Welnfurtn er,
director of the Southeastern
Oliio · Special Edu cation
Regional Resource Center •
Regional Education Service
Agen cy (SEO-SERRC ·

ScoU's world

get first start

LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Maury Wills rejoined the Loa
Angeles Dodger Wedneaday
as an instructor in the line llrt
ol b8sH!eallng at which he
exceUe&lt;!, and bitting and
fielding.
Dodger President Peter 0'·
Malley aMounced that the
former star shortstop allr
will be able to take
assignments as ·a baseball
announeer for NBCTV oo
weekends.

BENT. I\AV

ATHENS - A regional
meeting wh ere publi c
comment will be Invited on
the state 's plan for th e
educatidlt of the ha ndicapped
will be heid at Chillicothe
High SchOOl on Oct. 13, at 9
· a.m.
The meeting is one of six
being heid to discuss the
provisions of Ohio's Fiscal
Year 1977 State Plan for the
Education of Handt~apped
Children and Youth, ac·
cording to Ma rtin W. Essex,
of public
superintendent
J. L. MeNEALEV
instruction.
..
Major provisions of the
president in April 1976.
plan
include;
A navy veteran of World
Free
appropriate special
War II, Ray is active in
education
for all handicapped
various trade and civic
persons
between
the ages of 6
associations.
and 18 by Sept. I, 1978,
- Identification, location,
evaluation of all served or
un served handicapped
children, regardless of the
severity of their handicap.
- Priority to the unserved
out·o.f-school and severely

Recognition given 2 for
work in health services

St. Clair may
BEREA, Ohio (UP!) Hometown favorite Mike St.
Clalr may get a chance to
start at defensive end for
Cleveland Sunday because of
the Browns' failure to put
pressure on opposing
quarterbacks in the la5\ thr..,
games.
The Browns have only
three quarterbeck sacks so
far this season.
·
Sf. Clair, a graduate of
Cleveland's East Tech High
School, played· the final
quarter of last weekend's
game against Cincinnati
because starting right
defensive end Mack Mitchell
injured hll f9Qt.
Afourth-round draft choice
from Grambling, St. Clair
had· four tackles to lead the
defensive linemen.
"It's mo~e than likely St.
Clalr will play somewhere
Sunday and .there Is a
possibility he will be a
st.arter," coach Forrest
Gregg sald, •
Mitchell's injury was not
serious, but Gregg was not
Impressed
with
his
performance. The 1975 firstround plck built high
expectations at the end of last
season by putting heavy
pressure on ¥rtemy passers,
getting four sacks in one

Ohio's plan to educate handicapped
·to he aired in Otillic_o the meeting

.C&amp;SOE's hoard

will be c'aUing the signals,

.Breakfast At CoUntry Cousins
Eggs
Hot Coffee

·'
••

.

rut Ill ... :.

m~Maw, .... •

• . lllfllher

ttnillc:

• ' -....

[()jn,. . . . . . ..... 10)

m

~ ~~~~~:.....;
STEEL SHOVEL
Rugged, lono-weorlnSl
steel blode. 47"

211NCH

long wood

hondle

B.!)WSAW

Sw edl~ h

steel blade.
Vinyl-grip chrome
bow.
•

REGUlAR 5.29 •

3-88

••••••••••••••••
LAWN RAKE
/:;, AMES~
.. '
, llQ
•McOor&lt;lvt• C&lt;!"''*''

Twemv green enameled ~teel tines. otB"

long smooth pi ne hondle.

REGULAR 2.39

181NCH

GARAGE BROOM
WnH HANDL E

. . 20UNCE

MOUSE-PRUFE
ou t omat~eolly

Boil feeds

RE
59•G

33c

-.g.Jt.ijt:)·

POP

6 BUSHEL ·

RIVOOOL KIT

KIT tncludes rlvetool ond an .
assortment of "p6p " ri ...eh,
threod!d ones ond bockUil
plates .

LEAF BAGS

Eosy- ~en ltpped

plostlc bags.

Side seal for -added sTrengTh ,
Pocko~

of 10.

REGULAR 2.89

REGULAR 6.Y9

Y.'\RD &amp;

G.I~DEN

CART
20 or 33 GALLON

TRASH CAN LINERS
Choose o pockooe ol 15 33-gal.
01

a pockoge of 20 20·gol. bogs.

SALE PRICE

Lorge co,i(ldfy green con with black.,
lock·on •cover. Rustp roof ond dent·proof

plastic con for trosh,.cutlings or storoge.

SALE PRICE

WITHSTANDS
TEMPERATU~ES

·147

.ro -2411f.

....

YQUR
CIIOICE

EACH

88

7
_

Pomeroy :Cement Block
Co.
.
.

The Department Store of Building Since 1918

rubulor steel
!rami! with rec·
tonQUior rlm.·Ad ·
justa~! ~ .
•

REG . 13.95

...
•
•

..

..

�.·

.

•

.

•-The DaUySentlnel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursd•y, Oct,7, 1916

-1be n.tJy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Thursday, Oct. 7, 1971

'

'

· Gura .wants NY

Marauders take on·· winless Waverly
By Grtg Batley
Coach Charles Chancey
and hi! Meigs Marauders
travel to Waverly Friday
evening to do battle with the
charges of Coach John
Burehlnal. Both clubs are 11-1
in league 'a ction ; the
Marauders are I.J overall,
the Tigers are ~ . Waverly
was picked by the leagl·.~·s
r;oaches and sportsca5\er~ to
·finish in the ~llar of the
SEOAL and Meigs wa s
tabbed as proliiible finishers
or.2 place above the Tigers.
Friday's c6ntest should be
a real battle'
La5\ week Waverly fell to
Athens 2M in the league
opener. Thei r ba ckfield
averages 170 pounds, . but
stalwart halfback· Chuck
Thompson iB out with a
broken ankle . He'll be
replaced · by senior Kevin
Silcott, and the re5\ of the
. backfield will consist of
underclasamen. Sophomore
quarterback Lorne Weeter

'

·'

NEW

0

...

..''

Pancakes

.

Danish

,.'

•

.•

'

up agauist Jackson and came will average more than strength.
· and classmate Rob Leffler away empty-handed.
Waverly 's defensive front
Arnold and Wilford will he ·
will be at the other hallhack
At least three starters bad wiil be Allen Stewart and Dan the tackles on defense also,
position. Junior ·letterman not practiced through Granda I on the ends. Stewart and at the defertsive ends will
Randy Thomas will be at Wednesday and may not has been the receiver lor .be Granda! and possibly
wingback.
play ,
A four!~ ·- ls ·mo5\ of Gum'Uerlal!. Senior DeMis Wolle for Wheeler
Four lettermen will be on questionable. Other reserves Ra,o Wilford and jWiior Brent Thomas, who has been ill.
the Tiger line that averages also have been ill.
Arnold will again be at the Rick George and " T!!Jl.
just 160 lba. (Meigs will start
So uthpaw quarterba ck tackle spots while at guards Thomas ·wlll be the cora defensive line against them George Gum will he at his wiil be Duane Weber and nerbacks, and Stewart and
that averages 1~. ) ,
spot, and Rick Johnson will Dave Miller, both sen ior junior Brent Stanley will be
Regular center, Greg be his center. The Marauder lettermen. Arnold has been ill the llnebeckers. Randolph
Williams has been out with offense generated .bar ely · and may be r~li~ved by stan and Coats will go both ways
the flu , so his status as a over 100 yards last week, so . Starcher, from the .defense. as they are also the defensive
starter is still questionable. Coach Chancey will be
On defense will be the same hallhacks. Illness has made
Other ...l~.liWIJ~n besides _ looking to lmprQ~e over that. lineup with two possible Brent Stanley questionable.
Willlams are Craig Towler Wingbeck Steve Randoiph, .. exceptions. , Co-c aptain
Meigsownsa5-ledgeinthe
and Dave Welch at the ends tailback Ron ·Coats, and middle guard Stan Starcher · series between the .two
and at right Iackie wiii be Jlm fullback Dan Buffington were ·wfll be back at his spot after teams, and last year the
Williams. Players getting a stymied last week by the being out for two weeks due to Marauders knocked over the
' 5\al!in~·'·nod ' just this year
Jackson defense, getting jUst a leg injury , He saw some Tigers 37-7. So the Tigers will
wiil be left tackle Tim 54 yards total rushing.
limited action la5\ week, but be looking -to belance up the .
Beeman, right guard Bill
1
On the offensive line that this . week he'll be at full score.
Childers, and left guard Dave
Blaum. Jeff Noble will also
see some action at one of the
ends.
Meigs, if the nu bug abates
. COLUMBUS (UPI)
place mar gin this week previously . unbaaten Uma
· in tlme, could start about the
same offensive team as went R e lentle ss Cin cinnati jumped to 48 points, with Senior 51).6 Friday night.
· Moeller, mowing down Arllngton moving into the No ,
The rest of the AAA top ten
everybody , in iis path, 2position from ils tie lor third consists of Youngstown
continues Ul hold a huge lead last week. Carey, an ~loser Mooney in liftit, Zanesville,
•
over ruMerup Findlay in the to Marion Pleasant, fell from Allian ce, Elyria, · Lorain
AND GOODI
second week of balloting in second weighth, whlle Black Senior and Middletown.
the
United
Press River moved t~to third,
Four of last week's AAA top
lriternational Ohio High Newcomerstown to fourth ten did the disappearing act
School Board of Coaches' and BlufftOn to fifth, all ~ith after suffering their first
Clasil AAA football ratings, 4-0 records. 'I
losses of the season. They
The , Crusaders, 56-0
Rounding ,oul the lllp ten in were Niles McKinley, Warren
winners over Cincinnati Class A are Sandusky St. Haroing, Lakewood St.
WiU1row last Friday night, Mary's in sjxth, followed by Edward and Akron Garfield.
lost some of last week's Cedarville, Carey,
St. Marys Memorial, New
gigantic margin as expected, Ridgemont and South -- Lexington , C.olumbus
but still own a 389-293 edge Charleston Southeastern. Watterson and Urbana hold
over the Trojans.
Ridgemont, playing without lite fourth· through seventh
Moeller' s superiority is star tailback Greg Whetsel, places in Class AA, lite same
shown by the fa ct the lost to Mechanicsburg.
spots they enjoyed last week .
Crusaders picked up 34 of a
GahaMa Lincoln moved,
Unbeaten Shelby moved
possible 41 first place votes, into 'the third spot in AAA into the No . 8 position, Huron
probably a record in the shead of Princeton, even into ninth and Bellaire,
usually regionalized voting , though th e once-beaten falling one spot, claimed
although such records are not Vikings overwhelmed tenth.
kept.
r
Also holding on to their No.
I ratings claimed in last
week 's first balloting of the
year were Cin cinnati
Wyoming tn Class AA and
Newark Catholic in Class A.
All three of the leaders are 4COLUMBU S IUPil - This 39 ; 12. Columbus DeSales Ill

Wyoming tops AA ratings

•'

Bacon
Sausage

Breakfast Now Being Served Mon.
• •
thru Sat., 7:00 till 11 A.M.
••
Sunday, 9:00 A.M. tiJI 1:00 P.M.
"A.Great Way To Start The-Day"
Country Cousins is located at
698 W. Main St. next to
Jones' Boys
I •
f

' •:
,
: '
''
•
•'
&gt;

\

I

•

.•.'

LAST 3 DAYS

) ,

••

nfURS., FRI. AND SAT.
OCTOBER 7-3-9

~·

"'
."''......

...••
~.

••
••
,

..
,. .
,.."'·..
....

,..
''"

.••..

;-.

••
.l:
••
·=
'3•·

,.' .
•

•

0

•

•
•
••

....
,,.
'

'

.,•.,.
,,
I

•,1-:

. ''
.

week ' s Uni ted Pr ess In ternational Ohio High School
~oard of Coaches football
ratings w ith fir st place votes

28; 13. St. Clairsville 26 ; 14.
(1 1e) Reading and M inerva,
22 each ; 16. Oregon Cardinal

Slr ilch Il l 19 ; 17. Orrville Ill

and won -los t record s in

parentheses :
Class AAA

Team
Points
1. Ci ncinn . Moeller (34 4-0) 389

2. Findlay 12 4-0l

· 293

3. Gahanna Lin coln (4 -0)
4. Pr inceton ( 3-1)
5. ·Young stow n Card 1na l

Mooney (4-0I

189
178,

124
103
85

S. Elyria (4-0)
9. Lorain Seni or ( 14-0)

Volleyballers

·-·

'

Wyoming, however, is
getting a strong challenge
from once-beaten Akron St.
Vin cent-St. Mary, which
swept w within four points of
the Cowboys this week, 166162. Ironton, runnerup iast
week, fell to third in AA with
144 points.
Newark Catholic's fir st

6. Zanesv ille ( 1 4-0)
7, Alliance (4-0)

•
'' '
'
' ••
' •
'•
•' ••

•

0.

Class A
Team
I. Newark Calholic
·2. Arlingto~ (3 4-0)

13

Second len : 11 . Cent.er&lt;JI IIe

4: Newcomerstown (3 4·0) 108

62 ; 12. Ni les Mc Kin ley 58 ; 13.
Kettering Fairmont West (1)
49 ; lJ. Warren· Harding 43 ;

break even in·

5. Biufftoo (l' 4-0)

·

3-way match

0l

17. Akron Garfield 32 ; 18 .

0)

each; 20. (lie) Groveport Madison and Walsh Jesuit , 24

Heights 41 ; 12.j,l.elpslc 33 : 13.
Spencer v i lie
32 ;
14.
M echanicsburg
29;
15 .
Centerburg 27 ; 16. Ashtabula

Class AA

I. Wyoming IS&lt; OJ
2. Akron St . Vincent.

St. John Ill 26; 17. Tiffin
Calvert 24; 18. Woodsfield Ill

Points

St. Mary (4 3-ll
J. Ironton (3 4-01

4. St. Marys Memona l (3 4·
0)
.
5. New Lexington (4·0 )

166

20 ;

162
14&lt;

1)

9. Huron I I 4-0l
10. Bellaire I I 3-ll

Portsmouth

19.

Catholic 17 .

98
91

Valley North, Oak Hill. Twin

Valley North, Versa ill es, St.

84

Fostoria

St.

Wendel in ,
Dalton, Fa irport Haber ( l) ,

57

.'

.•

• No appomtment necessa ry • Um1t: One spe cial 8 x 10
per child . Two per family • All ages w~l c o me • Addi·
ljonal pr ints a•iailable at reaso nable pr1ces • Groups at
$1.25 each additional child .
•

. ••·'

.••.••

. • tl

...:,.
•••
• II

48

Berkshire

Second ten : 11 . Brookvil le

Uniled ill.

and

'

I

COLUMBUS IUP II - The

Regi"" 2

l.

Findlay. 33.00 ;

.' '

Frem ont Ross, 28.25.

Class AAA

Region 3

Region 1

1. Stow Walsh Jesuit, 32.00;

2. Akron North, 31.00.

.•·

Region 4
1. Cincinnati Moeller , 39.00;
2. Kettering Fairmon t West,

. ;:

35.00.

tlass AA

'

.
I

:.;.
' tj
.··•)· ~...
1

'

,

1 Philo. 25.50; 2. Uhrichsville Claymonl, 22.00 ; 3.
Bellaire, 21.00; 4. Gallipolis ~

20.00 ; 5. New
,

Le~iogton,

19.00 ; 6. tronton ,,_jft.75 ; 7.

·

2. N.arysville, 24.00.
Class A
· Region 9

J, Itiel Ashtabula Sf . ·John

an.cl Cuyahoga .Heights , ·11.00
each.

69~

Region 10
1. Fostoria St. Wende.l ln,

18.00; 2. Blufflon, 12.50.
· ,: _::·,

pr.

Region 11

2.

J
• J

!1:

2. Elyria

I. Columbus DeSales. 30.00;

JUST IN-

• BUDGETEER
,. -.PANTY HOSE

'

~~;

~

2. Fostoria , 25.00.
Region 7

SALE

. ''

.'

::

l. Girard. 22.00 ;
Catholic, 21 .
Region 6'

Region 8

'

'

2.

1. North College Hill, 28.00 ;

I' I . I

I

contmue

1. Pa r ma Val ley Forge.
36.00 ; 2. Parma Senior , 34.00.

fir st 1976 Ohio High School
Athletic ASso ciation co mputenzed footbal._ ra t ings
with, including poll'l-.....t.Qtals :

I

'

•' • I•

•

Hanoverton

,:' Minerva . IS.ODf B. South
Point, l6.00;_.9."St. Clairsville,
14.25 ; 19-- tlebron Lakewood.
14.00.
'

:t•,.

·

l. Newark Cathol ic, 17.00 ;
Llc ~lng Heights, 16.oo: 3.

N'ewcom erstown, 15.00 ; 4.

PT. PLEASANT
RIPLEY
AnfENS
BELPRE

w ~~f~n~ot~o~H~o~ur~s:~~~1~2-~5~~~·;S~at~· ;1~~1;2~~~·-~~~

(tie) Mingo Junction and Q.lk

Hi ll, 13.00 each; 6. Woods·
field. 12.00; 7. Centerburg,
, ; .:;'\; B. Indian Valley North,

11 :00 · 9. Crooksville,' 10.00;

10. Beallsville, 9.50.
Region 12

1. West .}elferson. 18.00; 2.
(tie) Lewisburg Twin Valley
,•: ,

:-.; ..

:·:::

'•

Golfers
•

•

.. CHECK 'EM OUT
"

i ·:

College Football Forecast
By FRED McMANE
UPISporta Writer
Texas and Oklahoma Is a
sportsriv~lcy that makes Ali·
Frazier seem like a mutual
admiration society.
It begins in the high school
ranks where each college
tries to outrecruit the other in
the other's backyard. Folks
in Texas see red at the mere
mention of the word
"Sooner " and as for a
"Longhorn, " well, the only
place for one of those,
according to O~lahomans, is
hanging over the fireplace.
The fall madness, known as
the Texas.Oklahoma football
game, conies down to Game
No. 11 in the college football
series this Saturday at the
Cotwn Bowl ih -Dallas, and
this is the year Texas fans are
counting
on
Sooners'
dominance to end.
Oklahoma has won lite last
five games in a row, following
a streak in which Texas won
four straight. The series has
been pretty much like that
since lite post ,World War II
era. Texas, for example,
leads tbe overall series 4:1-262, but since 1945 tlje
Longhorns' lead is only 16-15.
The last two contests
between the . school! have
been remarkably close. Two
years ago the Sooners
squeezed out a !6-13 victory
and last year Oklahoma won
by only one touchdown, 24-17,
Which brings us to
Saturday and everyone
anticipating another Sooner
triumph. Oklahoma is 4-0

Midqjefleld Cardi nal, Burton

Region 5

' .

Sal~m .

Henry , West Liberty

77
72

North and Portsmouth Notre
Dame, 15.00 each.

.

wmnmg
The Meigs golf team
continued wiMing this week
with two victories. On
Monday at Ironton they had a
relatively easy time with the
ho5\a as they came out on top
150-171. Dale Browning, who
led the locals, was medalist
with a 37. Chuck Follrod
turned a 38, Lance Oliver a
39, Mark Gilkey a 41, and
Crenson Pratt 43.
Cary Fairchild led Ironton
with a 41, Bob Osbourne had a
42, Dave Ra.tiHf and Kevin
Fairchild each carded a 44,
and J&amp;f Linn had a ~.
.
In a lfiangular match at
Athens Tuesday Meigs won
over host Athens and Logan,
171 to Athens' 174 to Logan's
189. Those two wins put Meigs
all alone in second place in
the league with one match
left I&lt;T play,- that Waverly.
Crenson Pratt this timew&amp;B
the medalist with a 39.
Browning carded a 41, Oliver
a 44, Follrod a 47, and Gilkey
a 48. For Athens Karl Fry
shot a .0, Brian Lawson, a 44,
Steve Hensler and Mark
Finlay each 45, and Kevin
Goldsberry a 49, Logan's
Mike McBroom turned in a 40
while Tom Russell was next
with a 42. Dave Lehman was
at 51, Dave Stillwell ahot a 58,
and Ni\;l.ll.ow Jlll'lled in a 58.
That leaves Meigs' OV!'rall
record at 17-5 while their
league record is 12-.1.

a

'
'

the opening game Saturday.
Herzog said right,ltander
DeMis Leonard a native of
Brooklyn, N.Y..' would start
Sunday's second game. Left·
bander · Andy Hassler, who
earlier this season broke a
personal 18-game losi~g
streak, was expected to go m
the third game on Tuesday at
New York.
·
"I'm oot starting hlm ·be·
cause of lncentive," said
Herzog, "I'm startijtg him
becaUse he's the best.J've got .
It looks like he can stand the
pressure better than the
others.''
~-•.,,.,,,
The f:loyals won only two Of
their last II games and both
victories went to Gura.
Gura feeis he was never
given a chlmce by Martin,
when he played for Tesas.
Martin became the Texas
manager•·in 1973 and he let
Gura pitch one inning in
spring practice before
t&lt;ading hlm to the Yankees.
And when Marlin took over

the Yankees in !l'ldlfM..,
last year, one .li' hll lint
moves was to change the
Yankees' pitching rotaUoo
!r&lt;ll) a five-man rotaUon.to a
lour-man rotadon. Gura wu
the fifth man.
"I knew I was going to get
traded from the start," ~ld
Gura. "I kept bearing I'UIIIOrB
about Milwaukee but then I.
wound up with the Royals.
That was great for me."
Martin makes no bones
about why he got rid of Gura.
"I got rid of him at Texas
because he coUldn't get the
\JI!ll over the. plate," sald
Martin. "And I got rid of him
at New York because I didn't
feel he was as good as our
other starters. U I bad him
now I'd get rid of him again."
Gura can't understand
Martin's feellngs.
"Last year I bed 20 starts
wlth the Yankees and I
pitched poorly in lour of
them," said Gura. 11 He seems
w just remember those four
and forget the others."

Texas picked 20-17
over Oklahoma team

Others with ten or more
points: Columbiana, Indian

WHAT'S HAPPENING!

DASHIKIS!

Notre

Dame Il l 18 ; 20. Marion

6. Columbus Watterson (137. Urbana 12 4-0l
8. Shelly I I 4-0)

44

Second ten : 11 . Cuyahoga

each .

Team

86
51

10 Southeastern Clark (2 4-

and Lak ewood St. Edward; 30

93
87

9. Rldgemonl (3 ~ 11

(tie) Parma · Valley /'FOrge

In a triangular girlS'
volleyball match Tuesday
night, the Meigs girts broke
even. In the first match of the
night Meigs fell to Kyger
Creek in three games when
Kyger took the first one 15-7,
and Meigs bounced back to
take the second game 15-9. In
the deciSive third game,
Kyger finally came out on top
of the. see-saw contest 15-11.
The second match of the
night saw Kyger roll over
Jackson in · two games. 15-9
· and 15-11. Then it was Meigs'
turn for. a crack at Jackson
and the local gals came away
victorious in two games to
take the match. Meigs fell to
Jackson 15-9 in the first one,
but bounced back to tie the
match when they won the
second 15-9. Meigs then had•
an easy time as they coasted
to a 15-8 win the last game.
Meigs travelled to Belpre
for a match Wednesday.

:::
•..

104

6. Sandusky St. Mary' s (4-

IS. (lie ) North Canton Hoover . 7. Cedar vil le 12 4-01
and Fremont Ross, 36 eaCh; 8. Carey II 3·ll

•,

'.,.,

Points

(7 4 ~ 01 186
138
3. Black River (34·01 ·
lll

70
64

10. Middletown ( 3· I)

18; 18 . Cincinnati McNicholas
I I ; 19. El yria Catholic 16 . 20.
Dublin 15.
Other s with ten or more .
pomts :
Martins
Ferry ,
Cl eveland Holy Nam e, West
Brench ( 1), Hamilton Badin
( 1), Hannibal Ri v er , Cir.
devi lle and Bellefontaine .

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI )
- The biggest worry Kansas
City RoyalS left-bander Larry
Gura has about pitching
against the New York
Yankees in the American
League playoffs is that he
might get psyched up enough
wthrow the ball through the
screen behind home plate.
There will be no trouble for
Gura in getting psyched 'uphe.will be pitchijtg against the
YankeeS and Manager Billy
Martin, a man he feel! has
cheated him twice. •
"I wish I could pitch aU
three games again5\ them,"
said Gura. "When I pitched
against the Yankees before,
while I was warming up . I
didn't get one pitch over the
plate but then I setUed down
and did okay. I just hope I
don't throw the ball through
the screen this time."
Ro)\llls' Manager Whitey
Herwg Wednesday named
lite 28-year&lt;Jid Arizona State
University graouate 'to 5\art

thus far while Texas, though
Z-1, has looked unlmpressiV.
in two of Ita games, includin2
a season opening 14-131oss to
Boston College.
· But, the underdog is always
primed for this game and we
think there's a good chance
Coach Darrell Royal,'s boys
can spring an upset Saturday.
Oklahoma has been steady,
bul underwhelming in its four
games, and the time is ripe
for a Texas triumph. We like
the Longhorns to win it, 211-17;
with Texas' Johnny Jones
providing the margin of
victory.
Here's how we see the other
big games across the nation :
The East
Peim St. 17 Army 14-II
Cadets can protect Leaman
'Hall, they could turn this one
arolUid.
.
Syracuse· 23 Tulane 12-0rangemen's offense fiiiaUy
getting untracked. .
West Virginia 22 Temple
15- UniOlJS Mountaineers get
caught loqking ahead to
Boston College,
Pittsburgh 35 Louisville
Ill- Cardinals can't stop onetwo punch of Cavanaugh and
Dorsett.
· The South
Georgia 20 Mississippi 7Bulldogs have eye on that
Southeastern Conference
uue .
Alabama 36 Southern
Mississippi 6-Against the
weak sisters, Crimson Tide
looks very ~ormidable.
· Maryland
23
North
Carolina State 10-Terps'
Atkins outshines Wallpack's
Browi{
· TeMessee 20 Georgia Tech
17 - Vols trying hard w save
Bill Battle's job.
The Midwest
Michigan 37 Michigan St.
10-. Wolverines have too
much of everything for

'-

Spartans.
Dllnois 17 Minnesota 13-lllini more hardened from
tougher schedule to date.
Indiana 24 Northwestern
6- Wildcats should really he
in Ivy League.
Ohio St. 32 Iowa 6Hawkeyes can he beaten with
passes. Well, Woody?
The Midlands
Missouri 25 Kansas St. 3-Tigers' loss to Dllnois seems
more puzzling every week.'
Kansas '!I Oklahoma St. 71'Cromwell's Cru~ders" can
crunch it out.
Iowa St. 30 Utah 14Cyclones' offense is one of
best around.
Nebraska 22 Colorado 16Cornhuskers had better not
get too careless.
'
The Southwest
Baylor 21 SMU 7- Bears'
defense wins another one.
Navy 17 Air Force 10--Last
week's comeback against BC
bed to give Middies JUt.
LSU 18 Vanderbilt 7Tigers hard to beat on own
turLespecially at night.
The Ro&lt;kles
Arizona 30 Texas-EI Paso
7- Wildcats get a breather
before meellng Texas Tech,
Arizona St. 21 Cincinnati
12- Sun Devils might have
more trouble than they
bargained for against
Improving Bearcats.
Brigham
Young
22
Wyomijtg 21-Give Cougars
one-point edge for home field
advantage.
The Far West
California 20 Oregon IllGolden Bears wln on
passes •.
UCLA 31 .Stanford 14Bruins offense should . roll
against defenseless
Cardinal!. .
Southern California 37
Washington St: 6-Trojans
rounding Into top form .

retires McNealey
COJ;iJMBUS ~ The Boafd
ol Directors of Columbus and
Southern Ohlo Electric
Company on Oct. 6 ac:tepted
the realgnatlon of J.
Lawrence McNealey as
~ director and a member of the
,..uecutlve committee ef. ··fective .Nov. 16, 1976. ·. .
"'eNealey baa reached the
.. retirement age lor directors
-,- ~ aa required by company
"'bylaws. Deep appreciation
~ waa espre~sed for Me·
•• Nealey's able leaderahlp and
~ his 53 years of faithful un·
~, selflah service 19 the com: pany. The board further
"'elected McNealey to serve as
·~director emeritus of the

Company,
BenT. Ray, Executive Vice
President, was elected to fill
the poata of dlrecto• and
uecutlve coljlmittee
member upon the resignation
date of McNealey.
A native of Gallipolis,
McNealey received his
education at the Case School
of Applied Science In
Cleveland. He joined the
company in 1923 as a meter
reader and a wlreman in
Gallipolis. McNealey left the
company in 1942 to serve as a
Major in the , U. S. Army
Corps of Engineers and
returned in 1M6 to the post of
assistant ma.nager of the

company's .Outhern divisjon.
Since that time, McNealey
baa served as vice president
of operations, esecutive vice
president, president · and
chalnnan of the board. He
'1-etired from the post of
chalnnan in 1973. He has held
memberahlps and ollic,es in a
number · of professional
groups as well as civic
organizations. ·
Ray, a native of Glouster,
was graduated from the Ohio
State University in 1949 and
joined the company in 19~1 .
He bas served in various
capacities Including vice
president of employee

game.

1

relations and senior vice
president of corporate affairs. Ray was elected w· his
present po5\ of executive vice

. ATHENS - Awards for first recipient of an award to
signiflcant contributions in be presented aMually in
the field of health services in memory of Edward E. Davis
· Southeastern Ohio were the Foundation's only
1 made to five persons at the
president until his death in
eighth annual meeting of the late 1914. An industrialist,
Ohio Valley. Health Services banker, civic leader and
Foundation this week.
humanitarian was a native of
Honored were the four Oak Hill and instrumental in
trustees 'of the Mabel W. the formation of several
Jehklns Trust Fund In regional bodies for promotion
memory of the late and betterment of Southeast
Congressman• Thomas A. Ohio.
Jenkins, and Mrs. Maxine S.
Mrs. Plummer has been
Plummer, of Wellston , active in health and rural
BILL
executive director of the opportunity affairs in Ohio;
•••
Gallia, Jackson, Meigs and
especially
the
•
Community Mental Health Southeastern region, since
"
and Mental Retardation 648 the early 1960s.
Board.
Among
her
recent
The Jenkins Trust Fund achievements were directing
1258 Powell St.
was established in 1964 by the four successful mental health
Middleport, Ohio
will of Mrs. Jenkins. A&lt;i- tax levy campeigns in Galli a ,
ministerijtg the 'fund have· Jackson and Meigs counties;
been Mrs, Cynthia Evans, being the chief drafter of two
Lakewood; Mrs. Helen applications which have
•
Michael and Harold Jenklns, resulted in the construction of
'
Weliston, and Hudson Jef· mental health and mental
ferys, Ironton , The trustees retardation
treatment
beve coritribuied almost $1 facilities in Jackson and
million dollars to hea1th GaUia counties with capital
facilities ln the Foundation's investments of $1.5 million .
~llolleowners
health demonstration area .
The U. S. Department of
These include $327,000 in the
$3.million expansion and
renovation of Lawrence
County General Hospital;
$350,00 in the construction of
the Jenkins Memorial Health
Facility
at Wellston; $150;000
,,.11 u••
in the expansion. of the Oak
Hill flospltal; $40,000 · to
INIU.,N(I
O'Bieness Memo~r.la,Ji~-•
Hospital, Athens, and $125,000 By VERNON SCO'IT
Lit.C aavod acighllor,
toward construction of the
HOLLYWOOD. (UPI)
new
$525,000 Jenkins The ' television cop as prey
• Slale Farm is tltere.
Memorial Health Clinic · at instead of hunter?
S.FnFitttn~~c..lly~
That's
Bob
Stack ' s.
:;· ·
""""Ollr.e: ~ IIMWIII p 7570
Wellston.
.,
Mrs. Plummer became the interesting theory as he

FLETCHER

PH. 992-7155

"Seemdor

'1nsuranet fmm
State Farm- the
world\ largest!'

A

Health , Education and
Welfare kpproved her staf·
ling request for the three
counties in the amount of
$650,000.
Mrs. Plummer is currently
chairperson
of
the
Legislation Committee of
Ohio's Community Mental
Health and Mental Retar·
dation Association;
a
member of the Mental Health
Councils of Ohio Districts 7
and 8; a member of the advisory council of the Dayton
Children ' s Psychiatric
Hospital, and a member of
Meigs County Regional
Plarming COmmission 1
The U. S. Office of Opportunity awarded Mrs.
Plummer its Rural Service
Award in 1968. During 1970,
the Ohio Office of Op·
~ portunity, for which she
served as a regional direct~,)!':
honored her with a " Cer·
tificate of Achievement and
the Ohio Valley Health
Services · Founilation also
recognized her participation
in the Student American
Medical Association
program.

