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'·
•
~D-The Sunday Tirnea-SenUnel, SWiday, Oct. 17, 1976

Tanning important
.
in early Gallia history
'

BY JAMES SANDS
each time In a stronger Centerville.
GaUIAHialorleaiSotlety
solution. The tallllinC might
The tanner usually had a
GALUPOLIS - On a hot take 'as long aa a year. It Is deal hooked up with the
sultry summer. day In 1811 llkely that Newsom made his fanner to split each hide that
Gallipolitana, out for a walk own tan bark at a tan bark was tanned. After the hide
along the lower end of Second mill. This wsa a round pit Into was tanned, the fanner might
street, or Vine street, would which chipe· of black oak or take his hide to the saddler or
almost have been · knocked hemlock were placed. A the shoemaker.
over· by the · odors coming heavy vertical poet supported
In Gallla saddlers ·also
from the town's tanneries. a heavy pole which served as were called hamess makers,
One of the · tanneries was an ule tree lor a thick for they usually made both
operated by Lewis Newsom corrugated stone wheel.
·· saddles and hamesses. Some
who had leamed his trade as
Sheep and goat skins were of Gallipolla' first saddlers
an apprentice.ln Lewl!iburgh, first treated with alum and were members of the
Va.
salt before tanning; calves' · Chapdu, Maguet, and BeU
Newsom started with $500 skins were treated with hen famlliea (flrsl 2 French).
capital and buUt a thriving dung befort tanning.
Other early saddlers were
business that extended over
In some years of the 19th Coleman, Kincaid, Robert
40 years. He rose to the rank century (llke the 1870s and Black, George White, John
ol General in the Ohio militia 1880s) Gallipolla had two Hovey ·and Alfred Griswold.
and• served as a trustee of , tarmeries, Bliclde's on Vine Griswold, operating In the
Gallia Academy for over 60 between First and Second, 18308, employed sti joumey-.
years.
. ·and August Ulermann's men and two apprentices.
Most of the tanneries builti • steam tannery on Vine beProminent saddlers in
in GaUls In the early 19th , tween Third and Fourth. the county were (In the early
century consisted of a Peter Dages ta another name years) John Foster of Raenumber of vats (6'x4'x4') dug asaoclated with tanning In coon township, James
out ol the ground. In the vata· Gallipolis' (operated In mid· Thompson of Morgan,
the hides would he tanned century).
_.
Willlam Jacobs of Addison,
..first in a weak · solution of
In Vlntoh, Moses Mathews Morris Evans of Wales
water and tan bark (called and later Phineas Mathews (Centerpoint), John Hampton
ooze ). The hide would be ran a successful tanning of KygerviUe, John Weaver of
dipped several more Urnes, business more than 40 years. Cheshire, and Elmer WashOther important early tan· bum ol Vtrlto~;
nerles in Gallia county were
Occaslorurlly, too, the
David Spicer at Patriot, w. saddler was asked to make
H. .Ravenscroft (Kygerville) milltar)' hats lor the Ohio
aod David Edwards tn militia. For Instance, the

THESE GffiLS HAVE BEEN selected by their
respective classes of Eastern High School to make up Ure
queen's court at the annual hcmecymlng, set lor Oct. 22.
From the left are Brenda Frecker, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Frecker, Reedsville, a sophomore; Lila
Young, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Young, Tuppers
Plains, a freshman, and Theresa Browning, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Browning, Reedsville, a junior.

·Development workshop
will be in.Otillicothe

REAR ADMIRAL GEORGE MilLER {ret,) makes Bl\ emphatic point in remarks to
Rio Grande College-Rio Grande Community College student. last week .

Rear Admiral Miller sure
U. S. is· losing influence
RIO GRANDE - The
admiral who once com·
manded the surface striking
forces of the Seventh Fleet
believes the people of the
United States have never
been. ''less safe than we are
today."
'
Rear Admiral George H.
Miller, U.S. Navy (Retired),
apoke about national securit:.;
to students at Rio Grande
Colleg~mmunity College
on Navy Day, October 13. He
said he believes the United·
States has less Influence ln
the world now than ever
'before. Miller said that at the
end of World War II, the
United States was the
strongest nation In the world.

Holiday Inn's

management
is ranked high
GALLIPOLIS Top
management personnel of the
Holiday Inn here have been
named among the in·
lernalional Holiday Inn
ayatem'a outstanding performers lor 1976.
Innkeeper Dan Jansa was
named among Ure top five
percent In his category and
Housekeeper Mary J ,
Tbomas placed ami&gt;ng the
top 1110 In her field. The
awards of merit ·were an·
normced at the 21st alinual
conference of the Inlerna Ilona I Asaochition of
Holiday Inns In Memphis,
Tenn. where more than 1.350
Holiday Inn owners, .company olllcl!ils and guests
from around·the world met to
plan operational
and
marltet!JJ8 strategy lor next.
•. year and to honor the chain's
top performers lor this year. '
The 1976 Awards .BaU Ori
Thuraday night recognized
the top eight Innkeepers,
Food " Beverage Directors
and HoiiHkeepers. Jansa Is
one of only two'Innkeepers In
Ohio llld Mrs. Thomas one of
only 1our ~oUBekeepers In
Ohio so honored. Jansa \rasa
top It per eent award winner
In 111'11 and Mrs. Thomas waa
I top 10 ·percent award
winner in lt74 and 1975.
Alfo attendq the con·
lere8ce wu Delrr.'J L. Roush,
local franchise owner,

CillLUCOTHE - Public
oflicla~ and other interested
persons are urged to attend
an economic development
strategy workshop to be held
Oct, 28 at the L &amp; K
Restaurant on the US 23 ,bypass of Chillicothe. The
· meetlhg will sta.rt at 7 p.m. It
Is jointly sponsored by the
Ohio Valley Regional
Development Comml!islon
and the Ohio Department of
Economic and Community
Development.
Questions to be discussed
include major roadblocks
facing our communities,
economic
and
social
problems which need to be
resolved; and wha.t public
officials and plaMers can do
to help community leaders
make proper decisions which
will lead to higher Incomes
· and higher quality of We lor
our cltl!ens.
Janet Bell, program
consultant to DECD will
serve as group facilitator for
the session , others participating wlll be James
Duerk, director, and Nell
McCabe of DECD, plus
OVRDC stsfl members: The
public Is invited.

Adamsville militia wore
black leather helmet caps
with white pompons llld red
tops. Green coats and green
pants, white vests, and red
wet boots made up the rest of
the uniform.
Almoet every community
had at least one or two
shoemakers thrcugh much of·
the 19th centlll')'. Shoemaklng
was rather an easy skill to
learn. Quite often brothers
· would team up to start a
bualneas or a father and son.
It was also cominon for
successful businessmen to
have started as shoemakers.
The shoemaker, because oi
the menlalness of his \alik,
had a lot of time to think and
philosophl!e about the l!isues
of \he day,
At Urnes the shoemaker
was called 111"!1\ to protect ihe honor of the town as happened to shoemaker Jones in
1884. A band of gypsies came
.Into Henry Hennon's· store
(Gaillpollii) and one ,of the
gypsies proceeded to weigh
hiplaell on the store scales.
A. customer (Joe Martin )
pushed the gypay out and
scratched the gypsy's Ia~ in
the process. The gypsy
caught
Martin by the
shoulders and butted him In ·
the breast (Joe was hauled
home lit a wagon) .
That's when Mr. Jones
went out to hunt up the gypsy.
The gypsy got in the first
swing and broke his wrist
across Jones' face. While
Jones was fighting with his ·
hands the gypsy was forced to
use. his feet. The typsy laid
Jones out with a swift kick to
the chest, whereupon the
gypsy placed Jones in' the
wagon and drove both ol
them t~ Doctor Hanson's.

:ARROL K. SNOWDEN
24 St. St.

Gallipoiis, Ohio ·

Phone 446·4290

"State Farm,has LIFE insurance;
too! Call me for details:' '
Slate r ~· ' ' L.le ln~"'!rce ~·"'
Home OHa 81oc.otllftytlfl, llltr1(!0S:
lfUUU,f.CI

•

Let us
put you
behind a·desk.

' ·-·
Ev•rv home needs o desk .•. • cho9s• one from our a bun.
dont •election ·of Early American, Contemporary and
Med iterranean 1tyles , . . all from distinctive makers,
especiollv tc1le priud for this great money~soving· e~ent • .

· SPECIAL SALE PRICES
J29.00 PINE ROLL TOP .......SALE 1103.00
1149.00 PINE SECRETARY ..... • SALE '119.00
1159.00 MAPLE STUDENT DESK
wi chair •• ••• • • ••• •• SALE '129.00
'159.00 MAPLE. PINE OR OAK SALE , OO
KNEE HOLE .. •••••.. . 129•
'179.00 PINE KNEE HOLE·· •• • SALE 1143.00
1
199.00 MAPLE OR OAK
1
. KNEE HOLE••••••• ... SALE 159.00
I
.
279.00 MAPLE ROLL TOP••. ••. SALE '223.00
1
289.00 MAPLE, KNEE HOLE •••• mE '231,00
1399.00 DISTRESSED .PINE SECRETARl
w/Curio Top .......... SALE 1319.00
1

'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'

8

SALE! Save 60

on ·r emote control color TV

Hurry, sale prices on these TVs end Octohel,' 25

~ SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
.

•371 95

OPEN.WEEKDAYS

~- Con~enient!

TIL 9 P.M.

ov

'

•710

seafS

•

EltU GUman,' 24, Rt. 1,
Langsville, a maintenance
lralne•! at the Southern Ohio
Coal CO. 'a Meigs County Mine
No. I, wu.kiUed early today
when a machine that loads
coal struck him In the head.
David Baker, personnel
IIWIIller lor Southem Ohio,
saki Gillman was working a
cOillinuoua mlalng machine
boom which loads coal Into
hoppers, when an ann of the
. boom hit him In the head llld
pinned him against tit!! coal
seam.

POMEROY-MIDDLEP-ORT, OHIO

EXTENDED Otm.OOit
A cbaaee of raiD Wed- ·
llHdlly llld lair Tbllrlday
llld Friday. HJPo will be
in lite lh ud loWI! wW be
in lite 381 or lite low 48o.

Clinics
doing

•

near for
Jr. Ml·ss

lOS ANGELES- JEFFREY DANIELS, 15, had his neck,
lnken d~ a tackle in a footbaU game and slumped to the
ground WlCODIICloua In front of fans Including his lather.
Dflrplte emergency lirst..lld efforts by his coach, Daniels was
pronoiDlded dead on arrival at a nearby h011pltat
But doctprs put the iYOilth on special' llle-aupport
equipment anyhow, and moments later he began to breathe on
hiB own. He was listed In critical coodition Sunday at St . .
Francis HOII)Iltalln suburban I.ynwood. II he doea survive,
· doctors said, he will probably be paralyzed from the neck down
(or the rest of his llle.

I.OUISVD..LE, KY.- JAY SPRINGSTEEN OF FUNT,
Mich., the youngast ever national motorcycle champloo,
showed his lllreJI8th &amp;mday by winning easily In the ?&amp;-lap
$18,1100 Race of. Qamplona at Louisville Downs,
1
The l~year~ld cyclist, riding a Herley.()avlclson, took the
mUe oval frmr lltew Eklund, a rookie expert from San Jose,
. Calli., and beJjl on lor the win, Eklund flnlsbed fourth. Spring.
111een averaged 18.71 mllea per hour O'll!r the 25.057 miles In the
race, the world series of motorcycle racing.