-~,

The bu tl ht: r. th e hahr and 1he ~.:andlt.'"llt.' k
maker wcrc·not trying to ~.· n n ~.: rv ~.: hu t watcr
und na tur al ga s when th l' )' Wl'l' t: in tha t
fablt!d tu b toge thcJ. But. th ~.:y wcr~ nn thr
right tra&lt;.: k.
Lc ~~ Wil ~h: ful u ~c uf h\l l water will wnsa vc natural ga~ AnJ that', nnp unant. he·
c_jme tlvc r half of America\ inJu:- . tr\' run:-.
\Jn na tural ga~. Milli on:- . ui'Jub.. an: at.,takr
BccaU'&gt;l' the , [wrtagc 11t' n ,!lu~;d gj1:- . _1., very
real anJ .g nm11ig. cntii.:aL
\
'
Your wutc r llL' a t~.:r b a gooJ pl &lt;.u:c to ~ t .tn
You call ~ave a lo t of · natu~al ga~ if you
follow j u~ t a fc.: w ~ i m pk ' ug~ I..".., !Hlll...,,
u~e o ne in ch lc~' h tll watl'r in ) 1\ Lif hath .

"I've been wantijtg to play
all along, 001 I understood
that I have to wait my turn,"
St. Clair said. "I've learned a
lot from watching the older
players on the line and beving
them tell me different moves
against different men, and
what not to use.
"I've picked up quite a few
moves and little tricks and
playijtg more will benefit me
and, 1. think, the team. I've
been doing my best on the
special teams, now I'll do my
best on the llne .
"One day I hope to be one of
the greata of lite game,"
Wide receiver Paul
Warfield, the victim of a
hanstring {lUll against the
Bengals, is now llsted as
"probable" for the game
against the Steelers.

~~ r

spend

lc:-.~ tim~

in the

~hu w eJ.

A leaky hnt water faun;- t 1..'&lt;.111 W&lt;.t., tc.: 111 &lt;.111 )
gallon:- . ul'lwt ~\ i.ll t: r. anJ tiH.:,g a" ihat make,
·it 'hot Fi x it with a new w;~ s h~ r.
AvotJ rartial lo&lt;J lb _in your L.: lnthc' wa , hcr
aru.J In )O Ur di ~h wa ~hcr. DDn 't lctlltlt Wi.l ll'r
run·wh!lc sh;wtng. or while ri n:-.in g Ji., hc:-..

Drai n a hul·kct o f W&lt;ll l.' r fr om 1hr. fau l'l:l
.at thc h a~ e nf yo ur .wa!l.:r 'hc dtl! r (,n lc ·"
month to hdp k ~.: e p it working dlki ~.:rHi y.
By u ~_in g lhl\ Wi.l h: r ~ &lt;Hci'ul l y. ytnr 'll l'on ~ crv c natural ga-.;. and ~r kl!cp uur whl)IC

t..:ountry nut of Ill)I ,water.

(

returns to weekly episodic
television in "Most Wanted,"
playing a police detective .
"Ten years ago. the cops
were the hunters/ ' he said.
"Now they've become the
hunted. You read about
·criminal conspiracies to kill
cops. Ambush is. common.
There's
a
different
psychology involved and we
hope to bring it to our new
show."
Stack starred in two
previous series, as sup~r Gman Eliot Ness in "The
Untouchables" and as a
crusaaing newspaperman in
"Name of the Game."
In both shows , Stack
believes, his characters were
counterpoint w the action.
" In 'The Untouchables'
Ness was a straight man '
reacting to the criminals in
the show. In 'Name of the
Game ' I was a reporter, a
spectator, not the driving
force of the stories/' he said.
"This guy's name 'is Line .
Evers, head of the 'Most
Wanl&lt;ld' unit. There's plenty
of action and he's the moving
force . Line is involved in each
story before the villain shows
up. I like the c'\"~Pt.
"I didn't want ID play a
private eye because I don't
believe them. I know cops
from the shooting ranges.
Their involvement gives an
actor a better umbrella, a
re;lSOn for being part of the
action."
Regardless how good , the
con~pt, no matter how 'brllliarit the scripts, Stack is weD
aware the principal criterion
for success is matching the
star with the role ,
"Getting the right acwr
into .the ' right part is the
secret to every top show," be
said. "Other elements
contribute, sure, but without
pe~t castirig it doesn't ·
· matter.
"Look whet happened to
George C. Scolt in 'Eastside,
Westside.' He was wrong for
the part. CarroU O'Connor
was abaolutely perfect for
Archie Bunker. ,
"!'Ieier. Falk In 'l'rilll li
O'Br*l'
IIOIIhtlt. They
fill PN ill '0+ • ' llld the

...nt

mat~

..wt.

"Jim

•
-... . . . . . . . . . . . . ._ _ _ _ _. -~MBIAGAB

.....

llESA).

The agency coordinates a
variety of handicapped and
special education programs
for 27 school districts in
Ath~ ns, Ga ilia, Hock.in g,
Jackson , Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan , Perry, Vinton and
Washington Co unties.
The propolll'{j agenda for
the regional nleetings wiii
begin with discuss ion of
prog ram sta ndards · for
related services at 9 a.m.
followed by standards for
multi-factored evaluation,
least restrictive placement
and the individ ualized
educational plan at 10:15.
The afternoon session wiii
start at I with discussion on
the guidelines for special
edu cation regional resour~
~nters, followed by prograpl
standards for identification of
handicapped children an d
youth at 2. From 3 to 5 there
will be public hearings on tho
state 's special education
plan.

A complete copy of the
Fiscal Yea r 1.977 State Plan
may be obtained by writinK
the Ohio Deportment of
Ed ucat ion, Dlvision of
~peciai Education , 933 High
St reet, Worthington, Ohio
430l\S,

Persons unable to attend
the meeting in persOn may
submit their · commenta in
writing to the Ohio Department of Education by Oct . 21.
Othe r Ohio regional
meeting locati ons and dates
are : Inde pendence High
School, Independence, Oct .
11 :
Founders
Halt
Audit orium , ·Ohio Stat e
University Newark Branch,
Oct . 12; Ceptral Junior High
Schooi,Findtay , Oct. l9; Kent
State Unive rsity Student
Cenler, Kent, ()&lt;.1, 20; and ·
Lebanon High Schoo l,
Lebanon, Oct. 21.
Chillicothe High School is
located at 455 Yoctangce
.. parkway.

Lawn and Garden

_Grooming Aids ·sate
Walls- Lamont

YOUR

WHITE COnON or
BROWN
JERSEY
.
GLOVES

CHOICE
I

a-l"

'

Brown jersey gloves in men's ond lod •es'
sizes or while cotton gl oves w1th blue
knit wr ists for men H0ndy for arou nd-the ·
home w'ork or garden ing.

PAiRS

OR 79' PAI R

Stack's back

· ··

.__. ....._______

. '·

handi&lt;apped child.
- Placement ·of all han·
dicapped children needing
special education in accord.'
ance with a multi.fai:tored
assessment and an individual
educational plan. Provisions
for assuring education of the
handicapped with the nonhandicapped to the extent
possible.
. - Provisions 'by the . state
insuring that handicapped
children and their parents
are guaranteed procedural
safeguards, in cludin g the
right to an impartial due
process hearing and con·
fidentiallty of all information.
"I urge everyone interested
in education, not ju5\ those
persons with handi c app ~ d
children, to attend this lmportant · meeting," said
Robert . L. Welnfurtn er,
director of the Southeastern
Oliio · Special Edu cation
Regional Resource Center •
Regional Education Service
Agen cy (SEO-SERRC ·

ScoU's world

get first start

LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Maury Wills rejoined the Loa
Angeles Dodger Wedneaday
as an instructor in the line llrt
ol b8sH!eallng at which he
exceUe&lt;!, and bitting and
fielding.
Dodger President Peter 0'·
Malley aMounced that the
former star shortstop allr
will be able to take
assignments as ·a baseball
announeer for NBCTV oo
weekends.

BENT. I\AV

ATHENS - A regional
meeting wh ere publi c
comment will be Invited on
the state 's plan for th e
educatidlt of the ha ndicapped
will be heid at Chillicothe
High SchOOl on Oct. 13, at 9
· a.m.
The meeting is one of six
being heid to discuss the
provisions of Ohio's Fiscal
Year 1977 State Plan for the
Education of Handt~apped
Children and Youth, ac·
cording to Ma rtin W. Essex,
of public
superintendent
J. L. MeNEALEV
instruction.
..
Major provisions of the
president in April 1976.
plan
include;
A navy veteran of World
Free
appropriate special
War II, Ray is active in
education
for all handicapped
various trade and civic
persons
between
the ages of 6
associations.
and 18 by Sept. I, 1978,
- Identification, location,
evaluation of all served or
un served handicapped
children, regardless of the
severity of their handicap.
- Priority to the unserved
out·o.f-school and severely

Recognition given 2 for
work in health services

St. Clair may
BEREA, Ohio (UP!) Hometown favorite Mike St.
Clalr may get a chance to
start at defensive end for
Cleveland Sunday because of
the Browns' failure to put
pressure on opposing
quarterbacks in the la5\ thr..,
games.
The Browns have only
three quarterbeck sacks so
far this season.
·
Sf. Clair, a graduate of
Cleveland's East Tech High
School, played· the final
quarter of last weekend's
game against Cincinnati
because starting right
defensive end Mack Mitchell
injured hll f9Qt.
Afourth-round draft choice
from Grambling, St. Clair
had· four tackles to lead the
defensive linemen.
"It's mo~e than likely St.
Clalr will play somewhere
Sunday and .there Is a
possibility he will be a
st.arter," coach Forrest
Gregg sald, •
Mitchell's injury was not
serious, but Gregg was not
Impressed
with
his
performance. The 1975 firstround plck built high
expectations at the end of last
season by putting heavy
pressure on ¥rtemy passers,
getting four sacks in one

Ohio's plan to educate handicapped
·to he aired in Otillic_o the meeting

.C&amp;SOE's hoard

will be c'aUing the signals,

.Breakfast At CoUntry Cousins
Eggs
Hot Coffee

·'
••

.

rut Ill ... :.

m~Maw, .... •

• . lllfllher

ttnillc:

• ' -....

[()jn,. . . . . . ..... 10)

m

~ ~~~~~:.....;
STEEL SHOVEL
Rugged, lono-weorlnSl
steel blode. 47"

211NCH

long wood

hondle

B.!)WSAW

Sw edl~ h

steel blade.
Vinyl-grip chrome
bow.
•

REGUlAR 5.29 •

3-88

••••••••••••••••
LAWN RAKE
/:;, AMES~
.. '
, llQ
•McOor&lt;lvt• C&lt;!"''*''

Twemv green enameled ~teel tines. otB"

long smooth pi ne hondle.

REGULAR 2.39

181NCH

GARAGE BROOM
WnH HANDL E

. . 20UNCE

MOUSE-PRUFE
ou t omat~eolly

Boil feeds

RE
59•G

33c

-.g.Jt.ijt:)·

POP

6 BUSHEL ·

RIVOOOL KIT

KIT tncludes rlvetool ond an .
assortment of "p6p " ri ...eh,
threod!d ones ond bockUil
plates .

LEAF BAGS

Eosy- ~en ltpped

plostlc bags.

Side seal for -added sTrengTh ,
Pocko~

of 10.

REGULAR 2.89

REGULAR 6.Y9

Y.'\RD &amp;

G.I~DEN

CART
20 or 33 GALLON

TRASH CAN LINERS
Choose o pockooe ol 15 33-gal.
01

a pockoge of 20 20·gol. bogs.

SALE PRICE

Lorge co,i(ldfy green con with black.,
lock·on •cover. Rustp roof ond dent·proof

plastic con for trosh,.cutlings or storoge.

SALE PRICE

WITHSTANDS
TEMPERATU~ES

·147

.ro -2411f.

....

YQUR
CIIOICE

EACH

88

7
_

Pomeroy :Cement Block
Co.
.
.

The Department Store of Building Since 1918

rubulor steel
!rami! with rec·
tonQUior rlm.·Ad ·
justa~! ~ .
•

REG . 13.95

...
•
•

..

..

�.6 -Tbe OaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Oct. 7, 1976 '

••

.Gardei;ers planning for holiday
lrf.'eport Garden Club Hallie and Nellie Zerkle. Mrs.
Titus and Mrs. John Kincaid
holiday ~. planned a will organize the program.
C h r ia t m a s··-.Jl ower Members are to lake a sack
arrangement workshop for luncheon with the program
Nov. I durillg their Mod~ committee to provide the
night meeting at the country dessert and the. coffee.
home of Mrs. James Titus.
The planter at the in·
The workshop will be an all- tersection of Mill and Second
dey &amp;!fair in the social room in Middleport was discussed
of the Columbus and Southern and Mrs. Michael Fry was
Ohio Electric Co. beginning appointed to have cha rge of
at 10:30 a.m. It will feat• ,·e the project 'Bnd to buy
Christmas arraoRemeuts greenery to be placed there.
suitable for use in the Meiss Plans were also made to put
(;ounty Christmas flower out the tulip bulbs which w.ere
show as well as demon- taken up after the spring
at. atlons
on
maki ng blooming.
Christmas ornaments by
It was noted that the home
of Mrs. Betsy Horky is on the
house tour scheduled for
Sunday and the club agreed.
to
iurnlsh
f,\Ower
arrangements ·to decorate
' her home. Mrs. Sibley Slack,
president, called for volunteers · to
mak.e
the
·arrangements and agreeing
to do so were !drs. Fry, Mrs.
•••
Dorothy Morris, Mrs. Slack,
••
· Mrs. Mary Skinner, Miss
Nellie Zerkle and Mrs Kin- .
cald.
A colonial arrangement ui
Open9·l
a
crystal compote with the
: \-~Ma=n~d~o~y.~lh~ru~~~~u~rd:•~Y__J
flowers in cylors representing
•I
the di!ferent offlces was used
by Mrs. Fry in an impressive
'I
installation ceremony for the
1976.-77 officers. installed
•
were Mrs. Slack, president;
I'
Mrs. Horky, vice president ;
J
Mrs.
Beuilih
Hayes,
I
secretary, and Miss Nellie
•'
Zerkle, treasurer. Mrs. Fry
concluded the ceremony with
'II
comments to the officers a.nd
the members on club values.
Mrs. Dana Kessinger was
welcomed as a new member.
I
Mrs. Slack read "On Our
•
Wai' by J. D. Freeman, and
the death of Miss Mary Park,
mei.~IS , looking toward the

.-

'

DAN'S

'

'

..

Frigidaire
Laundry
Pair ·

Wash one piece or up to
an 18-lb load in this
Frigidaire Heavy Duly
Washer. Matching Dryer
otters a 2-position Fabrics
selector, Tim ed and
No Heat cycles.
•

'

I'

••
~

.

l
l

•
'
ColorCamel
'

'·

'•'

''
'••

·.,

•
;

l

t

GEM I

i

·. •

llia•pi(·s

/US I for you.

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

'

',

,,"

.

m.

.

"':\

Tips for 'cleaning

Us·•• ·•

plastic bathtubs

r'

"

••
I

•\

,.,'Polly.Cra·m
" er
uy
DEAR POLLY - The
apartment my husband and 1
recently moved into has a
plastic bathtub that presents
the most impossible cleaning
•job I have ever encountered. 1
hope someone ¢an ·assist me ·
·as I have used a cleaner on it,
·
·

i

sOC•1aI

.; CI . da
1 aen r

•·

.,'
•
0

''•
'

'.

,"t:!/:

,,

Forat RIID Unlted MoibodlJt
Church Thursday · and
Frldliy, clct. 7 and a.

r

\

•,'·

'

•

aJamily

'

'

''
\

.DUTTON'S DRUG STORE

1

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

i

•

·

ptlping

•..SENIOR. CITIZENS

''

'
'I'

,,""'S\ '·e'
· .

Brother dies
.i n California

•·

SALE

I

0

'"

MARGUERITE'S
SHOES

l.

'II

oJft.lrtsilf»eS .
CHA.fMAN'S SHOE STORE

Pomeroy, o.

992-281,5

'CARDS WANTED
A card ajlower II plaMed
for Mrl. Edith Davia wbo will
be 10 yean old on Sunday,
Oct. 10. Mn. Davt, resides on
Union Ave., Pomeroy, with a
niece, Mrs. Marie Leifheit.

I I

I

I
I

I'

.

I

~Ill$
. !op,~27 so

I:

~ock&lt;'$1800

' I~
I

'

r1
I
i•

E.

!=
i

I

, EIGHTY-ONE IN BAND - Southern High School's Marching
rncreased m me!Jlbership from 39 last year to 81 this year. The new director
is Jesse Browning.
·

Crow guiding

.
campaign for
'

.

highest court
Don P. Brown, candidate
for Justice . of The Ohio
Supreme Court, has named
Pomeroy Atty. carson Crow
Chainnan of his campaign in
Meigs County. Brown said
Craw's acceptance of the
position Is a "real boost" to
his campaign. "We ~ve been
very fortunate in attracting
ltlgh caliber people such as
Crow to work on my cam- ·
paign," Brown said.
GO OVER ROUTINES - Jesse Brownlng, new ~and director at Southern ltlgh School,
Crbw has law offices at
reviewed drllls for the band at Southern High wrth Lor! Guinther field commander.
Second and Mulberry Sts. In
llrownin~ did .his under~radu~te work at Qllvet Nazare"" College and worked i!Jward his
Pomeroy. He Is active in the
masters at Ohro State U~versrty an? Oberbn .College. He has taught nine years in Ohio, the
Ohio Bar Asaocialion. At Ohio
,Slate of Marne and commg In Racme from Wilmington, Delaware. He had two years of
Unlversity he was an all Midexperience and commander of the .287th Army Band. His previous bands have received
American Conference Center
number one ratings in state competition. He and his wife and two children reside in Portin 1969 and 1970 and selected
land.
'
most Valuable Play~r on the
1970 Ohio University football
team.

as ho looked In !he fall of76. You' ll !honk your5ttf In the
· years to come. .
.,

During lh... s~~tci•l . hours; 1 10 Pel

discount on fill &amp; winter COlts•. 11cktl1 &amp;
snoWiults will be In ~ct. &lt;~n peld In
full. Sorry, IIYIWIYI not Included.)

• -&lt;.·

•
=
= j, ,.

;=

,.

'

CHESTER - Army Pvt.
Kenneth K. Burke, 19, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burke,
Chester, ' Is one of the
thousands of American and
Allied troopa who look part 1n
NATO Erercise Relorger 76
in Germany.
Reforger 76 was two major
field training erercises
conducted In the states of
Bavaria and Hessen, Germany . It Included participating elements of NATO
forces of the u: s., Belgium,
Canad, and Germany.
Burke is regularly assigned
as an assistant gunner in the
101st Airborne Division of Ft.
Campbell, Ky. He 1s a 1975
graduate of Eastern High
School.

I

I

i;

..

~

•

•
BAHR tLOTffiERS
992-2351

••

From

•

0

$20()

GivE:
Bulova
Accutrone
The tamou a tuning fork '
movement keeps avery :
Aecutron watch accurate •
to within 1 minute a month. • :

Our selection rangaa from •
sta/nleaa atael
;
.
from sporty atrapa

jawelry bncelell.
!hom oll, todoy.
'

to ;

See ~

•

I

u .. Loy Awoy l'lan NOo!lt :
I

GOESSLER '
JeweiiJ Store

I

Court St., Pom•roy ; .

•'
•
.,

byThom MeAn
Only · :

••
;·

•

You get uppers made' o('
soft, quality leather. :

You get
inner
linings and leather covered
innersoles.

Who !lliYS a great-looking,
great-feeling, greatwearing dress shoe
has to be expensive?
Not Thorn MeAn.

·Footgioves are .
designed for
style, crafted

You get tough,
tong-lasting
soles and. heel~.

FAMILY OUTING"
I.A.M. &amp; A.W.

LOCAL LODGE NO: 598
SO. CHARLESTON

for comfort, and

built to last.

.:

In black and brown.

; ~"'-~

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 10TH
CAMDEN PARK'S
ANNUAL

.. APPRECIATION DAY"
. LAST DAYQF 1976 SEASON
RIDE ALL DAY-lf AMIII9 rM-S3 .00 .Person

~'\

•

Hi$

TRI·M OFFICERS - Music Mast~ of America (Tri-M) Club at Southern High has
elected (front) Kim Taylor, treasurer ; Usa Alien, secretary, and Heidi Ashley, ~lslorlan; ·
(back), Bob?i Chapman, pr~ident, and.Br.ema Lawrence, vice president.

11

'·.'

~

Accutron

SA TURDA:f, OCTOBER 9TH
. UNTIL 5 PM .
.

dlh.

£i ld
e exercise

. PARK RESERVED

..··..,..

For
Christmas.

Pvt. Burke on

Q
FI(ES

.

'