·
ADKTOWED
Marriage licenses were
Issued to Charles Jennings
Eaklni,l9, Rt. 2, Racine, Jill&lt;)
Freda Louise Warth, 16,
Hartford; Charles Ray
Lawrence, 32, Rt.l, Portland,
and Mary Jane Smith, 18, Rt.
1, Portland.

I~

/ 1

By ELIZABf;TH WIURTON
Utdted Preas Inlerllltloaal
President Ford and Jlmmy
Carter took thne 'of! from
campalgnlng today to begin
preparing lor their debate
Friday night, when the two
csn be aalred about any
subjects.
G!Jrter spent most of the
day at borne in Plains, Ga.,
before beginning a scheduled
two-day trip to Florida, NOI'Ih
Carolina and New York.
After that, he plana lo spend
Ure rest of the 'Week getting
ready lor the final debate In
WUUamsburg, Va.
•··
Ford, back at the White
House, also prepared lor the
debate, and plamed lo near
In his new education COIIlJIIis.
stoner, Edward Aguirre, in a
Rose Garden cenmmy, and
meet with U.S. Ambaaador
to ~land Anne Armstrmg.
The vice prerddentlal candidatcs , Republican Robert
Dole and Delllocrat Walter
Mondale, meanwhile,
continued seeldng votes in the
Midwest.
'. .
Except tor a quip]! up-andback t_rlp to New York
Thursday lor the annual AI
Smith dinner, Ford was
e:rpected to stay close to the
White House untU the final
debate
Friday
In
WUIIamaburg, Va.'
Aides said he was
tnarShaDing hiB energy and
hiB llnances for an bienalw
10-day non-etop campaign
swing lioot Friday night untU
election day to try to
overcome Carter's lead.
'
Carter has outspent Ford
by a raUo of more than two to
one so far, which means that
. Ford hal lhe bulk of his
lederaUy aUotted funds still
available lor UJe In the
crucis! closing daya of the
campalgnd.
..
For , alter attending
church SUnday, met In the
White House 'with a Cabinetlevel task Ioree to- dlscusa •
urban policy. Carter attended ·
the Plains, Ga., Baptist
~nd~ing~ord •

Health officials
In
Louisville, Ky., Mlrcoo, Ga.,
and Dade COunty, F1a. al8o
d
k d
reporte
wee en
lmmunlzailons dropped oil
sharply.
Besides AUegheny County
a n d · M 1c h t g a n ,
immunizations were
resuming lrf Loulstana, Vermont, Tezas, Wisconsin,
MaJna •Virglnla• JUino'·
.... New
Mexico and Alaska, All
halted programa following
the Pittsburgh destha and the
reports of slmilar lataUUes
Ural followed.
The CDC ruled out any
connection between the
deaths nattonwlde of '35
persona wiUrln 48 hoW'!! ol
their Inoculations and the
vaccine oc the way It was
administered,

•
•
sponsor p1cmc
"

ves , a program .
· WASHINGTON:.... TilE CIVIL SERVICE CIIJlllllasion ia ' of,the GaDJa.Jackson·Melgs
warning nearly aU federal wortera aild ewn the employes of Community Menial Hesltb
11001e private agenclee receiving federal funds that they must Center, will sponsor a picnic ,
stay oo the political aidelinee this year. IssUing an 11-page nat at the Bob Evans Farma
of rules, the eonunlsslon said SUnday federal 'employes are Saturday, Oct. 30,10a.m. Uli
problblted by law from either candidacy or actl'll! supPort of 4p.m. to provide adoleacenta,
candJdateo In a part1asn election, and nonfederal workers in ages 10 to 16,. a chance to
certain 'categories may not be canilldatee.
meet court olliclals, ponce
'lbe reatrlcllona .., cootalned lit the ·Hetcll Act 1 Jaw officers, teacbers, the mental
Curar- recenU,. refused to modify, 'lbe SU)I'ente
has health staff and welfare
reJected clllml that the Hetcll Act violates the constitutional jVOr~ers In a relaxed at·
rtcht.l of pollllcala-bl" and free~. WNJe the act's · moaphere.
reatrlcllona are aimed mainly at federal employes the esc
The '• picnic Is offered to
warned that pr1V111e ClllllliUDity action agencies rimed by adolescents In Meip, GaUJa,
federal~ progJ enw anc1 employes in state and local ancl Jackson counties wlih
acencteafundad prlnclpaUy by the federal govermnent also 'transportatloa being supmay not be candidates In partisan poUUcal cainpalgna.
pUed, Activities will Include
1
'
· ·
volleyball, softbaD, bJtlni,
COLUMBUS-TilE OillOSTA'J'EGRANGE 104thannual · sack races, tug-of,war,
Mlloo aplned today starting a lhree-ddy program featutlng music, .., ju.al plain "rapaiiJIIC!Ch by~-~ A. Taft Jr., &amp;Ohio, at a Tuesday night ping" org~~ed and con· •
banquet.
·
ducted by "Alternatives"
Gen«aaaeasionswillbeheld daUy. The youth meetlng·wtU Board members and staff .
N1 eonCiliTC!III wlthTullday'a pneral conference. The Young
Mental Health stall and .
Gnlree Couple of the Year and the Youth P~Cesnt wiU be beld V9lunteera from the varloua ,
~ capped by the Prince and Princess BaD. Winners .of itOClal agencies and judicial
tile lllatewlde cmununlty service and blcentennlal conteata systems of Meigs, Gallla, and
will be antlO•tced Tueeday night. New officers wiU be Installed Jackson counites.
'
Wednesday night.
'
•

c.:urt

.

AItematives
. to
"Aiterna'ti

'!be openlna ulyos ol.

lAP A•a

light

acalnat

UNESCO wen fired at Sa!t
Jose, Costa Rica, thl1

lllmlllef . nwiU~tt~ttcurylts

,S iruglt to anOther UNI!:SOO ·
conference In Nalrobo, ·
~ya, later this monih.
Pi'ea freedom In general
llld the UNESCXl )li'OJIOI!Ils,
In particular, are alao
e:rpected to dominate the
IAPA's two lt77 meetings -

free aile

A
moon meal will
be supplied by the "Alter·
natives" program . .W that Is
asked of participants iB that
they dress wanruy In com·
lortable clothes and come
prepared to enJoy themselves.,
AdolesCents belwo;en the agee
of 10 llld 18 or Interested and
concerned parenta who feel
that this would be a good
experience for their. chUd
should call their local ichool,
mental healtll center, or
welfare. ol!lee lor further
detallsabouttheplcnlcandto
sign up all must regilter by
October 27 lor lhe. picnic. .
"Alternatives" thanks an
schoolir, ·eourt ll)'!lema and
Judlclal l)'llems lor their
support with a special tha~
to Bob Evanalor the UBe of
his lacllitles. "Alternatives"
Is a program of the CoJn..
munlty Mental Health .Center
which Is a contract agency of
the Gallia.Jackson-Meip 648
Board.
I~

'

tile mJd.year conl«Wlce In
Car111ena, Colombia, In
Mardi, and the S3rd Annual ,
Au •iNJ In Santo Dclnlngo,
Dominican Republic, In
Oc!Obw.
•"nie thrtats IC&amp;li'IJI in·
dependent joumallan In the
Amerlcaa are no longer
llmlte~t' by geography or ·
time," asld the lAP A '~
~of !he 'Preerl report .
ill1led In Wllllamsburg.
.
"The7 occur at any
tnOIIIellt and In ariy pia~. In
war or peace , under
authoritarian regime' or
(eoDifms~ on' page 1%J

en tine
resident said.
Runk uld people do not realilt they .
. probably have left their former pets to face
death from starvaUon, frmr attack by a wUd
anlmal or .frmr the gunshot of an Irate
fariner. ·
·
Jack Cline, profeaaor of anlmal!lcience at
Ohio state University, pointed out the
problem of l'OIIIIllni doga.
He said pets that .., allowed to roam,
particularly male doga, may Join a pack of
wUd dogs lor two or three days jCIIIIq In on
Ute padt'a ldlla before re1urnJni home.
Cline said the loog rarwe solution to the
Jll"!blem l.s educating people aboul the effect
of dtunplng • dog.
"They don't realize all of the
ramlllcatiOOB," he said. "Inatead of o quick
mercllul death (lor the dog) It's a prolonged '
nasty deslrucUon" lor the doga aa weD as
livestock.
·
"We have to protect ourselYet from our
pets," he said.. ·

Debaters boning
up for Friday

optimistic."

STRIXE ENDED
COLUMBUS UPI - SOme
3,500 White-Westinghouse
Corp, workers in three states,
Including Ohio, retumed to
their Joba todily, ending a
strike which started July 12. ·.
A new three-year contract
Includes a &amp;kents-per-hour
ralae the first year.

struale."

~·~~:~for~:;~.~~.~

neaday, Oct. 20,
program, clinics reopened
High school senior girls but only 17,0'14 of an ezpected
wishing to enter should send 1110,000 showed up,
theirnameandaddresstothe
Figures
were
not
Southeast Ohio Junior Miss completely available as
Scholarship Program, P. o: Michigan's Immunization
Boz lot, Pomeroy, 46789, Tbe program resumed jn eight
finals will be Nov. 21 at 3:15 _counties, bjit health ofllcl!ila
p.m. at Meiga JUnior High were dlaaPPQinted with the
School auditorium" in · Mid· luriloul. In Jackson County,
· dleport.
where :Ml,IIOO ""re ezpected
Two. winners will be before the nu shot scare
selected by the ' panel of began, 3,550 people were
judges to repreaent this area · ·tmmWllzed.
· ·
at the Ohio Junior Mlas finals
"With the bad p~~bliclty we
In Mount Vernon In Januarj. _lowered our stghia, but we
The next practice sesaton were sUli hoping lor at least
lor aU Junior Mlas con- 9,1100 today," said Jackson
teatants Is Sunday, Oct. 24 at County Health Department
1 p.m. at the Pomeroy village nursing director Delores
haD ground Boor meeting Ray. "I guess we were too

room.

ancl wltb
UNESCO in lhl vquard qt.
the ._.,, It II time to get
ready for 1 long uphUl

· MONDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1976

COLUMBUS (UPI) - As unllkely as It
may seem, packs of wild dogs klll at least
$2M,IIOO worth of Uveatock, moatly sheep, In
Ohio each year.
·
Packs of feral dogs - ooce tame and now
wild - roam the countryside, mliltly In
southeastern Ohio, ~lns hogs, cattle sheep
and wUdllfe, Roher! Rwrk, Mid.Statea Wool
Growers AsloclaUon tepresentalive, said
during lli.weekend.
He said the dogs prey on sheep, primarily.
A pack of dogs struck a fiock of sheep In
Hocking County last week, tllllng seven, he
said. It was the third attack on the Rock In
three weeks.
"For 11001e reaaon people feel a lot better
·about tunil1~ doga loose, rather than taldng
them to the anilnal shelter" when they no
longer want them as peta, Runk said.
"They probably feel they are baing m.te
humane" by placing the dog In a wild
environment instead of having them
·mercifuUy put to sleep, the rural Granv!Ue