r

. .

~~~~~~~~j~~i'~l'houe~~tlewllhfo!.hlonotje

l,

Band

byKatie Crow ·

Children grow up fast. "-"' a memento of your chlld

CLUBTOHEET
RACINE - The Western
Boot CB Club .~~ at. 8
p.m. Mondiy atiht Roush

Landlnll.

),

'

Contemporary corduroy
separates from The fallery ·•
by Haggar~ · .
.

I

Pictures

SAHL SUES
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Comedian Mort Sahl sued
Hilton Hotels Wednesday,
cHarging he was beaten by an
employe of the Las Vegas
NO AWARD PLEASE
YARD SALE
NASHVILLE , Tenn. (UP!) HUlon.
FOUR
Family yard sale at
Sahl gave no details of the
- Country music singer
Poulin residence
Richard
incident,
other
than
that
he
"Waylon Jennings, citing
beside
Bradbury
School.
was
assaulted
Oct.
8,
1975.
He
"personal and private
Men's,
women's,
childfen's
asked
for
damages,
the
reasons," says he doesn't
clothing, coats and shoes,
want. to be coosidered for arnolDII to be determined
bedspreads, curtains,
·later.
Country Music Assocation
pictures and lamps, maple
awards this year. But,he may,
vanity, gas heater, quilting
get them. anyway because be
scrapa, kitchen gadgets,
'tithdrew after balloting was AMY HANGS TOUGH
Thursday and Friday, Oct.
f,'er. .
·
TUCSON, Ariz. (uPl)
7 &amp; 8, 9 to 4 p.m.
· ;'In the past Jenniligs has
to brother Chip,
called the awards a rigged, According
Amy Carter was knocking
popularity con~ .
down $20 a day profit in
lem111ade sales In tourists YARD SALE, Saturday, Oct.
who dropped by Plains, Ga .,
9, 10 a.m. til evening.
Across from Roadside Park
PELE BACK
and forked over $10 a day t.)
Dad, Jimmy, for hls
In Syraclll!e•
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil campaign.
11).7-ltc
(DPI) - New York Cosmos
But when Dad got the
star, Pele, whose dazzling Democratic nomination, the
RUMMAGE SALE SET ·
scoring took Brazil to World Secret Sei'vlce closed the
A
rwrunage sate will be
CUp victories in 1958, 1962, street in front of the Carter
held
at
the Enterprise United
and 1970, was back In , home.
Methodist
Church Thursday
Maraca n a S tad I u·m
"So Amy's lemonade staild
and
Friday,
Oct. 7 and8, from
Wednesday, wearing his No. went bankrupt and she asked
9
until
4
p.m.
A large selec10 green · an!l yellow Brazil for her $10 hack," dtlp told
tion~~
children's
clothing will
team jersey ftr the first time local Democrats .
be
available.
in five years.
Peie, 35, who ·sctred 1,216
goals in 1,255 games during
0
hls 17-year career with
SaqW. Soccer Club, played
the first 45-minute half, but
did not score.
IS EVERYONE'S BUSINESS!

I

BJ birthda11
fi ted 1J da

.,.,

I

''8 .
v e"

tip~

TO BOW SALE

-

..

a

A rummage aale will be
held In the buement of the

_,

.

nominees will be developed in The duties of Communlly
each COJ!Uilunity. Petitions Committeemen tnc:lude infor nominations and in- forming farmers of the
structions have been sent to purpose an&lt;J Pr&lt;&gt;v!sions of the
all known eligible voters. U ASCS programs, keeping the
any farmer did not get a County Committee informed
petition or needs additional of local conditions, r ecompetltions he may call at the mending needed changes· In
Meigs ASCS office and pick farm programs, pardne •up., Ali farmers have the ticlpating In community
right 10 nominate candidates 'ineetings a8 necessary and
by petition.
·
performing other dalles as
Each petition submitt~d assigned by the County
must be llmlt~d t o one- Committee.
nominee, signed by at least
ASCS Committee elections·
three eliSible voters in the are open to all eligible voters
communJty, Include If cer- wlthoulre~ard tonce, ~lor,
Ufication that the nominee is rellglon, sex, or national
willing to serve if elected, and origin.
received. at the county ASCS
••
. , Otflce not later than Nov. 1.
"'";:..,_If five or more eligible
•
- candidates are nominated by
proper petition, .no further
npmlnatlons will be rritlde. If
;;: ~14.\1
less than five are nomihated
0
:0
u\\ol • 0 . by petition, 'the present
·I
Community Committee will
1
1•
' ' lfi~\\'ZJ
1•
add the number of nof!linees
...,~\ yl \.ol
. needed to complete the slate
of five . .
7
''/t
o
If a person who is
-1
·
nominated by petition is
found ineligible, he will be so
notified and given 15 days In
wbich to appeal
Persons nominated should
be currently engaged in the
operation of a farm or ranch
.and be well qualified for
committee wor~ . In general,
REV. HAYSE
the farmer is eligible.to be a
"'
Communlty
Committeeman
SYRACUSE - The Rev.
.,
if he lives in the colllQlunlty George Hayse willlijleak and
in which he is eligible to vote: show slides of his and Mrs .
Hayse 's ~ionary work In
South Africa, at 7:30 p.m.
Friday at the Syracuse
Church of the' Nazarene,
Bridgman St.
Rev. and Mrs. Hayse,
..missionaries to the RepubUc
~ POMEROY - Mrs. Mattie of South Africa, South Field,
''" • Sprouse has recieved wor~ of are now on furlough . and
the . death of ber' brother, holding services in Nazarene
il'. ·
· 61 , at
churches. Rev. and Mrs.
Char Ies .A, n.eJSer,
OntariO, Callfornla ,
· Hayse went to the field, June
Mr. Keiser was a graduate 30, 1947.
i
of Pomeroy High School
Rev. Hayse has served in
I, .
where he was a member of many areas of missionary
the ioothaU'\ea!JI iii the early work. From 1948 to 1952, he
I
1930s.
was an evangelist and bunt
He is sui'vlved by Ills wife, the station In Blouberg. From
''
Sally; three sons, Tony, 1954 to the present be opened
f
Johnny E., and Charles, Jr., a new district, had supertour daughters, Robyn, vision of pastors and chur·
IT
:i. Available In
Jackie and Kim all at home ches, was manager of the
.,
Cimet .&amp; Black
and Mrs. Don~ld (Karen) Nazarene Publishing House
:!. ,. ~ ·, , (:l '
,
..Dspu:pQ,, ~1;\~; ~ •.Jl$er,
for two years, and durlii'g- the
1
111
't.tr8. · Sprouse, ' Ruil4nd;' a ' )last''year has served as•the
brother 'Jess 'Holt Lon- !reid superintendent of the
1
·
donder;y ·, a slsier·'ln·law, · Re
. pubUc of Sout!t Africa
k ;
Mrs. Helen Holt Pomeroy· field.
· ,fo!!l- grf'D~ch!l'!ien, severai
Rev. Hayse received hls
,e•c
·
nJeces and nephews. ·
B.S. L. degree in Blbl~ and
Ji ~ ' · : • Betty Ohl!nller
Sei'vlces' were belli at 2 . Theology . at
Chrcago
I 102 E. Main •~ meroy, O. p.m. Wednesday ·1n Ontario EvangelistiC Institute. Prior
I ____·;,;·;•,_ ._.____ with burial there
to going to the field he was
,
·
involved in youth work in
1
Hazelton, Pa. from 1941-1943,,
From 1943 until 1946; was
1
pastor in Claytonia, Pa ..

·

", .o

)

...

-J

The lt'/6 ASC Communlty
, ~ election will be
~· h lth ballots IDIDed to
)'otera about 10 days before
~the eleetlon. The voted ballots
JDU11 be mailed.or returned in
~ ·DOt later than the
~ectiOII date.
.
;: The ASC communities in
llle county are !mown as:
'1Hciford.s8tt.bury, · Chester, ·
JColumbla.sctpto, Lebanon).etart, Ollve -Orang.e,
'1'utland-Salem and Sutton.
,..;., _E!lgible votera .are sent a
~~ (Wthe community in
WIIICil their prtncipal farming
.illterest is.bleated. ·
i: A slate of .at least five

'•

Pictures l1st.

·,I

:...

•

conducted 'o n December 6.

4

held

..

.

!1'1 More Tbu 1 ~ Jl'lallll
Rap :
I'm 20, and not reaDy nuttybul tlllllnightoound llkelt.
but nothing aee'm, to do a
About four montblqo' I (IOrtl) met tiU IUY, thtJIC(i
reaDy good job no matter how
we've
nevllr talked together. l!:vw Iince, I'Ve been yearnin&amp;
much elbow grease f muster.
for
his
picture. You set!, I set in 1 very lutpjly mood, jalt
- DOROTHY.
looting at him.
DEAR DOROTHY
Afrlem even utad if lhe could lllre bla pclure, but be uld
Abruive eleoaen ahou1d
aever be ued ou aueb a lllb. ''No" bealuse he's married.
Should I juti ~ 111 troot of him and III!IP. then hope 1 · . Mttbodllt Women of tb~
Tbe malten aay a damp eloth ·
can
run faster than he can? _ H.F.
· . WilleyiD United lilelllodllll
shotdd elean . ou, and diJbClurdl, llac:lne.
leaves, pampas grass and ~:::~::::~::eu:tue m:u\IJl't«e&amp;&amp;.' waablq IJ4auld (rtplar aol
H.F.: ,
~at,.the rneet1n1lt
crotea. She explained the ~:;
·
automatic) lboqld rtmove
Not mleos you want to look u nutty as you sound.
tbe WQife bOme ... Mrf.
process of skeletonizing
any riqo. Some wu them I
Be
honeli:
a
photo
lln'.
t
all
you're
lfta'.
Expend
yGul'
Belly
Roull!. Prayer by Mn.
leaves. Mrs. Titus also .•,
. couple of tlmeo a year with
yearning
in
daydreama,
but
don't
olfer
"a
ruct
of
the
plc"IO
a
ADeyne
~ and ~
showed a fantail pussywillow :,:
automobile · wax, but be
man
who
won'
appreciate
it.
He'•
married.
Forget
him.
bJ
Mn.
Wolfe opened tilt
which grows near her home . ·· . ·
cartful It II not too 11lppery.
HELEN
AND
SUE
.
.
·-'on.
'
along With her collection Of ·
- POLLY.
+++
A
dGa•U.
of
money
wal
unusual dried materials.
~
.
DEAR POLLY _ Mine is)i Dear Helen and SUe :
made to. the Rulltll
For roll call members
responded by paying their
THURSDAY
pointer discovered out of ·
My only mlatake waslsot Jftpnt. My parenll pli&lt;l for =~~·
dues. Mrs. Morris gave the
J 0 H N J E SB U RG, desperation. I foWKI that I the abortion. Now they watch every move I Illite. I have to be worklhop to be beld at
program on organlc gar- misswnary from France will could clean my fiberglass in by 10 p.m. and they thlr~ me about~ my ~; Nel10ntllle. Several aiek
dening noting that a compost be the guest speaker at the bathtubs and sinks by using a
'!bey think I'D jump IIIlO bed with my boyfriend rrvery
heap is a sign of a CJIIIlpetent Carleton Church, Kingsbury combination of well·ltnown chance I get 111d it will happen aplll,l'm noUtupld !
~ were repcrled.
gardener. Sh9 '''gave in- Road, Thursday at 7:30p.m: ·powdered non-abrasive
Theyplayb!SaUthorlty~andtUemeforalot'I'CI'ilt , The bollday buaar ~
structions on how to make a Slides will be shown. Public cleanser and one-fourth to than I am. They put m~ down, always su.spect me ollylnc. J. dllculaed and It wu noted
one-half cup of powdered learned my lesson, but \bey paid ftr It, and 1 am neverailoWed lbat memblra are Ultllinl
compost heap using such Invited.
materials as weeds, grass,
EVANGELINE CHAPTER laundry detergent. This to forget.,
• eacb Thuraday at tbe IWIIlea ves, woodchips, then 172, O.E.S. Thursday' 7: 30 works wondersand leaves the
I don I need an answer -I've done all I can. Pleaaejuat ~ ~~...~~
adding water and some p.m. with election of officers. bathroom smelling fresh. print tllio 110 they'll read It and set out of my face f..- 111ce.- - d ; e h e l d in ear!l
manure. She sai~r two Dues are payable now.
(Polly'snote-Iwasadvised PRISONER AT 17
. Deeember with the met
inches of comJl(lst added to
CATH,OLlC WOMEN 's these products should be .., .1.
. •le and place · to !Je anthe soil in the garden will ClUb meeting, 8 p.m. Thurs- diluted In water) Now Dear Prisoner:
supply nutrientsJor a year. {("· dsy at social hall of Sacred someone please ten toe how
Duly printed, but we doubt your letter will accunplilb . no~W=~ed a Iliad
general discussion was held Heart Church. There will be to keep mold from forming on much with apprehensive parents.
'!be 111e leii!OII you haven't leamed II EMPATHY ! Think coune.
with members relating ex- no mass. Members ~re to the tracks on the bathtub
how frightened you would be if your daughter, after II)
periences with compost take crafts to w.ork on . doors. _ LisA.
heaps.
Hostesses are Janet Duffy,
DEAR fJSA _Do you dry · abortlon,stlllshowedarebelllous streak that might land her In
PABroRN.unti:)
Mrs. Titus and Mrs. Kin- Rita Hamm, ·Mildred Wells lbe tracts as thorOIIg\lly 11 irouble qain.
- The Rev. Nyle Borden will
you wash them? Mold lhi1ves
Prove you can be trusted by accepting thelr ·overstrict .aerve u pator elf the Forest
ca id served a dessert co urse and Helen Handley.
from a !able centered with an
MEIGS COUNTY Council on dampneas. 'when It doee l'!llestoc;.a whlle, and we HOPE they'D show an lillderslandlnl Run ·Baptilt Cb1ilch. He will
you d111 t now believe poesible. -HELEN
cond1lct J'e8U]ar iervicea on
arrangement of fall flowers. of PTA wiil meet at 7:30p.m. appear, try rubbing wilb
Mrs. Slack presided at the Thursday at Riverview cloth allghdy dampened with
.+++
. tbe IICOIId and fourth Suncoffee service. Mrs. Titus Elementary School.
denatured alcohol. Fretjuent , NOTE F,~OM SUE: It a~ comet to the IIDie old ~:" · dap of each month. The
use of spray hou1ebold 'Talk It out. You can, if you ll knock off mutual resentme11L ehureb eongregatlon mel
presented each of th e
FRIDAY
members with a flower slip
BAKE SALE and rummage dls1afeclanl (follow dlrec- Illig en""'!h to .meoo communicatlm Unes.
Tueaday DiCbt at the church
from her garden.
·.sale at Racine Car Wash, lloils) should keep Ibis 11Dder Rap .
.
+++
and voted 10 caD the Rev. Mr.
Thursday and Friday, 9 a.m. control. - POLI,Y.
·
·
•
Borden u putor While be
I'm 14 and my brother-In-law tried 10 rape me. I llaby-ilt .resides in · Gamprilil, he 11
to 5 p.m. by Racine Baseball
for them, and he lakes me home afterwards. When he Iunsed ' ·emplo....o
in Mlnllleld •
Assn., with proceeds going to
1~
·
'
~·
new unifonns now on order. Sunday School, 9:30 .a.in. atmeljumpedoUtofthecarandranlntoourhouae.
followed by worship service.
I
couldn't
teD
anyone.
It
would
twmy
ala,
and 1f Dad found
MARY SHRINE 37, Order Basket dinner at nOOn. Af· outbe'dmurdertheguy. What to do? -SCARED
Versaltle sb1rtdress
of
the White Snrine of ternoon services at 2 p.m.
You can do ahnost anything
Jerusalem
, 8 p.m. Friday at Christian singers of Point Dear Scared:
with a little wool shirtdress in
beige or .any other neutral the Pomeroy Masonic Pleasant and Gospel Tones of
Warn ,your !Hn~ thaty ou'll teD ·the whole family if be.
color. It fits nicely under a Temple. Material objective Chester along with other ~es near you again. Should h~ sUll seem dangerous, your
tweed spori jacket, a tabard night to be observed. District ·singers will be featured.
Sister should know.
·
'
or a multi&lt;olored sweater. chairman, Mrs. Emily 2-24 officers sb
Our guess is it won\ happen a second tlm4! (perhaps be 1111
Frazier will be a guest.
' ·Add a b1ousoo
New officers were Installed drunk?), but untll you're sure, avcid beU. ,al111e with him,
A blouson jacket Is the Refreshments are to be at a recent meeting of the even if tfiat means the loss of,your baby..!ittlng job. -HELEN
thing to wear over llgbl served by the Middleport Baptist ·Women of.lhe First AND SUE
pants, or a newly fashioned members who are to take Southern Baptist Church,
ligbtsklrt. Choose 11 in suede, either sandwlches or cookies. Pomeroy,
.
'
· ·
fur, cashmere
aoythhlg
ijAPPY HARVESTERS, . Installed were Carolyn Uomecomt'n~a '
su~ J 1 ,11
' you like.
Trinity ·Church social room, DBiley, president; Lenaill
6
1/IUUJ
7:30 Friday night.
Basham , secretary.'
RETURN
JONATHAN treasurer; Clara White,
Tbe·aMualhomecomlnl of otben having ..,edal muiC
,Meigs Chapter, Daughters of mission study chairman; tbe Hemlock Christian ·were Roger Watson and
CURTAINJ..
IN COLUMBUS
COOLVILLE '- Mrs. Mary the American Revolution, Donna Spencer and Rachael Cl)urcb was held Sunday with Sbaron Wlllon, Mrs. llllty
DRAPERY
Christy of here has spent I :30 p.m. Friday, Episcopal Lefebre, co-chairmen for 108 person~ attending the Kern and Ray WhaleY· Then
and
several days in Columbus pariah house, Pomeroy, with mission !IIIPPDrt, and Sylvia l!lOl'lliDS aervi~, and 121 wu a reacllfl8 by Mn. JeMlt
program
on
quilts
by
Betty
Zw.!J!ing . and Rho jean Me- present for the afternoon White. Special 111uslc · '!tl .. '
with Mrs. Rachel Christy,
Milhoan.
Clure, co.chalrmen for prosram.. A basket dinner allo preaented by vlllllnj:·
who has been ill.
SATURDAY
mission action.
wu held at noon.
church groups. Ten churellel •
SQUARE
DANCE
,
8-11
Projects
piBIUied
for
the
Dr.
James
Quisenberry
.of
were
repreaented at the
FAMU.YVISITING
p.m.
Saturda
y,
Portland
coming
mont.
h
s
include
Morehead,
Kf.
.
a
former
homeeomlni·
Mrs. Don Brown, Chris and
Stacey, of Columbus are Grade School sponsored by making tray cards for minister, gave the mol'lliDS
Senior citizens .Golden Age Thanksgiving, Christmas and sermon and also had a serI
spendin
spending the week here Club. Music by String- Easter for the hospital and monette ·at thti afternoon ,
SERVICI!S Sl."r
visiting her parents, Mr. and dusters ; callers, Cora Milton nursing home qnd gift boles · program. He Wll joined by
CHESTER - The Cbellet
Mrs. Everett Bachner. Don and Glenn Lambert. Children lor the residents of the his dauilhlers, Lynne ait4 Church of God will have ID
Brown· is in Hartford, Conn. under 12 free, adults, $1. nursing home for Christmas. Ann, for a vocal number, evqeliltlc service at 7: 30
Refreshments.
The next meeting was Featured · on the program p.m. Sunday with tbe Rev•• .
for the week on business.
•
SOUP AND bake sale, BIUiounced for Oct. 18 at were "The Chrlotlanairea" of Paul Coy II guest l!liilllt!lr; .
Syracuse
·.First
United
which time a project work the. Gallipolis Christian Communioo and foot wullinC .,
NOW
SONGFEST SLATED
Church. The Hemlock Grove will be featurel of tbe evenirJC
CHESTER - A songfest Presbyterian Church annex, session will be held.
WIS $2':98
SUNDAy
youth group had a song and semce.
·
wlll be held at the Church of Saturday beginning II :.30
a.m.
sponsored
by
Guiding
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
.
God at Chester at 2 p.m.
(Also,
we
will
Sunday featuring the Coy Star Council 124, Daugbters Black Lung Assn. meeting,
St
omCEIISELECI'ED
of
Ameril!o.
Take
containers
custom-m1ke
Sunday,
Jack Ward's
·
'J
Family of Waverly, the
Offk:era will be electid dr1perles for you)
Eternal Youth Singers of for carry out orders.
recreation room with James
wben
the M,igs CollldJ
FISH
FRY
for
members
F. Kldd, Glouster, president, ~ ·
tJ.eS, ~
Wellston, the Gospel Tones
Council
on AsiDII meeta at
Quartet of Chester, and Ron ~nd families of Modern to be on hand. Doors ope~~ at
9:10
a.m.
TUeeday at the J
Susie Fischer celebrated
Dickens and faniily of ·'Woodmen of America, C!!mp 12 noon ; all members asked
.B,enlilr
Cllilel)l
Center Ill
her 8llt birthday TUelday
Waverly .
Rev.
Mike 7230, Burllngbllm, at the hall to attend.
Pomeroy.
AD
l'llldentl,
II,
!47TH HOMECOMING of nigbt. Glfla were presented to
Southerd, pastor, extends an at 7:30 p.m. Saturday. Jane
and
over,
are
1nvlted
to
ito
invitation to the public. ' Brown, R.N ., county Rutland . Church ~ Christ, her by her family. Calte and tend.
'
tuberculosis nurse, speaker. Sunday. beginning at 9:30 coffee were served.
lo)eat and beverage furnished a.m. ; afternoon sefvlce 2 Attending were Tony and
by camp; door prize to be p.m. with special singing I!Uda Frecker, BW and Mary
given. P'amllies to take from area churches; pubUc Porter and children, John
covered dish .
Invited.
.
and Mark, Gerald, Gloria,
MEMBERS OF Shade
HOMECOMING AT Roger, Dennis and Debbie
River · Masonlc Lodge are Flatwoods Unlted Methodist Michael, Brenda, SlleUy and
asked to meet at the haD at 10 Church, Sunday, 12:30 p.m. Tara Wolfe, Thurman
a.m. Saturday to repair the basket dinner; afternoon Fischer, Carol and Stacey
roof.
service, 2p.m. featuring the Thel11, Gary and Vicky
CARNIVAL Saturday at "Praise the Lord" singers 1\fichael, Hazel Michael and
Riverview Elementary, from Kingston, Ohio, and ' Diana King.
.
Reedsville, Dinner at 5 p.m. other taleJ)t; pubUc lnV\ted.
- - -- ·
REVIVALPLANNED
Carnival at 7 p.m. Public
. MONDAY
Arevival will be held at the
.,Oct.9-12-4p .m.
Invited.
SOUTHERN
ATHLETIC
Hazel
Community Church
SUNDAY
Boosters Monday, 7:30 p.m. Oct. 11 tbrougb Oct. 24 with
ANNUAL HOMECOMING at high school: Ali Interested the Rev, George Hoetbar u
at Carleton Church Sunday. persons urged to attend.
Full color
guest speaker. Tbere will be
photo I
special singing each evening.
Servicea are at 7:30 nlghlly.
The public is Invited.

Three, outstanding
arrangements were on
display at the meeting. Mrs.
Horky used gloriosa and
marigolds
in
her
arrangement, Mrs. Skinner, yellow sweetheart roses
and wild asters In a seashell,
and Mrs. Titus, a dried
·arrangement. us i ng
skeletonized magnolia

,·

\

5X7- '2.50

.,

I,

By Helen Hottel

Asc' co11:1ln~ity
electi,o
'

FALL .PICTURES

'"

'

an associate meinber was
,noted. It was also reported
that Mrs. Mildred Ziegl~r. an·
active member of the club, is \ ,

Alice Wo!fo
•. presents
'program '

!kt. 7, 1976

'1.98

Hush

H'ere·s 'the neWest fashion star l Or !he young , ·need til e
latest " ga l ·. , lhe Ge n11n1 Super t:om lurl i:!bll:! ou tr" design with semi-soeE;!U lacmg and &lt;1 h1n1 of a wedgcsole.
And Hush Puppies · Caw als are born comforrablo .

I
•"

I

Fashion, beauty
- Chignons are back
An up-to-date chignon
should hit the nape of the
neck and the front of your
hair should be kept soft.
Covering up
You can't have too many
layers of fabric on your bead
lbese da ys. Cowl neck
sweaters convert into hoods.
These you· can then cover
with the hood of a Jackel or
coal. De-hood according lo
temperature.

Polly's Pointers

7..:... The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 'lbursday,

heritage house .
N. 2nd Ave.

,·

l'
'

J

'

.

H2·5627

..

''

�.6 -Tbe OaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Oct. 7, 1976 '

••

.Gardei;ers planning for holiday
lrf.'eport Garden Club Hallie and Nellie Zerkle. Mrs.
Titus and Mrs. John Kincaid
holiday ~. planned a will organize the program.
C h r ia t m a s··-.Jl ower Members are to lake a sack
arrangement workshop for luncheon with the program
Nov. I durillg their Mod~ committee to provide the
night meeting at the country dessert and the. coffee.
home of Mrs. James Titus.
The planter at the in·
The workshop will be an all- tersection of Mill and Second
dey &amp;!fair in the social room in Middleport was discussed
of the Columbus and Southern and Mrs. Michael Fry was
Ohio Electric Co. beginning appointed to have cha rge of
at 10:30 a.m. It will feat• ,·e the project 'Bnd to buy
Christmas arraoRemeuts greenery to be placed there.
suitable for use in the Meiss Plans were also made to put
(;ounty Christmas flower out the tulip bulbs which w.ere
show as well as demon- taken up after the spring
at. atlons
on
maki ng blooming.
Christmas ornaments by
It was noted that the home
of Mrs. Betsy Horky is on the
house tour scheduled for
Sunday and the club agreed.
to
iurnlsh
f,\Ower
arrangements ·to decorate
' her home. Mrs. Sibley Slack,
president, called for volunteers · to
mak.e
the
·arrangements and agreeing
to do so were !drs. Fry, Mrs.
•••
Dorothy Morris, Mrs. Slack,
••
· Mrs. Mary Skinner, Miss
Nellie Zerkle and Mrs Kin- .
cald.
A colonial arrangement ui
Open9·l
a
crystal compote with the
: \-~Ma=n~d~o~y.~lh~ru~~~~u~rd:•~Y__J
flowers in cylors representing
•I
the di!ferent offlces was used
by Mrs. Fry in an impressive
'I
installation ceremony for the
1976.-77 officers. installed
•
were Mrs. Slack, president;
I'
Mrs. Horky, vice president ;
J
Mrs.
Beuilih
Hayes,
I
secretary, and Miss Nellie
•'
Zerkle, treasurer. Mrs. Fry
concluded the ceremony with
'II
comments to the officers a.nd
the members on club values.
Mrs. Dana Kessinger was
welcomed as a new member.
I
Mrs. Slack read "On Our
•
Wai' by J. D. Freeman, and
the death of Miss Mary Park,
mei.~IS , looking toward the

.-

'

DAN'S

'

'

..

Frigidaire
Laundry
Pair ·

Wash one piece or up to
an 18-lb load in this
Frigidaire Heavy Duly
Washer. Matching Dryer
otters a 2-position Fabrics
selector, Tim ed and
No Heat cycles.
•

'

I'

••
~

.

l
l

•
'
ColorCamel
'

'·

'•'

''
'••

·.,

•
;

l

t

GEM I

i

·. •

llia•pi(·s

/US I for you.

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

'

',

,,"

.

m.

.

"':\

Tips for 'cleaning

Us·•• ·•

plastic bathtubs

r'

"

••
I

•\

,.,'Polly.Cra·m
" er
uy
DEAR POLLY - The
apartment my husband and 1
recently moved into has a
plastic bathtub that presents
the most impossible cleaning
•job I have ever encountered. 1
hope someone ¢an ·assist me ·
·as I have used a cleaner on it,
·
·

i

sOC•1aI

.; CI . da
1 aen r

•·

.,'
•
0

''•
'

'.

,"t:!/:

,,

Forat RIID Unlted MoibodlJt
Church Thursday · and
Frldliy, clct. 7 and a.

r

\

•,'·

'

•

aJamily

'

'

''
\

.DUTTON'S DRUG STORE

1

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

i

•

·

ptlping

•..SENIOR. CITIZENS

''

'
'I'

,,""'S\ '·e'
· .

Brother dies
.i n California

•·

SALE

I

0

'"

MARGUERITE'S
SHOES

l.

'II

oJft.lrtsilf»eS .
CHA.fMAN'S SHOE STORE

Pomeroy, o.

992-281,5

'CARDS WANTED
A card ajlower II plaMed
for Mrl. Edith Davia wbo will
be 10 yean old on Sunday,
Oct. 10. Mn. Davt, resides on
Union Ave., Pomeroy, with a
niece, Mrs. Marie Leifheit.

I I

I

I
I

I'

.

I

~Ill$
. !op,~27 so

I:

~ock&lt;'$1800

' I~
I

'

r1
I
i•

E.

!=
i

I

, EIGHTY-ONE IN BAND - Southern High School's Marching
rncreased m me!Jlbership from 39 last year to 81 this year. The new director
is Jesse Browning.
·

Crow guiding

.
campaign for
'

.

highest court
Don P. Brown, candidate
for Justice . of The Ohio
Supreme Court, has named
Pomeroy Atty. carson Crow
Chainnan of his campaign in
Meigs County. Brown said
Craw's acceptance of the
position Is a "real boost" to
his campaign. "We ~ve been
very fortunate in attracting
ltlgh caliber people such as
Crow to work on my cam- ·
paign," Brown said.
GO OVER ROUTINES - Jesse Brownlng, new ~and director at Southern ltlgh School,
Crbw has law offices at
reviewed drllls for the band at Southern High wrth Lor! Guinther field commander.
Second and Mulberry Sts. In
llrownin~ did .his under~radu~te work at Qllvet Nazare"" College and worked i!Jward his
Pomeroy. He Is active in the
masters at Ohro State U~versrty an? Oberbn .College. He has taught nine years in Ohio, the
Ohio Bar Asaocialion. At Ohio
,Slate of Marne and commg In Racme from Wilmington, Delaware. He had two years of
Unlversity he was an all Midexperience and commander of the .287th Army Band. His previous bands have received
American Conference Center
number one ratings in state competition. He and his wife and two children reside in Portin 1969 and 1970 and selected
land.
'
most Valuable Play~r on the
1970 Ohio University football
team.

as ho looked In !he fall of76. You' ll !honk your5ttf In the
· years to come. .
.,

During lh... s~~tci•l . hours; 1 10 Pel

discount on fill &amp; winter COlts•. 11cktl1 &amp;
snoWiults will be In ~ct. &lt;~n peld In
full. Sorry, IIYIWIYI not Included.)

• -&lt;.·

•
=
= j, ,.

;=

,.

'

CHESTER - Army Pvt.
Kenneth K. Burke, 19, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burke,
Chester, ' Is one of the
thousands of American and
Allied troopa who look part 1n
NATO Erercise Relorger 76
in Germany.
Reforger 76 was two major
field training erercises
conducted In the states of
Bavaria and Hessen, Germany . It Included participating elements of NATO
forces of the u: s., Belgium,
Canad, and Germany.
Burke is regularly assigned
as an assistant gunner in the
101st Airborne Division of Ft.
Campbell, Ky. He 1s a 1975
graduate of Eastern High
School.

I

I

i;

..

~

•

•
BAHR tLOTffiERS
992-2351

••

From

•

0

$20()

GivE:
Bulova
Accutrone
The tamou a tuning fork '
movement keeps avery :
Aecutron watch accurate •
to within 1 minute a month. • :

Our selection rangaa from •
sta/nleaa atael
;
.
from sporty atrapa

jawelry bncelell.
!hom oll, todoy.
'

to ;

See ~

•

I

u .. Loy Awoy l'lan NOo!lt :
I

GOESSLER '
JeweiiJ Store

I

Court St., Pom•roy ; .

•'
•
.,

byThom MeAn
Only · :

••
;·

•

You get uppers made' o('
soft, quality leather. :

You get
inner
linings and leather covered
innersoles.

Who !lliYS a great-looking,
great-feeling, greatwearing dress shoe
has to be expensive?
Not Thorn MeAn.

·Footgioves are .
designed for
style, crafted

You get tough,
tong-lasting
soles and. heel~.

FAMILY OUTING"
I.A.M. &amp; A.W.

LOCAL LODGE NO: 598
SO. CHARLESTON

for comfort, and

built to last.

.:

In black and brown.

; ~"'-~

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 10TH
CAMDEN PARK'S
ANNUAL

.. APPRECIATION DAY"
. LAST DAYQF 1976 SEASON
RIDE ALL DAY-lf AMIII9 rM-S3 .00 .Person

~'\

•

Hi$

TRI·M OFFICERS - Music Mast~ of America (Tri-M) Club at Southern High has
elected (front) Kim Taylor, treasurer ; Usa Alien, secretary, and Heidi Ashley, ~lslorlan; ·
(back), Bob?i Chapman, pr~ident, and.Br.ema Lawrence, vice president.

11

'·.'

~

Accutron

SA TURDA:f, OCTOBER 9TH
. UNTIL 5 PM .
.

dlh.

£i ld
e exercise

. PARK RESERVED

..··..,..

For
Christmas.

Pvt. Burke on

Q
FI(ES

.

'

r

. .

~~~~~~~~j~~i'~l'houe~~tlewllhfo!.hlonotje

l,

Band

byKatie Crow ·

Children grow up fast. "-"' a memento of your chlld

CLUBTOHEET
RACINE - The Western
Boot CB Club .~~ at. 8
p.m. Mondiy atiht Roush

Landlnll.

),

'

Contemporary corduroy
separates from The fallery ·•
by Haggar~ · .
.

I

Pictures

SAHL SUES
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Comedian Mort Sahl sued
Hilton Hotels Wednesday,
cHarging he was beaten by an
employe of the Las Vegas
NO AWARD PLEASE
YARD SALE
NASHVILLE , Tenn. (UP!) HUlon.
FOUR
Family yard sale at
Sahl gave no details of the
- Country music singer
Poulin residence
Richard
incident,
other
than
that
he
"Waylon Jennings, citing
beside
Bradbury
School.
was
assaulted
Oct.
8,
1975.
He
"personal and private
Men's,
women's,
childfen's
asked
for
damages,
the
reasons," says he doesn't
clothing, coats and shoes,
want. to be coosidered for arnolDII to be determined
bedspreads, curtains,
·later.
Country Music Assocation
pictures and lamps, maple
awards this year. But,he may,
vanity, gas heater, quilting
get them. anyway because be
scrapa, kitchen gadgets,
'tithdrew after balloting was AMY HANGS TOUGH
Thursday and Friday, Oct.
f,'er. .
·
TUCSON, Ariz. (uPl)
7 &amp; 8, 9 to 4 p.m.
· ;'In the past Jenniligs has
to brother Chip,
called the awards a rigged, According
Amy Carter was knocking
popularity con~ .
down $20 a day profit in
lem111ade sales In tourists YARD SALE, Saturday, Oct.
who dropped by Plains, Ga .,
9, 10 a.m. til evening.
Across from Roadside Park
PELE BACK
and forked over $10 a day t.)
Dad, Jimmy, for hls
In Syraclll!e•
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil campaign.
11).7-ltc
(DPI) - New York Cosmos
But when Dad got the
star, Pele, whose dazzling Democratic nomination, the
RUMMAGE SALE SET ·
scoring took Brazil to World Secret Sei'vlce closed the
A
rwrunage sate will be
CUp victories in 1958, 1962, street in front of the Carter
held
at
the Enterprise United
and 1970, was back In , home.
Methodist
Church Thursday
Maraca n a S tad I u·m
"So Amy's lemonade staild
and
Friday,
Oct. 7 and8, from
Wednesday, wearing his No. went bankrupt and she asked
9
until
4
p.m.
A large selec10 green · an!l yellow Brazil for her $10 hack," dtlp told
tion~~
children's
clothing will
team jersey ftr the first time local Democrats .
be
available.
in five years.
Peie, 35, who ·sctred 1,216
goals in 1,255 games during
0
hls 17-year career with
SaqW. Soccer Club, played
the first 45-minute half, but
did not score.
IS EVERYONE'S BUSINESS!

I

BJ birthda11
fi ted 1J da

.,.,

I

''8 .
v e"

tip~

TO BOW SALE

-

..

a

A rummage aale will be
held In the buement of the

_,

.

nominees will be developed in The duties of Communlly
each COJ!Uilunity. Petitions Committeemen tnc:lude infor nominations and in- forming farmers of the
structions have been sent to purpose an&lt;J Pr&lt;&gt;v!sions of the
all known eligible voters. U ASCS programs, keeping the
any farmer did not get a County Committee informed
petition or needs additional of local conditions, r ecompetltions he may call at the mending needed changes· In
Meigs ASCS office and pick farm programs, pardne •up., Ali farmers have the ticlpating In community
right 10 nominate candidates 'ineetings a8 necessary and
by petition.
·
performing other dalles as
Each petition submitt~d assigned by the County
must be llmlt~d t o one- Committee.
nominee, signed by at least
ASCS Committee elections·
three eliSible voters in the are open to all eligible voters
communJty, Include If cer- wlthoulre~ard tonce, ~lor,
Ufication that the nominee is rellglon, sex, or national
willing to serve if elected, and origin.
received. at the county ASCS
••
. , Otflce not later than Nov. 1.
"'";:..,_If five or more eligible
•
- candidates are nominated by
proper petition, .no further
npmlnatlons will be rritlde. If
;;: ~14.\1
less than five are nomihated
0
:0
u\\ol • 0 . by petition, 'the present
·I
Community Committee will
1
1•
' ' lfi~\\'ZJ
1•
add the number of nof!linees
...,~\ yl \.ol
. needed to complete the slate
of five . .
7
''/t
o
If a person who is
-1
·
nominated by petition is
found ineligible, he will be so
notified and given 15 days In
wbich to appeal
Persons nominated should
be currently engaged in the
operation of a farm or ranch
.and be well qualified for
committee wor~ . In general,
REV. HAYSE
the farmer is eligible.to be a
"'
Communlty
Committeeman
SYRACUSE - The Rev.
.,
if he lives in the colllQlunlty George Hayse willlijleak and
in which he is eligible to vote: show slides of his and Mrs .
Hayse 's ~ionary work In
South Africa, at 7:30 p.m.
Friday at the Syracuse
Church of the' Nazarene,
Bridgman St.
Rev. and Mrs. Hayse,
..missionaries to the RepubUc
~ POMEROY - Mrs. Mattie of South Africa, South Field,
''" • Sprouse has recieved wor~ of are now on furlough . and
the . death of ber' brother, holding services in Nazarene
il'. ·
· 61 , at
churches. Rev. and Mrs.
Char Ies .A, n.eJSer,
OntariO, Callfornla ,
· Hayse went to the field, June
Mr. Keiser was a graduate 30, 1947.
i
of Pomeroy High School
Rev. Hayse has served in
I, .
where he was a member of many areas of missionary
the ioothaU'\ea!JI iii the early work. From 1948 to 1952, he
I
1930s.
was an evangelist and bunt
He is sui'vlved by Ills wife, the station In Blouberg. From
''
Sally; three sons, Tony, 1954 to the present be opened
f
Johnny E., and Charles, Jr., a new district, had supertour daughters, Robyn, vision of pastors and chur·
IT
:i. Available In
Jackie and Kim all at home ches, was manager of the
.,
Cimet .&amp; Black
and Mrs. Don~ld (Karen) Nazarene Publishing House
:!. ,. ~ ·, , (:l '
,
..Dspu:pQ,, ~1;\~; ~ •.Jl$er,
for two years, and durlii'g- the
1
111
't.tr8. · Sprouse, ' Ruil4nd;' a ' )last''year has served as•the
brother 'Jess 'Holt Lon- !reid superintendent of the
1
·
donder;y ·, a slsier·'ln·law, · Re
. pubUc of Sout!t Africa
k ;
Mrs. Helen Holt Pomeroy· field.
· ,fo!!l- grf'D~ch!l'!ien, severai
Rev. Hayse received hls
,e•c
·
nJeces and nephews. ·
B.S. L. degree in Blbl~ and
Ji ~ ' · : • Betty Ohl!nller
Sei'vlces' were belli at 2 . Theology . at
Chrcago
I 102 E. Main •~ meroy, O. p.m. Wednesday ·1n Ontario EvangelistiC Institute. Prior
I ____·;,;·;•,_ ._.____ with burial there
to going to the field he was
,
·
involved in youth work in
1
Hazelton, Pa. from 1941-1943,,
From 1943 until 1946; was
1
pastor in Claytonia, Pa ..

·

", .o

)

...

-J

The lt'/6 ASC Communlty
, ~ election will be
~· h lth ballots IDIDed to
)'otera about 10 days before
~the eleetlon. The voted ballots
JDU11 be mailed.or returned in
~ ·DOt later than the
~ectiOII date.
.
;: The ASC communities in
llle county are !mown as:
'1Hciford.s8tt.bury, · Chester, ·
JColumbla.sctpto, Lebanon).etart, Ollve -Orang.e,
'1'utland-Salem and Sutton.
,..;., _E!lgible votera .are sent a
~~ (Wthe community in
WIIICil their prtncipal farming
.illterest is.bleated. ·
i: A slate of .at least five

'•

Pictures l1st.

·,I

:...

•

conducted 'o n December 6.

4

held

..

.