United Preas lutentatlollal
The deaths of several aged
recipient.. of swine Du shots
frightened Urouaands away
from lmmunlzatioo clinics In
some states, but federal
health authorities said
&amp;ulday the impact can'! be
• measured until later this
week.
In AUegheny County, , Pa.,
(Continued on page 12)
Southeast Ohio senIor high where
three deaths of elderly
:::w.m::~%'&gt;':·:·-~-·.,.::;s;&lt;·:·:·-s;&lt;':&amp;.'«!~··~ achool girls · are reminded vaccine recipients a week ago
· ·:··"' .•~•.•..w .&lt; " ·
~•
~ today the deadline for entry kicked up a sUr ov¢r

HONG KONG -STUDENTS SWARMED through the
streets of Shanghai today with large drums and gongs
supporting the purge of Mao Tile-tung's widow and three
radical leaders, an American ylsl!Qr said. Posters accused
Msdame Mao, or Chiang Ching, and her radical asaoclates of
plotting the assasstnatioo of new party leader Hua Kuo-feng
and attempting to ' seize power even belort Mao died last
mooth.
It was the fourth straight day of massive demollBtratiOOB
in Or!ria's largest city.
"SII!dents were marching through the streets everywhere," the American told UP! In Hong Kong by telephone.
·"Tirey plastered up posters. Trucks with loudspeakers, 18rge
drums and g&lt;lltiB roamed thrcugh the downtown streets and In
the suburba;" The Shanghai demOnstrations 'were believed to
, be part of a campaign by central authorities In Peking to rally
)II'Ovlnclalsu)liKII'I behind Hua In preparation lor lormallzln2
the purge of Madame Mao and the members of the ~Ued
''Shanghai f,fafia !''

IIMI'e ~

Wdd dogs big killers in southeast OhiO

Gillman was dead at the

.
. By Urdted Preas lutemaa,..l
CLIFFORD, MICH. - A FREIGHT TRAIN deraibnent
today caused two lank cars carrying a deadly lndustrtsl
cbeniical to ezplode and burst Into flames. Authorities
evacuated residents of a llklquare-mile area. The tankers
spewed fumes of rur lndustrtal chemical known as AcrynUe, a
~le liquid that Is poieonous II inhaled or comes 1n
contact with the skin, the'Sanllac CoWlty sheriff's department
qid,
,
The 472 residents of Clllford were evacuated to the village
of North Branch, a mile to the south. Hours later authorities
beganevacuatlngNorthBronchltsell,de$111tereaiBtanee(l'om
residents. School buses w~ used to take residents of North
Branch and Clifford to Lapeer,

II added that "the enemies
of free jornallam, who at one
time were only the dlctatora,
grow llld multiply. The communlcaUons media live under

'

VOL. XXVII . NO: 128

ews. • •in Brie"'
·fu!: ~::. ~~~"": ~~~
J'

qld,

at y

scene.

Baker said a cormirtttee
made up of officials from the
eompany, the United. Mine
Workers, the Mining En·
lorcement and Safety Ad·
ministration and state
agencies will Investigate the
accident.
The mine, located just east
of WllkesvWe, was closed
until at least . midnight
Monday. Southern Ohio's

u thole being Pl'opooed by
UNESCO, wh'lch IAPA
deacribed • beq "In the
vanguard of the enemy ~ the
free prwa."
Durtnc the weet.!ong ling, the IAPA alao Jsaued a
grim resiort on the status of
preMiteedcrn In the Western
Hemllphere, "The ·stat• qt.
the )ll'ess In the Am&lt;!rlcas II
not encourpg," the repot't

•

e

Langsville man
•
•
killed mmme

Since then, he said, "the
He said his concern about
United States has come national security stems from
down. We must be doing . an analysis ol the way the
something wrong."
•Soviets are using maritime
Admiral Miller retired strategy while .the United
from active'.duty in the Navy States ·continues to em·
In 1975 alter 42 years of phasize a land-war strategy.
service. He has been awarded
Writing in the May issue of
both .the Navy Cross for Sea Power magazine, AdExtraordinary Heroism and mlral Miller said, "A new
the Distinguished Service Soviet campaign of conquest
Medal. As Director, Navy is proceedlng ·on a scale and would al!io include a stronger
Was $511.95 ... Now on sale
Strategic Offensive and ~t a rate unprecedented In . N,avy and the ~evelopment of
Defensive Systems, .he world history." According to more powerful ships. He said,
developed the long-range Admiral Miller, the Soviets "Our present ship technology
misSile submarine concept are using the sea to carry .out must be updated. We need
which has become the basl!i .their plan.
new technolnglee. We need
• 19-in, diagonal measure
ol the present Navy Trident
"Trade missions provide laster surface ships."
picture
Submarine Program.
cover for political activists .. . , He told the studenl!i be
His a~dress at Rio Grande while Soviet military per· liked to talk to&lt;&gt;~llege groups
• Soft touch electronic tuninJ:"
College-Community CoUege sonnel remain In the back- because he felt he could ask ",.
• Super Chromix®in-line
4220
was part of a two day visit to ground ... Trade, carried In them to "dedicate themblack matt•ix pictm·e tube
this area sponsored by the Soviet-bloc merchant ships, selves to the service of
• 100% soJid·state chassis
United States Navy League. constitutes the leading edge freedom." Miller told the
Remote control lets you
• Adjnst.a ble, one-buttolt color
Admiral Miller believes the of the USSR's new campaign Students, "We aU share the
I urn set on and orr, change
United States needs to lor world domination - · blame lor not being the
• Set-and-fot•get volume
channels and adju~;t ~olqnte,
reconsider a maritime which is based, in fact, on a number one nation In the
from DIJ.,YWhere i~ the room I
, control
strategy
lor · national largely maritime strategy." world'."
security. He explained to the
He believes a similar
As be finished his talk, the
Rio Grande audience,. maritime strategy for the Admiral told the stud!"'l!i
"Successful nations in the United States should Include what he thought they could do
past were maritime nations. an expansion of the merchant to help. First, he said, lhey
Those same nations d.edined marines. "Our merchant had to vote, and keep labs on
In Influence when &gt;hey marine Ioree Is too smnU. We their
representatives .
adopted a · land power don't have enough to support Second, "Insist your govern·
strategy ," The Admiral our armed forces In time of ment tells you what's· going
claims that the United StAtes war;" Miller said.
on."
has declined in power for . ~at
The Admiral thinks lhe U. In 1944, Rear Admiral
reeson.
.
S. merchant marine should George · Miller was responCiting the lessons of be used in foreign trade in the Bible lor saving the light
history, Miller ssld that for same way the Soviets use ,. cr~er Houston alter It was
any nation the key to wealth their merchant marine. He torpedoed off Formosa. In ·
was maritime power. Ad· was crlti~'Bl ·of American 1976, only a year alter his
mira!
Mlller defined policy for not "maintaining a retirement, he has dedicated
maritime strategy as a · strong U. S.. merchant marine himself to his belief In a way
means ol using the sea rather lor national defense" and for to save the United States.
than land In the conduct of not adequately developing U.
On Navy l&gt;By; October 13,
war.
S. foreign and domestic two different generations met
commerce.
on the campus of Rio Grande
A strong national·security, College· Community College,
according to Admiral Miller, and listened to each other~
448~2 Spanish-8tyle
'
TRANSCRIPTS FOR SALE
•40 off 100% soUd-slale color TV
,'100 oH console color. TVs ·
HUNTING TON - Tran·
Was $411 .95, 19-in. diagonal
Was saio.9s, 25-in. diagonal
SALE
scripts of public meetings
SALE
.
measure pi~ture. In-line
· measure 11icture. Soh·tuuch
held last June relating to an
Super Ch(omi•® black rna'
tuning. One-buttot:t color .
Ohio River Port Development
95
trix tube. One-button color.
Super Chromi:&lt;&amp;tube.
Study are now available from
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the Anny Corps of Engineers'
'--'
,
-,
--.
--------"-~'-··--·-c----;----,-...J.
Huntington, W, Va. ~flee .
The meetings were beld to
See Wig Davis or Joe Tfiompson
.
obtain public comment on the
o Sears ha• a credir plan to •uil mo&lt;t every need · • Includes. Dellve!Y and Normal Hook·UF
State of Ohio's Ohio River
. Guaranteed or Your Money Back On Console T.V.'s
·
Port Development Program,
Satisfact&amp;on
.being conducted by the Ohio
Department of TransShop Sears
SILVER, BRIDGE
por1a~on. Interested pe1110ns
....__~ Catn~o~~~hone
PLAZA
should write to the .District
Engineer, Army Corps
'24 Hour PhOne Service·NUR.., ROEBUCK ANO CO.
Engineers, P. 0. Boz 2121,
Huntington, W. Va. 25721.
(

.IN lHE

LAB!' CLASS - Due to dlicont1Jisance of ltmdlng,
mlalng lnatruction In the MeJas ~ School'Dlllrlct has

been dropped. Above Is the lui 8fOUI? of men who
· graduated Friday In mine maintenance Jill&lt;) mechanical
!Ork after aeven monlhl oflr!dnlng IUIIer the Instruction
of Randle Simpson and Jdrn Bmd, Gracmtes are, front,!
tor, Stew Johnson, Jdrn Hess, Terry JarreD, BID Uttle,
G. K. &amp;nlth, Wayne Peytm, John Slaven, Dana Aldridge;
badr; row, Larry Coz, Rlchsrd Dempsey, Steve Hawk.
· Archie Dlgga, Phl1lp McFarland, Steve Johnson, Robert
Bl&amp;ck, Olarlle Johnson and Mike Beach.
·

'

Sears

WASHINGTON (UPI) '
The lui anrual ~ of
the Inter-American Presa
Association marked the
beginning of Its ,light ICabwl
UNESCO propoeala which, 11
aucceulu1, could severel7
limit the free now of
ltionnatlm thrcugh Third.
World smmment....,trolled
"""" agencies,
.
In lact, IAPA ended its S2nd
:Aiiilual Al8embly In Williamsburg,
Va., late
last week with a call
on lir members "to 11e1
ready for a long liphlll
·struggle" against attempts

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT, 3RD FLOOR

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT. 3RD A.OOR
Like a good neighbor,
Stare Farm is there.

·Press freedom -b attle opened

ELBERFELDS IN .POMEROY

.

lor coming under the
Influence of Industry
lobbyiQ.