!1'1 More Tbu 1 ~ Jl'lallll
Rap :
I'm 20, and not reaDy nuttybul tlllllnightoound llkelt.
but nothing aee'm, to do a
About four montblqo' I (IOrtl) met tiU IUY, thtJIC(i
reaDy good job no matter how
we've
nevllr talked together. l!:vw Iince, I'Ve been yearnin&amp;
much elbow grease f muster.
for
his
picture. You set!, I set in 1 very lutpjly mood, jalt
- DOROTHY.
looting at him.
DEAR DOROTHY
Afrlem even utad if lhe could lllre bla pclure, but be uld
Abruive eleoaen ahou1d
aever be ued ou aueb a lllb. ''No" bealuse he's married.
Should I juti ~ 111 troot of him and III!IP. then hope 1 · . Mttbodllt Women of tb~
Tbe malten aay a damp eloth ·
can
run faster than he can? _ H.F.
· . WilleyiD United lilelllodllll
shotdd elean . ou, and diJbClurdl, llac:lne.
leaves, pampas grass and ~:::~::::~::eu:tue m:u\IJl't«e&amp;&amp;.' waablq IJ4auld (rtplar aol
H.F.: ,
~at,.the rneet1n1lt
crotea. She explained the ~:;
·
automatic) lboqld rtmove
Not mleos you want to look u nutty as you sound.
tbe WQife bOme ... Mrf.
process of skeletonizing
any riqo. Some wu them I
Be
honeli:
a
photo
lln'.
t
all
you're
lfta'.
Expend
yGul'
Belly
Roull!. Prayer by Mn.
leaves. Mrs. Titus also .•,
. couple of tlmeo a year with
yearning
in
daydreama,
but
don't
olfer
"a
ruct
of
the
plc"IO
a
ADeyne
~ and ~
showed a fantail pussywillow :,:
automobile · wax, but be
man
who
won'
appreciate
it.
He'•
married.
Forget
him.
bJ
Mn.
Wolfe opened tilt
which grows near her home . ·· . ·
cartful It II not too 11lppery.
HELEN
AND
SUE
.
.
·-'on.
'
along With her collection Of ·
- POLLY.
+++
A
dGa•U.
of
money
wal
unusual dried materials.
~
.
DEAR POLLY _ Mine is)i Dear Helen and SUe :
made to. the Rulltll
For roll call members
responded by paying their
THURSDAY
pointer discovered out of ·
My only mlatake waslsot Jftpnt. My parenll pli&lt;l for =~~·
dues. Mrs. Morris gave the
J 0 H N J E SB U RG, desperation. I foWKI that I the abortion. Now they watch every move I Illite. I have to be worklhop to be beld at
program on organlc gar- misswnary from France will could clean my fiberglass in by 10 p.m. and they thlr~ me about~ my ~; Nel10ntllle. Several aiek
dening noting that a compost be the guest speaker at the bathtubs and sinks by using a
'!bey think I'D jump IIIlO bed with my boyfriend rrvery
heap is a sign of a CJIIIlpetent Carleton Church, Kingsbury combination of well·ltnown chance I get 111d it will happen aplll,l'm noUtupld !
~ were repcrled.
gardener. Sh9 '''gave in- Road, Thursday at 7:30p.m: ·powdered non-abrasive
Theyplayb!SaUthorlty~andtUemeforalot'I'CI'ilt , The bollday buaar ~
structions on how to make a Slides will be shown. Public cleanser and one-fourth to than I am. They put m~ down, always su.spect me ollylnc. J. dllculaed and It wu noted
one-half cup of powdered learned my lesson, but \bey paid ftr It, and 1 am neverailoWed lbat memblra are Ultllinl
compost heap using such Invited.
materials as weeds, grass,
EVANGELINE CHAPTER laundry detergent. This to forget.,
• eacb Thuraday at tbe IWIIlea ves, woodchips, then 172, O.E.S. Thursday' 7: 30 works wondersand leaves the
I don I need an answer -I've done all I can. Pleaaejuat ~ ~~...~~
adding water and some p.m. with election of officers. bathroom smelling fresh. print tllio 110 they'll read It and set out of my face f..- 111ce.- - d ; e h e l d in ear!l
manure. She sai~r two Dues are payable now.
(Polly'snote-Iwasadvised PRISONER AT 17
. Deeember with the met
inches of comJl(lst added to
CATH,OLlC WOMEN 's these products should be .., .1.
. •le and place · to !Je anthe soil in the garden will ClUb meeting, 8 p.m. Thurs- diluted In water) Now Dear Prisoner:
supply nutrientsJor a year. {("· dsy at social hall of Sacred someone please ten toe how
Duly printed, but we doubt your letter will accunplilb . no~W=~ed a Iliad
general discussion was held Heart Church. There will be to keep mold from forming on much with apprehensive parents.
'!be 111e leii!OII you haven't leamed II EMPATHY ! Think coune.
with members relating ex- no mass. Members ~re to the tracks on the bathtub
how frightened you would be if your daughter, after II)
periences with compost take crafts to w.ork on . doors. _ LisA.
heaps.
Hostesses are Janet Duffy,
DEAR fJSA _Do you dry · abortlon,stlllshowedarebelllous streak that might land her In
PABroRN.unti:)
Mrs. Titus and Mrs. Kin- Rita Hamm, ·Mildred Wells lbe tracts as thorOIIg\lly 11 irouble qain.
- The Rev. Nyle Borden will
you wash them? Mold lhi1ves
Prove you can be trusted by accepting thelr ·overstrict .aerve u pator elf the Forest
ca id served a dessert co urse and Helen Handley.
from a !able centered with an
MEIGS COUNTY Council on dampneas. 'when It doee l'!llestoc;.a whlle, and we HOPE they'D show an lillderslandlnl Run ·Baptilt Cb1ilch. He will
you d111 t now believe poesible. -HELEN
cond1lct J'e8U]ar iervicea on
arrangement of fall flowers. of PTA wiil meet at 7:30p.m. appear, try rubbing wilb
Mrs. Slack presided at the Thursday at Riverview cloth allghdy dampened with
.+++
. tbe IICOIId and fourth Suncoffee service. Mrs. Titus Elementary School.
denatured alcohol. Fretjuent , NOTE F,~OM SUE: It a~ comet to the IIDie old ~:" · dap of each month. The
use of spray hou1ebold 'Talk It out. You can, if you ll knock off mutual resentme11L ehureb eongregatlon mel
presented each of th e
FRIDAY
members with a flower slip
BAKE SALE and rummage dls1afeclanl (follow dlrec- Illig en""'!h to .meoo communicatlm Unes.
Tueaday DiCbt at the church
from her garden.
·.sale at Racine Car Wash, lloils) should keep Ibis 11Dder Rap .
.
+++
and voted 10 caD the Rev. Mr.
Thursday and Friday, 9 a.m. control. - POLI,Y.
·
·
•
Borden u putor While be
I'm 14 and my brother-In-law tried 10 rape me. I llaby-ilt .resides in · Gamprilil, he 11
to 5 p.m. by Racine Baseball
for them, and he lakes me home afterwards. When he Iunsed ' ·emplo....o
in Mlnllleld •
Assn., with proceeds going to
1~
·
'
~·
new unifonns now on order. Sunday School, 9:30 .a.in. atmeljumpedoUtofthecarandranlntoourhouae.
followed by worship service.
I
couldn't
teD
anyone.
It
would
twmy
ala,
and 1f Dad found
MARY SHRINE 37, Order Basket dinner at nOOn. Af· outbe'dmurdertheguy. What to do? -SCARED
Versaltle sb1rtdress
of
the White Snrine of ternoon services at 2 p.m.
You can do ahnost anything
Jerusalem
, 8 p.m. Friday at Christian singers of Point Dear Scared:
with a little wool shirtdress in
beige or .any other neutral the Pomeroy Masonic Pleasant and Gospel Tones of
Warn ,your !Hn~ thaty ou'll teD ·the whole family if be.
color. It fits nicely under a Temple. Material objective Chester along with other ~es near you again. Should h~ sUll seem dangerous, your
tweed spori jacket, a tabard night to be observed. District ·singers will be featured.
Sister should know.
·
'
or a multi&lt;olored sweater. chairman, Mrs. Emily 2-24 officers sb
Our guess is it won\ happen a second tlm4! (perhaps be 1111
Frazier will be a guest.
' ·Add a b1ousoo
New officers were Installed drunk?), but untll you're sure, avcid beU. ,al111e with him,
A blouson jacket Is the Refreshments are to be at a recent meeting of the even if tfiat means the loss of,your baby..!ittlng job. -HELEN
thing to wear over llgbl served by the Middleport Baptist ·Women of.lhe First AND SUE
pants, or a newly fashioned members who are to take Southern Baptist Church,
ligbtsklrt. Choose 11 in suede, either sandwlches or cookies. Pomeroy,
.
'
· ·
fur, cashmere
aoythhlg
ijAPPY HARVESTERS, . Installed were Carolyn Uomecomt'n~a '
su~ J 1 ,11
' you like.
Trinity ·Church social room, DBiley, president; Lenaill
6
1/IUUJ
7:30 Friday night.
Basham , secretary.'
RETURN
JONATHAN treasurer; Clara White,
Tbe·aMualhomecomlnl of otben having ..,edal muiC
,Meigs Chapter, Daughters of mission study chairman; tbe Hemlock Christian ·were Roger Watson and
CURTAINJ..
IN COLUMBUS
COOLVILLE '- Mrs. Mary the American Revolution, Donna Spencer and Rachael Cl)urcb was held Sunday with Sbaron Wlllon, Mrs. llllty
DRAPERY
Christy of here has spent I :30 p.m. Friday, Episcopal Lefebre, co-chairmen for 108 person~ attending the Kern and Ray WhaleY· Then
and
several days in Columbus pariah house, Pomeroy, with mission !IIIPPDrt, and Sylvia l!lOl'lliDS aervi~, and 121 wu a reacllfl8 by Mn. JeMlt
program
on
quilts
by
Betty
Zw.!J!ing . and Rho jean Me- present for the afternoon White. Special 111uslc · '!tl .. '
with Mrs. Rachel Christy,
Milhoan.
Clure, co.chalrmen for prosram.. A basket dinner allo preaented by vlllllnj:·
who has been ill.
SATURDAY
mission action.
wu held at noon.
church groups. Ten churellel •
SQUARE
DANCE
,
8-11
Projects
piBIUied
for
the
Dr.
James
Quisenberry
.of
were
repreaented at the
FAMU.YVISITING
p.m.
Saturda
y,
Portland
coming
mont.
h
s
include
Morehead,
Kf.
.
a
former
homeeomlni·
Mrs. Don Brown, Chris and
Stacey, of Columbus are Grade School sponsored by making tray cards for minister, gave the mol'lliDS
Senior citizens .Golden Age Thanksgiving, Christmas and sermon and also had a serI
spendin
spending the week here Club. Music by String- Easter for the hospital and monette ·at thti afternoon ,
SERVICI!S Sl."r
visiting her parents, Mr. and dusters ; callers, Cora Milton nursing home qnd gift boles · program. He Wll joined by
CHESTER - The Cbellet
Mrs. Everett Bachner. Don and Glenn Lambert. Children lor the residents of the his dauilhlers, Lynne ait4 Church of God will have ID
Brown· is in Hartford, Conn. under 12 free, adults, $1. nursing home for Christmas. Ann, for a vocal number, evqeliltlc service at 7: 30
Refreshments.
The next meeting was Featured · on the program p.m. Sunday with tbe Rev•• .
for the week on business.
•
SOUP AND bake sale, BIUiounced for Oct. 18 at were "The Chrlotlanairea" of Paul Coy II guest l!liilllt!lr; .
Syracuse
·.First
United
which time a project work the. Gallipolis Christian Communioo and foot wullinC .,
NOW
SONGFEST SLATED
Church. The Hemlock Grove will be featurel of tbe evenirJC
CHESTER - A songfest Presbyterian Church annex, session will be held.
WIS $2':98
SUNDAy
youth group had a song and semce.
·
wlll be held at the Church of Saturday beginning II :.30
a.m.
sponsored
by
Guiding
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
.
God at Chester at 2 p.m.
(Also,
we
will
Sunday featuring the Coy Star Council 124, Daugbters Black Lung Assn. meeting,
St
omCEIISELECI'ED
of
Ameril!o.
Take
containers
custom-m1ke
Sunday,
Jack Ward's
·
'J
Family of Waverly, the
Offk:era will be electid dr1perles for you)
Eternal Youth Singers of for carry out orders.
recreation room with James
wben
the M,igs CollldJ
FISH
FRY
for
members
F. Kldd, Glouster, president, ~ ·
tJ.eS, ~
Wellston, the Gospel Tones
Council
on AsiDII meeta at
Quartet of Chester, and Ron ~nd families of Modern to be on hand. Doors ope~~ at
9:10
a.m.
TUeeday at the J
Susie Fischer celebrated
Dickens and faniily of ·'Woodmen of America, C!!mp 12 noon ; all members asked
.B,enlilr
Cllilel)l
Center Ill
her 8llt birthday TUelday
Waverly .
Rev.
Mike 7230, Burllngbllm, at the hall to attend.
Pomeroy.
AD
l'llldentl,
II,
!47TH HOMECOMING of nigbt. Glfla were presented to
Southerd, pastor, extends an at 7:30 p.m. Saturday. Jane
and
over,
are
1nvlted
to
ito
invitation to the public. ' Brown, R.N ., county Rutland . Church ~ Christ, her by her family. Calte and tend.
'
tuberculosis nurse, speaker. Sunday. beginning at 9:30 coffee were served.
lo)eat and beverage furnished a.m. ; afternoon sefvlce 2 Attending were Tony and
by camp; door prize to be p.m. with special singing I!Uda Frecker, BW and Mary
given. P'amllies to take from area churches; pubUc Porter and children, John
covered dish .
Invited.
.
and Mark, Gerald, Gloria,
MEMBERS OF Shade
HOMECOMING AT Roger, Dennis and Debbie
River · Masonlc Lodge are Flatwoods Unlted Methodist Michael, Brenda, SlleUy and
asked to meet at the haD at 10 Church, Sunday, 12:30 p.m. Tara Wolfe, Thurman
a.m. Saturday to repair the basket dinner; afternoon Fischer, Carol and Stacey
roof.
service, 2p.m. featuring the Thel11, Gary and Vicky
CARNIVAL Saturday at "Praise the Lord" singers 1\fichael, Hazel Michael and
Riverview Elementary, from Kingston, Ohio, and ' Diana King.
.
Reedsville, Dinner at 5 p.m. other taleJ)t; pubUc lnV\ted.
- - -- ·
REVIVALPLANNED
Carnival at 7 p.m. Public
. MONDAY
Arevival will be held at the
.,Oct.9-12-4p .m.
Invited.
SOUTHERN
ATHLETIC
Hazel
Community Church
SUNDAY
Boosters Monday, 7:30 p.m. Oct. 11 tbrougb Oct. 24 with
ANNUAL HOMECOMING at high school: Ali Interested the Rev, George Hoetbar u
at Carleton Church Sunday. persons urged to attend.
Full color
guest speaker. Tbere will be
photo I
special singing each evening.
Servicea are at 7:30 nlghlly.
The public is Invited.

Three, outstanding
arrangements were on
display at the meeting. Mrs.
Horky used gloriosa and
marigolds
in
her
arrangement, Mrs. Skinner, yellow sweetheart roses
and wild asters In a seashell,
and Mrs. Titus, a dried
·arrangement. us i ng
skeletonized magnolia

,·

\

5X7- '2.50

.,

I,

By Helen Hottel

Asc' co11:1ln~ity
electi,o
'

FALL .PICTURES

'"

'

an associate meinber was
,noted. It was also reported
that Mrs. Mildred Ziegl~r. an·
active member of the club, is \ ,

Alice Wo!fo
•. presents
'program '

!kt. 7, 1976

'1.98

Hush

H'ere·s 'the neWest fashion star l Or !he young , ·need til e
latest " ga l ·. , lhe Ge n11n1 Super t:om lurl i:!bll:! ou tr" design with semi-soeE;!U lacmg and &lt;1 h1n1 of a wedgcsole.
And Hush Puppies · Caw als are born comforrablo .

I
•"

I

Fashion, beauty
- Chignons are back
An up-to-date chignon
should hit the nape of the
neck and the front of your
hair should be kept soft.
Covering up
You can't have too many
layers of fabric on your bead
lbese da ys. Cowl neck
sweaters convert into hoods.
These you· can then cover
with the hood of a Jackel or
coal. De-hood according lo
temperature.

Polly's Pointers

7..:... The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 'lbursday,

heritage house .
N. 2nd Ave.

,·

l'
'

J

'

.

H2·5627

..

''

�,·

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
WANT ADS
Sealed proposals w 111 bt
INFORMATION
rece ived by the eoaf&lt;:l 0 1
DEADLINES
Education Of the SO Uth&amp;rr
5
P M
Day
Be for e
Loca l Sc:hool Oistr Jc t a t th f
Flubl rc atlon
Southern Loca l High S.c hQo
ca nce llations,
cc:;&gt;rr ec
ofllce et Rec 1ne, OhiO, unfl
'ions accep t ed f irst day ot
twetve o'clock (1 2: 00) noon
ptjbllc at lon
preva iling
loc al
f •me
REGULATIONS
THUR SDAY , OCTOBER 28
The Publ is her rnerves
1976 and opened lmmed i31e ly
t h~ r ight to ed it or re[ect
thereafter , for the furn lsh1ng
any ads deemed ob
ot ell mater1als a nd pe r
(ec t lo nal The publiSher
forming all labor for the
wr it not be respons ible for
e rect ion of
mor e th an one IQCOr r ect
ADDITIONS TO
msertlon
SO UTHERN LOCAL
RATES
HICH SCHOOL
F or Want Ad Servtce
RACINE , OHIO
5 cents per wo r d one
P lans and specifiCation may
1nserr•on
be obf! Ine d tram the Ar
Mmrmum Ch(lrge
00
c h 1tec ts, Ees tey , Lee Vargo &amp;
14 cents per wor d three
Cassedy , J26 Front Stree t
conse cutive Inse r tions
Me rle1t8, Ohio, 45750, for a
26 cents per wotd srx
depOSit o f 115 wh ich will be
consecuHv e Insertions
refund ed 1f the doc um en ts ar e
~S Pe r Cent Orscount on
ret urned unmar ked and tn
pa id ads and ads pai d
good cq n~ • llon w1t~m ttn d\ll ys
with in 10 days
after b1d du e date Sho uld no
CARD OF THANKS
proposal be sub ~H tte d and th e
&amp; OBITUARY
dra w 111Q!i not returned fi ve
s2 oa
for
so word
days before the b•d !:lue date
....m1n 1mum
the full amount of the de po sit
Eacfl add itional word 3
Nill be forle ile d
ce nts
SepHate b1ds wt!l be ,
8LINO ADS
Add it ional 25c Ch arge
rece1ved on
t GENERAl:. CONTRACT
per Ad'.'e rtl semen t
tf PLUMB ING CONT RACT
OFFICE HO URS
ttl
HEATING &amp; VE N
a 30 a m to 5 oo p m
TILATiNG CON TRACT
Dally . 8 30 a m to 12 JUl
IV
ELECTRICAL CON
Noon Sa turday
P hon e today 99'1 if.'i6
TR ACT
All proposa ls musT conT ain
the nam e ot eve ry person
Int erested the re tn be sub
NOTICES
ATTN It
m li ed on terms turn•shed by
1he Ar c h1tec ts and be ac
All HOUSEWIVES
com pan•ed by a sah sfacto rv
All Yerd Sale s R um m ege
Surely Bond or a Ce r h ln~ d
Por c h end Buement Por ch
Check on a bank. do1ng
and Bnement Sales e tc
busmess 1n the State Of Oh o
must be pe1d m ad'.'an ce
m th e amount of 5 percent of
Get yours 1n ear ly by
th e total value of the b•d n
s topp ing by our off ic e at
ctud lny all add i!ltern ate s Btd
The Da•l v Se ntin el 111 .
securtty w ll be r etu r ne e
Cou r t St o r wr.t lng Bo x
W1lh 1n ten days after co ntr11 cl
719, Pomeroy , Oh iO 45 769
tor 1ne work has beer
w1th your r emi ttance
eJCecute d F atlure of an-,
b idder to ente r 1n t o anc
eJCe cu te a [Qnt ra ct ror the
'
work covered by th e proposal
he has subm•fled wdhm ten
days follow ing not•ce 01 award WE WISH to thank oil those who
of such wo r k to h1m , shall
cause the b•d secur •tv to
he lped •n any way at the deoth
b ecome for felled by the bidder
of our bro ther and uncle Mar
to the Owner as I qu•f4_a ted
vm Hun ne l Spect or thanks to
dama ges and not as~· " ttli'lnends a nd ne1ghbors who
pen at tv tl ec a use a t s u c h
vts •l ed sen t fl owers or food to
failur e on the parT of the
Drew Webs tgr Pos t Amer can
bidder
-- ll be
l eglon for graves• d e .se rvu:es
Eac h bidde r - sha
prepare~ 10 the event he 15 The
to the mlnts ter Rev James
acce pt ed b dde r to fur ntsh
Cor btl! ond to Homer Boxer
performan ce and payment
a nd Ge rold Powe ll of the Ewing
bonds , 1n a form sat.s lactory
Funeral Home Your help a nd
ell' press ion of sympathy ore
to the Owner , tn the amount at
100 percent ot the co ntra ct
deeply. opp rec 1ated The tom• ly
pr •ce
gua rantee.ng
the
fM
F H
1
0
SU[Cess
ful
comptelion
o
f
t
he
work b 1d upon and payment of
att
obl• ga t•o n s
ar s•ng
therefr om
Pr oposa ls may be ma•l ed or
delivered If m aded, send v 1a TH E RACINE F1re Deportmen t w1 ll
reg•slered ma111n 11m E.' fo r b1d
ho ve o gun shoot So!urdoy at
open1ng
B dOers
sh all
6 30 p m ot th e 1t bu•ldmg m
designate on the envelope thai
Bos hon
•
11 15 a .seated b id md• cate Th e
~~-_c.--~pr o1ec t be 1ng b•d th e d 1v 1s1an FUL LERBrushProducls theF I P
carpe l sweeper
Now on
upon WhiCh he 1S b1dd 1ng th e
spec1al reg ular $2~ 95 now
na m e and address of b dde r
and addressed to
$19 95 Offer ex p•res Oct 7
Sou th e rn Loc al Board of
1976 Phone 992 3 ~10
Ed uc a lion
Sou thern Lo ta l H1gh School PETE an d Genes Goroge Is now 1n
Rac• ne Oh10 4577 1
operot•o n Mechan ic and body
Th e Owner rese rv es th e
wo rk North Second Street 1n
r 1ght 16 accept an y b• d to
M1ddleport
Formerly Bran
wa1v e a n y or al l mlo rmalllles
nons Goroge Phone fN2 5450
1n b1ds and or r e tec t anv or at!
or co ll olter5 pm 99T-7135
bi ds at his d1sc r et10n
-~
No b ia may b e Withdrawn OPEN
AGA IN - after bemg dos
for a p er•od of 45 da ys
ed for vocot10 n We ore open
By or d er of th e Soulne rn
ogo1 n w1th our usua l good
Lo ca l Board of Educ atiOn
quol•ly kn •ls an d low pnces
Ra c m e t Oh1 0
Ho urs Monday through Friday
Mr s Jan e Wagne r
Cler k
9 a m hll 7 p m Closed Sotu r
days Carolmo Fobms on St
llOJ 7, 13 20 17 o~t c
Rt 7 11J m1le N ot C hest~r
Oh1o Henry a nd Mary ttunter
_'!_w_n_er_• ,--':-~--,--PUBL!C NO TICE
BEGINNERS and 1mmed1ate coke
TO BIDDERS
decoro tmg classes For more
SuBJECT
Mater at s a nd
mform ollon coli Joon e Petty
labor tor •n sta l)at• on of
742 28 18 or Lo1s Wo lker 742
gymnasiUm bt eache rs
FOR
Tne
Boa r d
of,. 2333
Educall on of th e So uther n NOW O[Cepl 1ng p 1ono students
Lo ca l Sc h ool o ,strrcl, Rac.ne
b
d
Oh io 4 sn 1
eg mner~ mterme 1otes ad
992
vonced stude nt s Coli
2270
Sealed propo sals will be
rece1ved by the Soard of AUOION Fndoy 7 p m Lots of
Edu cation of the Southern
new merchond159 Al~o good
Local Sc h ool D1st r tc t at the
u~ed !ools and miS[ Auclton
Sout hern Lo cal H1gh School
Hou se Horto n St , Mason W
off tce at Racmc- . Oh to un111
twelv e
( 12 OO l
noo n ,
Va Phone (30-4)773 5-471
prevail tng to ca l lime Thurs
WALNUTS
ore Cos h I Starft ng Oc
day , October 18 1976, and
tober ~ we are buym. Block
opened
tm med•afely
Wal nuts at $.:1 00 per hundred
thereafter for the furn t~JJ mg
of all mater als and pe r
pounds Bnng your wa lnuts to
for m m g a ll labor for th e 1h
f x[els1or Sa lt Wo rks Pome roy
s tallat •on of gymnas• um
Oh 1o
bl eachers m the South er n
Lo ca l H1gh Sc hool
Spe c1 fr cat•on s rnay be ob
lamed rr om the OffiC e Of the
CI e r K T r e a s u r e r
.Q I
t he ~---'""-~""'"""~=
s aut ne rn Loca l Board o f SOMEONE to dean 3 homes on o
Edu car•on Box 176 Rac .ne 1
regula r bas is
one 'nea r
Oh iO 4577 1
Snowv tlle one near Pomeroy
Atl proposa ts shalt be ac
one In Middlepor t References
com pa n ted by a sai•S fa ctory
requ •red Mm •mum $2 50 hour
Surety Bo'nd or a Cert1 f1ed
ly Ph one 992 6651 or (OU )
Check on a bank domg
busmess m the Sta te of Oh io '~300
- "
m the amoun t o f 5 perce nt of
BABY.
HER
needed
to
l1ve
1n
or
the tot a l va lue of the b id B1d
sta y dtt}ls w1th s mall ch1ldren
secur• fv wilt be r eturned
Phone91n-6025
w thtn fen day s a fter con Tract
for the work has b ee n
e)(ecut ed
Failu r e of any
bidder t o ente r Int o and
eJCccutc a con tr ac t for th e
The Alma118c
work cove r ed by the proposat
he has s ubm•tted , w il hm ten
Today ts T hursday , Oct 1,
, dtlys follow ng no flee of award
•' of such work to htm sha ll the 26lst day of 1976 With 115 tO
1~ 1 cause the b •d sec urity to follow
become forf e ited by Ihe btdd e r
The moon is m tis full
do ff'\e Owner as l1 qu1 daled
, , damages and not as a penally phase.
,l, beca us e of such fa ilur e on the The mormng stars are
• , part of the. bidder
Saturn
and
• •'
Prop osals may oe ma1led or Mercury,
· ~ 1del ive red If ma•led , send v1a Jupiter.
: 1 reg1stered ma11 rn t 1me for b1d
The evening stars are Mars
~
open1ng
B•dders
sha ll
~ ~ de slgnate on the e nvelo pe that
and Venus
~ ., •f Is a sealed btd , The nam e a nd
TI!ose,)lorn on this date are
~~ add ress of b idder and ad
~ ~ dre!sed to
So uthe r n Lo cal mtder the sign of libra.
.;-- eoard ot Educal •on
Jane
American p oe t Jame~
1)
Wagn er, Cle rk Treasurer ,
Whitcomb Riley was born
~· 80){ l76, R~ c m e, Oh10 45171
The Owner r eserves the Oct. 7, 1849
•(
' r1 ght to eccept any b•d , to
On th1s day m history·
•, we•ve any or" a ll tnformal1hes
'r
n b ids and or reject any or all
In 1916 , i n the most
:: b•ds a t h•s dls c r ellon
stagger
ing football defeat on
•,
No b •d may be wiThdrawn
record,
Georgta
Tech
\~ for a penod of "45 da ys
' By order of the Sou thern humbled
Cu mberland
Local Board of educa tio n,
University, 222-()
1 1 Racine, Ohio
In 1961, a British airllner
jane Wagner
c
rashed
in the French
Clerk
Pyrenees and 37 persons
I
{10 1 7, IJ 20, 27, 4tc
were killed .
~i' ·
In 1963, Bobby
re¢::
' ~·
signed as Senate Democratic
secre tary
after
bemg
charged, in a $300,000 civil
suit, with using hiS mfluence
for personal monetary gains.
In 1971, President Nixoo
announced an eco nomtc
control system to follow the
!JO..day, wage-price freeze he
unposed m mld·August.

•

QUAUlY

' :·'

orv~m~~u~nn!eiiii

,,,,,.
!•

Baker

..

~,

'

A thought for the day
" I shou ld have listened to my
American poet James Whit·
wrfe S he told me to take an
comb Riley said, " The r ipest
umbrella ''
peach is highest on the tree."

•

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Shops the
WANT AD WAY

Business Services

1

GUTTER S£RV1CE
.A lumi num

'I

0

Televis!on log for easy v_iewing

0

~

-! •

!'EVDYBODY

2 SIG_NS
Of

'

V- 1'1.. l)allv Senti;_. I, MlddlePOrl·Pomeroy, 0 , Thursdav, Oc1 7 1!1'76
UIC,...fKACY

Gvt11n

J

o: Brady Bunch a.
Mister Rogers 20,33: Star Trek 15
5 ·30--News 6, Family Affair 8. Etec Co 20,33 , Adam·
12 13.
6 [)()-News 3.6.8.10,13,)5, ABC News 6. Zoom 20.
Consumer E)(perlence 33
6 30--NBC News 3,6,15 , ABC News 13, Andy Grllllth 6,
CBS News 8,1 0 , Hodgepodge Lodge 2(), lTV
UtlllzaiiM 33
7 [)()-Truth or CMs 3: Bowling tor Dollars 6, Muppet
Show 8: News 10: To Tell the Truth 13, Family
.Affair 15; Anyone for Tennyson&gt; 2D : Air Show 3J
5 m-Big Valley 3 : Merv Griffin

EXPERIE ..(ID
&amp;

0owfl$1tDUh _

$595

1969 V.W. 2 DR .
Runs good, new tires. radio

• Roofint Alvml~~t~m Siellna

3 AND 4 RM furn ished and u"·
furn ist-led apt• Phone 992·

&amp;

Soffit•

--

5434
1972VDLKSWAGEN2 DR.
11595
Red fin ish, good tires, c te&lt;~n Interior, •utom•tlc Irons.,
good economy .
l97l VEGA GT CPE.
11895
Loca l owner, Acyl, automatic, p steering, radio, a ir
condiiiMed , good tires
,•

POM!~!v~~!'!~ CO.~
\CI
POMEROY, OHIO

1968 Dodge Dort In good cand1
tton 2 dr fa[ lory o1r condT
tton
$750 Can be seen
onyllme at 760 Laure l St Mid
dleporl, O_h_:
oo'--~---~
197.. Dodge 11t ton p1ckup V 8
outomohc
good cond11ton
$2795 flfm Phone 992 7210 or
'19'17066

1975 Monte Carlo p s , p b
automo!1c om radio tape
ployer 111nvl top rollv wheels
e-xcellen t conditiOn Real sharp
Phone 992 2386
1957 Chevy 2 doo r wogo n Phone
'19'13397
1973 Copn ~ speed rod1ol ti res
good cond it ion
toke over
paymenls Coli 992 583 1 or
3914ohe r 5 p m

m

1966 Ford Fo1rlo ne m good cond1
l1 on A se[ond or work car
Phone 949 2887
1973 V W Super Bug 2 new t1res
4 speed Phone 992·5875
1973 Bu1 ck Cenlunon LeSobre
one owner 38 000 m1les Olr
cond1t1on tdt wheel , trunk
release 60 ~0 fr on t seat rad1al
tTres 455 engme, vtny l top
Phone 742 221 1 before 5 00 or
742 202Softer5 00
1971 Dodge Cha rger 318motor 2
door outomalte Phone 985
4111

CLOT H handbag lost on Rutland
Keep
' rownstHp Rood 76
money need b1llfo ld bock
Phone 742 20 14,
THUNDERBIRD hubcap brown O[·
cents
between Midd le port
and Heck -s on Slate Route 7
Reward Phone
7:JS:4

m

WOULD the party who fou nd o
b1Ufold be long1ng to G• lb&amp;fl K
Sm 1th please ca ll (614 ) 446
0110

WILL DO odd robs rooftng po1n
tmg haulmg , tree work and
mowmg Phone 99'2 7~09

AVEAAGE $.40 on eventng or
afternoons
dem o n &amp;lrollng
guaranteed toys a nd g1fts No
cosh mvestment no de llv&amp;ry or
coll ectmg Computers do you
paperwork Call 949-2803 or
992 2927 Also bookmg po rt1es
PUBLIC SALE
In
Re Doris WarSWICk,
Guar d1a n of Raymond Barn
hart, a Mmor
In pursuance of tne ord e r of
tne Cou rt of Co m mon Pleas,
Probate DIVISIOn , Metg s
the
un
County , O h10 ,
ders •gned , guardia n , will offer
for sa le at Publi c Auction on
the 4th dey of November , 1976,
a t 11 o clock A M , pr eva 1llng
t1me, on th e prem1 ses t he
fol lOWing d escr1 bed r eal
estate
' Situate m the County of
Me igs. Sta te of Ohio an d In th e
Townsh iP of Ru tl a nd , to w11
F1rst Tract Beginning s
87 1h degrees E ~feet from th e
Northeast cor ner of Lot No I
of Luh's Add1t10n to Ru tl and ,
thence s 87 11~ degrees E 100
feet , then ce N 2'11 deg r ees w
34 feet , thence S 87 degrees
W 92 feet and 6 •nches then ce
S 23 fee t and 7 mches to th e
place of beg inn ing , containing
6 100 acres, mor e or less
Second Tr~tt. Beg Inn lng at
the North east corn e r of Lot
NQ l in Luh 'S Add lt!CW'I to
Ru tla nd, thence N 87 lf'l
degrees E 4 feet. thenc e N 16
degrees E 1 rod and 10 links ,
thence N 8l 1h degrees E 7
r ods and 16 links thence N' 12
degrees West 1 r od ,and 1
links , t/'lence N 83 11:1 deg rees
W 112 feet. th ence S 12
degrees w 72 feet an_d 6 mches
to the place of beg in ning ,
conta,n.ng 1 32 acres , more or
less
E~&lt;.cephng and reserving
unto the gra nters , their heirs
and assigns. and all persons
for the benefit of the grantors
a r1ght of way to be use d In
common Wlfh th e grantees,
their he ir s and asslgM end all
pe rsons for the ben et!! ot the
grantees , a'tr' e r and across the
pr esent existi ng r oa d on th e
west s•de of the property
co n'tr'eyed h erem , w ~1C h se•d
road way runs tr am th e
townsh tp road to the reel
esta te now owned · by the
grantors herein
Reference Vol 2:A3, Page
245 , Me rgs Co un t y Deed
Records
Third Trac1 &amp;emg Lot No
Twelve (12) In Luh 's Add ition
to Rulland, Meigs County,
Ohi o
Referenc:e Vol 263, Page
82~.,
Me 1gs County Deed
Records '
Said pr e m •ses are appra ised
at. Frrst Tract and , Second
Tract $700 , Th1rd Tr act
S7 , 100 , and mu s t be sold for
not l es~ than tw o thirds of seld
appraised value , and the
terms of sale ere
cash 1n hand at time of sa le
Doris Warswl ck ,
Gullrdlan of
Raymond Bernhart,
a Minor
( 10) 14, 21, 28, 31c

I,

1970 Bu•ck Riviera , good condi
lion new fires $900 Phone
7•2 2796
1975 MONTE CARLO, automatic
power st. .nng power brakes,
air cond1tro mng AM radio ond
stereo, roHy wheel5 , w1ll sell
reasonable Phone
7036

m

1971 Ford Mover•ck orr p s red
w tth , block vmyl top Phone
949 2BDi sharp
1969 Novo , extra sharp new
pa in t bucket seats a •r shocks
mags Phone 9A9 2A80
1973 VW TH ING 35 mpg near
perfect
co nd111on
R1ck
Gil mor&amp; Rt 1, R&amp;&amp;dsvllle (Sue:·
cess Rood) or phone 992 5323
1969

COUNTRY Ma bile Home Pork, Rt
33 ten mil•• north of Pomeroy
Large lots with concr•te poflos ,
sidewalks , tunnen ond oH
street park ing Phone 992 7479
ONE be'droom apartments. at
VILLAGE' MANOR In Middleport
for $10.. monthly plus glee or
$130 indud•ng e lectric LOWER
RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS
Conven tent to shoppmg on
Third and Mill Streets m M•d·
dleport Brand new h1gh quah
ty . apartments
Se-e the
manager of Apt 16 o r call
992-7721

ONE bedroom moblle home ,
adu lts only Phone ~-5535
2 Bedroom troller , Browli s Tro•k,r
Pork Phone 992 3324
HOUSE tra•le r 3 bedroom 12x60
near Shod&amp; Phone 696 1283
3 Bedroom tro1 ler Furnis hed or
unfurn1sh&amp;d hone 7A2 3122
Phone

2 Bedroom mobt le home turn1sh
ed ut11i11es paid to respons•
ble par ty only Phone 99'2

7666

Chevrolet

Wrec ker ond
1967 GMC gos
tractor w1th AO ft flat troller
umt crone with 35 ft boom 22
LOC UST POSTS, round or 5plit
ft low 3 wheel tro1ler to haul
Phone 949 277A
dozers 1975 John Deere 350
dozer Pho ne 997. SA68
COAL limestone ond colc1um
chlor1c;le and cak•um bnne for
1971 Dodge Monaco new flr&amp;s
dust control and spec1ol m•w •ng
loaded $1200 2~1 Beech Street
sa lt for farmers Mom Str eet,
M1ddleport
Pom eroy Oh•o or phone 992-

Boom truck

3891

HUBBARDS

8th~

I 0 a after
m tlllponrng
7 p m Southern
2nd rood
on right
H1gh School on Route 12i from
Rocme Fourth house on left
Me n's women's, ch1ldren s a nd
baby clothes W1nter caps mot·
tress tratmng wheels , baby
swmg and m•sc Phone 9~9·
2625 Rarn or shme
A Fom1ly Basement Sole 1677 L1 n

coi n Hgts Pomeroy Thu rs day
..- Fr.day ond Saturday
3 Fomtly Yard Sole Fourth Sf
Syracuse Watch for srgns Slim
J1m ewe rcne Nice doth1ng
very cheap. Thursday, Fndoy
ond Saturday
6 Fomtly Yard Sole. Thursday ond
Frtday
Furmture
clothing
boby tlems, oil sizes Rl 12A
one fou rth m1le of Rocine past
htgh school
STREET S~lE , Sol~•doy , Oct 9,
9 00 ti ll dilrtl All slr:e clothing
m1sc , househld 1lems l ow
pnces Falrlane Drive, Mid
dleport, Oh•o
YARD Sole Oct aond9 , lO a lllf
ol p m , carrier . of Rt 7 and
Forest Run Rood Cancelled Ill
- case of ro•n
~--~--

~---

2 Family Yard SOle Fnday and
Satu rday 9 00 o m ft ll 5 p m
89i Pearl St. Middleport Oh•o
--~

-=p=m
=========~
1
SALE
New fuel or&gt; stove, Reg.
$372.37
Now$322.37
New· Co-op water softener
Reg . S34t.l5
NOW$289.95
1 used Home lite charn
SIW
$200
1 used McCullough chain
saw___
S75

Pomeroy Landmark

9.~

Jack W Carsey, Mgr
..
Phone992-218l

--------

Phone Coolville
667·3876

Syracuse, 0.

.

or Free Esttmlte

AL FEE:

•Q3
"QJIOl
• Q 10 7

/ -~ Ji'-U'.I

.. A Q7 4

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

ruffe&lt;l e heart, pulled the last
trump and play ed hts kmg of
diamonds
East let 1t hold South led a
second d1amond and agonrzed
for a while In an e ffort to
dee1de 1f he should pl ay the
queen or 10 from dummy It
made no differen ce East held
both the ace and JaCk and t he
slam had disappeared In the
blue
South complained about bad
luck but No r th was not
Impressed He pornled out
t hat rf South had b1d SIX

7

NORTH !Dl

•'

.

EA~T

WEST
• 7 62
"8 6 3

.. 9114

• 8 52
.. J 10 9 8

t AJ 9 4
.. K 6 3

• 8s

SOUTH

Box2a.A
Rutlond, Ohio 45775
Ph. !614) 742-2409
We llellv•r
7·28-4 mos

BORN LOSER

ltj!; aE'~TI0~ 1

DID qov
DID YOlJ WitJ Z

•AKJI094
'AK
• K 63
• sl
Both vulnerable

•. AIJD llWW 40U BW~V~
r •.n &gt;f?. WT
Wesl

POL_Y-FOAM

North wou ld have had no
womes He would be sure of
t 2 trick s, smce th e club lead
would be up to and not through
h1s ace-queen
North s worr ies wer e
JUSttfled North played and
made SIX notrump at the other
table , a nd won the match

UPHOLSTERY

FABRIC
sofa, chatr cushions,

For
maHresses , paddln~. Ideal
for campers. Yartetr of
si zes.
Velvets, nylon pnnts,
herculons , vinyl solids, and
fancv prints, accessones.

FREE ESTIMATES
•

lnSIIIation Services

Pl . Pleasant

_

BRADFORD Auct1oneer, Comple te Serv~[e Phone 9A9 2487
or 9~9 2000 Roc me Ofho, Crltt
Bradford

PLEASURE HORSES and pon un
a lso will buy ho r1es and
pon1es Phon&amp; (614) 698·3290
Rut h Reeves
AKC RegiStered Sa1 nt Bernard
Puppies, 2 ma le, I female, 3
mon ths old
Strong • and
heollhy Phone (304 ) 773 5&lt;05
or (30i) 675 2310 Pt Pleasant
W Vo

AKC Reg Beegle
Pho ne 992·3717

pups

S..O

GENTLE geldmg ppn1es w1th sod
die bridle a nd ho ller Phone
9•9 2739
APPALOOSA more bred to Ap
polooso 5 yrs old $300
Phone (304) 882 3262
dogs . all oges
trorned Phone

MOBILE home for sole or rent , 3
bed rooms ol ull l•l tes paid
Phone 992 1751
LECHALET tro1le r, $2000 Jomes
Appleby , on Rt li3, mile post
H orn er.~H.::i::,
ll '--l RAilfR' Iar sole ll{hc-o~n~e~'m
-~f&gt;J
76
or 992 3333 ,. "

------

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

-,...---

WILL do roofing , [Onstrudl on
plumbmg a nd heating No 10b
too Io rge or too small Phone
7A2 234B
CARPENTER
fl oormg ce1hng
panehng Phone 992 2759
DOZER work and we ldmg Con
tact J ames Parsons Rt 1
Roc me on Carmel Rood

TRENCHER

•

MJRK
From 6'' to 18" wide and up
to 5 ft. deep with or without
ptpe furnished. Under road
bores UR to 12" ptpe size:

EXCAVATING dor:er loader and
backhoe work dump trucks
and lo boys for hire w• ll haul
f1ll d1d to so •l llmeslorie and
grave l Ca ll Bob or Roger Jef ·
fe n , day phone 992 7089
nrght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232

HOCKING RIVER Tradlr)g Com
pany GUNS--OVER 250 IN
STOCK Buy sell trade ..78
fhchland, Athe-ns , Oh•o .45701
Phone (6U) 593 8906

APPEARAN-CE?

OH,ENTIRHY!
WHY, at.IE
WOULD HARDLY
KNOW Y"OU
AT ALl -

TUPPERS Platns , new
homes bu dt 1n k1tchens fli ed
baths ca rpeted w1th ottoch&amp;d
garage 1 acre lot $22 900
Phone (614)b67 6304

by THOMAS

ACROSS
1 Premise
6 " - Love
You

2 A.CRES - New 3 bedroom
hom e with closets Step
saver kttchen, dining with
glass doors to pallo 2 full
baths, full basement &amp;
carport Only 531,000
DRIVE - IN ~

Equipped for
busmess Includes land and
burldlng Now open Only
SlO,SOO

Will tnm or cut trees a nd sh rub·
bery Phone 9.49 25.45 or 7A2·
3167

(2 wd!l.)
11 Spanish

MOBILE Home Repatr Elec
plumb1ng ond healing Phone
9925858

1Z

NEW LISTING - 2 acres,
garden and room for pony ~
3 bedroom horne, 2 ear
garage Only $5,000
STOCK FARM - 157 acres,
60 tractor land, 2 farm
ponds, good old 3 bedroom
house, bath. wood burning
fireplace

LAND -

70 acres near
Darwin and lots at f l'tr'e
Points

MINERALS -1~ acres In
Lebanon township
,._c~~

PORTLAND - 3 bedroom
home on large level lot
Ntce bath , modern kitchen
with stove, FA. oil furnace
end new 2 car heated
garage $17,000
WE
HANDLE
EXCLUSIVE
LISTINGS
ONLY FOR YOU
5 room house w1th bath, 1 acre of
lond Phone 7&lt;2-2769
6 room 1 •It story an 1'/, acres.
Close- to En terpnse Church Ap·
po•ntment only Phone 992590:.:
1-----

I

-&gt;

spade openi ng
~
The a n swer IS that you
should pass Any b1d may get
you nght mto the mea t
grrnder

(For a copy of JA CO BY
MODERN send $1 to Wm
a t Brtdge ' c/ p lh 1s
newspaper P 0 Box 489
Radso C1 ty Stat•on , New York
N Y 700 19)

3 Surrmmd-

mgs
t Dock·

!J'orkers'
union

5 Type of
cracker

I Latvien
7 Anesthetic
8 Word with

province
One of the

ADens
13 Somewhat

GAS and 01l Sal&amp;s ond Service , 2A

I

loony

hours Phone 843 2165 or 843
234 1

15

It

(p;;+.;~~';;;[.i~;;:j:'""" ~
11 Knightly
"Turnip Tm•nin
title

slept- hel"el''?

18 "Ramayana"
hero

Z2 CaD for

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
Sonlfat1on, 992 3954 or 992·
242B

capital
WBB

Susa
Z4 Chevalier's

Nobleman

song

17 AirbOrne

~'Th~~~:;ao_:siQ1 out

._

Z3 lis

WSW

Lambkin's
mom

16 See t2

NEIGLER Bu1ld•ng Suppl 1es for
bu1ldmg houses
cabtne ts
plumb•ng Phone 9o19-2508
Racme Oh10

Yesterday's Aawer

Hague
SpoU

10 OppO!Ite of

(3 wds.)

25 Keep oul

Z7 Glittering
defense
object
group
19 Competent Z8 Caress
30 Observed
ZG Servant
Zl Dilettantish 32 "A - of
Honey"
Z2 Pert of
..a wall
35 Appearance

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

2i Gol!el's

34 !Dgbpitched
sound
'11 American
play.wright
38 Squeezed
(out)
" -

culpa

to Badly
11 Funny

t2

Caesar
Convey

Wile
2'1

Leave

(sl.)
Sire's mate

GEORGE Hobstette r .
1
Broker, Pomeroy.
acre of land 6 room
bedrooms~ bOth front
I
centra l ~ 01r , wall to
carpeting stove and re t
to school and church Pnced to
16 900 H11ton Wolfe.
se II · $ ' Phone 9-t9 2589
SQiesmon

6-+--+-+--11--'-

Wasting
no time
OverlOok

Dine
Prayer

word
31

ITS NO SENSE ALL OF US
Wa&lt;RYIN' OURSELVES :1:&gt; A SH.&lt;'IDC:tR~-0/IIfl
OFUSG::&gt;ITA GJ /N AN'

PARTIALl V flntshed house 3
bedroom,, 2 half baths located
In Ro clne on a 62){119 lot
$4200 Ph one 992 7081 J

a. 1976

6 15-Engllsh 3. Farm Re por l 13
6 21l-Nol For Wom en Onl y IJ
6 3G-C o lu mbus Tod6Y 4, News 6 Svn rlse Sc; n ws le r B
Oversel!ls Mi ss ion 10,
6 &lt;5-Mornlng Repor t J
6 so-Good Mor ning , West Vlrglnl ~l 13
6 55-Good Mor ning Trl Sta te 13
7 oo-Todllly 3 15 : Good Morning , Amur h:.~ 6 13 CBS
News 8 Chu c k Wh ile Re porl s 10
7 05-Bugs Bunny &amp; F r iends 10
7 :m-&lt;khnn iiP. ~ 10
8 DO-Lassie 6, Capt Kangaroo 0. 10, Sustml&lt;• St JJ
8 Jll-Big Valley 6
. ,
•
9 1)()-A M 3, Phil Dona hue 13, 15. Lu c y Show 3 Mlku
DouQias 10
9 31l-C;oss WI Is 3 One Ll le to L lvo 6. Good Duvl U
10 oo--Sanford &amp; Son 3 4, 15 t-'nce ts t&lt; 1gllt U, IO, Mllt1
Douglas 13
10 I S- General Hosp llal 6
10 31l-Hol lywood Squares 3 4,1l
11 Oil-Wheel ot Forlune 315, W ecktloy ' [clgo o l
Night 6, Gambl l 8,10 , Mornin g will• 0 J IJ
11 3G--Siumpers 3, 15, Ha ppy Day s 6 13 Lovo ol Life
8,10 , Sesame Sl JJ
11 55-Take Kerr 8.10
12 DO- News 3,6 ,8, 10 "Hot Sen t 13, Bob Brflun •I, SO
G rand Slam IS
12 31l-Gong Show 3 IS )I I) M y C hild ren 6, 1J , Sc, or c h
for tomorrow 8,1 0
12 55- NBC News 3, 15
1 oo-Somerset 3, Ryans Hope 6, \3, Conc~ntr u l lon 0.
Young &amp; th e Restl ess 10 , Nul For Wo m e n Only IS
1 3G--Days of Our Live s 3. 15, F ,mllly !; c ud 6,11, A!!
The Wo r ld Turn s 8 10 2 Oll-$20 000 Pyron old 13
Dinah 6
2 3()-0octors 3,.4 ,15, One Life to Live 13, Guiding
Llghl 8, )0
3 OG-Anott\er World J, 15 A ll lr1 '' J F. ~tHII y fl 10
Crockett s Victory Garde n 10
J 15-General Hospital 13
3 Jll-Bewl tched 6, Ma l c h Gam e u 10 Ll ll os Yug.t ~
You 20
4 Oo-Mister Cartoon 3, Mar c u s We lby M D •I
• Somerset 15 Howdy Doody 6 Mi ckey Mo u~c Cl uiJ
8, Sesame St 20 JJ , Movi e " Gun ll~hl ll l Cwn.111 chc
~ek" 10, Dinah 13
4 3G-My Three Sons 3, E m t:r gt"IH.: y One ' 6, p, ,rlrldQP .
Family 8, Fllnls lone s 15
5 [)()-B ig Va lley 3, Merv G ri ffi n 4, Br ody ll unclo q,
Mister Rogers 20,33, Slar rek 15
5 3G-News6. Fa mily Af fa ir 8 E. lee Co 20,J3. Adn m
12 13
6 oo-News 3,6,8. 10 13, 15, AB C New s 6, Zoom Z0,33
6 31l-NB C News 3,4, 15, Andy Grlflllh 6, ABC News IJ,
CBS News8, 10, Hodge podge Lodgo l O. VIti a Alegre
33
7 oo-- Truth or Cons 3. To Te lllh o Trulh 4, Bowling lor
Dolla rs 6, Andy Willia m s B. News 10. To Te ll the
Truth 13. Fa mily Affai r 15 Ohio Journa l 20 Block ·
Perspective on the News 33
7 Jo-Porter Wago ner 3, Break fh e Bank 4, Ca ndid
Camera 4, Treasure Hunt 8 Ma c Ne il Le hr er 20,33,
Andy W llllams 10, Name lha l Tune 13. Pop Goes
1he Country IS
8 [)()-Sa nford &amp; Son 3,&lt;. 15, Donn y &amp; Marie 6, 13.
Lawren ce Welk 8, Wa s hington Week In Re view
20,33, Spe ncer 's Pilots 10
8 · 3G--Chlco &amp; the Ma n J,4 , 15, Wall Street Wee k 20.J 3
9 OCl--' Rockford F lies 3,4, 15, Mov ie
"The Greol
Houdlnls " 6,13. Movie " Brann ig a n" 8,1 0 US A
People &amp; Politics 20.33
10 OG-Serpl co 3,4.15. Ne ws 20, Pau l Nuc lll m s JJ
t' l ·OG- News 3,6,8,10, 13 , 15, MacNeil Reporl 33
11 J ll-Johnny Carson 3,15, SWAT 6,13 Mou le 'T he
LosefS'' 8, M ary Hartman 10, AB C Ne ws 33
12 Oil-Mov ie "Or Jekyll &amp; Mr Hyde' 10, Jana kl 33
12 .41l-Don Kirshne r's Roc k Con ce rt 6, Wros lllng 13
I il0--Mran•gh1 ~pec l a l 3, IS
1 41J-.News 13
2 31l- News 3
J DO-Movi e "The Secr e t of Convict Lak e J
4 31l-Movle "Sally, )rene &amp; Mary" 3
6 1)()-Salnt J

Affillaf.loo

39 Twixt man

and simian
(2 wds.)
u The best
~Fencing

4 BEDROOM Large
double
living
room,
equip ped kitchen. hot
water heat , 2 enclosed
porches Full base ment
and larg e yard Asking
520,000.
MODERN 3 BEDROOMS
- Wood burning fireplace,
nice
kitchen
Full
basement, 2 car attached
garage F amlly room &amp;
nice lot $34,000

· - ·6143ltJ 764~ ·A4 3

m response to partner s one·

JOSE~H

Tonight"

TEAFORD
Vrrgrt B. Sr , Realtor
110 Mechantc Pomeroy, 0 .
Phone 992·3l1S

An Iowa reader wants to
know what you shou ld btd
With

~MM":td'

Pomeroy, Oh1o
992-2478
9-12- lmo pd

BUSINESS bu tldtng plus hvmg
quarters acreage a vo1loble
Must 5ee to apprec•ale For op
pomtmen l [ 011 985 3306

'
3 bedroom

0

•

BILl PUWNS

SEPTIC Syste ms 1nstolled by
ll c&amp;nsed mstoller
Shepa rd
Co ntractors Pho.ne 742 2A09

THE WHISKERS,
Etf7 DO YOU
THINK THEY
CHANGE Ml(

;

EXCAVATING BACKHOES AND
DOZER - LARGE AND SMAll
SEPTI C TA NKS INSTALLED LOW
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS Bill
PUlliNS PHONE 992 2478 DAY
OR NIGHT

EXCAVATING dozer backh oe
a nd d1tche r Charles R Hot·
Ba[k Ho e Serv1ce
held
Rutland Oh•o Phone 742 2008