Rhodes
•
s1gns
money
bill
COLUMBUS (UP I) - Gov.
Jamea A. Rhodes today
all)hed · Into law a f/50,000
interim appropriation for the
•lle1l'ly-crealed Olllee ol tho
Conaumer Counsel.
. The counsel Is mnpowered
under utility ratu-making
leatalallon sli!Jied Into law by
Rbodett lall summer to lntcrwae In uUltty rate ca:rcs
before the Public UUlltios
Conunlaslon of Ohio or
throu&amp;h the courts.
Under the new law, the
counael l.s supposed to bo
named before tire end of u.,
year.
'!be appropriation will fund
tile .~ for an anticipated
llal! Ill 10 persona through

June, 1171.

llltodta allo llgned Into law
CB!J' Face the Nation, aald eiPt
other bUl.s, Including
the Forcl' admlnlalratlon hu

Carter's campaign
headquarter&amp; also released a
lorm,rly secret list of
contributors to ·hla 1970
gubernatorial campaign. It
showed about $,1100 dooationa
totaling abnoat f/00,1100, and
revealed ftiOI'e support from
corporations than from
organized labor. But moat of
the contribullona friXII aU
sources were $1110 or less..
Dole was invited to annrer
quastlons from Ute pulpit of
Ure Colootal Congregational
Church In Kansas aty, Mo.,
Sunday, and apparently
conceded the congreutonal
election to the Democrats, to
make a point.
·
"I'm convinced that we will
have
a
Democratic
~greas," he said, "and 11
you 1urn over to Gowmor
Carter the White Houae and
have a liberal Democratic

:''applied the wrong remedy
lor lnfllltlm."
Mondale said- and Carter
echoed him In • statement
from Plains - that "what we
do need Ia a aetectlve
Jawbonlns policy Juat lib
John Kennedy In the 18601
stood up to the sttellnduatry
when li was lrylng,to rip ofi
Ure American people ,.."'
Carter said "Larp lmlpl·
niet (are) ... conftdent that a
president w&amp; Jtstena to their
lobbylatl wiU let them get
away with it." The relennca
apparently was to Ford'a soU
outings at the UJIBIIICI of U.S.
. Steel and lt.l chief lobbyist,
WIUJam Whyte.
A couple of poU1 this
weekend provided lood IIIWI
lor Carter. A Gallap Poll
lhowed Carter wu thOUI)ht to
have won the )lnlldantlal
foreign policy debate by aa to
3 margin. And the u..Ur

then I say to the tupayer you
better hang onto your
waDet. '.'
Mondale, appearing on .

straw poll lhowed Carter
holding a u percentaae point
lead for Dllnols' Ji electoral
votes,

~greaaUketheyhavenow,

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

accurate Chlcqo SUD·'I'bnel

Patrol probes 7
weekend mishaps

JeplaUon to:
- Authorize municipal
corporation! to construct
hoflllnC lor the elderly and
fur penona wiUr low or
moderate incomes,
·
- Revise atandarda lor
e)lemptlng noise pollution
control lacllltles from
tuaUon.

..: Authorize the sale of the
old Monrnor's mansion In
Cobunbull.
·
-Increase feea charged by
CQIUlty recorders.
- Require the Department ·
of Nalltral Reaources to
rellnburae townships for

maintenance npenaea.

·- Require the Wayne
Countr prosecutor to
prosecute
cases
in
•111-porated areas.
- Allow taz districts to
~ 1ue1 lor \he mentally ,
retarded to be on a cootlnulng
basil.
- Require shelters for
confined Mimsls,

Suit filed·to
quiet title
A suit tO quiet tiUe hu been
flied In Melga County Com·
mm Pl.a Court by Donald
.L. Ff7111tl', Middleport and
J - M. Fl'Jlllet', Middleport,

Seven traffic accident•
The flnt of two hlkklp·
c:-;J Crablre!t, Eolt
were lnveattgated
the accidents oct~ 8aturda7 -Uta pool,
et al.
·
weekatd by the Gilrn.Metp at 11:11 a,m. on SR 7 when
Tbe Pomeroy Nnlonal
Post State Highway PatroL Dale R. Sheeta, 38, Crown Baak flied for mortgage
A deer. wsa killed In an City, IIOIIPed his car which . ~ II!Jiinat Jerry L.
•ccldent at 1:30 p.m. · was. struck by an antnown and Sblron Jl'. John.!!on, Rt. 2,
Saturday on OR 1, one anc1 vehicle. whld! wu . . . . · Albln7, at al.
two tentha mUea north of
Robert R. Masser, Rt. 4,
Another hiWklp occumd
GaDipolla where the llllmal,
P~eroy,
flied suit for
ran Into the patb of a e~~r on SR 7, flve.and eiCbllllllhl divorce from Debra Ann
ted '- Ora F Baird 32 mllea north of Pomtro7 M_., North Dakota.
opeu w'
· ' ' w1tere 1ft unknown veltlcle
Fort Pierce, Fla. There .... lldelwlped a car operated 1J7
minor damage.
A l~lnt buck was kllled Melvta Lee Roll, a2, Pt.
.
EVANGELISTNAMED
In aa acctdeal at 1:30 am. · Pleasant.
No
one
was
lnjund
or
cited
RACINE
- . The Rtv .
Sunday ,on SR 36, five tenthl
In
a
coD!IIon
at
7:10
p,m.
' a.u1e1 Norris, formerly of
of a mile eut of SR 110. The
animal ran Into tbe petb o1 a Blulday on Salrord School lilt ~ will be evanceiJat at
vehicle operated by Jlalel L. -attenllllolamlle1101111111 senlctll to be held. thla
·SR 141.
.
ennin1 lll:vqh. Wednesday
Hataheld, 24, Galllpolla.
Tbe patrol uld car• at tha Carmel Cllarch. There
There WU heltYy Mmace tO apnted 1J7 Jolll T. aDck, will be ~~music .ancl a
his ear.
•• Middleport, aDd Bobble L. nar.r, Will be provided.
A single car acclclent oc- BurnltelnMr, 22, Gal11J)o11J,
wiD start at 7:30
curred at S:3G p.m. Saturday aldllwlped, · There waa •Cib evllllinll and the public Is
on CR 7, one mila east of SR Dioderats damage.
.
Invited.
110 where Juila Isaac, IS, Rt.
A 111111 ieddtnt occumd
2, Vinton, loet control of her on Gerqes Creek Rd. at 10
ear wlllch ran off the right p.m; SundaJ wbea aa auto
II'IRtMEN CALLED
llde of tile highway Into a dr1nD 1J7 CtJnton D. u-, . nt
Pomeroyed Fir~
ditch thin ..dt. IICrolll the 17, ltlllTicane, walt eat ol DaJ:dmtintHIDIIIIIWII' .,.I Cll
road~ an eler.trlc wire, c:oatrol,ranolftheleltllldelll to ,.J)Ill
at S:w p.m.
fence and a ho- owned by the highwq,~kin&amp; a dltcll. 8andl7 to atlngulah a brush
Jamea L. Davl1.
lift.
• 'V
~
I

over

s. ,....

Weather
Clear and cold tonight, 1m
In the upper 20s or low 301.
Cloudier, Tuesday with hiCha
.In the upper 48o or low 501.
ProbabUity of rain II near
zero per cent today, 10 per
cent tonight and :Ml per cent
Tuesday,

'·

•

�S-The O.UySentlnei.~IMleoort·Porneroy, 0., Monday,Oct. l8,1976
~

2-'1'he oauv ISellllnet, Mtddlepo, ~.-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Oct. 18,1976

Americans sweep Nobel Awards

'

''Knowledge of the subject about it all," he said at hla kind.*'
Their
two
prize
Held,
covering the bcranes office In the Europea n
(UP! ) - Prof. WWlam N.
eJJlOJiments
and
related
chemical
Nuclear
research
center.
were
made
Lipscomb of Harva rd
The Academy cited their lndependenUy of each other
Ualvenlty todsy won 1he 1976 compounds has tlua been
Nobel chemistry prize - the eiKJI'IIlously enriched," the "pioneering work In the at two of the "arlit's particle
discovery of .a hea vy accelerators, the Academy
lllslb American !D win a Academy said.
Profs. Richter and '11ng elementary particle of a new said In Its amouq,cement.
NOI!el prize this year ,
Ting and hill associates
Earlier today , In an Arneri· shared the physics award for
coostructed their equipemnt
can sweep of the awarda thus· "the .greatest dis covery
at the Brookhaven National
far, the Nobel physics prize ever" In a search for the
Laboratory. Richter's equlpsmallest
particle
m
earth.
was awarded jointly to Prof.
The
awards
carry
a
caah
Burtlm Rich!Alr, 45, of the
Tht Thursdoy Rejects
mentis comected to the twoThlindoY AHernoon Loogve mUe
linear
electron
&amp;anlord Unear Accelerator prize of $150,000 In each·
Stpt. 30. !976
. accelerator -at the Stanford
eer.ter, Stanford, Calli., and category ,... wit~ Joint
Prof. Samuel.C.C. Ting, 40, of wlnneM sharing the amount. T..m &lt;tandlnvs W ' L, Unear Accelerator Center.
.. N
Uslllg ·different forms
Today's laureates brought T.--the Mlissachuaetts IiiBtltute
eam
o. 1
26 14
h of
24 16 eipertmentatlon, bot men
of
Technology,
for to six the number of Welker's Ashland
22 18 discovered that when , a
discovering a new heayy Americans to win Nobel Teamoond2
High Individual games - stream of electrons and
Prizes In the 1976 series of
elementary particle.
Patt i Williams I6S : Ann
Lipscomb w~s given the awarda which began last Morris 159 ; sue Searles 127, positrons go around In ,
· High Ind. Il l games - opposite directions at very
chemistry prize for his ThU!'Bday.
Pattl Will iams 433 ; Ann high speeds and collide ~d·
E~
onomlcs
professor
aludies "m the structure of
oiO'I ; Sue Searles 321 . m, the energy produced a
boranes Illuminating Milton Friedman of the Morris
Team game - Team J
1
h
problems of chemical University of Chicago wm !Welker's
Ash land ) 271 ;' motion ess, very eavy
bonding," the Royal Swedish the ecooomlc award and the Team· 4. 2A6 ; Team 3 particle.
Richter named his particle
Academy of Sciences said. medicine prize was Bhared by 2.0. High team Ill Games
Team
No.
6
999;
Team
No.
peL
Ttng named his the J
professor
Barch
Blumberg,
Boranes Is thuccepted name
•
981
;
Welker's
Ashland
978.
perUcle.
'
of
Philadelphia,
and
Dr.
for heron hyprldes which are
Sun. Mixed League
Richter and Ting met Nov.
the compolUids of f!le element Carleton Gajdusek of
• I
Pick N Shovel W L II, 1974, at Stanford j and
Bethesda, Md. The 1976 Nobel
~roo with hydrogen.
44 12 foundtheyhaddlscoveredthe
Lipscomb, 56, received his p&lt;!ace prize was not awarded SalemSI. Mk t.
Farmers Bank
37 19 same· particle .
The
doctorate In chemistry from tlils y.ear,
Prof.
Goesta
Ekspong
of
Seldom
Res
t
Ceramics
32
24
announcement
appeared
in
the Calllornla Institute of
. Ed 's Crossroads Gro ,. 26 30 scientilic pUblications willlln
the
Academy
called
the
Technology In llH6 and then
~! ~~ a week. Ashort time later, it
transferred to the University physles award "the greatest f::~ ~~: ~
discovery
ever·Jn
the
field
of
Men
's
Hlgh Series -:- lst Stu
was confirmed at Frascati,
of Minnesota. He went w
elementary
,
particles"
and'
Blankenship
,
470.
2 ~d Clefts
Italy, and then at the
Harvard In 19S9.
.
added,
"It has changed the litlll ton 416, Jrd Roger Car- Deutches El ectronen
The Academy said there
~nter , 408.
Women 's High Series - 1st Synchrot ron In Hamburg,
were a grea~ number of work style of all laboratories
boranes but very little was lllroughout llle world which Kathie Lee, 504. 2nd Ann West Germany.
The Academy said that
: ,. known about them. They had due to this discovery are now Mo rri s, 410, 3rd Shirley
Honlnj
,
362.
during
the ·past 1~ years,
chasing
the
new
forma
of
to be studied at very low
Men_s High Game - 1st Stu
1 ·
matter
which
this particle Blankenship,
us,
2nd
Cletis
many
new e ementary
temperature, they were
Dalton. 112, Jrd Stu particleshadbeendiseovered
usually unstable
and promises."
"The amazing part of lllis Blankenship, 167.
which showed kinship willl
chemically aggressive,
Women 's Hi gh Game - 1st
one another in groups or
discovery
is
that
Richter
and
explosive and toxic.
Kathie lee, 189, 2nd Kath ie
"It was
not until Tlng worked completely In· Lee, 159, lrd Kathie ~~e 156: famllies, but the new particle
was separate and new and
Upacomb 's works from the dependent of each other,
completely
oblivious
to
the
Thursday
ReJects
formed
tile heglnni!Jg o! a
beginning of the 1950's nature of each other's work
t0-7-76
new
family
.
mwarda that the problems In and came upon the exact
Team Standings
"A
new
field
of research
borane chemistry could be
1st - Team No. Or1e
same
dlacovery
at
almost
the
has
b~
en
ope
"ned,"
the
2nd
T
eam
No.
Two
satisfactorily solved," the
same
point
of
time,"
Ekspong
Jrd
(Tie)
Welkers
Ashland
Academy
statement
said.
Academy s8Jd In Its aMOIUI·
and Team No. Four
said.
Richter was born In New
cement.
4th - Team No. Five
In
Stanford,
Prof.
Richter
York
In 1931. He took his Ph.D
l'ne
Academy
said
5th - Team No. Si x
at the Massachusetts
Individual high games Upacomb has been able to was "pleased and gratilled."
"You're kiddlllg,". he said. Sue Searles, 150 ; Char·lene Institute of Technology In
Identify
the
possible
Doczi, 139 ; Ann Morris, 136. 19~6 and then went to
"ObvioWiiy
I'm happy.
combinations of leasable
High team game ..... Team
Tlng,
In
Geneva,
Stanford.
bondlngs. He determined
No . One , 284 ; Welkers
Switzerland,
when
the
award
Tlng was born in the United
A shland , 25a ; Team No .
geometric structures through
was
annolUiced,
said
~ had
States
In 1938 of Chinese
!=our,
244.
x:ray' dlflractlons and by
High team ( 3) gameS' no
idea
he
was
in
the
running.
parents,
grew up In China In
using modern quantum
Ting,
40,
also
~aid he Welkers Ashland . 732; Team university surroundings but
mechanical calculations,
No . One, 726 ; Team · No. Four,
without regular schooling
'
predicted the stability and "certainly doeSn't mind at 664 ,
until he was 12, He came to
High Indi vidual {J) games
reacUons of the molecules all" sharing_the prize with
- Ann Morr is, 390 ; Charlene llle United States in 1956.
Richter.
Iinder varylllg condltloos.
"lrn still somewhat dazed Doc zi, 289 ; Sue Sea rles, 379.
Tlng did research work In
Berkeley, Calif., and later
went to the European Center
Wf!dnesday Early
· Letters of opiDioa are welcomed. They should be 1
Btrd
League
for Nuclear Research, In
leu 1llaa 300 words 10111 (or be aabJe« to redactloa by I
9-22-76
Switzerland.
He Is now with
lhe editor) aad muat be algaed wllh lhellpee'l ad· I
Pis.
MIT,
but
he
1.1
doii!g research
me11. Names may l!e withheld upoa ,.bU..IIoa. I Ben Tom 1
22
on
powerful.storage
rings at
1
Lighthouse
Restauran
t
21
Howe•er, oa rtotaat,.aamea wiD be dladGied. Lellm : Royal Cr own
.
16 the Swiss center.
should be ID good Iaiiie, addreaat.ac l1111ea, aol perKing Builders
16
The aMouncements of the
soaalltleo.
1 EvelynsGrocery
15 six Nobel prizes began
6
I No. 3
Thursday when llle Academy
Ind ividual high game
I Betty Whitlatc:h, 207 ; Flossi e ahd ·llle Karollnska Institute
I Ma xs on , 189 ; Marlen e
selected the economics and
I Wilson, 184.
I
Individual high series ~ medicine laureates, • all
I ~eHy Whi tlatch , 497; Floss ie Americans.
Maxson ,
471 ;
Marlene
Prof. Milton Friedman, 64,
. Wil son, 4S6.
of tile University of Chicago
won the Nobel prize for
WednudaV Early
She agrees with Mrs. Korn
economics.
Bird League
The medicine prize was
9-28-76
Pts. shared by Pr of. Baruch
Dear Sir:
30 Blumberg, ol, of the Institute
I read Mrs. Korn's letter to the editor and wish I could Ben Tom
Crown
24
have written it like she did. We shouta all be lllankful for a Royal
Evelyns Grocery
23 for Cancer Research,
..,.., . · hospital and staff as capable to treat and care for people as Lighthouse Rest .
21 'Philadelphia, and Dr .
,
Veterans Memorial Hospital. Also, lor doctors like Doclors King Builders
16 Carleton Gajdusek, 53, of the
. ":.,,.. Telle,
No. 3
•
6 National lnsUtute of Heallll,
Blamricz, Ridgway and all others oo duty.
Ind ividual high game
I
would
also
like
UJ
comment
on
the
tender
loving
care
:· (T.L.C.) as Mrs. Korn wrote about In her letter, I am sure lllis Flossie Ma xson , 189 ; Louise Bethesda , Md., for
••
Independent studies of InfecHarrison, 180; Jan Jel')kins,
,• . has helped many patients as much as the care given by the 171.lndhildual h i gh serieS, tious diseases.
doctors. In the past twelve months, my wife , l!lOther, and
The peace prize, which Is
~·
F lossi e Maxson , 493 ; Louise
'
mother~n~aw were given U1e same care that would have been
presented
by the Nobel Com·
Harri s, 48 4r Jan Jenkins, 484 .
given. in a larger hospital plus "T.L.C."
millee of the Norwegian
Wednesday Early
As for llle Emergency Room, members o! our family,
Bird League
Parliament In Oslo, will not
10-6-76
Including myself, have had to rely on it several Urnes.
he awarde&lt;) lllis year.
Stdqs.
Someone was always there to help, a nurse or doctor, Like Ben Tom
The prize for lite1·ature will
32
.. MrS. Korn'sletter impUed, II you have had a pain for days, Roya I Crown
he
presented Thursday by the
30
•
then It L• not an emergency when you do decide to go.
Evelyns GrocerY
25 Swedish Academy of Letters.
n
1would like to close this letter as Mrs. Korn did hers. She Uqhthouse Rest.
King
Builders
22
said It just right! Look It up In The Daily Sentinel, Letter to tlie Shirley Kays
12
Editor, October 13, 1976. - Don Rea, PO Box 422, P,9Jlleroy.
In 1776, the boundary
H i gh game
Flossie
MaJII:SOn,IW ; Mary Voss, 190 ;
between Maryland and
Louise Eads, 163.
Pennsylvania was finally
High series - Mary Voss,
settled.
It was to be known as
492 ; Flossie Ma x son, 474 ;
11
Myrtle Norman, 458.
The Mason-Dixoo l.J.ne."
STOCKHOLM ,

.

....

l

r'

.

.. ....
~

'

,.

~

DR. LAMB

11

by sundown."

Ip the !!!Iter, Rhodes said Sleblinl Otlllel' na eapeclali1

. Important In light of a bill he sllned lnw law Oftl' the ·
"eekend reforminc . alate workers' compensa«on
regulati0111.
"Our lawa are on!y u good u the people who
admlnlater lllem," !laid Rhodes.
'
RlJodes said he "and every working person In thla state
.will be watcl)big the acUon of the Senate In the apecil!l
session I have called."
Stebbins was OIC chairman under the prior Gilligan ad·
ministration. Rhodes demoted him after taking office.
"I hope .:. the working people of Ohio hope - that you
ana the other memhera of the Democratic caucus will
take a strong, meaningful stand m the question of
corruptioo and dereliction of duty In public office which Ia
before you,'~ Rhodes said.

Tight. security
imposed at trial
PHOENIX, Ariz. (UP!) Ofllctals said SUnday tight
security was helllg Imposed
for the !rial of John Adamson,
charged
with
killing
Investigative reporter Dm
Bolles, who had probed land
fraud schemes In one of
America's last real estate
frontiers.
The Maricopa County She·
riff 's Department said It
fears for Adamson's life
because of figures, wbo may
he ctted In .testimony, and
that he will "ear a
bulletproof · vest for his
· ·

'.

'·

related to wallting. That is
why you developed trouble in
keeping your balance.
A perm who takes folic
actd or gels too much In
vitamin pills one can buy
without a prescription and
also has a vitamin B-12
deficiency will not develop an
anemia. The patient feels fine
while the spinal cord Is
becoming permanently
damaged. If he had an
anemia he would feel bad and ,
go to llle doctor who coald
dlBcover the problem· belore
spinal cord degeneration
began.
Why would a person get B12 deficiency If he were
taking a daUy vitamin tablet
contained B-12 anyway as
well as folic acid? Simply
because some people caMot
absorb B-12 from the
digestive system. .This Ia
particularly true of people
who have had surgery of the
llomach.
That Is why your doctor Is
giving you 11-12 by llhota, to be
sure the B·l2 gels Into your
I

I

II

scheduled one·block ride
from )all to the courthouse
where jury aelectlbn will
begin todsy.
"There definitely is a
danger factor," a spokesman
for llle Sherlfrs Department
said.
Bolles, 47, a prtze.;wlnnlng
Arizona Republic r~r,
whose articles attacked the
Mafia, prominent politicians
and land fraud manipulators,
was fatally maimed June 2
when a bomb blew up hla car
as he backed out of a ~otel
parking lot af~ a tipster
failed lo show for an
appointment.
He died II days later after
losing both h1a legs and' an

arm.

down into lake

r-

MOIICOW (UP!) - Wjtll water for landing.
uld
efflll'll hampertd by ·Sbatalov

NEW YORK CUP!)
Sparliy Anderaon IIIH says
the Warld S.rles will go seven

lhe

and darkneu, iiplaahdown Saturday two~ CODCIIIUllaafely took place under "very hatd
ended an abortive ~y ·conditions," wltli frealng
and I racJng
apace mlulon with an templraturea
_ . _ . ....... ' to the',
IAJPiece4ellted spWildown 'ID IIIOw...,.u• ·-'0
huardl ol a nl&amp;bt landiDc.
• Central AliaD lite.
"'lbla wu the llrat lnltance
eo.nonaull Vyachealav
~. :~~,and Vatery RorJi. ol a IJIIMbdoWD,'; he said.
cleltvenUy' ll'l' IUI'VIved the "The ahlp'• crew and the
hollrG&gt;~a landlqj unatbed recovery party displayed
and reportedly we~ ''feeling hlcll courage."
The !allure once again
well" Sunday alta' arriving
at the Balkonur ~ce Center lUiderUned 1he technolocical
In Kaaakhatan. .
winerablllty of the ambitious
Gen. Vladlmlr A. Shatalov, Soviei1J18C8 program, which
head ol COIIlUIUIUI training, has ltlf!ered five major settold Soviet television· the bleb In the 1aat 18 manned
Soyuz 23 ntght was missions, including four
"complicated and dllllcult." deaths.
The Soviets released hw
'Sbatalov said "faults" In
. the Soyuz control system detalla of tile technical fault
forced the C(81101l8UII to call aboard ,Soyuz 23 or the
off a planned docking wllll the landiDc. They did not say If
Salyut 5 space Illation and the splaahdown had been
ground cmtrollers ordered Intentional.
Western space aperll em·
them to return.
eluded
the fault may have
Alta' just 48 hours In space,
been
In
a rocket cmtrol
the coimonauts splashed
system
and
that Soyuz was
down In Lake Tengiz, a 2().
mlle-loog lake In Kazakhstan, off course when It landed In
llle first time a maMed Tenglz, 121 mUes southwest
Soviet spacecraft baa used of the city of TselinOI(I'ad. _
heiV)' 111011'