0

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-TURBAN

410 I mo

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

At949·2801
Or
949-2860
PLEASE
NO SUNDAY CALLS
930 1 mo.

~~~~~

In IMP sconng honors are
not counted and a wm by JU St
10 pomtj on a ha nd IS not
counted A 20.pornl wm IS
worth one IMP
Here 1s a ha nd that dectded
a recent match South s tudied
the openmg_ lead for some
All. MV LIFE
t1me and flnally- deelded that
I HAVE WORN
Eas t held the kmg of clubs and
A TURBA~ ~ ­
BUT IF THS
that he bad a m1ghty good
S~HI B WI SHES-cha nce to make hrs sla m
,..;!! anyway
He we nt up wrth dummy ' s
ace, led a .trump to h1s ace,
cashed th e ace and km g of
hearts, led a trump to
dummy's queen discard ed h1 s
las t c lub on one htgh heart,

GLEN R. BISSELL

LARRl,,~~~~DER
Ph !92 3"3

By O•wo ld &amp; James Jacoby

CONTACT

IEI'IACE~EKI

WINDOWS
AlUMIKUM
SIDlKG-SOffln
GUnEIU.,WKIRGS

even thousands of dollars
with aluminum or vrnyl
siding.

North Easl

FREE ESTIMATES!

FtniiKtll( Antllble
Bktwn mto Walls I Atttts
SIORM
WIIIOOWS &amp; DOORS

DIRECT
FABRIC SALES
- :f28 Morn Street
Ph 675·3469
9-31).5:00 Darly
TrtiB 000 Fridays

- Blown

Soutb
l.t.
Pass 2 •
Pass 2NT Pass 6•
Pass Pass Pass
Open1ng lead - J •

You can save hundreds

FRIDAY , OClOB ER

6 oo-Sunrlse Sem es ler 10

DOlrUmp InStead of SIX spades,

9· 10· 1mo

pm

LARGE Fom1ly Yord Sale off Rt 7
bofor&amp; you ge t to Royal Oak IN DA.SH 23 Channel CB, am.fm·
Pork so me furmlure stoves
mp.: rod1o 8 track stereo Ca ll
and la mps Ahhq ue bottles
992 3965
mce cll"'hes ond other m1sc
ttemJ , 8om t•ll4pm Od 7 GRAIN fed beef 35c lb Phone
985·-4198
and 8th

rafters for commercial,
resd. , pole building s.

or

1975 Ou ster 6 cyl1nder outomatrc
p s , vinyl top 15 00J r1,Hies excellent conditio n $25CXt Two
lw1n 11ze mallresses excellent GOOD fam1ly Jersey cow for sale
condition Portable · Fr1g1 da1re
or w ill trade for equol amount
d1Shwo1her m workmg condl·
of hay Phone 985·•27A
tlon $10 Con be see n at 748
Htgh St Midd leport after 5 ·-~=:::c
lltl.:;: • . - · :::: , .. - . : ; - . •,.
b5 000 BTU Worm Morn mg Stove
l Utd 1 winte r like new $175
Phune 992 735A

Spec1JIIiz1ng tn custom built

GREENHOUSE
192-5776
9 2 1 mo

North can play It better

M&amp;GTI&amp;-Ratters

667·3166

1971 HONDA Cl &lt;SO 12 000
m1 les, s1ssy bar crash bars,
OLO fur n1ture, 1ce bo~ees , brass
pull bock handle bars new t1re ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR beds wall te lephones and
a nd seols Scramble r s1de
Swee pers toasters 1rons all
parts or complee households
p1pes $650 Col l949 2480
sma ll oppl1onles Lawn mower ,
next to State H1ghway Garage
Write M 0 M1\ler Rt 4 KENNEBEC pota toes 50 lb $3 50
'on Rou te 7 Phone 'i614 ) 985
or .100 lb $6 00 Brrng co n
Pomeroy, Oh1o Coll992·7760
3825
CASH paid for all makes and
ta mers Phone b67 3737 or
models of mob tle hom es ~66
=:_7_,3::9:_
74::-~~-~~~~ REMODELING Plumb1ng heor.ng
ond oil types of general r&amp;pon
Pho ne area cede 614 -423 9531
POTATOES and pumpk 1ns C W
Work guaranteed 20 years ex
TIMBER Pomeroy Forest Pro
Proff11t, Portland Ohto Phone
penence Phone 992·2409
4
duels Top pnce lor stond1ng
843 225
sawtimbe r Call Kent Hanby COA L for so le $22 per ton Open D&amp;D TREE Tnmmmg 20 years e)(
p&amp;ri&amp;nce
In s ured fr ee
1 A46·8570
6 ddys per week and even mgs
estima tes Call 992 2364 or
For furt he r Information coi l
$$CASH$$ for Junked autos
(6 ) 3 7 7 38
(614) 698 7257 Albony
"
6 3
Phone Z•2·2081 Frye s Truck .4
SCHOOL sew1ng moch1ne Smger SEWING MACHINE Repan , ser
Auto Ports Rutland
features buttonh ole
blind
v •cli all makes 992 228.4 The
COINS, 1929 and older currency
hem sews on kmts $48 cash • Fobnc Shop, Pomeroy
gold and Silver scrap W1l l bu y
Also S• nger Touch a nd Sew
Authomed S1nger Sales and
sell or trade foro goad selec
\Ike new $31 cosh Phone m.
Serv1ce We sh arpe-n Sc1ssors
t•on of coins Have su ppl1es for
s146
m&amp; tal •j J detectors
Roge r
Wamsler. on Leadin g Creek ESTEV organ 18 chord argon
and Ru t and Road Phone 742
$100 Phonem 5833
2331 for an offe-r
USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT HOMESITES for so le 1 acre and
up M•dd le port, near Rutland
SOUTHERN Yellow Ptne Pos t Pay
T1mbeqock 225 Sk1dder J oh n
Coll9&lt;12 7481
1ng Premtum pnces Pos t to be
Deere 4408 Sk1dder Coterplilor
delivered to our yard at Bill
922B l oa der 421n[h Tower Bull NEW 3 bedroom house 2 boll-is
mgs W Vo Spectes V•rg•mo
Edger Fronklm 1308 Skrdder
all el&amp;c , I acre , Middleport
P1tch ond Shortleaf For Sizes
Can to~! Don Groves or ly ons
close to Rutland Phone 992
and pr~ ces 1nq01re at The
Equ1pment Co Inc C~rclevltle
7481
Burke Parsons 'B ow lby Cor
Oh10 A311 3 Phone {6 1.4) 596
poroflon
P 0
Box 39
4769 , or (61~) ~ 7A 6028
Spencer W Vo Phone 927 ELECTRIC stovlll!l e lectr1~dryer
1250 N1ght call Ted Jackson
smell washer sewmg'moch.ne
J5.4 7694 or Jim I Lohner 927
brea kfa st set Phone
2856
1~66
•
1966 Ford P1ckup tfuck $500 Also
horse tro1ler $450 Phone ( 6 1~ )
698 3290 ' t
One to five-acre butldtng
IF YOU hove a serviCe to offe r SWEET potatoes R W lew•s Rt
s ttes located near Eastern
wont to buy or se ll samethmg
124 Rac 1ne Oh1o Phone 8.43
Tuppers
oe looktng for work
or
2432
1 Hrgh School
Plalns. Chester
water.
whatever
you II ge t resu lt s GREEN beans for sale p1ck your
Owner
can
arrange
fasterw1thaSentmeiWoniAd
own
2 m •le s below
ftnanctng wtth small down
Coll992 2156
Raven swood Ferry Davrd Yost
payment Phone 985-3595 or
GARAGE SAle-, Thur sd ay ond
or Delbert Patterson Portland
992-5869
•
Friday Oct 7 and B 9 00 0 m
Ohio
tii i.J, p m New and used q u1 lts 1975 Hondo 750 8 000 m1 les w 1th
2 almost new Cashmere coats
w1ndsh1eld a nd sorm g W1th
othe r clothmg Dtshes so me
crank bor and s •ssy bar w1lh SMA LL farm for sole 10'1. down
owner fmanced Monroe Coun
depressiOn gloss pots and
pod and luggage rack $1500
ly W Vo Phone (304 ) 772
pons cudot ns 14 mch t1res
Pho ne 99'2 3287 or 992 2A96
3102 or (304 ) 772-3227
m1sc Swan and Rou sh Dusk y
Street, Syracuse Oh1o A5779
TWO corn grov1ty beds , w1re corn
mb 4B h elevator Andrew COUNTRY formlond With sedud
ed woods, water and good oc
2 Fam1ly Goroge Sole, 848 logan
Cross Lefort falls Phone 2A7
cess m Monroe County W Va
Street
Mtddleport
Weds ,
2852
$1 000 down co li (304) 772·
Thursday and Fr~day from C) 30 ---'=:.:...----~--1111 4 p m Old dishes , drapes HAY Phone985~271ofter6p m
3102or(304l772 3227
bedspreads
all m e s of 1976 M C F Gyps&amp;y try houl boa t MORNING Star Hgts Buy 1 acre
dotl·11ng, pots and pans lots of
wlth 1976 Chrysler 75 h p
tract of la nd Will orronge for
other ml5t 1lems
motor To pay oft or toke over
fm onclng ond sm all down pay
YARD Sale on Rt 33 v, mile
payment s Rea son for se lling
. me nt to bu 1ld o home of you r
sou th of fa~rgro unds M1sc
il lness 1n tom1ly Phone 992
cho1ce
lee Constr uction
Phone 992-3454 or (614) 446
items Oct 7 and S I I a m till
5126
9568
:-:::..__ _ _ _ __
5P m
200 000 BTU Hell fue l o•l furnac e
5 Fam1ly Yard Sale, Oct 7th and
camle te Call a.t3 2664 after 5

m

ENOU6H'

NOTICE

WIN AT BRIDGE
'

NATURAll Y,
SAHif3 .. 1T IS
YOURS FORA
'"""'· ' ADD !TION

AND f lO MORE
FGR MY WAl LEr
SACK FA IR

---=--------

AVAILABLE at RIVVr$1de Aport
menb
1 bedroom aport·
ments $100 per month, 2
bedroom apartments $133 per
month , Phone 992 3273

2 bedroom lorm house
985 386.'l

SAY ft 20
TO $PRING
ME FROM THI5
CA~ I\EI OOSE ­

Open for Fill &amp; Winter
Susan, MondiY thru
Slturdly 10 to 5.
we hiYt one green house
full of Florldl foll•l•
p11nts Over SO 'lllrittlu In
111 From 4" to I" pots&amp; 6"
to 10 " hanging bltktts. 75c
to S6 oo

•

7 ·30-- Hollywood Squares 3. 1 Hollywood Squores 4.
Ohio State Loltery 6, Pr ice Is R ight B. Wi ld
Kingdom 10, Na •hvll leon the Road 13. Dolly 15
8 [)()-Gemini Ma n 3,, , IS. Wollon s 8, 10, • We ll ore 20.
Rhythm Blues Song 33
8 3G-Barney Miller 6, 13
9 oo--But Sellers 3,15 . Tony Rond•ll 6,13, Haw&gt; ll
Flve.O 8, HollywOod Tclovl slon 33 , Movi e " II
,Happened One Night" 10
9 30---Nancy Wa lker 6 13
10 OC&gt;--'Dick Van Dyke 3,15, Stree ts ot Siln rrnnc lsco
6. 13. Bi trneby Jones 8
10 &lt;5-'Musl cal Thealre 33
10 50-News 20
11 QO-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15, M.1 cN ell Le ll rer lh~por l
33
11 3D-Johnny Carson 3,15. Streets or Son F r iJ nc lsc o
6 ,13, Kolak 8, Ma r y Hartman 10. ABC News 33
12 GO-Movie " A Dandy In Aspic' HI,; JArmkl 33
12 Jll-Banac ek 8
12 41l-Dan Augu s l 6, 13
1 00-Tom orrow J ,A
l 50- News 13

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1976

move

UPIIgrim
settler
tl~on

(Incited)

DOWN

' MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

1 Plague
Z Acknowledge

•

HOW
ABOUT
thes e;
appllles? New aluminum
carpeting, new
new
FA
new
storm
windows , atl
with 3
bedrooms, form a l dlnlng ,
full basement w garage
Roofed
wide
porch
overlook ing river JUST
$18,500.00
RECREATION CENTER
- established a number of
years, dolng a very good
business BUY THIS AT
THE RIGHT PRICE
TUPPERS PLAINS ~ A
new home at just 122.900 00.
Bultt trom lhe ground up
( not a 2 wide or slab), 3
BRs ,
colorerl
bath (copper
plumbing) ,
beautiful
kitchen, garage, 92 A

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

WITH Mf I 'lOU NEEV'
OUT OF 11-IAT UNIFORM ANO INID HE_0'1ESPECIALLY
YOUR. OWN ClDTHEB '
WI I.H 1HAT ~A~
TELL THE 6086
BUT WHERE ·ANKLE OF ·
YOUf?f'QU!mM3! WILLIGO? YOURS!

I MAY BE CRAZY BUT I
STlLL 1HINK vdU 11ZE
6AFER WI1H ME 1HAN

YOU ARE WORKING' IN A

PLACEILIKE.1HIB

II

One letter Simply stands for another. In thts oample A II
used for the three L's, X for lhe two O's, e t c Singl e lellero.
•l"'•trophea, the length and formation of the wo rds are aU
hmto Eacb day the code !etten are diflerent.

CRYPTOQUOTES
NB

OBB

EMDTAO
NBHB
KB '

KICk UP YORE HEELS
J GO, GilL, GO Jj

YBS

BOAMAB

PWLP

ground
RUTLAND Like new
Inside, 2 large BR, et\lored
bath, large living R , all
car peted
&amp;
paneled ,
basement, porcn , level lot.
ONLY $12,000.00
OUR FIRM
Is ready to assist you, s1les
do not lust happen - they
are made
HENRY E CLELAND

VOU'RE SURE YOJ WANT,
ME 10 TA6 ALON6 Wl1ff
YoU ... l MEA ~ 1 AFTER
ALL 11-IE TKO/JBLE
I'VE CAUSED YOU?

AXYDLBAAXlt
LONGFELLOW

EMTTBS
EVH

EVH

APB

NPWUP

MJJVWSABK
TM

EHVY

AV

WA.

M

)

[

GBHX
APBX

ZBMS

IPREMET!

II

tJ I
(]

1 .... - - . . .i 1

RHDXB H B

Now arrnn~ee the clrdN tettert

to fonn the l!urprllle an11wer, u
IIUIJ(ellt.ed by the ubove clU"t.DDn.

rn THEIR an xJ.
0

(A~~&amp;wera

Yatenla)"o ~: THE SEVERITY OF THE
MASTER IS MokE USEFUL THAN THE INDULGENCE OF
THE FAniER.- SAD!
SHE WANTED TO KNOW WH~
~OU flAVEN'T 13EEN TO
SCHOOL . T TOLD HER THAT
'IOU GRAO\IATED, 6UT 1
' ~INK SHE 6£UEVED

1

rUSHOLj

1-W..• PLUIIE FRIAR BEWARE • INTAKE
Ytt~m!.y'e

•

1A.wen Drartk-'at wlfh tlfJ daggtrfng
eflecii- WATER

COULD 'IOU

SHOW 1-iER ~OUR

DIPLOMA, S IR 1

ME

l ___.JB!R!:D:!K!!E!!R~--_J

•

'

'

i

I

tomortow)

�,·

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
WANT ADS
Sealed proposals w 111 bt
INFORMATION
rece ived by the eoaf&lt;:l 0 1
DEADLINES
Education Of the SO Uth&amp;rr
5
P M
Day
Be for e
Loca l Sc:hool Oistr Jc t a t th f
Flubl rc atlon
Southern Loca l High S.c hQo
ca nce llations,
cc:;&gt;rr ec
ofllce et Rec 1ne, OhiO, unfl
'ions accep t ed f irst day ot
twetve o'clock (1 2: 00) noon
ptjbllc at lon
preva iling
loc al
f •me
REGULATIONS
THUR SDAY , OCTOBER 28
The Publ is her rnerves
1976 and opened lmmed i31e ly
t h~ r ight to ed it or re[ect
thereafter , for the furn lsh1ng
any ads deemed ob
ot ell mater1als a nd pe r
(ec t lo nal The publiSher
forming all labor for the
wr it not be respons ible for
e rect ion of
mor e th an one IQCOr r ect
ADDITIONS TO
msertlon
SO UTHERN LOCAL
RATES
HICH SCHOOL
F or Want Ad Servtce
RACINE , OHIO
5 cents per wo r d one
P lans and specifiCation may
1nserr•on
be obf! Ine d tram the Ar
Mmrmum Ch(lrge
00
c h 1tec ts, Ees tey , Lee Vargo &amp;
14 cents per wor d three
Cassedy , J26 Front Stree t
conse cutive Inse r tions
Me rle1t8, Ohio, 45750, for a
26 cents per wotd srx
depOSit o f 115 wh ich will be
consecuHv e Insertions
refund ed 1f the doc um en ts ar e
~S Pe r Cent Orscount on
ret urned unmar ked and tn
pa id ads and ads pai d
good cq n~ • llon w1t~m ttn d\ll ys
with in 10 days
after b1d du e date Sho uld no
CARD OF THANKS
proposal be sub ~H tte d and th e
&amp; OBITUARY
dra w 111Q!i not returned fi ve
s2 oa
for
so word
days before the b•d !:lue date
....m1n 1mum
the full amount of the de po sit
Eacfl add itional word 3
Nill be forle ile d
ce nts
SepHate b1ds wt!l be ,
8LINO ADS
Add it ional 25c Ch arge
rece1ved on
t GENERAl:. CONTRACT
per Ad'.'e rtl semen t
tf PLUMB ING CONT RACT
OFFICE HO URS
ttl
HEATING &amp; VE N
a 30 a m to 5 oo p m
TILATiNG CON TRACT
Dally . 8 30 a m to 12 JUl
IV
ELECTRICAL CON
Noon Sa turday
P hon e today 99'1 if.'i6
TR ACT
All proposa ls musT conT ain
the nam e ot eve ry person
Int erested the re tn be sub
NOTICES
ATTN It
m li ed on terms turn•shed by
1he Ar c h1tec ts and be ac
All HOUSEWIVES
com pan•ed by a sah sfacto rv
All Yerd Sale s R um m ege
Surely Bond or a Ce r h ln~ d
Por c h end Buement Por ch
Check on a bank. do1ng
and Bnement Sales e tc
busmess 1n the State Of Oh o
must be pe1d m ad'.'an ce
m th e amount of 5 percent of
Get yours 1n ear ly by
th e total value of the b•d n
s topp ing by our off ic e at
ctud lny all add i!ltern ate s Btd
The Da•l v Se ntin el 111 .
securtty w ll be r etu r ne e
Cou r t St o r wr.t lng Bo x
W1lh 1n ten days after co ntr11 cl
719, Pomeroy , Oh iO 45 769
tor 1ne work has beer
w1th your r emi ttance
eJCecute d F atlure of an-,
b idder to ente r 1n t o anc
eJCe cu te a [Qnt ra ct ror the
'
work covered by th e proposal
he has subm•fled wdhm ten
days follow ing not•ce 01 award WE WISH to thank oil those who
of such wo r k to h1m , shall
cause the b•d secur •tv to
he lped •n any way at the deoth
b ecome for felled by the bidder
of our bro ther and uncle Mar
to the Owner as I qu•f4_a ted
vm Hun ne l Spect or thanks to
dama ges and not as~· " ttli'lnends a nd ne1ghbors who
pen at tv tl ec a use a t s u c h
vts •l ed sen t fl owers or food to
failur e on the parT of the
Drew Webs tgr Pos t Amer can
bidder
-- ll be
l eglon for graves• d e .se rvu:es
Eac h bidde r - sha
prepare~ 10 the event he 15 The
to the mlnts ter Rev James
acce pt ed b dde r to fur ntsh
Cor btl! ond to Homer Boxer
performan ce and payment
a nd Ge rold Powe ll of the Ewing
bonds , 1n a form sat.s lactory
Funeral Home Your help a nd
ell' press ion of sympathy ore
to the Owner , tn the amount at
100 percent ot the co ntra ct
deeply. opp rec 1ated The tom• ly
pr •ce
gua rantee.ng
the
fM
F H
1
0
SU[Cess
ful
comptelion
o
f
t
he
work b 1d upon and payment of
att
obl• ga t•o n s
ar s•ng
therefr om
Pr oposa ls may be ma•l ed or
delivered If m aded, send v 1a TH E RACINE F1re Deportmen t w1 ll
reg•slered ma111n 11m E.' fo r b1d
ho ve o gun shoot So!urdoy at
open1ng
B dOers
sh all
6 30 p m ot th e 1t bu•ldmg m
designate on the envelope thai
Bos hon
•
11 15 a .seated b id md• cate Th e
~~-_c.--~pr o1ec t be 1ng b•d th e d 1v 1s1an FUL LERBrushProducls theF I P
carpe l sweeper
Now on
upon WhiCh he 1S b1dd 1ng th e
spec1al reg ular $2~ 95 now
na m e and address of b dde r
and addressed to
$19 95 Offer ex p•res Oct 7
Sou th e rn Loc al Board of
1976 Phone 992 3 ~10
Ed uc a lion
Sou thern Lo ta l H1gh School PETE an d Genes Goroge Is now 1n
Rac• ne Oh10 4577 1
operot•o n Mechan ic and body
Th e Owner rese rv es th e
wo rk North Second Street 1n
r 1ght 16 accept an y b• d to
M1ddleport
Formerly Bran
wa1v e a n y or al l mlo rmalllles
nons Goroge Phone fN2 5450
1n b1ds and or r e tec t anv or at!
or co ll olter5 pm 99T-7135
bi ds at his d1sc r et10n
-~
No b ia may b e Withdrawn OPEN
AGA IN - after bemg dos
for a p er•od of 45 da ys
ed for vocot10 n We ore open
By or d er of th e Soulne rn
ogo1 n w1th our usua l good
Lo ca l Board of Educ atiOn
quol•ly kn •ls an d low pnces
Ra c m e t Oh1 0
Ho urs Monday through Friday
Mr s Jan e Wagne r
Cler k
9 a m hll 7 p m Closed Sotu r
days Carolmo Fobms on St
llOJ 7, 13 20 17 o~t c
Rt 7 11J m1le N ot C hest~r
Oh1o Henry a nd Mary ttunter
_'!_w_n_er_• ,--':-~--,--PUBL!C NO TICE
BEGINNERS and 1mmed1ate coke
TO BIDDERS
decoro tmg classes For more
SuBJECT
Mater at s a nd
mform ollon coli Joon e Petty
labor tor •n sta l)at• on of
742 28 18 or Lo1s Wo lker 742
gymnasiUm bt eache rs
FOR
Tne
Boa r d
of,. 2333
Educall on of th e So uther n NOW O[Cepl 1ng p 1ono students
Lo ca l Sc h ool o ,strrcl, Rac.ne
b
d
Oh io 4 sn 1
eg mner~ mterme 1otes ad
992
vonced stude nt s Coli
2270
Sealed propo sals will be
rece1ved by the Soard of AUOION Fndoy 7 p m Lots of
Edu cation of the Southern
new merchond159 Al~o good
Local Sc h ool D1st r tc t at the
u~ed !ools and miS[ Auclton
Sout hern Lo cal H1gh School
Hou se Horto n St , Mason W
off tce at Racmc- . Oh to un111
twelv e
( 12 OO l
noo n ,
Va Phone (30-4)773 5-471
prevail tng to ca l lime Thurs
WALNUTS
ore Cos h I Starft ng Oc
day , October 18 1976, and
tober ~ we are buym. Block
opened
tm med•afely
Wal nuts at $.:1 00 per hundred
thereafter for the furn t~JJ mg
of all mater als and pe r
pounds Bnng your wa lnuts to
for m m g a ll labor for th e 1h
f x[els1or Sa lt Wo rks Pome roy
s tallat •on of gymnas• um
Oh 1o
bl eachers m the South er n
Lo ca l H1gh Sc hool
Spe c1 fr cat•on s rnay be ob
lamed rr om the OffiC e Of the
CI e r K T r e a s u r e r
.Q I
t he ~---'""-~""'"""~=
s aut ne rn Loca l Board o f SOMEONE to dean 3 homes on o
Edu car•on Box 176 Rac .ne 1
regula r bas is
one 'nea r
Oh iO 4577 1
Snowv tlle one near Pomeroy
Atl proposa ts shalt be ac
one In Middlepor t References
com pa n ted by a sai•S fa ctory
requ •red Mm •mum $2 50 hour
Surety Bo'nd or a Cert1 f1ed
ly Ph one 992 6651 or (OU )
Check on a bank domg
busmess m the Sta te of Oh io '~300
- "
m the amoun t o f 5 perce nt of
BABY.
HER
needed
to
l1ve
1n
or
the tot a l va lue of the b id B1d
sta y dtt}ls w1th s mall ch1ldren
secur• fv wilt be r eturned
Phone91n-6025
w thtn fen day s a fter con Tract
for the work has b ee n
e)(ecut ed
Failu r e of any
bidder t o ente r Int o and
eJCccutc a con tr ac t for th e
The Alma118c
work cove r ed by the proposat
he has s ubm•tted , w il hm ten
Today ts T hursday , Oct 1,
, dtlys follow ng no flee of award
•' of such work to htm sha ll the 26lst day of 1976 With 115 tO
1~ 1 cause the b •d sec urity to follow
become forf e ited by Ihe btdd e r
The moon is m tis full
do ff'\e Owner as l1 qu1 daled
, , damages and not as a penally phase.
,l, beca us e of such fa ilur e on the The mormng stars are
• , part of the. bidder
Saturn
and
• •'
Prop osals may oe ma1led or Mercury,
· ~ 1del ive red If ma•led , send v1a Jupiter.
: 1 reg1stered ma11 rn t 1me for b1d
The evening stars are Mars
~
open1ng
B•dders
sha ll
~ ~ de slgnate on the e nvelo pe that
and Venus
~ ., •f Is a sealed btd , The nam e a nd
TI!ose,)lorn on this date are
~~ add ress of b idder and ad
~ ~ dre!sed to
So uthe r n Lo cal mtder the sign of libra.
.;-- eoard ot Educal •on
Jane
American p oe t Jame~
1)
Wagn er, Cle rk Treasurer ,
Whitcomb Riley was born
~· 80){ l76, R~ c m e, Oh10 45171
The Owner r eserves the Oct. 7, 1849
•(
' r1 ght to eccept any b•d , to
On th1s day m history·
•, we•ve any or" a ll tnformal1hes
'r
n b ids and or reject any or all
In 1916 , i n the most
:: b•ds a t h•s dls c r ellon
stagger
ing football defeat on
•,
No b •d may be wiThdrawn
record,
Georgta
Tech
\~ for a penod of "45 da ys
' By order of the Sou thern humbled
Cu mberland
Local Board of educa tio n,
University, 222-()
1 1 Racine, Ohio
In 1961, a British airllner
jane Wagner
c
rashed
in the French
Clerk
Pyrenees and 37 persons
I
{10 1 7, IJ 20, 27, 4tc
were killed .
~i' ·
In 1963, Bobby
re¢::
' ~·
signed as Senate Democratic
secre tary
after
bemg
charged, in a $300,000 civil
suit, with using hiS mfluence
for personal monetary gains.
In 1971, President Nixoo
announced an eco nomtc
control system to follow the
!JO..day, wage-price freeze he
unposed m mld·August.

•

QUAUlY

' :·'

orv~m~~u~nn!eiiii

,,,,,.
!•

Baker

..

~,

'

A thought for the day
" I shou ld have listened to my
American poet James Whit·
wrfe S he told me to take an
comb Riley said, " The r ipest
umbrella ''
peach is highest on the tree."

•

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Shops the
WANT AD WAY

Business Services

1

GUTTER S£RV1CE
.A lumi num

'I

0

Televis!on log for easy v_iewing

0

~

-! •

!'EVDYBODY

2 SIG_NS
Of

'

V- 1'1.. l)allv Senti;_. I, MlddlePOrl·Pomeroy, 0 , Thursdav, Oc1 7 1!1'76
UIC,...fKACY

Gvt11n

J

o: Brady Bunch a.
Mister Rogers 20,33: Star Trek 15
5 ·30--News 6, Family Affair 8. Etec Co 20,33 , Adam·
12 13.
6 [)()-News 3.6.8.10,13,)5, ABC News 6. Zoom 20.
Consumer E)(perlence 33
6 30--NBC News 3,6,15 , ABC News 13, Andy Grllllth 6,
CBS News 8,1 0 , Hodgepodge Lodge 2(), lTV
UtlllzaiiM 33
7 [)()-Truth or CMs 3: Bowling tor Dollars 6, Muppet
Show 8: News 10: To Tell the Truth 13, Family
.Affair 15; Anyone for Tennyson&gt; 2D : Air Show 3J
5 m-Big Valley 3 : Merv Griffin

EXPERIE ..(ID
&amp;

0owfl$1tDUh _

$595

1969 V.W. 2 DR .
Runs good, new tires. radio

• Roofint Alvml~~t~m Siellna

3 AND 4 RM furn ished and u"·
furn ist-led apt• Phone 992·

&amp;

Soffit•

--

5434
1972VDLKSWAGEN2 DR.
11595
Red fin ish, good tires, c te&lt;~n Interior, •utom•tlc Irons.,
good economy .
l97l VEGA GT CPE.
11895
Loca l owner, Acyl, automatic, p steering, radio, a ir
condiiiMed , good tires
,•

POM!~!v~~!'!~ CO.~
\CI
POMEROY, OHIO

1968 Dodge Dort In good cand1
tton 2 dr fa[ lory o1r condT
tton
$750 Can be seen
onyllme at 760 Laure l St Mid
dleporl, O_h_:
oo'--~---~
197.. Dodge 11t ton p1ckup V 8
outomohc
good cond11ton
$2795 flfm Phone 992 7210 or
'19'17066

1975 Monte Carlo p s , p b
automo!1c om radio tape
ployer 111nvl top rollv wheels
e-xcellen t conditiOn Real sharp
Phone 992 2386
1957 Chevy 2 doo r wogo n Phone
'19'13397
1973 Copn ~ speed rod1ol ti res
good cond it ion
toke over
paymenls Coli 992 583 1 or
3914ohe r 5 p m

m

1966 Ford Fo1rlo ne m good cond1
l1 on A se[ond or work car
Phone 949 2887
1973 V W Super Bug 2 new t1res
4 speed Phone 992·5875
1973 Bu1 ck Cenlunon LeSobre
one owner 38 000 m1les Olr
cond1t1on tdt wheel , trunk
release 60 ~0 fr on t seat rad1al
tTres 455 engme, vtny l top
Phone 742 221 1 before 5 00 or
742 202Softer5 00
1971 Dodge Cha rger 318motor 2
door outomalte Phone 985
4111

CLOT H handbag lost on Rutland
Keep
' rownstHp Rood 76
money need b1llfo ld bock
Phone 742 20 14,
THUNDERBIRD hubcap brown O[·
cents
between Midd le port
and Heck -s on Slate Route 7
Reward Phone
7:JS:4

m

WOULD the party who fou nd o
b1Ufold be long1ng to G• lb&amp;fl K
Sm 1th please ca ll (614 ) 446
0110

WILL DO odd robs rooftng po1n
tmg haulmg , tree work and
mowmg Phone 99'2 7~09

AVEAAGE $.40 on eventng or
afternoons
dem o n &amp;lrollng
guaranteed toys a nd g1fts No
cosh mvestment no de llv&amp;ry or
coll ectmg Computers do you
paperwork Call 949-2803 or
992 2927 Also bookmg po rt1es
PUBLIC SALE
In
Re Doris WarSWICk,
Guar d1a n of Raymond Barn
hart, a Mmor
In pursuance of tne ord e r of
tne Cou rt of Co m mon Pleas,
Probate DIVISIOn , Metg s
the
un
County , O h10 ,
ders •gned , guardia n , will offer
for sa le at Publi c Auction on
the 4th dey of November , 1976,
a t 11 o clock A M , pr eva 1llng
t1me, on th e prem1 ses t he
fol lOWing d escr1 bed r eal
estate
' Situate m the County of
Me igs. Sta te of Ohio an d In th e
Townsh iP of Ru tl a nd , to w11
F1rst Tract Beginning s
87 1h degrees E ~feet from th e
Northeast cor ner of Lot No I
of Luh's Add1t10n to Ru tl and ,
thence s 87 11~ degrees E 100
feet , then ce N 2'11 deg r ees w
34 feet , thence S 87 degrees
W 92 feet and 6 •nches then ce
S 23 fee t and 7 mches to th e
place of beg inn ing , containing
6 100 acres, mor e or less
Second Tr~tt. Beg Inn lng at
the North east corn e r of Lot
NQ l in Luh 'S Add lt!CW'I to
Ru tla nd, thence N 87 lf'l
degrees E 4 feet. thenc e N 16
degrees E 1 rod and 10 links ,
thence N 8l 1h degrees E 7
r ods and 16 links thence N' 12
degrees West 1 r od ,and 1
links , t/'lence N 83 11:1 deg rees
W 112 feet. th ence S 12
degrees w 72 feet an_d 6 mches
to the place of beg in ning ,
conta,n.ng 1 32 acres , more or
less
E~&lt;.cephng and reserving
unto the gra nters , their heirs
and assigns. and all persons
for the benefit of the grantors
a r1ght of way to be use d In
common Wlfh th e grantees,
their he ir s and asslgM end all
pe rsons for the ben et!! ot the
grantees , a'tr' e r and across the
pr esent existi ng r oa d on th e
west s•de of the property
co n'tr'eyed h erem , w ~1C h se•d
road way runs tr am th e
townsh tp road to the reel
esta te now owned · by the
grantors herein
Reference Vol 2:A3, Page
245 , Me rgs Co un t y Deed
Records
Third Trac1 &amp;emg Lot No
Twelve (12) In Luh 's Add ition
to Rulland, Meigs County,
Ohi o
Referenc:e Vol 263, Page
82~.,
Me 1gs County Deed
Records '
Said pr e m •ses are appra ised
at. Frrst Tract and , Second
Tract $700 , Th1rd Tr act
S7 , 100 , and mu s t be sold for
not l es~ than tw o thirds of seld
appraised value , and the
terms of sale ere
cash 1n hand at time of sa le
Doris Warswl ck ,
Gullrdlan of
Raymond Bernhart,
a Minor
( 10) 14, 21, 28, 31c

I,

1970 Bu•ck Riviera , good condi
lion new fires $900 Phone
7•2 2796
1975 MONTE CARLO, automatic
power st. .nng power brakes,
air cond1tro mng AM radio ond
stereo, roHy wheel5 , w1ll sell
reasonable Phone
7036

m

1971 Ford Mover•ck orr p s red
w tth , block vmyl top Phone
949 2BDi sharp
1969 Novo , extra sharp new
pa in t bucket seats a •r shocks
mags Phone 9A9 2A80
1973 VW TH ING 35 mpg near
perfect
co nd111on
R1ck
Gil mor&amp; Rt 1, R&amp;&amp;dsvllle (Sue:·
cess Rood) or phone 992 5323
1969

COUNTRY Ma bile Home Pork, Rt
33 ten mil•• north of Pomeroy
Large lots with concr•te poflos ,
sidewalks , tunnen ond oH
street park ing Phone 992 7479
ONE be'droom apartments. at
VILLAGE' MANOR In Middleport
for $10.. monthly plus glee or
$130 indud•ng e lectric LOWER
RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS
Conven tent to shoppmg on
Third and Mill Streets m M•d·
dleport Brand new h1gh quah
ty . apartments
Se-e the
manager of Apt 16 o r call
992-7721

ONE bedroom moblle home ,
adu lts only Phone ~-5535
2 Bedroom troller , Browli s Tro•k,r
Pork Phone 992 3324
HOUSE tra•le r 3 bedroom 12x60
near Shod&amp; Phone 696 1283
3 Bedroom tro1 ler Furnis hed or
unfurn1sh&amp;d hone 7A2 3122
Phone

2 Bedroom mobt le home turn1sh
ed ut11i11es paid to respons•
ble par ty only Phone 99'2

7666

Chevrolet

Wrec ker ond
1967 GMC gos
tractor w1th AO ft flat troller
umt crone with 35 ft boom 22
LOC UST POSTS, round or 5plit
ft low 3 wheel tro1ler to haul
Phone 949 277A
dozers 1975 John Deere 350
dozer Pho ne 997. SA68
COAL limestone ond colc1um
chlor1c;le and cak•um bnne for
1971 Dodge Monaco new flr&amp;s
dust control and spec1ol m•w •ng
loaded $1200 2~1 Beech Street
sa lt for farmers Mom Str eet,
M1ddleport
Pom eroy Oh•o or phone 992-

Boom truck

3891

HUBBARDS

8th~

I 0 a after
m tlllponrng
7 p m Southern
2nd rood
on right
H1gh School on Route 12i from
Rocme Fourth house on left
Me n's women's, ch1ldren s a nd
baby clothes W1nter caps mot·
tress tratmng wheels , baby
swmg and m•sc Phone 9~9·
2625 Rarn or shme
A Fom1ly Basement Sole 1677 L1 n

coi n Hgts Pomeroy Thu rs day
..- Fr.day ond Saturday
3 Fomtly Yard Sole Fourth Sf
Syracuse Watch for srgns Slim
J1m ewe rcne Nice doth1ng
very cheap. Thursday, Fndoy
ond Saturday
6 Fomtly Yard Sole. Thursday ond
Frtday
Furmture
clothing
boby tlems, oil sizes Rl 12A
one fou rth m1le of Rocine past
htgh school
STREET S~lE , Sol~•doy , Oct 9,
9 00 ti ll dilrtl All slr:e clothing
m1sc , househld 1lems l ow
pnces Falrlane Drive, Mid
dleport, Oh•o
YARD Sole Oct aond9 , lO a lllf
ol p m , carrier . of Rt 7 and
Forest Run Rood Cancelled Ill
- case of ro•n
~--~--

~---

2 Family Yard SOle Fnday and
Satu rday 9 00 o m ft ll 5 p m
89i Pearl St. Middleport Oh•o
--~

-=p=m
=========~
1
SALE
New fuel or&gt; stove, Reg.
$372.37
Now$322.37
New· Co-op water softener
Reg . S34t.l5
NOW$289.95
1 used Home lite charn
SIW
$200
1 used McCullough chain
saw___
S75

Pomeroy Landmark

9.~

Jack W Carsey, Mgr
..
Phone992-218l

--------

Phone Coolville
667·3876

Syracuse, 0.

.

or Free Esttmlte

AL FEE:

•Q3
"QJIOl
• Q 10 7

/ -~ Ji'-U'.I

.. A Q7 4

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

ruffe&lt;l e heart, pulled the last
trump and play ed hts kmg of
diamonds
East let 1t hold South led a
second d1amond and agonrzed
for a while In an e ffort to
dee1de 1f he should pl ay the
queen or 10 from dummy It
made no differen ce East held
both the ace and JaCk and t he
slam had disappeared In the
blue
South complained about bad
luck but No r th was not
Impressed He pornled out
t hat rf South had b1d SIX

7

NORTH !Dl

•'

.

EA~T

WEST
• 7 62
"8 6 3

.. 9114

• 8 52
.. J 10 9 8

t AJ 9 4
.. K 6 3

• 8s

SOUTH

Box2a.A
Rutlond, Ohio 45775
Ph. !614) 742-2409
We llellv•r
7·28-4 mos

BORN LOSER

ltj!; aE'~TI0~ 1

DID qov
DID YOlJ WitJ Z

•AKJI094
'AK
• K 63
• sl
Both vulnerable

•. AIJD llWW 40U BW~V~
r •.n &gt;f?. WT
Wesl

POL_Y-FOAM

North wou ld have had no
womes He would be sure of
t 2 trick s, smce th e club lead
would be up to and not through
h1s ace-queen
North s worr ies wer e
JUSttfled North played and
made SIX notrump at the other
table , a nd won the match

UPHOLSTERY

FABRIC
sofa, chatr cushions,

For
maHresses , paddln~. Ideal
for campers. Yartetr of
si zes.
Velvets, nylon pnnts,
herculons , vinyl solids, and
fancv prints, accessones.

FREE ESTIMATES
•

lnSIIIation Services

Pl . Pleasant

_

BRADFORD Auct1oneer, Comple te Serv~[e Phone 9A9 2487
or 9~9 2000 Roc me Ofho, Crltt
Bradford

PLEASURE HORSES and pon un
a lso will buy ho r1es and
pon1es Phon&amp; (614) 698·3290
Rut h Reeves
AKC RegiStered Sa1 nt Bernard
Puppies, 2 ma le, I female, 3
mon ths old
Strong • and
heollhy Phone (304 ) 773 5&lt;05
or (30i) 675 2310 Pt Pleasant
W Vo

AKC Reg Beegle
Pho ne 992·3717

pups

S..O

GENTLE geldmg ppn1es w1th sod
die bridle a nd ho ller Phone
9•9 2739
APPALOOSA more bred to Ap
polooso 5 yrs old $300
Phone (304) 882 3262
dogs . all oges
trorned Phone

MOBILE home for sole or rent , 3
bed rooms ol ull l•l tes paid
Phone 992 1751
LECHALET tro1le r, $2000 Jomes
Appleby , on Rt li3, mile post
H orn er.~H.::i::,
ll '--l RAilfR' Iar sole ll{hc-o~n~e~'m
-~f&gt;J
76
or 992 3333 ,. "

------

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

-,...---

WILL do roofing , [Onstrudl on
plumbmg a nd heating No 10b
too Io rge or too small Phone
7A2 234B
CARPENTER
fl oormg ce1hng
panehng Phone 992 2759
DOZER work and we ldmg Con
tact J ames Parsons Rt 1
Roc me on Carmel Rood

TRENCHER

•

MJRK
From 6'' to 18" wide and up
to 5 ft. deep with or without
ptpe furnished. Under road
bores UR to 12" ptpe size:

EXCAVATING dor:er loader and
backhoe work dump trucks
and lo boys for hire w• ll haul
f1ll d1d to so •l llmeslorie and
grave l Ca ll Bob or Roger Jef ·
fe n , day phone 992 7089
nrght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232

HOCKING RIVER Tradlr)g Com
pany GUNS--OVER 250 IN
STOCK Buy sell trade ..78
fhchland, Athe-ns , Oh•o .45701
Phone (6U) 593 8906

APPEARAN-CE?

OH,ENTIRHY!
WHY, at.IE
WOULD HARDLY
KNOW Y"OU
AT ALl -

TUPPERS Platns , new
homes bu dt 1n k1tchens fli ed
baths ca rpeted w1th ottoch&amp;d
garage 1 acre lot $22 900
Phone (614)b67 6304

by THOMAS

ACROSS
1 Premise
6 " - Love
You

2 A.CRES - New 3 bedroom
hom e with closets Step
saver kttchen, dining with
glass doors to pallo 2 full
baths, full basement &amp;
carport Only 531,000
DRIVE - IN ~

Equipped for
busmess Includes land and
burldlng Now open Only
SlO,SOO

Will tnm or cut trees a nd sh rub·
bery Phone 9.49 25.45 or 7A2·
3167

(2 wd!l.)
11 Spanish

MOBILE Home Repatr Elec
plumb1ng ond healing Phone
9925858

1Z

NEW LISTING - 2 acres,
garden and room for pony ~
3 bedroom horne, 2 ear
garage Only $5,000
STOCK FARM - 157 acres,
60 tractor land, 2 farm
ponds, good old 3 bedroom
house, bath. wood burning
fireplace

LAND -

70 acres near
Darwin and lots at f l'tr'e
Points

MINERALS -1~ acres In
Lebanon township
,._c~~

PORTLAND - 3 bedroom
home on large level lot
Ntce bath , modern kitchen
with stove, FA. oil furnace
end new 2 car heated
garage $17,000
WE
HANDLE
EXCLUSIVE
LISTINGS
ONLY FOR YOU
5 room house w1th bath, 1 acre of
lond Phone 7&lt;2-2769
6 room 1 •It story an 1'/, acres.
Close- to En terpnse Church Ap·
po•ntment only Phone 992590:.:
1-----

I

-&gt;

spade openi ng
~
The a n swer IS that you
should pass Any b1d may get
you nght mto the mea t
grrnder

(For a copy of JA CO BY
MODERN send $1 to Wm
a t Brtdge ' c/ p lh 1s
newspaper P 0 Box 489
Radso C1 ty Stat•on , New York
N Y 700 19)

3 Surrmmd-

mgs
t Dock·

!J'orkers'
union

5 Type of
cracker

I Latvien
7 Anesthetic
8 Word with

province
One of the

ADens
13 Somewhat

GAS and 01l Sal&amp;s ond Service , 2A

I

loony

hours Phone 843 2165 or 843
234 1

15

It

(p;;+.;~~';;;[.i~;;:j:'""" ~
11 Knightly
"Turnip Tm•nin
title

slept- hel"el''?

18 "Ramayana"
hero

Z2 CaD for

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
Sonlfat1on, 992 3954 or 992·
242B

capital
WBB

Susa
Z4 Chevalier's

Nobleman

song

17 AirbOrne

~'Th~~~:;ao_:siQ1 out

._

Z3 lis

WSW

Lambkin's
mom

16 See t2

NEIGLER Bu1ld•ng Suppl 1es for
bu1ldmg houses
cabtne ts
plumb•ng Phone 9o19-2508
Racme Oh10

Yesterday's Aawer

Hague
SpoU

10 OppO!Ite of

(3 wds.)

25 Keep oul

Z7 Glittering
defense
object
group
19 Competent Z8 Caress
30 Observed
ZG Servant
Zl Dilettantish 32 "A - of
Honey"
Z2 Pert of
..a wall
35 Appearance

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

2i Gol!el's

34 !Dgbpitched
sound
'11 American
play.wright
38 Squeezed
(out)
" -

culpa

to Badly
11 Funny

t2

Caesar
Convey

Wile
2'1

Leave

(sl.)
Sire's mate

GEORGE Hobstette r .
1
Broker, Pomeroy.
acre of land 6 room
bedrooms~ bOth front
I
centra l ~ 01r , wall to
carpeting stove and re t
to school and church Pnced to
16 900 H11ton Wolfe.
se II · $ ' Phone 9-t9 2589
SQiesmon

6-+--+-+--11--'-

Wasting
no time
OverlOok

Dine
Prayer

word
31

ITS NO SENSE ALL OF US
Wa&lt;RYIN' OURSELVES :1:&gt; A SH.&lt;'IDC:tR~-0/IIfl
OFUSG::&gt;ITA GJ /N AN'

PARTIALl V flntshed house 3
bedroom,, 2 half baths located
In Ro clne on a 62){119 lot
$4200 Ph one 992 7081 J

a. 1976

6 15-Engllsh 3. Farm Re por l 13
6 21l-Nol For Wom en Onl y IJ
6 3G-C o lu mbus Tod6Y 4, News 6 Svn rlse Sc; n ws le r B
Oversel!ls Mi ss ion 10,
6 &lt;5-Mornlng Repor t J
6 so-Good Mor ning , West Vlrglnl ~l 13
6 55-Good Mor ning Trl Sta te 13
7 oo-Todllly 3 15 : Good Morning , Amur h:.~ 6 13 CBS
News 8 Chu c k Wh ile Re porl s 10
7 05-Bugs Bunny &amp; F r iends 10
7 :m-&lt;khnn iiP. ~ 10
8 DO-Lassie 6, Capt Kangaroo 0. 10, Sustml&lt;• St JJ
8 Jll-Big Valley 6
. ,
•
9 1)()-A M 3, Phil Dona hue 13, 15. Lu c y Show 3 Mlku
DouQias 10
9 31l-C;oss WI Is 3 One Ll le to L lvo 6. Good Duvl U
10 oo--Sanford &amp; Son 3 4, 15 t-'nce ts t&lt; 1gllt U, IO, Mllt1
Douglas 13
10 I S- General Hosp llal 6
10 31l-Hol lywood Squares 3 4,1l
11 Oil-Wheel ot Forlune 315, W ecktloy ' [clgo o l
Night 6, Gambl l 8,10 , Mornin g will• 0 J IJ
11 3G--Siumpers 3, 15, Ha ppy Day s 6 13 Lovo ol Life
8,10 , Sesame Sl JJ
11 55-Take Kerr 8.10
12 DO- News 3,6 ,8, 10 "Hot Sen t 13, Bob Brflun •I, SO
G rand Slam IS
12 31l-Gong Show 3 IS )I I) M y C hild ren 6, 1J , Sc, or c h
for tomorrow 8,1 0
12 55- NBC News 3, 15
1 oo-Somerset 3, Ryans Hope 6, \3, Conc~ntr u l lon 0.
Young &amp; th e Restl ess 10 , Nul For Wo m e n Only IS
1 3G--Days of Our Live s 3. 15, F ,mllly !; c ud 6,11, A!!
The Wo r ld Turn s 8 10 2 Oll-$20 000 Pyron old 13
Dinah 6
2 3()-0octors 3,.4 ,15, One Life to Live 13, Guiding
Llghl 8, )0
3 OG-Anott\er World J, 15 A ll lr1 '' J F. ~tHII y fl 10
Crockett s Victory Garde n 10
J 15-General Hospital 13
3 Jll-Bewl tched 6, Ma l c h Gam e u 10 Ll ll os Yug.t ~
You 20
4 Oo-Mister Cartoon 3, Mar c u s We lby M D •I
• Somerset 15 Howdy Doody 6 Mi ckey Mo u~c Cl uiJ
8, Sesame St 20 JJ , Movi e " Gun ll~hl ll l Cwn.111 chc
~ek" 10, Dinah 13
4 3G-My Three Sons 3, E m t:r gt"IH.: y One ' 6, p, ,rlrldQP .
Family 8, Fllnls lone s 15
5 [)()-B ig Va lley 3, Merv G ri ffi n 4, Br ody ll unclo q,
Mister Rogers 20,33, Slar rek 15
5 3G-News6. Fa mily Af fa ir 8 E. lee Co 20,J3. Adn m
12 13
6 oo-News 3,6,8. 10 13, 15, AB C New s 6, Zoom Z0,33
6 31l-NB C News 3,4, 15, Andy Grlflllh 6, ABC News IJ,
CBS News8, 10, Hodge podge Lodgo l O. VIti a Alegre
33
7 oo-- Truth or Cons 3. To Te lllh o Trulh 4, Bowling lor
Dolla rs 6, Andy Willia m s B. News 10. To Te ll the
Truth 13. Fa mily Affai r 15 Ohio Journa l 20 Block ·
Perspective on the News 33
7 Jo-Porter Wago ner 3, Break fh e Bank 4, Ca ndid
Camera 4, Treasure Hunt 8 Ma c Ne il Le hr er 20,33,
Andy W llllams 10, Name lha l Tune 13. Pop Goes
1he Country IS
8 [)()-Sa nford &amp; Son 3,&lt;. 15, Donn y &amp; Marie 6, 13.
Lawren ce Welk 8, Wa s hington Week In Re view
20,33, Spe ncer 's Pilots 10
8 · 3G--Chlco &amp; the Ma n J,4 , 15, Wall Street Wee k 20.J 3
9 OCl--' Rockford F lies 3,4, 15, Mov ie
"The Greol
Houdlnls " 6,13. Movie " Brann ig a n" 8,1 0 US A
People &amp; Politics 20.33
10 OG-Serpl co 3,4.15. Ne ws 20, Pau l Nuc lll m s JJ
t' l ·OG- News 3,6,8,10, 13 , 15, MacNeil Reporl 33
11 J ll-Johnny Carson 3,15, SWAT 6,13 Mou le 'T he
LosefS'' 8, M ary Hartman 10, AB C Ne ws 33
12 Oil-Mov ie "Or Jekyll &amp; Mr Hyde' 10, Jana kl 33
12 .41l-Don Kirshne r's Roc k Con ce rt 6, Wros lllng 13
I il0--Mran•gh1 ~pec l a l 3, IS
1 41J-.News 13
2 31l- News 3
J DO-Movi e "The Secr e t of Convict Lak e J
4 31l-Movle "Sally, )rene &amp; Mary" 3
6 1)()-Salnt J

Affillaf.loo

39 Twixt man

and simian
(2 wds.)
u The best
~Fencing

4 BEDROOM Large
double
living
room,
equip ped kitchen. hot
water heat , 2 enclosed
porches Full base ment
and larg e yard Asking
520,000.
MODERN 3 BEDROOMS
- Wood burning fireplace,
nice
kitchen
Full
basement, 2 car attached
garage F amlly room &amp;
nice lot $34,000

· - ·6143ltJ 764~ ·A4 3

m response to partner s one·

JOSE~H

Tonight"

TEAFORD
Vrrgrt B. Sr , Realtor
110 Mechantc Pomeroy, 0 .
Phone 992·3l1S

An Iowa reader wants to
know what you shou ld btd
With

~MM":td'

Pomeroy, Oh1o
992-2478
9-12- lmo pd

BUSINESS bu tldtng plus hvmg
quarters acreage a vo1loble
Must 5ee to apprec•ale For op
pomtmen l [ 011 985 3306

'
3 bedroom

0

•

BILl PUWNS

SEPTIC Syste ms 1nstolled by
ll c&amp;nsed mstoller
Shepa rd
Co ntractors Pho.ne 742 2A09

THE WHISKERS,
Etf7 DO YOU
THINK THEY
CHANGE Ml(

;

EXCAVATING BACKHOES AND
DOZER - LARGE AND SMAll
SEPTI C TA NKS INSTALLED LOW
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS Bill
PUlliNS PHONE 992 2478 DAY
OR NIGHT

EXCAVATING dozer backh oe
a nd d1tche r Charles R Hot·
Ba[k Ho e Serv1ce
held
Rutland Oh•o Phone 742 2008

0

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-TURBAN

410 I mo

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

At949·2801
Or
949-2860
PLEASE
NO SUNDAY CALLS
930 1 mo.