Reedsville News Notes
Recent visitors of Mrs.
Beas Larkins were Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Smith and son, Tom
of Laurelville, Mr. and Mrs.
Kermit Evans ol Columbus,
and Rev. and Mrs. Bruce
~mllh nl Athens.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Cow·
dery and son UII'IStopher
have moved to ChJIIIcothe
where Mr. Cowdery bas
employment. &lt;(
The folloWUJg\Jllemhers of
the UMW recently held a
program at the ·Arcadia
Nursing Home and ate-out at
a restauranl at Belpre: Mrs.
Leona Ruth, Mrs. Mamie
Buckley, Mrs. Sue Reed, Mrs.
Darlene Reed, Mrs. Verna·
Bose, Mrs. Sandy Cowdery'
Mrs. Pat Mat:tln, Mrs. Vivian
Humphrey and the members
were Joined by Mrs. Dorotha
Riebel of Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson
spent a couple days with
Millard Wilson at Rittman:.
Mrs. Lyle Balderson has
returned home after being a
surgical patient at Camden·
Clark Hospital, Parkersburg,

w. Ya.

Mr. and Mrs. Grant Borlllg
are visiting with their son and
his wife, Mr, and Mrs.
Michael Boring at Teus.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward ChevaUer visited with Mr.
and· Mrs. Zenith Chevalier
and Alan at Belpre Rd.
VIsiting at tbe WilllaJns.
Balderson home Saturday
were Mrs. Roy Flck and
daughter, Beth Anne of
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. George Ar·
nold were weekend guests of
.Mr. and Mra. Lawrence
Arnold at Beaver Falls, Pa.
They also altended the Grove
City CoUege football game at
Grove City, Pa.
Mrs. oj&gt;al Harris is a
patient at Camden-Clark
Hospital, Parkersburg, W.
·va.
·

Pollee, who believe a con·
spiracy was involwd, said
A lamily reunion was held the appointment wu a
atllle home of Helen Johnson "setup," that the bombing
Sunday. Those attending Involved "big name political
were Mr. and Mrs. Carl figures" and that land frAud
Mourning of Elyria, Mrs. ·"deOnitely has come Into the
Cecil Glllogly, Steve, Jeff and ·lnvestlption."
Pn)Stan~
Ailsa of Albany, Mrs. KenAdarnson,32,adogbreeder
neth Grover, Jennifer of Long and sometime tow-truck
International Hockey
Bottom, Mrs. Byrne VaughaQ operator, was believed by
League Standings
of Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. pollee to have lured Bolles lo
United Press International
Harley Haning, Flatwood and the hotel by pl'GIIIIslng him
Norlll
w' LTptsgtga
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Lambert, Information about a land deal
Kalamazoo 2 0 0 4 II 6
Charlotte, Mr. and Mrs. Involving Se~. Barry
Flint
2 l 0 4 13 8
DaMy Abbott, Syracuse, Mr. Goldwater and RejJ, sam
Port Hurorl 1 1 0 2 5 8
Big
Raa
It Elk Raa
and Mrs. James Johnson, Steiger, a candldste for the
I 1 0 2 8 7
Carol Rhodes visited her Saginaw
Jamie Sue, Todd and Teresa, U.S. Senate.
Mus~egon
I 2 0 2 tO 13
South
Mr. and Mrs.' Larry Johnson,
Bolles told a colleague he parenta recently, Mr. and
gf ga
Gina, Tahnee and Brady, did not l!elleve the tip, and Mrs. Jewell story. Mrs. Story Fort WayneW IL 0Tpts.
0 2 5 2
Is
recovering
nicely
after
Mrs. Lee RouSh, Rodney, · Goldwater and Steiger
Columbus I 0 0 2 7 3
Cheryl, Joey and Elizabeth angrily denounced the having hlp surgery.
Dayton
0 2 0 0 4 12
Mrs • • Florence Schlot· Toled o
,0 2 0 o 7!1
Ann all of Pomeroy, and Mr. murder. Goldwater said:
Results
and Mrs. Homer Forrest of "It's all right If thoee things terbeck and son, John Ray m Fort Saturday's
Wayne 5 Toledo 2
spent
Thursdsywith
Mr.
and
Bradbury.
happen w an SOB, but not a
Saginaw 5 Muskegon 3
Pot luck dinner "as served. guy lllte this." President Mrs. Dorset Biggs and·Janel Port Huron 5 F)lnt 3
Kalamazoo S ai\:'fon 1
Mr . and Mrs. Charley Ford said he was "outraged. Biggs.
Denver Biggs spent Frl&amp;!y
Sunday's Rtsults
Smith were Sunday afternoon that a reporter In search of
Flint 5 Port Huron o
olght
with
Mark
Caughnour.
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Roy truth became an apparent
7 Dayton 3
Mr. and Mrs. Dorset BlggB . Columbus
Smith of Rock Springs.
victim of the underworld."
Muskegon 4 Saginaw 3
"ere In Point Pleasant
6 Toledo S
Mr. Earl Russell of KenBolles, who acquired many Monday consulting Mr. Biggs Kalamazoo
Monday's Games
tucky Is visiting 111a mother, enemies and admlrer8 for h1a physician, Dr. Alirom No games sCheduled
Mrs. Bertha Russell.
etposes, told peraons, who Boonsue.
Tuesday's Games
No games scheduled
Mrs. Paul Darnell and new treated him just after the
Maey Midkiff Ia visiting her
son, Jeffery Scott returned bombing, "The Malia ... got
paren~,
WHA Standings ·
home from hospital and are · me." He alao mentioned the Midkiff. Mr. and Mrs. Zlha · B•fUnited
Press International
spending a few days with her names "Adamson" and
1
Mrs. George Ziegler, Inez
!a~'r Pis. GF GA
parents Mr. and Mrs. James "Emprlae,' a maJU- sports Randolph
and
Bernice
Hawk,
Quebec
8 25 16
Reeves.
concesslmalre now.known u Mr. and Mrs. James Cincinnati ;2 2l o
2
6 37 32
Blr m inghm 2 3 1
5 21 24
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Ramccrpthatbaaan Interest Hazelton, Clnthla, Jane, lndienepois
2 2 o
4 13 19
Smith, local and Mr. Robert In all Blx Greyllound race Jessie White attended church Minnesota 2 4 0 4 22 24
Reeves, Bryan were Sunday tracks in Arizona,
at Zion Church of Chrlal. The New Englnd ~e!t 0 0 4 15
belore noon callers of Mr. and
Akey figure In the trial will Hemlock Grove Church
w L T Pts. GF GA
Mrs. Paul Darnell, Jeffery · he Neal Roberts, an attorney Youth Group sang a number san otego 3 1 1 ' 25 20
on
3 1 o
6 12 a
Scott and Mr. James Reeves. ~ho baa said Adamson was In and Zion Youth Group had a Houst
Phoen l ~
3 1 o 6 21 JB
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Sayre his,office minutes before the special Sunday evening Oct. Winnipeg
3 2 0
6 20 ll
Edmon ton
2 1 o
A 10 8
and son visited hla parents born bll)g and that he
0 5 0
0 e 21
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sayre; arranged for a chartered 10.Beatrice Bentz of Lan· CalgarySaturday's
Rt~ults
Sunda
plane lo fiy Adsmaon lo Lake
Quebec B New England 2
I
with
Houston 3 Birm ingham o
Y·
Havasu City, Ariz., 12 hours caster spent a ew da fS
San DiOllo 4 Col gory 2
after the eiPio!lon. ,Another her sister Pearl Randolph · Phoenix
6 Winn ipeg 4
k
tnst
figure, land developer Max
wee ·
(Only games scheduled)
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence E.
. Sunday's Result!
D\UIIap, said he deliwred
Bandolph
Jr
of
ChJIIIcothe
Minnesota
6 Birmingham l
$5,000 to $6,000 Ul Adamson
•
Edmonton 7 Indianapolis 2
spent
Tuesday
night
and
Ctnclnnott
s
Quebec 2
J\Uie lti In another attorney's
bloodstream.
Wedneaday
with
h1a
parents,
Son
DIOllo
3
Winnipeg
l
' home office.
How can other people avoid
Recent callers at the
••-a
C E Bandolph !Only gomes scheduled }
and
Mr
A nationwide . team of .
•
mi" • •
•
Monday' s Games
what has happened to you? of Mary Circle were Mrs.
!No go me• scheduled }
Don't become · a vitamin Donald Pierce of Athens, Investigative reporters has · Sr. and Inez Randolph.
popper in place of eating a Melvin Circle of Columbus, come lo Phoenix for the case, Donald Randolph and wife New EJg~:~~·~;~H~~~:~
proper balanced diet wlth all Mr. and Mrs. James Circle, along with some 100 and 2 sons spent Tuesday indlanoooll,.f Winnipeg
•• BirmlnghOm
the right vitamins. If you do Mrs. Geors~ Circle of New journallais fnm arOund the evening · at .the Randolph • Quebec
Phoenix at Edmonton
home
to
see
the
ne1f
.
son,
Cincinnati
at Minnesota
world.
Bolles,
a
father
of
take vitamins use only the Haven and Mrs. Laura Circle
James
Ermal
and
his
older
!Only
gomes
scheduled !
seven
and
Pulitzer
Prize
regular daily vitamin of Dorcas. ·
'!''·
:
• = !,.f
preparations and avoid the
Rev. and Mrs. Richard nominee In 1866, was , a brother ~ryan.
founder
of
the
lmutlcatlve
super
vltamln·lype Young and famlly and a
WI\ITE-IN URGED
,. ..., _
preparation a day. If you take friend of Sidney, Olllo spent Reporters and Editors
SKOWHEGAN, Maine
"':.:,~'*
too many and they contain the weekend with Mr. and Assoclatlm.
(UPIJ- Former Republican
even a small amount of folic Mrs. Edlon Rouah.. .
Senator Margaret Chase
.- .. ~··acid you may he getting
Mr, and Mrs. Lee Harris of
Smith, who baa llid &amp;he
enough to mask a B-12 Springfield, Ohio spent the
WDUld have peter red race
.
•••deficiency.
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. ELLA HONORED
he-n
HuiMrt
·
H
umphrey
,.._
"'"
· - ..._., ...
unt Q ,.._,"
, ......,..
n.ow..,...,.,.,u.t•••~·
To give you a more com· Homer Circle and other
BEVERLY •u'"""" """'· andRonaldReagan,laurglng Ill_,"·-... -~
plete concept of the role of 8- relatives.
(UP!) - Dionne Warwick, vOters to cast write-In ballots
..,1_
"""" " '·" · •
12 I am sending you The
Rev. Sieve Wilson cal!ed at Ray Charle., Mel Tonne and 11 they are lUihappy with ." '.:"":::.""~ . ,.,. ~
Health Letter number ~. 1he home of Homer-Circle and Sue Raney feted linger Ella Jimmy Carter or Gerald ~~.... _ ,
VItamin B-12, Folic Acid, farntty on Saturday. ,
Fitzgerald at dinner where Ford.
-.. . - · - · .....
Pernicious Anemia. Others
"It repreaenll a golden ' - ....._ . ..... m
William and
Cathy she received the second
who want this lnfonnatlon -Carleton of Racine and tshery nationaiAwardofDiatlnctlm · opportunity 1•-""'ca•1 -, -.,,•...
.... ,.._
u .••"·. . . . . . . . ~
...
lllllal
••
can send 50 cents with a long, LeAnn Johnson, local called from
the
National not only to espreas . . . _ - . - r i - ~·
stamped , self.-addressed at the home of Mrs. Dean Assoclatim for Sickle ~II ,themlelves with rapect to - · "' "'"' "'"" ...,... ~nvelope for it. Send your
Brlnk,t!r 011 Monday evenlllg. Disease lor her ''llntitlng •'wn::- Individual \;IIIIW
wo but
111 Ot.t.
..
·--•'cia"'•
-u.n . .,. -...n·w -w. v.~
letter ·to me in care of this
If any one folUid a knlf efforts on behalf of also u to IICIII1Inatlon by a •' -· · - ' " ' - "'""
newspaper, P!· 0 . Box 1551, along the road bet!'een the humanitarian causes:
direct (primary) system ~-:':'..:.,loo..!:;;,:.,
Rad io City Station, New home of Mrs. Dean Brinker
Charles W&lt;ll the group's rather than by the present ~ - ..._ York, NY 101119.
would they return It to her at first national award last convention system," ahe ~ • ..... •
call her on the phone.
year.
. ~d.
~