~~~~~

In IMP sconng honors are
not counted and a wm by JU St
10 pomtj on a ha nd IS not
counted A 20.pornl wm IS
worth one IMP
Here 1s a ha nd that dectded
a recent match South s tudied
the openmg_ lead for some
All. MV LIFE
t1me and flnally- deelded that
I HAVE WORN
Eas t held the kmg of clubs and
A TURBA~ ~ ­
BUT IF THS
that he bad a m1ghty good
S~HI B WI SHES-cha nce to make hrs sla m
,..;!! anyway
He we nt up wrth dummy ' s
ace, led a .trump to h1s ace,
cashed th e ace and km g of
hearts, led a trump to
dummy's queen discard ed h1 s
las t c lub on one htgh heart,

GLEN R. BISSELL

LARRl,,~~~~DER
Ph !92 3"3

By O•wo ld &amp; James Jacoby

CONTACT

IEI'IACE~EKI

WINDOWS
AlUMIKUM
SIDlKG-SOffln
GUnEIU.,WKIRGS

even thousands of dollars
with aluminum or vrnyl
siding.

North Easl

FREE ESTIMATES!

FtniiKtll( Antllble
Bktwn mto Walls I Atttts
SIORM
WIIIOOWS &amp; DOORS

DIRECT
FABRIC SALES
- :f28 Morn Street
Ph 675·3469
9-31).5:00 Darly
TrtiB 000 Fridays

- Blown

Soutb
l.t.
Pass 2 •
Pass 2NT Pass 6•
Pass Pass Pass
Open1ng lead - J •

You can save hundreds

FRIDAY , OClOB ER

6 oo-Sunrlse Sem es ler 10

DOlrUmp InStead of SIX spades,

9· 10· 1mo

pm

LARGE Fom1ly Yord Sale off Rt 7
bofor&amp; you ge t to Royal Oak IN DA.SH 23 Channel CB, am.fm·
Pork so me furmlure stoves
mp.: rod1o 8 track stereo Ca ll
and la mps Ahhq ue bottles
992 3965
mce cll"'hes ond other m1sc
ttemJ , 8om t•ll4pm Od 7 GRAIN fed beef 35c lb Phone
985·-4198
and 8th

rafters for commercial,
resd. , pole building s.

or

1975 Ou ster 6 cyl1nder outomatrc
p s , vinyl top 15 00J r1,Hies excellent conditio n $25CXt Two
lw1n 11ze mallresses excellent GOOD fam1ly Jersey cow for sale
condition Portable · Fr1g1 da1re
or w ill trade for equol amount
d1Shwo1her m workmg condl·
of hay Phone 985·•27A
tlon $10 Con be see n at 748
Htgh St Midd leport after 5 ·-~=:::c
lltl.:;: • . - · :::: , .. - . : ; - . •,.
b5 000 BTU Worm Morn mg Stove
l Utd 1 winte r like new $175
Phune 992 735A

Spec1JIIiz1ng tn custom built

GREENHOUSE
192-5776
9 2 1 mo

North can play It better

M&amp;GTI&amp;-Ratters

667·3166

1971 HONDA Cl &lt;SO 12 000
m1 les, s1ssy bar crash bars,
OLO fur n1ture, 1ce bo~ees , brass
pull bock handle bars new t1re ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR beds wall te lephones and
a nd seols Scramble r s1de
Swee pers toasters 1rons all
parts or complee households
p1pes $650 Col l949 2480
sma ll oppl1onles Lawn mower ,
next to State H1ghway Garage
Write M 0 M1\ler Rt 4 KENNEBEC pota toes 50 lb $3 50
'on Rou te 7 Phone 'i614 ) 985
or .100 lb $6 00 Brrng co n
Pomeroy, Oh1o Coll992·7760
3825
CASH paid for all makes and
ta mers Phone b67 3737 or
models of mob tle hom es ~66
=:_7_,3::9:_
74::-~~-~~~~ REMODELING Plumb1ng heor.ng
ond oil types of general r&amp;pon
Pho ne area cede 614 -423 9531
POTATOES and pumpk 1ns C W
Work guaranteed 20 years ex
TIMBER Pomeroy Forest Pro
Proff11t, Portland Ohto Phone
penence Phone 992·2409
4
duels Top pnce lor stond1ng
843 225
sawtimbe r Call Kent Hanby COA L for so le $22 per ton Open D&amp;D TREE Tnmmmg 20 years e)(
p&amp;ri&amp;nce
In s ured fr ee
1 A46·8570
6 ddys per week and even mgs
estima tes Call 992 2364 or
For furt he r Information coi l
$$CASH$$ for Junked autos
(6 ) 3 7 7 38
(614) 698 7257 Albony
"
6 3
Phone Z•2·2081 Frye s Truck .4
SCHOOL sew1ng moch1ne Smger SEWING MACHINE Repan , ser
Auto Ports Rutland
features buttonh ole
blind
v •cli all makes 992 228.4 The
COINS, 1929 and older currency
hem sews on kmts $48 cash • Fobnc Shop, Pomeroy
gold and Silver scrap W1l l bu y
Also S• nger Touch a nd Sew
Authomed S1nger Sales and
sell or trade foro goad selec
\Ike new $31 cosh Phone m.
Serv1ce We sh arpe-n Sc1ssors
t•on of coins Have su ppl1es for
s146
m&amp; tal •j J detectors
Roge r
Wamsler. on Leadin g Creek ESTEV organ 18 chord argon
and Ru t and Road Phone 742
$100 Phonem 5833
2331 for an offe-r
USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT HOMESITES for so le 1 acre and
up M•dd le port, near Rutland
SOUTHERN Yellow Ptne Pos t Pay
T1mbeqock 225 Sk1dder J oh n
Coll9&lt;12 7481
1ng Premtum pnces Pos t to be
Deere 4408 Sk1dder Coterplilor
delivered to our yard at Bill
922B l oa der 421n[h Tower Bull NEW 3 bedroom house 2 boll-is
mgs W Vo Spectes V•rg•mo
Edger Fronklm 1308 Skrdder
all el&amp;c , I acre , Middleport
P1tch ond Shortleaf For Sizes
Can to~! Don Groves or ly ons
close to Rutland Phone 992
and pr~ ces 1nq01re at The
Equ1pment Co Inc C~rclevltle
7481
Burke Parsons 'B ow lby Cor
Oh10 A311 3 Phone {6 1.4) 596
poroflon
P 0
Box 39
4769 , or (61~) ~ 7A 6028
Spencer W Vo Phone 927 ELECTRIC stovlll!l e lectr1~dryer
1250 N1ght call Ted Jackson
smell washer sewmg'moch.ne
J5.4 7694 or Jim I Lohner 927
brea kfa st set Phone
2856
1~66
•
1966 Ford P1ckup tfuck $500 Also
horse tro1ler $450 Phone ( 6 1~ )
698 3290 ' t
One to five-acre butldtng
IF YOU hove a serviCe to offe r SWEET potatoes R W lew•s Rt
s ttes located near Eastern
wont to buy or se ll samethmg
124 Rac 1ne Oh1o Phone 8.43
Tuppers
oe looktng for work
or
2432
1 Hrgh School
Plalns. Chester
water.
whatever
you II ge t resu lt s GREEN beans for sale p1ck your
Owner
can
arrange
fasterw1thaSentmeiWoniAd
own
2 m •le s below
ftnanctng wtth small down
Coll992 2156
Raven swood Ferry Davrd Yost
payment Phone 985-3595 or
GARAGE SAle-, Thur sd ay ond
or Delbert Patterson Portland
992-5869
•
Friday Oct 7 and B 9 00 0 m
Ohio
tii i.J, p m New and used q u1 lts 1975 Hondo 750 8 000 m1 les w 1th
2 almost new Cashmere coats
w1ndsh1eld a nd sorm g W1th
othe r clothmg Dtshes so me
crank bor and s •ssy bar w1lh SMA LL farm for sole 10'1. down
owner fmanced Monroe Coun
depressiOn gloss pots and
pod and luggage rack $1500
ly W Vo Phone (304 ) 772
pons cudot ns 14 mch t1res
Pho ne 99'2 3287 or 992 2A96
3102 or (304 ) 772-3227
m1sc Swan and Rou sh Dusk y
Street, Syracuse Oh1o A5779
TWO corn grov1ty beds , w1re corn
mb 4B h elevator Andrew COUNTRY formlond With sedud
ed woods, water and good oc
2 Fam1ly Goroge Sole, 848 logan
Cross Lefort falls Phone 2A7
cess m Monroe County W Va
Street
Mtddleport
Weds ,
2852
$1 000 down co li (304) 772·
Thursday and Fr~day from C) 30 ---'=:.:...----~--1111 4 p m Old dishes , drapes HAY Phone985~271ofter6p m
3102or(304l772 3227
bedspreads
all m e s of 1976 M C F Gyps&amp;y try houl boa t MORNING Star Hgts Buy 1 acre
dotl·11ng, pots and pans lots of
wlth 1976 Chrysler 75 h p
tract of la nd Will orronge for
other ml5t 1lems
motor To pay oft or toke over
fm onclng ond sm all down pay
YARD Sale on Rt 33 v, mile
payment s Rea son for se lling
. me nt to bu 1ld o home of you r
sou th of fa~rgro unds M1sc
il lness 1n tom1ly Phone 992
cho1ce
lee Constr uction
Phone 992-3454 or (614) 446
items Oct 7 and S I I a m till
5126
9568
:-:::..__ _ _ _ __
5P m
200 000 BTU Hell fue l o•l furnac e
5 Fam1ly Yard Sale, Oct 7th and
camle te Call a.t3 2664 after 5

m

ENOU6H'

NOTICE

WIN AT BRIDGE
'

NATURAll Y,
SAHif3 .. 1T IS
YOURS FORA
'"""'· ' ADD !TION

AND f lO MORE
FGR MY WAl LEr
SACK FA IR

---=--------

AVAILABLE at RIVVr$1de Aport
menb
1 bedroom aport·
ments $100 per month, 2
bedroom apartments $133 per
month , Phone 992 3273

2 bedroom lorm house
985 386.'l

SAY ft 20
TO $PRING
ME FROM THI5
CA~ I\EI OOSE ­

Open for Fill &amp; Winter
Susan, MondiY thru
Slturdly 10 to 5.
we hiYt one green house
full of Florldl foll•l•
p11nts Over SO 'lllrittlu In
111 From 4" to I" pots&amp; 6"
to 10 " hanging bltktts. 75c
to S6 oo

•

7 ·30-- Hollywood Squares 3. 1 Hollywood Squores 4.
Ohio State Loltery 6, Pr ice Is R ight B. Wi ld
Kingdom 10, Na •hvll leon the Road 13. Dolly 15
8 [)()-Gemini Ma n 3,, , IS. Wollon s 8, 10, • We ll ore 20.
Rhythm Blues Song 33
8 3G-Barney Miller 6, 13
9 oo--But Sellers 3,15 . Tony Rond•ll 6,13, Haw&gt; ll
Flve.O 8, HollywOod Tclovl slon 33 , Movi e " II
,Happened One Night" 10
9 30---Nancy Wa lker 6 13
10 OC&gt;--'Dick Van Dyke 3,15, Stree ts ot Siln rrnnc lsco
6. 13. Bi trneby Jones 8
10 &lt;5-'Musl cal Thealre 33
10 50-News 20
11 QO-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15, M.1 cN ell Le ll rer lh~por l
33
11 3D-Johnny Carson 3,15. Streets or Son F r iJ nc lsc o
6 ,13, Kolak 8, Ma r y Hartman 10. ABC News 33
12 GO-Movie " A Dandy In Aspic' HI,; JArmkl 33
12 Jll-Banac ek 8
12 41l-Dan Augu s l 6, 13
1 00-Tom orrow J ,A
l 50- News 13

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1976

move

UPIIgrim
settler
tl~on

(Incited)

DOWN

' MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

1 Plague
Z Acknowledge

•

HOW
ABOUT
thes e;
appllles? New aluminum
carpeting, new
new
FA
new
storm
windows , atl
with 3
bedrooms, form a l dlnlng ,
full basement w garage
Roofed
wide
porch
overlook ing river JUST
$18,500.00
RECREATION CENTER
- established a number of
years, dolng a very good
business BUY THIS AT
THE RIGHT PRICE
TUPPERS PLAINS ~ A
new home at just 122.900 00.
Bultt trom lhe ground up
( not a 2 wide or slab), 3
BRs ,
colorerl
bath (copper
plumbing) ,
beautiful
kitchen, garage, 92 A

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

WITH Mf I 'lOU NEEV'
OUT OF 11-IAT UNIFORM ANO INID HE_0'1ESPECIALLY
YOUR. OWN ClDTHEB '
WI I.H 1HAT ~A~
TELL THE 6086
BUT WHERE ·ANKLE OF ·
YOUf?f'QU!mM3! WILLIGO? YOURS!

I MAY BE CRAZY BUT I
STlLL 1HINK vdU 11ZE
6AFER WI1H ME 1HAN

YOU ARE WORKING' IN A

PLACEILIKE.1HIB

II

One letter Simply stands for another. In thts oample A II
used for the three L's, X for lhe two O's, e t c Singl e lellero.
•l"'•trophea, the length and formation of the wo rds are aU
hmto Eacb day the code !etten are diflerent.

CRYPTOQUOTES
NB

OBB

EMDTAO
NBHB
KB '

KICk UP YORE HEELS
J GO, GilL, GO Jj

YBS

BOAMAB

PWLP

ground
RUTLAND Like new
Inside, 2 large BR, et\lored
bath, large living R , all
car peted
&amp;
paneled ,
basement, porcn , level lot.
ONLY $12,000.00
OUR FIRM
Is ready to assist you, s1les
do not lust happen - they
are made
HENRY E CLELAND

VOU'RE SURE YOJ WANT,
ME 10 TA6 ALON6 Wl1ff
YoU ... l MEA ~ 1 AFTER
ALL 11-IE TKO/JBLE
I'VE CAUSED YOU?

AXYDLBAAXlt
LONGFELLOW

EMTTBS
EVH

EVH

APB

NPWUP

MJJVWSABK
TM

EHVY

AV

WA.

M

)

[

GBHX
APBX

ZBMS

IPREMET!

II

tJ I
(]

1 .... - - . . .i 1

RHDXB H B

Now arrnn~ee the clrdN tettert

to fonn the l!urprllle an11wer, u
IIUIJ(ellt.ed by the ubove clU"t.DDn.

rn THEIR an xJ.
0

(A~~&amp;wera

Yatenla)"o ~: THE SEVERITY OF THE
MASTER IS MokE USEFUL THAN THE INDULGENCE OF
THE FAniER.- SAD!
SHE WANTED TO KNOW WH~
~OU flAVEN'T 13EEN TO
SCHOOL . T TOLD HER THAT
'IOU GRAO\IATED, 6UT 1
' ~INK SHE 6£UEVED

1

rUSHOLj

1-W..• PLUIIE FRIAR BEWARE • INTAKE
Ytt~m!.y'e

•

1A.wen Drartk-'at wlfh tlfJ daggtrfng
eflecii- WATER

COULD 'IOU

SHOW 1-iER ~OUR

DIPLOMA, S IR 1

ME

l ___.JB!R!:D:!K!!E!!R~--_J

•

'

'

i

I

tomortow)

�..
10 - The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, &lt;k\. 7, 1976

Reedsville accorded
bicentennial""status

News .~

P oll shows
Carter winning

Unlled Press International
A national poll which
showed President Fo rd
wilming the fi"t presidential
campaign debate reported
today that Jimmy Carter won
the second one.
An Elmo Roper Poll for the
Public Broadcasting Service
II1ditated that 40 per cent of
the 300 persons in a survey
considered Carter the winner, 30 per cent regarded
Ford the victor, and 30 per
cent called it a draw.
A similar Roper Poll
following the Initia l debate
~cp t. 23 had ·shown Ford
eonsidered the winner by 39
per cent, (,:,,!rler by 31 per
e•nt, and 30 per cent
regarding it a draw.
Each candidate claimed
victory, and their partisans,
as they did two weeks ago,
were quick to agree. "I felt
even better than the last
.time," said Ford.

" I think I won but I think
President Ford thinks the
same, Carter~ remarked.
11

PUBLIC INVITED
RIVERV IEW - A carnival
will be held at the Riverv iew
Elementary, Reedsv ille,
Saturday, Oct. 9. Dinner at 5
p, m. with tbe carnival to
follow at 7 p.m. The public is ·
invited.

in Briefs

WASHINGTON - THE AVE RAGE WEEKLY paycheck
rose $12 in the year that ended in May but there was no ,
increase at all in the buying power of tbe average worker . The
Labor Department said Wednesday an average 6.5 per cent
hike in weekly ea rnings of full-time workers was completely
wiped out by inflation during the one-year period.
Although paychecks increased by an average of 6.8 per
cent each year since 1967 - almost doubling f:om $1 09 to $197 a
week - inflation has left these average lull-time wor~ers w1l!l
only a 5.5 per ce nt overaU increase in real earnings. Avera~e
real earnings for most full-time workers are ~ow lower l!lan m
1973, when they peaked a.t 10 per cent above the 1 967 l~ vel. And
for all workers - including part-timers - real earnmgs have
declined below 1967 levels.
,.
DETROIT - AMERICAN MOTORS CCRP. Wednesday
announced the smallest price increase amoog the four U.S .
auto companies in 19V models -an average 4.8per cent boost,
or $1 G7 a car. AMC was the last of the four U.S. automakers to
announce its prices and l!le last UJ pob its 1977 model cars on
sale.
AMC 's price increase over 1976 models compares with a
5.9 per cent. or $338, in c1·ease by General. Motors on cars
equipped with tl1e options most people choose, Chrysler Corp.
also raised pr ices by 5.9 per cent, or $326, while Ford Motor Co.
said its increase averaged 5.1. per cent, or $310, over
compa rable 1976._I_n odels.
SAN FRANCISCO - NATIONAL LEAGUE president
Charles S. "Chub" Feeney announced Wednesday a six-man
wnpiring team, Uu·ee of .til em regular , season crew chiefs, !o
work the Championship Series starting Saturday , Oct. 9, m
Philadelphia between the Phillies and Cincinnati Reds .
The six are.crew chiefs Ed Sudol, Doug Harvey and Ed
Vargo plus Dick Stella, Jerly Dale and Terry Tale. In total the
six have over 66 years of servil-e in the N.L. Only Ta la will be
working his fi rst Championship Series, while Sudol and
Harvey will be annearing for the third time.

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSEDFOR
VACATION
WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

,-~-----~-~,

Improved
· (Continued !rom page I)
group practice by doctors and the advantages of such a program. Frank 0.
Myers, associate dean lor clinical affairs, .
stressed that the Athens school is training
country doctors of work in the country and
opined that the type of training might affect
other schools of the nation. Kenneth H.
Pickering, a rural health planner, expressed
enthusiasm lor the establishment or the
,clinics. "You are gotng to have them", he
said.
Scot\ Lucas, adtninistrator of Veterans
Memoria l Hospital, introdu ced Dr.
Faverman and members of the hospital
board attending. A luncheon preceded the
meeting,

--·--·--·-·-·1

SPEAKS TO CLASS
Mrs. Goldie Clendenin was
guest speaker at the fifth
grade class of Pomeroy
Elementa ry School. Mrs.
llysell is the teacher. Mrs.
Clendenin spoke on transportation through the years, a
unit which the class just
completed. Her appearall£~
was made possible through
·the Retired Senior Volunteer
Program,.

I

I
LUMBER, HARDWARE &amp;
BUILDING SUPPUES
FOR AU YOUR BUILDING NEEDS

I
VAllEY LUMBER-&amp; SUPP.LY CO~
992-2709

923 S. 3rd Ave.

Middre p,p_r_t ,
HOU II'S
7: 00 lo 5:00 Mond~y lhru Frida~
7:00to4: 00 Saturday

L----J

'

CALLS ANSWERED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered three calls
Wednesday night. They came
at 4:39p.m. lor George Foss,
Pomeroy, taken to and admitted at Veterans Memorial
Hospital after becoming ill;
at 8:07 p.m.; to old Route 33
fOr Lucretia Smith, who had
received a shoulder injury in
a fall and was taken to Holzer
Medical Center, and at 9:46
p.m., to the Pine Grove area
for' Mrs. J ean Roush , who
had chest pains. She also was
taken t o Holzer Medical
Center.

I

o.

J

-·--------~

\'

'

ELB·ERFELDS 1·N POMEROY

The first religious society
was fonned In 1318 at Reed,._
ville under the auspices of
Reverend Mr. Laws, of the
Methodist Epi~opal Church.
The members were Mr.
Landon a_nd wife, Philip
Hetzer and wife, Salvina and
Sarah Reed, Jane Coleman, ·
Mrs. Thomas Coleman· and
Samuel Coleman.
The second religious
'!!ociety was the Christian
Church, organized by the
Rev. Warick Martin about
1836. Their meetings were
held during cold weather in
scholllhouses but in the
summer In the leafy groves
that impart a chann to the
slow and solemn cadence of
sacred music, and give in·
spiration both to speaker and
hearers.
The first members of this
church were Ezra Hoyt and
wile, James Knowles and
wife, William Buffington and
wile, William Packard and
wife, James Calder and wile,
and Harriet Hoyt.
The neil was the United'
Brethren Church, 01ganized
in 11155 or '56, by the Rev.
William RedJern. The first
memb ers were Joseph
Osborn, Mrs. Rosa mond
.Osborn, Peter Chevalier, and
Mrs. Elizabeth Chevalier.

Second debate

Scotts world

CO Tl UES

THESE ANNIVERSARY SALE PRICES BEGIN FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8TH AT
9:30A.M. BE SURE TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF ALL THE OTHER
ANNIVERSARY SALE PRICES AT THE MAIN STORE- HOME
FURNISHING$ ANNEX AND MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE.
~~~---A~~-;;:~;;,:;s;r;;._.,.__..~r------~-in~Tv;;;~-s;r;;-..,.--

.

FAMOUS MAKE

MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS
.

·

_Nee!\ s i ~es 14'1: to 17'12 5!eeve lengths 32 to 35
mches ~ white - solid colors .. and an
exce ll ent line . of patterns . Includes our
en tire s tock fam ous ma ker Dres~ Shirts.

l
. MAGIC CHEF
I
~e!.
~
57~o~~~~~~~-~!~e~~~oo
"!

~

the wrong series and viewers
will tune in 'Laverne and
Shir[ey' every time.

w~~Anth~~:n ~·~~=~~eh:!!
miscast. But he
get
ca ~ 't

away with it in television ."
Stack is coovinced he is tbe
right guy for Line Evers. A
fifth generation Californian

fr om a famil y of great
wealth, stack exudes seHconfidence and a certain
brahmin panache. He seems
not to have aged a moment
from his days as Eliot Ness,
He is sleilder, muscular

and a physi ca l marvel.

Economi cally he needn 't
work
again.
Stack
was lured back to a

1

1 Only Reg· . $399.95

I

1 WALNUT CO"SOLE .......... SALE $36fJ
1 Only Reg . $469.95
11
·
SALT '43!r

Men's Sport Shirts · Knit Shirts · !
- em
· . Sh'rls
Le'
Sh'rls . I!
West
I1 . · ISUre I .
Sizes s m a ll (14-14 12 neck), m edium (15I
15112 ), la rge (16-16'12 ), ex tra larg e (17-17'12 ) . . 1

'WHITE ALL APINT

These sal e pr ices ap pl y to a ll of our ,m en' s
Weste rn Shirts -- Sport Shirts - Knit Sh irts
and Leis ure Shirts . The Saving s a re Great .

l

Warehouse on Mechanic Street -

~

big selecti on of Aurora · Monza Road Race Sets. Buy

Anniversary Sale!
Reg. $10.49 Gallon
Glidden Spred Satin
w
·

1[

'811 A GAUOff
·
..

--·-----~~!~~ltl,q(~~·-----r----"A-;;;;;;;;;,;s.;re-----.
Anniversary Sale!
1 Electric Trains &amp; Road Racing Sets
Men's &amp;·Young Men's Fashion Jeans I Electr ic ira ins in regular and HO Gauge Track plus • .
·

I

Sizes 28 · to 42 wai s t - length s 30 to 36.
Corduroy s · br ushed denims - cotton
new se lection .
Mens $10.95 Fashion Jeans

..

Some styl es · fashion jeans have jackets to

~:~f~er~=~~ets

in sizes 36 to 46 -

[
' l

I
I...

$8.86

~=~~ !:~::~ ~:~~:~~ ~=:~:
- s~::::
MEN'S. ·JACKETS TO MATCH
. ·
for our

now for Chri stmas' giving . LlmlledQuantltles.
$21.99toS29.9S - --- - -- - - SALE$14.99
$31.9Sio$39.9S - . . • - - . - - SALE$22.99
$43.50io$58.SO - . . • - -- - - SALE$32.99
Toy Department- Is! Floor

~

__.;...~ - ~--.,_,__.._._..__.._.

1
I
i1

· Anniversary Sale!

WOMEN'S COATS
Wom ef! s 8 to 20. Half sizes l 41f2 to 24Vl. Junior sizes 5 to .

1

Annwersary Sale!

- -- -- · Anniv;;s~ry Saicl- - - ·--1

TUBE SOCKS

_.._._. _,_

15. And Preen sizes. Thi s sale includes our entire stock
I olwomen'scoats.
Save O&lt;lwhatyouneed now .
. ·· ~----·-!~~!!!~~-------

SALE PR•CIS

.

_

GIRLS' COATS &amp;JACKETS

· · '' '

Month sizes - 12 month_s

to 24 months and 2

I1 · toCoats
14. Includes our entire stock of Girls
J ~n1or
.
·.
·
S1zes. Wh1te w1th stnped t_ops - dark colors ·
1I
Children's Department - 2nd Floor
stnpe d top s and while wtfh numbers.
-~------'-~..P~ll-------+--·-;__._!.~!.!l!!.g.L_.;. __ _
Anniversary Sale!
I
Anniversary Sale!
· · B

R 1 · Bo Ys and MeA's
oys : egu ar
·.

!1

Mim's Pre-Washed Denim Jacket Wa ist length and lon!jer lengths st yles made by Wrangl e r and Lee.
MensS17.9SPre-WashedDenimJacket
Mens s18.95 Pre-Washed Denim Jackets
Mens S21.9S Pre-Washed Denim Jackets
Mens S24.9S Pre-Washed Denim Jackets

I
~
I

510.77

$11 .37

Sl 3.17
.

,

,

DINING ROOM FURNITURE

~

Sl4.97

1

·Anniversary Sale!

MenSr Wrangfer Western JeaiiS

Bassell, Lane, Pr&lt;&gt;vincelown, Webb, Burlington
House, Kincaid .

I 1329.00 Basset! Maple Corner Cupboard
1339.00 Basselt 42" Maple Buffet &amp; Hutch
1379.00 Bas sell 54" Maple Buffet &amp; Hutch

Sate $263.00
5ate $271 .00
S4le $303.00

537'9.00 Bassett 54" Pine Buffet &amp; Hutch

Sale $303.00

.I
II

S
$13 .95 Flare Leg Style -- - ---- ale $10.99

Anniversary Sale!

MEN'S LEE $14.49 WESTERN JEANS

14 ounce Denim - . Choose boot cut, fire leg
sty le or straight legs .
.

'1149

II

l

·
--·- - -A ;FnA-M;;OeU.;Ss;MrA;KsEalel ___ _

I

Sale $495.00

S619.00 Bassett 48" Maple Round Tabte, 4 mates, 2

capl. chairs.

-~.:.~.:!:~~~r:,g,.!!!,~:_:_:.~.;~_:~_j S369.00
I chairs

Sate $495.00

BasseH 42" Maple Round Table, 4 windsor

table, bench, 2 arm chairs, 2 side chairs
Sale $751 .00
SS14.00 Provincetown Dark_Maple 48" buffet and hutch

MEN'S DRESS BELTS

1

I
Reg . price $5.00 to $10.00.
.
I
. SALE PRICES
I·
.~,-._ ,_._.._ ,_.._.._,_.._. _,_...,._._.._.._.._.._..)
A11niversary Sale!
I
-

all the popular widlhs. Good

se lection of styles a nd colors. Includes our enti r e stock .

MEN'S &amp; IIVJ;'I
a..,.1 Wint J kets
I er ac

Boys' siLes J. to 20 - men's sizes 30 to 54. A truly.r·1ne

selection of style s · mater ia ls . sizes. You'll really save

t-I

Sate 1411.00

table with 2

leaves. 6 commander chairs
Sale 5626.00
S386 .00 Provincetown Maple Corner Cupboard

M~ple

42" Round Titble, with 2

leaves, 6' Gxbow chairs
Sale 5472 .00
1369.00 Webb 42" Maple Butte! and Hlilch Sale 1295.00
S1098.DO Lane Walnut China, table with 2 leaves, 2 arm
chairs, 4 side chairs.
Sale $878.00
51249.00 Purlington House Pine Br eakfast Oval Table,
2 side .chairs, 2 arm chairs
Sale $999.00
1995.00 Kincaid Pine Butte! and Hutch , SO" lreslte loble
with bench, 2 side chairs, 2 arm chairs
Sale S796.00

1259.00 Maple Oval Table, 1teat, 4 male chairs.
Sale 1209.00

,. .

.._.._..__.._.._.._.._..._._.._._

A

______

_..

,
S
nnrversary ale! ..
WomenIS Nylon Robe ' &amp; GowliS

.

.:::._ _ _ _ 1~~ .!~~~------·-..1
'I
Anniversary Sa1e.I

DUTCH·FLOWER BULBS

SALE .PRICES .

Women's Coord.lnate s•..,.,._,ear

nuue togelher .

,..

I

_

_..

.

56 00

ELBERfELD$ IN POMEROY
.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Nearly 5 mlllloo low Income
children needln&amp; and lee lilly entiUed to medical help were
denied It last year because of federal M e d I c a I d IIUmanagement, according to a Ho- 111bcmunlltoe report.
It was the aecond Ume in rilcent weeb a ~onal
panel has charged the Department of Health, Edueadon
-.and W~lfare with mlsmnagemenlln the $!e btilloo+ year
federa~tate program of medlcal'care for the ~
The Charges, from bcith Democrats and Republlcana,
· genera lly have gone unchallenged by · the
administration.
_
The new report by a House oversight .and lnvestlgatiOIII
subconunlttee satd about 12.9 million needy children
uilder 21 were eligible for m~cal examfnatiOIII and
treatment In 1975, under a law !lull waa to have taken
effect in llltl9.
.
But 10.9 mtilloo of the eligible children were left
unexamined and untreated, the report said.
"The subcommittee finds that mlsmanagl!ment by
HEWof this program has caused unnecessary crippling,
retardation, or even death o! thousands of children,"
subcommittee chalnnan John Mou, J&gt;.Callf., aald in a
letter to the House Commerce CQIIllulttee.
The subcommittee repqrt was approved by a ltl-1 vote
with only Rep. Jam04 Collins, R:Tet.,"dlssenilng .
·
unaer tile law, routine Medicaid health ex~l,loos ·
for poor children up to age 21 and treatment where
necessary were to begin July I, 1969.
·
But HEW was up to four years late In lasuing
regulaUons for full Implementation and haa failed to
properly penalize ·states falling to meet program
requirements, Moas said.
Based on testlmooy at subcommittee hearings,. the
report estimated about I million ·of the unscr- ed
children would be dlagnoJed and found to need treatment
for a perceptual deficiency auch as a significant hearing
defect; 850,000 would need treatment for eye defects ;
770,000 would have some kind of Ieeming dlaablllty, and
4:15,000 woUld need irealmenl for iron deficiency anemia.
It said U million eUglble children, who were not examined, would have been found to need medical
treatment .
.
Early deteetlon of illnesses could prevent mfslabeling of ·
some children as retarded , or even uve lives In 10me
cases, the r eport said.
"Of particular concern Is the lac~ of treatment
mandated by the law but not being provided by the•
pi'ogram,'' It said.

Canaday heads
-realtor group

$10,000
•u dgm
. ent
J
asked

'

.

'

Fa·i r board
election
set
.

,!. ..

.Trick-treat ·set

·H omes tour set·

Weather ·

.

three

'·
I

of low income children

LOS ANGELES (UPI) today ataMexlcan-Arnerlcan name until the 'I&amp;Bt seniAlnce
President Ford, scrambling . festival In nearby Glendale · be uttered and devoted the
to pot his campaign bad&lt; 111 before flying to Oklahoma to bulk of his time to advocacy
track, Is urging fellow seek support from wheat of the Republican party
Republicans ·to get him vital · fanners and cattlemen in the plallorm or criticism of tbe
· Democratic votes and ~wak e of Earl Butz' Democrats.
accusing· Jimmy Carter of resignation as secretary of
Ford's aides acknowledged
giving the nation "a lot of agriculture.
privately they were hoping
doubletalk."
Aides scheduled a loog the President could regain
Ford coupled his stepped- weekend of appearances in the offensive quickly after a
up attack on C&amp;rU!r with a Texas, another crucial state string of troublesome
personal appeal for help from for him.
developmenta, including tbe
his own party Thursday !light
Warning his Thursday departure of Butz because of
in a speech beamed to GOP night audienee \hal GOP protests over a t'08rse -raclal
fund raising events in 21 other votes alone would not lie "joke. 11
cities. _Ronald Reagan was at enough, Ford said, " I as.k
Most worrisome was the
· his side for the first time in every Republican to uproar frOill some ethnic
the campaign.
Persu~de_ - just
one groups over Ford's statement
VICA WINNERS NAMED - In competition !sst week were Meigs High vocational
"We
have
heard
a
lot
of
independ
ent
and
one
In Wednesday night's debate
students and Vocatlonal.Industrllll Clubs of America (VICA) members. Judging was 'on
Ron Canaday, or Canaday Weu.ton; Don' Shaffer lnd
doubletalkfromMr.carter, a Democrat" to keep him in with Carter that ''there Is no Realty, Gallipolis, recenUy Mike Gllllm, Shaffer Qeally,
personal appearance, interviews, activities and accompllsbments, public relations ability
lot
of
Irresponsible office.
Soviet domination " In was elected president for the Jackson ; Harry Naugle,
and a written elllllll on etiquette. Winners were, 1-r, MeiQdy Scaggs, first kunner up, senior
promises,'' Ford said.
"If you do this, person to Eastern-Europe.
COSilletology st11dent; Brenda BIBhop, queen , drafting, and Paula Kloes, second runner up,
1977 fiscal year by the Jackson Realty; Hanley
" I still doo't know where persim, friend to friend, we
Ford sought Thursday 1&lt;1 Southeastern Ohio Board of Betz, Southern l!.eally,
junior COSilletology student. Judgek were iKennll Willton&gt; of the New York Clothing House,
Mr. Carter stands on most can win," be said.
Kay Rail of the Middleport Ben Franklin $tore, and ·Mrs. Roy Holter, 4-H advisor. The girls
reassure ethnic voters. Ad- Realtors.
Jackaon; VIrgO and Helen
issues
and I am not sure he
Reagan, speaking before dressing an estimated IS,OOO
will C(lllpele in southeast regional competition on Oct. 16 at Lancaster. The evaluation will
The annual meeting was Teaford, Teaford Realty,
does ellher.''
Ford to about 750 per110ns persons at tl)e University of held at the Colonial · Inn, Pomeroy; WUIIll LeadlnChlm
be the I!IIIIle except for the written exam which will be on vocational education and VICA.
Ford,
oo
his
longest
trip
of
pavi ng $1,000 each 111 the Los Soutpern Calllornla , Ford Jackaon.
, Mrs. Mary Pow!II, 90SilletolO!!Y lntltrQctor at Meigs, was the coordinator for the J\l~ig6 test_
•
and
Merrill · Carter,
the
CllfRpalgn,
Pla!tned
to
end
A•
. d es dinn~r , failed to said he wanted to underscore
J:o.qiiBlifY the-shi~pts have to be a 'vocational student aod a member of VICA. Absent was
Ltadfnlhlm
A1enc1 ,
Oilier olflcen eloeted '"""·
his live-day stay In C&amp;Ufornla mention the President's his "finn support for the · VIrgil
Trudy Hall, third runner up, senior in cosmetology . .
Teaford, Pomeroy, GaWpolla; Dave Jonet lnd
aapirallons for Independence prealdent~oet. and Audrey Janet Reigel, Dtve Jon•
of the nations of Eastern Canaday,
Galllpo!la, Really, Jackaon; Ron and
Europe" and ~aid " the secretary~treaaurer.
Audrey Cana!ily, .C&amp;naday
United States has never
. Dlrectoril elected were Ron · Realty, Galllpolla; Pruldelll
conceded and never · wlll Canaday, John Fuller and John 'Fuller and Dolllllu
concede their domination by -Harry Naugle. Trulteea Wetherholt, S&gt;hlo 4River
the ~viet Union.''
elected were Canaday, Jan Realty, Galllpolla and 1t111
By United Pres11DternaUoul
Gettlea,
Audrey Canaday and Morcan, Wood Allency.,
MEXICC CITY - HURRICANE MADELEINE, packing
WUIIll
Leadingham.
GaWpolla.
'
130 mUe-per-bour winds, chnmed · toward the Melican
During
the
bualneu
One
guest,
Walter
Wauctr,
malnland today, threatening resort .uiages 150 miles northLOS ANGELES (UP!) meeting, member• reviewed Mt. Zion Realty, Jact.l,
west of -Acapulco.
· Confident that his Cllmpalgn swing after two weeks of of domination by the Soviet
general
malaise
following
the
Union
that
obviously
Is
not
the
articles of lncorporaUon also attended.
•
- A spoke811181l for the Water Resources Board said the has - taken a big UP6wing,
first
debate
and
his
true,''
Carter
said.
"I
think
It
and
adopted
by-lawa
for
the
Current
president
John
' ' hurricane - heading north at S mph - would hit the Pacific Jinuny Carter Is hitting hard
organtzaUon.
controversial
sex
and
religion
is
a
very
serious
biWlder
for
IMOunced
the
nut
Fuller
coastline between 7 a.m. and 9 a.m, (9a.m. and lla.m. EDT). a t
President
Ford's interview with Playboy him to say that - It's a
Attending
were:
Jim
and
The board said Madeleine was churning up the sea along the '•'ridiculous" blunders on
meeting will ~,t:-17, at the
magazine.
ridiculous statement.''
Jan GetUea, Gettlea Realty, Meigs IM, P
y.
·
enUre coast and creating "violent waves."
foreign policy statements.
"The
!tend
in
California
At
every
stop
during
the
"It Is also causing very high winds and heavy rain," an
Ford's foreign policy .state- and in other slates aroiUid the day Carter said: "If you tore
official said.
Walter D. White and
ments in the second debate country in \he last few days down the Berlin Wall, which
between the presidential has been strongly for me," way would tbe people move? Imogene E. Whlte, Rodney,
ClllCAGO - ROBERT DOLE SAYS THE Republican candidates w~re targets of · Carter said In Los Angeles. They would rn~ve toward owners of an Ice cream and
~n faces some problems cjiUSed by President Ford's car ter attacks In San
restaurant establlshment on
As Carter h9pped across
aaaerUon that E&amp;Btern Eureope Is not under Soviet Francisco, Salt Lake Oty and the West he said that voters freedom.''
Carter also hammered Upper River Rd. soulh of
dointnatlon.
•
Los Angeles Thursday.
Addison, have filed a suit for
with ethnic ties 1&lt;1 Eastern
Dole attended a fund raising dinner in Chicago Friday
There was a strong feeling Europe should be "shocked" away 111 the basic theme of judgment and Injunction In
., ..,,,
night and hailed Ford· 'as a man who "understailds the in the Carter campaign that, by Ford's conunents that the his campaign - that the Gallla County Common Pleas
RACINE - A9 p.m. curfew month. ·-·
economy ... the responslb!Utles of foreign policy, the details while he may not have area was Independent of nation's ecoo(llly Ia ~ iD Court against Thelma Coal
had shape after· two years of
for that part of the populatloo
Coiancu remfndl l'llldtnti
and demands of our defense establlslunent." But his remarks decisively won the debate, Soviet domination. ,
Company, Rt. I, GaWpolla here Wider 18 will belin Ibis that no one Is to burn truh In
Ford's
administration.
during the lrogram, part of a closed-circuit lelevlsloo · Ford made major mistakes
and GJWa Coal ProceSIIIng, evening, according to vllla18 Ute town untUaftertp.IJ,I.Ind
"I thought he disgraced our.
lroadcast to 22 nationwide locatlons, lacked his usual humor whlcb will be capitalized on country by claiming that the· _ "This Republican Inc., Mabacott, W. Va.
adrnlnistratlon
has
council which met earlier thLI there 11 no burning what-and were limited to )raise of Ford's leadel-ship ability.
liB the Democratic contender
Plaln\lffa, who ask for week.
Eastern Europeans were free peraonally ~en able to give
aoever pennl\ted on Sllllday."
moves to Albuquerque, N.M.,
as the.bJgliest unemploymen_t $10,000, contend that the
A siren will mark the start Mayor Chari• Pyl• will PIULADELPHIA - CITY CCUNCILMAN JIM TA YOUN El Paso, Tex., and Cleveland, ·
'
defendants' coal crushing of the curfew each evening, a · eontact Harry Bwngardner
o1 Philadelphia and CollllcUwoman Helen B. Hinckley of Ohio, today.
m~~~M~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~:t~~I~:~::::~:~:~:i!i!~:~~:!l~:!:: ~:i: ·~':n':!f~t ':" 1~ operation generates a large council
· spokesman 1ald. of the Buckeye lllllp-Hocklng
Cin¢nnatl have a bel on the National Lea'"e baseball playoffs
Carter's glee was IU-cooqll!lntlty Of coal dust and Mike Zirkle, pollee officer In Valley Reclonal Plannlnl
years
'
of
our
nation's
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
which will leave the loser shook up. He or she will have to cealed as he repeatedly atproduces unreasonably loud
perform ·a belly dance at a downtown restaurant in lacked Ford's statement that
Sunday througli Taea: hist.ry," lie said. "Next Jan. noise. They claim the dust the town, reported he haa Commlaslon In . l'lflard to-20 this Is going to be
asked the State Department meetln1 with council to .
Philadelphia. r
Russia does not dominate tbe day, parUy cloudy aud cool changed.''
contaminates the food and Ice ol Highways for -caution sign dlscuu the netdl for Willer
Tayoun, confident the Phlllles will beat the Reds, offered coWJtries of Eastern Europe. Sunday aud Moaday aud a
Carter's best stop of the cream aold at their establlaJI.. on Route 124 near the Harry line awnat0111 and a new ·
the bet to Mrs. Hinckley. She accepted on -one conditfoo : If Carter
called
Ford's chaace of 1bowen 111111 day came In Salt Lake City ment, endangers the health of WUHord home.
weil lnd tani.
TayoiUIIoees, he not ooly do tbe "dance of the seven vells" at comments "ridiculous" and wU'IIIer · Tuesday. Highs
their employees, creates JID
where
he
atiracted
14,000
Parents
will
decide
!he
fate
Several resident• ban
wW be Ill lbe mid to upper
the Middle East Restaurant but also · feed the enUre said the President was
uncomforlable environment of "trick o~ treat" night. uted a11o about beiDg anpersons
to
the
Salt
Palace
Clndnna\1 team and berseH.
"Insensitive" to Americans 5011 Sllllday, wal'llllq to ..e
for customers, and the noise
In a telegram to Mrs. Hinckley today, Tayoun accepted the with relatives behind the Iron mid 8G1 tr lower 7ts a capacity crowd in a heavily Ill uncomfortable for em- Realdents wlihlnll to give are nued to Rac:lnt Vlllaie. Suc:h
Republican
state
where
to tum on their porch lillbti, .l'llldeatl are to get petltlana
challenge and warned)ler to "get her act together.''
Tllesday. Lows wW be Ill
Curtain.
'recent newspaper polls ployees ind customers and and children are not to bother llllned and pre.~\ them to
carter's strong conviction the mid to UJIPI!r lh early showed him trailing Ford 2-1. makes It.dlfflcult to transact thoae not having porcb llghts couricll. ·
·
LOS ANGELEs·- THE COI\WERCE DEPARTMENT Is that be won the second debate Sllllday, warmiDC to ..e__ He received a loog, standing business.
on.
Attending the meeting wen .
under orders from President Ford to f9entify U. S. companies was · coupled with a mid lo upper 4111 early ovation liB he entered the hall,
Plaintiffs say as a direct
The trick or treat period Mayor. Pylu, Mae CltWid, .
lnvol~ in the future In the Arab economic bciycott of Israel, confidence in hill campaign
Tue~day.
jumping and waving to the cause of the-noise, they have will be for one hoar only, but clerk-treuurer· lnd coancll '
but 'It's doubtful that many or any will be known before the that he is on a strong upward ···························································:·:•:•:....:•:•:•:
"
lost the· tenant who was the date baa not been lei. ~ber• Albert Hlll, Grace :
::~:~:=::::::::~::~:=:~:::::::~::~~:;:::::::;:;$?.~::;~;:-;; ?,,
(Continued on page 10)
Nov. 2 election.
lesalng
their business, and Members of the volunteer fire Rouab, Pete Slmpaon, Rant:
Ford's dlsCIOIW'e order, made whUe he canipalgned In Los
that
the
earning
power of the deJII!rlrnent have agreed to · WUHord, Clarence Bradford ·
Angeles Thursday, covers only future reports filed . by
business
haa
dropped con- help control Halloweeillng lnd Muine Wingett.
'
COOipanies wilh the government. II 10111't ldenUfy those firms
'
liderably.
They
contend
the
during
the
Jut
week
of
Ibis
that have CQJillllled with the boycott In the past, as Ford
... , .. .
viilue of their bluiness has
.,
Henl8d lo B11811ast it would during Wednesday's debate with
'
J
. ·~··· .
.
F(V'e members to the board The ~ petitions must be
The directors whose terms decreased In the amount of .
......'
~- Carter ;
"
'
of directors of the Meigs 'I n \be hands of board expire Ibis year are BIU $10,000.
.
County Agricultural Society, secretary, Mrs. Muriel Downie, Bimn:r Slawter,
They
seek
a
Judlirnent
of
WESTERN EUROPEAN. NEWSPAPERS TODAY which stages the annual Bradford, by Nov. 2.
James Carnalian, Rex $10,000 plus an InJunction to
REACTED harshly to President · Ford's staU!ment that. Meigs County Fair, wW be
Each petition must ~rry at Shenefield anci Lauren E. enjoin the defendants from SYRACUSE
Syracuae
A request to Jdd a street ;
elected
at
tile
society's
an·
least
10 signatures of' society Hoffman.
(Continued on page 10)
prod¥clng unreasonable VIllage Council Thursday light wu turned down ·
nual election to be held Nov. 7 · members. Petltlona may be
The board, known as the amounts of coal dust and night Ret Trick or Treat niStrt
temjklrarlly. Ughts wiD be .
at the office of the Meigs secured by phoning Mrs. "lair board,'' haa flled an noise:
·
for Thursday, Oct. 28, from 6 added .as flnancel permit. ;
County Commissioners.
Bradford at 9115-3974 or by application with the Ohio
to 7 p.m. ~air'" wlll begin . 'Attending were Mayor ·
Residents Wilhing to fO' for wrl\jng her at Route 2, Cool- Department of Agriculture
and end activities-'
London, Rober! Winsett, . ·
.
"
a seat muat be qualified ville. ,
· for permission to stage the
,
'.
ConJl!'llctlon has begun on pre!lident of council,·Kathry!I ·
v9ters of Meigs ' C&amp;unty and
Hours of the election will be 1977 fair lrmn A~g. 9 lhi'ough
Cloudy, cool tonight and
The Ohio Eta Phi Chapter aU those taking It at the home hold a membership tickets In 5 to 9 p.m. In the corn· Aug. 13, a week earlier than Saturday, chance of 111\owers. the . new swimming pool, er"", S.rry McCoy, Troy
council learned.
•
Zwllllng, Eber Plckenir, lnd
of Beta Sigma Phi IS ready of Dr. and Mrs. Lewis Telle, the !IOCtetr at least 15 days missioners offlc and any usual. TIJe chapge Ill expected
Lowa tonight In the mtd 4011 Mayor Herman L9ndon Jimmy Joe Hemaley, council
Lincoln
Hill
Road.
for lti MeiCI County Home
before the election. ·
member of -the ·society Is to .be approved because of the and hlgha Salllrday in the mid said complaln\L. an being
Other homes on the tour are
Tour fniiD I to 5 p.m. Sunday.
Those Interested who did eligible to vote for the live moving up ol the !ICbedule of to upper 40s. ProbabWty of received of wee4Jr on vacant memben, Mary 'Chancey,
clerk, · Gtorae Holman,
Eiebt hom• are Included Mr. and Mrs. Richard Collins not purchase a 1976 mem- directors wbo will be named the Ohio State Fair and local rain 80'Jier cent today, 40 per
·lots.
Council
agreed
that
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Fennan
Jn tbla year's tour with
bership ticket may do so from to
y'lllr terms on the .fairs Wffe uked to set earlier cent tonight, . 30 per cent residents be notified the Treasurer, lnd Ponce Chief
Milton Varian.
relreshments to be l!ei'Yed to
Blll Downie· at Elbetfelds. board.
dales .for 1977 as a result.
(ContiJ!ued on page !OJ
Saturday.
weeds mast be cut.
'

Sate $308.00
$533.50 Provincetown Maple Dropteat !able
4 Oxbow Chairs
Sate 1426.00
$590.00 Provincetown

Men's sizes 30 lo 46

~8"

SIMMONS INNERSPRING
MATTPESS &amp; B()YSPRJNGS

~ II

.,

mediCal help to milli..ons

~-

SatU295.00
1939.00 Basse!! 54" Maple· BuHel and Hutch. Sawbuck

$783 .00 Provincetown Dark Maple

PRICE FIFTEENCENTS

r---·· - - - - - - - - - _ _ ,
•
_Bungled
~edicaid
denied
'
.
. .

Curfew begins in
Racine toni.ght

$619 .00 Basse1t 48" Pine round table, 4 mates, 2 capt.

chairs.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1976

Ford says Carter
talks doubletalk

MONTEVERDI STEREOS BY LLOYDS

1

1

1wu~wur go\
movie
moolhs
greatsixra!ings,
It

POMEROY,MIDOlEPORT, OHIO

____

weekly series· by his old _
I
friend ,and. colleague Quinn
'
[J Solids and prints - short and long lengths
Our ent ire stock of .Bul bs Ot s pe ~ lal Prices for this sale
t -k
Martin, who produced "The
- Tulips - Narcissus - Daffodils . Hyacinlhs - Crocus I
faf\10US brands. Includes our entire -soc .
Untouchables" for fou r
o 1h 11
'
years
l~cc BUtBS·
- - - _, - - - - - - : SALE Be
Martin is an amazingly
U
12c
I...--_....-_.._...__.._.._.._._..~_,w-.._.._.._.._..
'
1Sc B LBS· .:. - · · • - - · · .- · ·•SALE
successful producer, who inSALE t•c
I
BULBS · _- _ -_
• • - ·•.SALE
. 20c
~
·
A nnrversary
.
Sale.I
vests tremendous qu ality in
....19c
Sc BULBS
his show~ - "Cannon,n "The
·"
•
FBI ," "The Streets of Sa n
39c BULBS · · · · · · · · · · · ~SALE J 2 c
I
~'raneisco" and "llarnaby.'' ·
49c BULBS • • · · · • · · · • • ~SALE 39C
!
" In the beginning !his show
"O";;g~7,'':Q~;,;-cas;.;l and oth;'r-1
.
• " . •
.
.
had a simplistic concept ~"'1'--l'i.Plous makes selected from our regular
! $89.00 Value - Box_Spnng or Mattr~ss.
four people," Slack said. "An
stock.
.
I . Di.scontinued covermgs - medium firm
ord. cop, a yoWlil cuv. a
mismatched .
technical wizard and a girl
IN' lo'Jft
psychiatrist. N!Cr a two-hour
.
SALE PRICES
·
\ ·
'
0
discussion wiLh Quinn it can1c
._,._,._..._..._..,.__..__.._..__.. _ _ _.._.._.__._~-~------..,..._..
_...._.._..__
down wonecop - UncErers
OPEN FRIDAY 9:30A.M. TO 8 P.M; AND SATURDAY
alone. '
. t --.
pM
"W'e filmed
II
that
w
ay
as
a
9:30
A.M.
TO
5
_• •
.
a~o and j,

at y ._.entine

-------------·-------:4
MAPLE CONSOLE........... ..
· Anniversary Sale!
· 1------W.!",!!J~~.!"-~~~i,:.~~.!_.--

.

~~vr".' t~~R~~",.'; ~':ctf~r~~~

VOL XXVII . NO. 122

most of them in the rubber industry.
'
Although the number of discouraged workers - pen10ns no
Jooger looking for work- also declined, there was a significant
Increase of 300,000 in the nwnber of persons now seek!n4! parttime jobs out .of ecooomic neceaslty . There were 3.3 million
such part-lime workers last month.
Teen-agers enjoyed much of the decline in joblessness
during Septemeber. Unemployment among teena was down
from 19.7 per cent to 18..6 per cent.
. •
There was a slight lncre~~ae, however, In- unemplo)'ll\ent
among adult men.-a phenomenon that also was refiecU!d In
the jobless rates for male heads of households, mar~led men
and Vietnam-era veterans .
Joblessness declined sllghUy aiiiOilg adult women to 7.S per
cent and among blacks 1&lt;1 12.7 per cent:.The rate for 10hlte
workers held to 7.1 per cent for the third consecutive mooth .

•

REG. $417 .00 , . . . . . -- •. SALE$333.00

Mens $9.50 Dress Shi r ts . . . • . . $7.41
iMens $14.oo DressShirts -_ -_ -_- _- _- _- s1o,_.91
51 31
,Mens $14 .50 Dress Shi r t s
$15
M
SoD
$
S
, ens
.
ress hirt s
- - 12 . II .Mens $16 .00 Dress Shirts
- - $12.51
,Mens$16.50 Dress Shirts
- - $12.91
.Mens$20.00 Dress Shirts
- - $15.61

pol ye~ terblend s. AII exc ellentqual i ty . Abig

down from 7.5 mlllloo In August. Tbls waa the first decline
since last May, wben joblessness hit a post-recession low of 7.3
per cent.
.
, Unemployment has been Increasing steadily since last' May
and many administration eeooomlsta fea red it might hit aper
cent in September.
A wtal of 87.&amp;rrulllon per110ns were employed In &amp;!ptember,
a decline of 160,000 from the previous month. II was the biggest
decUne since June.
·
The total number of ~~raons available (or work also decuned:
sllghOy for the first time In lour months. The clviUan labor
force now totals 95.2 million persons,' down · 280,000 from
August. It " as the biggest deelinuince Feb!'UIU')I, 1975.
- The decline In total employment might have been larger had
100,000 striking wor'~rs 'lOt returned to work In September·

e

I REG. $324.00 __ .••.••• • SALE $259.00
.
I
A Good Selection
·~
I
Warehouse on Mechanic Street
~-·..----------------~._
I
Anniversary Sale!

~ ---· -_.. _._.._...._. . _.._.._.._.._._.._,._._.._,_..4

(Continued from page 5'Nichols.' 'Now he's · back
strong wil!l 'The Rockford
Files.' He's the same actor,
but he wasn't right for that
~~
"Television ·is a never-

WASHINGTON (UP!)- Unemployment declined slightly 1&lt;1
7,8 per cent in September, the ftrat dip In the overl!ll jobless
- ratelnfourlll(IQtha, the Lalllr Department reported today.
Hcnmer; \li'e number of pereons holding jobs alJo slipped lor
the lint time since June, the department said.
'llle 0.1 per cent drop In September provided some small
comf&lt;rt to President Ford In the final weeks of his electioo
campaign. II was the last report oo joble&amp;'lllesa before the Nov.
2 electloo.
. .. .
But the job market basically ~ retnalned unchanged over
the put three months, and the recently along increase in l&lt;ltal
employment appeared to be cooling somewhat. Ford has often
bouted abciutthe 3.7 mlllion people who have found work since
the recession was atlts low point In May, 1975.
·
Some 7.4 million persons were unemployed in September.

.ANNIVERSARY SALE

.

(Continued from page 1)
'
questions specifica lly. I 'lee I
very good about tonight, just
as I did after the first one."
In t~eir exchanges during
tile debate, Ford charged
" the kind of a defense
program that Mr . · Carter
wants" would cut U.S. anned
fo rces by 250,000, delay
aircraft and naval prilcuremen!, slow military re5emh
and force this country UJ
negoliate with the Russians
"from weakness.''
Ca rter sa id For d ' had
distorted his position. "Our
country is not strong any
more" he sa id, later in the
debate explaining that while
America is still strongest
militarily, it is weak in
relations with the people, in
asserting moral leadership ,
in finding suppor~ abroad.
Carter said America could
not exert world leadership
while
it
lea ds the
industria lized West in
unempl&lt;)yment. Ford said the
prosperity under Democratlc
presidents Lyndon Johnson
and John Kennedy, which
Ca rter cited, was accom·
panted by wa r.
Ford said under his leadership the U.S. influence in \be
Middle East reached "the
peak of its power" ·while tbe
Soviets lost influence . Carter
complained Ford was overarming countries hostile 1&lt;1
Israel.

at· 2.2%

112TH

'

I

I

•

•

Veterans Memorlal'HospltaT ·
Adtultted - Alice Hackney,
Racine; Janet M. Jeffers, .
Pumeroy; Enuna Lou Finch,
CuolvUle; Lena Lenz,
Cuolvllle; George Foss,
Pomeroy.
·
REEDSVILLE
ReedsWhen war was declared
Di.oharged
Ethel ville, through the e[[orts of against Great Britain In 181%, _
Adkins, Russell Capehart, the Com munity Building he enlisted in the service of
Ht rman Warner, Alice Club, has been declared a his country. AI .t he close or
Haw k, Robert Williams, bicentennial community.
the war he settled lor a time
Hichnrd Norman, Donald
A program has been at Belpre, where, October 15, _
Covert.
planned, probably still this 1815, he w&amp;B married to Miss
month, .to emphasize the Salvina Barstow,
119 1zer MedJcal Center
h
edand Olithe
_
rges,Oct.
&amp;
)·
honor
when
a
bicentennial
nextyear
t
ey
mov
to ve
Qischa
.(
flag
will
be
presented
to
the
·Township,
Meigs
County.
f reda Addis, Bert Barney,
1
In 1817,f he .was e ected
George Bates, Ardell· Boring, school.
bel a
Ccro Brenner, Roy Brinker,
A sign noting that the jastice o the peace,
ng
Martha Burns, Sandra community Is a bicentennial then 28 years old. He conha s
been tlnued, by successive
Ciemons, Clara Coffman, comm unity
ffi re5I
Orville Eastman, Guilietta prepared and will be un- t lections, in this o ce
Girolami, Vicky Hammond, veiled. It will be placed on consecutive years.
ed
government property near
In 1825 he was elect
Huth Harkness, Jesse the Belleville Locks and County Conunlssloner, and
Henson, Viola Jacobs, Doris
King, Carolyn McCoy , Dam. Riverview Elementary beld that office until
th 1113!;. In
School
pupils,
the
Eastern
1842
he
was
one
of
e county
Charles Musgrave, William
Peck Lena Rail&lt;e, Atricig High School Band, Boy and appraisers. He also devoted
'
·
HHildolph,
PauUne
Runyon, Girl Scouts and others, will considerable
11 time
f to· surH
Jeff attend
the , program. ~:.f'~ a~;e as anmng. e
Herbert Shaffer,
S.'owa rds, Marvin Spencer, Everyone wishing to conIda Stapleton, Huber Wears, . tribute to the .. pense's in . • Reedsville, laid out about
Betty Wiles, Thier! Wilson, prepa ring the sign may 1855 by Major Reed, is
contact Dohr man Reed, iDI!aled nearthe Ohio .1\iver in
Charlotte Yonker.
chairman of the finance the eastern part of Olive
(Births, Oct. 6)
h
'd
Mt.and Mrs. Robert Roble, committee , at · the Reed Townshi p. T e res1 ent
proprietors
daughter, Pomeroy; Mr. and Brothers Store.
R were
d H.
hnBarstow,
H
A history of the community, W. B. ee , Jo
etzer,
Mrs. Gerald L. Fragale,
named
after
MaJ
·or
Reed
has
John
Shum
way,
D.
W.
daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. an d
Mrs.
Ronnie
Roush, been prepared and reads :
Wilson, llenry 'Williams, S.
Ma]'or Reed , a", nat.ive I(
of _Kibble, V. II. Smart, a~d
daughter, New Haven, W.
Vu .; Mr. and Mrs. Daniel. Washington .Co., ''ew Yor , Columb_us Reed.
was ·born September.. l-3, 1789 ,~0iive Township was named
Colley, daughter, Jackson. and came to Washington Co., in honor . of Major Reed 's
Ohio in 1.809.
da ughter, Olive Reed. '.
llolzer Medical Center
(Births, Oct. 5)
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Layne,
son, {iallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
(Continued from page I)
Pa ul Spence, daughter, Rio
wday
w
give
Its
approval w l)le tentative $1 billion-plus
Grande ; Mr. and Mrs. Albert
agreement.
'l'he
26-member
International Executive Board
Luvcduj, Sun , Bidwell.
·met for three hours lale Wednesday to consider the pac t~ and
UAW Vice President Ken. B'l!lnon emerged from the meeting
to announce that the board ,had "Unanimously approved" it.

,.

-

•

J

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="782">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11248">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="52404">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52403">
              <text>October 7, 1976</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