Vitamin deficiency causes problems
By Lawreaee E. Lamb, M.D. say though that he caught It
DEAR DR. LAMB - I at an early stage and my
would appreciate anything going on a diet didn't caUJelt,
you can tell me about my but may have aggravated it.
condition. About a year ago 1 At lim he tbought I might
· went m a !lrlct diet and lost have pernicious anemia.
L- • 30 po\Uids In . about three
DEAR READER - You
monthS. Then I began having are eaaentlally correct In
trouble with my ,.alklng and your Interpretation of your
keeping my balance. My Illness. You had a marked
••
regular doctor sent me to a deficiency In vitamin IH2.
neurologlst.-He went over me We have !D have thla vitamin
''\ and
I didn't have any reflexes for our cells to reproduce. We
·,
In the lltkle. Th1a has since manufacture about 200
Improved.
million new red blood cells
He dlagnoaed· my problem each minute to replace those
as subacute combined tha• have been destroyed,
degene~atlon with malab· When a peraon Ia·deficient In
eorpt!on. For a month he 11-12 he may not be able to
gave me two vitamin B-12 form these new cella and
lllaU a weei and' now flake becomes anemic. Th1a type of
one ahot I week.
anemia Ia pernicious anemia.
If I lUiderstand it right It
Other cella In the body are
has damaged the nerves In also affected. You need B-12
my IJilne. My walltlng has . to prote« the cells Inside
improved somewhat In the your spinal .cord. Folic acid
1ut few months. The doctor mar correct an anemia and
said I would hive trouble resolve other problems but It
with my walking for a couple · won't prevent cord dsmage,
of yean and then 1 may not 'I1le segments of the cord that
, • entirely get onr lt. He did . are damaged include the cella

-

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Gov. Jamu A. Rbodel asked
Republican and Democratic leldn of the Ohio Senate
todsy to "take a 11ron1 and meaningful stand on the
questlm of ~lkm. and dertllcllon of duty" u the
legislature conwned In apedalllllkln.
In a tw01)811e letter to Senate Majclrlty Leader Oliver
Ocasek and Mlncrlty leader Michael Maklley, Rbodea
outlined h1a cue fer removal of former Induatrla1
Commission chalrmlln Gregory J . Stebbins. ,
Rhodes called the leglalaturelntoapoda!IIOIIIdon earner
this mmth with 1he call that the Senate remove Stebbins

Wo'lfpen·
News Notes

---------------------------1

.

actiOn agatmt corruptiOn

Sweden

'"

.

sp·a rky still thinking seven

Cosmonauts set

Legislators uked to take

Carmel New8,
By the Day

MI,....A,.,.,•••

a

..,.:;:-.;n...

..

games. Lllcklly, he hasn't got
hll Cincinnati Reda players

believq II.
"I atlU think It's going w go
seven." 11id tbe evercautloua Anderaon Sonday
nilbt after the Reda, seeking
to become 1he 'flrit NaUonal
League team In M years to
win bacil-w-blick World .
Serl~ championships, left
home for Ylltkee Stadium
"lth . a \wo.games·to·norie
lead over the New York
Yankees,

That two.game bulge ,... Martin ordered Joe Morgan
achieved when Tony Perez walked Intentionally, "When.
wanned the 54,816 chilled 1got to the plate I didn't feel
Cincinnati fans , who !raved the cold. It was warm for me.
the oear.freezlng weather of 1 hit the hall so goud I didn't
the first-ever Sunday night feel a thing ."
Series game, with a game.
Perhaps so, but ·the
winning, nlnlll4nning single Yankees have certainly felt
lllat gave the Reda a 4-.'1 tile st~ of Perez, who is
victory over the Ylltkeea.
hitting .556for thetwo games.
"I lalew with the winning
"For 10 s(raight years, he
run on second base, I had to (Perez ) had over 90 RB!s,"
get him in,'' said Perez, who · said Anderson. "He's
was f!iven that opportlUIIty probably as tough as anyone
after Yankee ahortstop Fred with the winning run m
Stanley threw wUdly c:11 Ken base."
Griffey's · tw&lt;M~ut grounder
Still. Perez' line-drive,
for a two.hase error and first-pitch single might not
Yankee manager Billy

Players, fans, owners
CINCINNATI' (UP!) - "I
hope the commissioner
. freez~s his ears off, "
deadpanned New York
Yankee catcher . Ellie
Hendrlcka.
Baseball Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn wasn 't wearing
earmuffs, but they wouldn't
have been out of place at
Riverfront Stadium Sunday
night,

.

Kuhn and 54,816 fans
!raved chilly wlnda and cold
temperatures 10 watch the

Cincinnati Reds edge the New
York Yankees 4-.'1 In t~ first
Sunday night game In World
Series history.
Temperature at 6:30 p.m.
(EDT) game time was 43
degrees. The mercury
slipped !D41 midway through
tile contest and was dipping
Into llle 311&lt;1 by llle time Tony .
Perez was knocklllg In the
gam&amp;-endlng run shortly after
11 p.m.
The ·sunday night game
came about to suit televislm
executives and was OKed by

Perez makes it hot
for New York Yanks
.
By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - It
was a cold night, but Tony
Perez knew how to make It
hot for the New York
Yankees.
'

have happened had Stanley
not rushed his throw oo
Griffey • groWJder . Prior UJ
Stanley's error, Yankee ace
Ca tfish Hunter,
who
experienced a rocky first.
lllree innings, had retired IS
out or 16 batters and
appeared . in complete
command· o! the Reds
batsmen.
.The swift Griffey race&lt;\
around to second as Stanley's
throw went lnt~ f,he Reds
dugout and suddenly H\Uiter
and the Yankees were In
trouble again.

(Griffey) gO( 38 Infield hits
this year , so I knew he eou ld
run·. I didn't have time to
plant my foot, so I had to
throw o!f balance and I
hurried it.
.
" If. I had wanted lo play it
safe, I could have. I could
,have pl ayed back and
conceded the hit or I could
have charged it and taken an
extra step.' Eit}1er way, he
would've been safe."
It was then 'that Martin,
af ter

who wound up the wirming

pitcher by retiring all eight
haltrrS he faced.
. h 1 f' t
As m
t e r lfS game 1os., ,
the Yankees simply were

conferring wi\h HWltcr,

1Morgan).
Otherwise,

was

"otably Ul llle !ourth when
they fwd runners on set'Ond
and Ulird with one out before
Elliot Maddox struck oul und
Willie Randolph grounded
ou t , and in Ute sixth when,
with rwmers on fir st and
second and none out, Nettles
fouled oul and Maddox' hard·
hi t ground~ r to Conce pcion at
short resulted in n double
play.
"We're being beaten by

a

bopln g to be here tonight. I lackluster garne--jlrobably
don 't care i! il's 20 degrees due 'to the football-like
wealller which caused the
and snowing.u
Cincinnati Reds' hilting Yankees to bring their bats
coach Ted Kluszewski Inside and utilize hot water
recalled when he actually did bottles for their hands, while
th e Reds used sm a ll plugin
play in the snow.
"Opening day one year' it heaters and hand warmers.
"In wcatller like I his," said
was 28 degrees and snowing,
Reds
center fi elder Cesar
but we went ahead and
Geronimo,
"I wish tlJC World
played because it was a
Series
was
being played in
season opener/ ' said Klu.
the
Dominican
Republic."
"But I think we were snowed
out for our next three
Taking advantage of
games."
Hu nt e r 's ear l y- innin g
Blurted Yank manager adjustment problems wiU1
Billy Marttn; "! think it's the pitching mound, the Reds
ridiculous. This is football whacked out five hits in the
weather."
firs,t two Innings nnd sct~rt•l
Chimed in Reds manager three runs in the second.
Sparky Anderson, "I'd just as
"! just. could"'t get used to
soon the season ended the Ute mmmd at first," said
first day of September,
Hunter. "It was too hard and
"In this kind of weather the I kept landi"g ' on it
pitcher has all
the differently. I couldn 't get a
advantages. How would you hold on it."
like to whack against (hardDesigna ted hitter Dan
throw ing Phillie pitcher Driessen sta1'ted tlle UU'eeSteve) Carlton in this run Cincinnati second with a
weather? How would you like double orr the left-eenter field
to whack against Nolan Ryan wa ll a nd George Fos ter
... or Burt Blyleven '"
brought hln1 home wiU1 a
Reds' designated hitter sin gle t o cen ter . Yan~ee
Danny Driessen shuddered In ca tche r Thul'm an Munson
the cold.
helped Hun ter somewhat by
"I know I'm not a cold nailing Foster attemP.ling to
weather . hitter, " he said. steal second, but then Johnny
"Back In '721was playing for Bench doubled to left-center ,
Three Rivers up In Canada . It Cesar Geronimo wa lked and
was so cold at the start of the Dave Concepcion singled
season I was wearing work home the second run ol· the
glbves. I hit .1~0 ·the first inn ing. A sacrifice fl y by
month. I thought I'd lost my Griffey later gave the Reds a
ability to hit. I figured my 3.Q lea~ .
career was over. But then it
warmed up and I wound up
hitting .322."
'
Many players struggled
lllrough the night In long
underwear and Johnny Bench
summed it for a lot of them, 1
"Sonday night baseball in 30
degree weather. I don 't like

Griffey got Into scoring degree weather, but I don't
position for Perez thanka to care about the cold ,n insisted
his quickness. He reached Rose. "I'm just here to play
secorid after Yank shortstop ball._I went to spring training
Fred Stanley threw wide !D
first trying to nail the
This Week's
Insisting he felt "warm" at speedster on a high hopper.
Ohio College
"Griffey getting to secoQd
the
plate
despite
Football Schedule
temperatures In the high 30s, was another example of the
United Press International
Saturday
Perez he~ted up all of chilly way the Reds force llle issue
Riverfront Stadium late - pressure you all the time," Purdue at Ohio St.
Bowl ing Green et Miami
Sunday night with a sizzling noted Morgan . "Griffey's Eastern
M ichigan at Akron
" game-wlnnlllg single for the speed forced Stanley to hurry Kent St . at Virginia Tech
his throw. We're always Wi ll iam &amp; Mary at O~i o Univ.
Cincinnati Reds.
T oled o at Oay t_on
·
forcing
the issue."
And Perez' clutch hit really
And Griffey figured it was Ashland a t Sl ippery Rock
put the heat on the Yanks.
IPa.)
, The New Yorkers llmped likely Perez would continue Central St. at Eastern Illinoi s
back home todsy down :&gt;AI In to force the issue.
Youngstown St. at Villanova
"It seeli)S every time I'm Capital at Ohio Norther n
games, deep In the pressure
cooker against the red.!Jot oo second with Perez at hat Heidelberg at M uskl ngum
Wooster at Wittenberg .
Reds, who are threatenlllg W it's au~matic he drives me Baldwin-Wallace ~ t Ohi o
sweep the Yanks In four in," said Griffey. 0 He just Wesl eyan
·straight just like they tries to hit llle ball hard. He's Otterbe in at Denison
Onlnahed off Philadelphia In the toughest man at bat , in Marietta at Mount Un ion
' Grove City { Pa. I at Ken Yon
lllree straight In llle National that situation."
Bluffton a t Hanover (Ind .)
Despite the two wins at Findlay at Ea rlham lind .)
League playoffs .
Perez personally gave the home, \(eds manager Sparky Wilmington at Taylor (Ind .)
Reds viclory No, 2 Sonday Anderson still apparently Genev~ (Pa . ) at Cas e
Western
·
night. With the seore tied ~ isn't all that confident about _Wash . &amp; Jeff (Pa .l at Hirc1ro
and two out in the bottom or . winning at Yankee Stadium.: Thiel ( Pa .) at John Carroll it."
· . the ninth, Perez stroked a He said after Sunday night's
' Single to •core Ken Griffey win he still iS sticking with his
from second base with the earlier predlctiiln that the
• wInn'mg run.. "·
series will go seven games.
And, the Reds players were
"When I got to the plate I
didn't feel the cold,'' Perez rather subdued in the
said, ignorlllg temperatures clubhouse after Sunday
in the high 311&lt;1. "It was wann night's win.
Why?
for me. I hit llle ball so good I
"Because even if we sweep,
didn't feel a thlllg.
westUlhave
two more to go,''
with the percentages. When
"I knew we had the winning
By GENE cADDES
answered
Morgan.
"!feel the
run on second base and I
Billy came out, he said, 'do
UP! Sporta Writer
lalew· I had lo get him in. I same as I did before the
CINCINNATI (UP!) - .lim you want to walk this guy.' I
was looking for a fastball and ·aeries started, even more ~~catfish" Huntr and said , 'yes.' He said, 'how are
that's what I got (from losing confident.
manager Billy Martin you going UJ pitch the next
pitcher Catilsh HlUiter.)"
agreed. They had to play the guy?' And I said 'away.' "
· Perez, who went 0-15
Griffey reached second
percentages,
through the first four World
when
he hit a slow bouncer to
That nieant walk Joe
Series games a year ago , Is
Morgan and take their Yankee shortstop Fred
off to a sizzling start against
chances on getting Tony Stanley, who threw wildly
the Yankees - lllree hits
Perez, considered by HlUiter past first baseman Chris
Saturday and two more
as the Cincinnati Reds' "best Chambliss kod into the Reds'
Sunday night,·
dugout ..
-9- - - · clutch
hitter."
Reds manager Sparky - - - -Oct.
·
But, Hunter refused to put
It turned out tD be the
Anderson said there couldn't
Sat. Afternoon Junior
wrong decision, as Perez sent the blame on Stanley.
Nile Owls
" 46- 2
have been a better hitter at Road
"It wasn't his . fault, n'
Runners
24-24 a line drive over shortstop
the plate In Sunday night's Super Stars
Hunter
said in Stanley 's
24-24 Fred Stanley's head, easily
tense situation !han Perez. Gutter Busters
24-24 scoring Ken Griffey willl the defense, "I just made a bad
"For 10 straight years he's Bowlin~ Stones
20-28 winning run 1n the Reds' 4.,'! pitch to end llle game . I got
Barons
6-42
had over 90 RB!s," pointed Red
High game - Bob Ha~~y . wii! In the second game of the. llle ba llln the wrong place on
out Anderson. "He's probably 190 ; Bill Jeffers, 180.
· World Series Sunday night. Perez. I wanted to pilch him
aslo\llh as any man with the
High series - Bob DeMoss. · "He's (Per.. ) probably away and I threw it right over
wlnnlDc run on base."
449 ; Bob Haggy, 445.
tllelr best clutch hitter,'' said the plate.
Beamed teammate Joe
Team Game - Nile Owls, HIUI!Alr , "but you've got tog~ "As soon as he hit it, I said
Morgan about Perez, "Some 941.Team Series - Nite Owls ,
tD myself, 'Oh, hell, I know
guys' adrenatin flows better 2,697.
it's going to he tough." AB it
with men on base and Tony Ia
turned out, .leftfielder Roy
Pomefoy Bowling Lanes
a great clutch hitter."
White didn 't have a chance to
"""·
Oct. 2
catch
the ball or throw
Sat. Afternoon Jr.
Griffey out at the plate .
Saturday's
Nlte Owls
38
Ollio Coll011e
H\Uiter, who was touched
Road Runners
24 - CINCINNATI (UP!) Football Scores
Super Stars
22
for
eight hits In the first four
United Press International -· Gutter Busters
16 Rookie Pat Zachry will pitch innings but settled down to
Bowling Stones
1•. for the Cincinnati Reds and
Ohio State 30 Wisconsin 20
Akron 3 Ball State 0
Red 'Barons
• Dock Ellis will hurl for the retire 12 Reds In a row at one
Ash land 30 Fairmont State
High Individual qame .
New York Yankees when the stretch, said he had trouble
(W Val 7
Bruce Fisher, 161 ; second Worid Series switches to. with the mound at Riverfront
Baldwln,Wollace 23 Otterbein high Individual game - Bob y k , Stadi f th th ' d Stadium. ·
an ee
urn or e "
Ha•ggy, 1.9 '
12
"I couldn't get u:;ed w the
·~ Bethany (W. Va.l 22 Case
High series - Bob,Haggy, game Toesday nignt.
~. Western 7
mound," said Hunter,
441 ; secon9 high series . Zachry, a right· hander,
• Bowling Green 17 Kent State Bruce Fisher, 393.
ed
d ·h
Team high game - Gulter post a 14-7 recor Wit a admitting he !elt he was
~ 13
'
'
·Busters, 741, team high series 2.74 earned run average this within ooe batter of being
"1 Capital 20 Heidelberg 0
season and was the winning removed from tile game on a
Carnegie-Mellon 36 John - Gutter Busters - 2,0)1.
I' carroll o
'
pitcher In the second game of couple o! occasions. "Af!Alr I
Clntlnnatl !6 Tulsa 7
Monday Night Mixed
the Reds' three.game sweep got a hole dug, I could land In
' Hanover lind.) 24 Defiance 3 ~~W L of llle Philadelphia Phillies In the same spot every time.''
Team No. 4
44 • 12
: "'' Kenyon 52 Oberlin 0
Hunter,
who
beat
i ·~ Marietta 25 Denison 7
Team No.6
42 14 llle NatiooM League playoffs.
• Marshall 9 Dayton 0
Team No. 1
26 30
Ellis, also a right.!Jander, Cincinnati twice In the 1972
1
; , Musklngum 2A Wooster 0
Team No. 3
24 32 was 17-8 durlllg the regular World Series as a member of
24 32
•~ Ohio University 28 Miam i 14 Team No. 5 ·
Team No. 2
8 48 season after having been the Oakland A's, said he felt
~ Ohio Wesleyen 10 Mount
acquired from the Pittsburgh this year's Reds' team was
High
series
Moses
'·' Union 7
Norman, 542; lynn Shuler,
;;. Tar,lor (Ind.) !4 Bluffton 7
Pirates last winter. Ellis also better offensively.
1 Th el (Pa.) 10 Hiram 7
SOl ; Larry Hendricks, 432. won -the third game of the , "When you have (Juhnny 1
: • Waynesburg (Pa.) 17 Findlay
High series -,- Myrtle
I ,. 6
Norman, 404; Bess Henricks, American League playoffs Bench hatting seventh ,'' said
Hunter, "you know they've
against Kansas Cily.
' '• Western Mlchlgen .34 1oledo
3811; Naomi Floyd, 385 .
~ ~ 21
Bob • This will be Ellis' second got a heckuva hi tUng lineup ."
· High game ' ' Wilmington 21 An'derson Southern, 209; M oses Nor· appearance In World Series
Hunlcr said 'he fell &gt;Lrong
man, 193; Moses Norman ,
:~ (lnd.)O
,
at
the end of the game.
play.
He
was
the
losing
• , Wittenberg 30 Ohio Northern !87.
"'!
felt like I could haw
pitcher
for
Pittsburgh
In
tho
High game - Bess Hen !• 24
, Youngstown St. 33 Morehead drlck5. 146; Myrtle Norman , first. game of the 1971 Series pitched all night, bot, as it
l !Ky.) St. 7
' 141 ; Naomi Flovd, 137.
agaln•t B'altlmore.
·
1urned out, I didn't have to.' '
4

l

BtU

FLETCHER

!

PH. 992-7155

50 21
4 120

'

4 o 11

Bench c

4

Geroni mo cf
Cncpclon ss
Norman p
Bii Hnghm p
Total ·

"Seemeroi

120

2 10 0
4o l 1

llomeownen
InsuranCe from
State Farm- tbe

0 0 0·O

oo oo

IS 4 10 4

out w hen w inni ng r un
scored.
New York
000 , 100. 201)-3

Cincinnati

E -

Powell Sl,

1251

M iddleport , Oh io

un pble to C'apitalize on
scoring opporlunitii.'S- most Two

11

it

NEWYORK
Ployor
ob r h bl
Rivers cf
50 00
RWl\lle If
~ o 1o
M unson c
_. 1 1 1
Plnlella rf
4o2o
Chambllst b
• o 2o
G Nettle! lb
40 I l
E Maddox dh
3 'o 0 0
~~~~~~ 2b
~~~
F Stantons
3 111
Hun ter o
0 n oo
Tot al
3! 3 ' l
Player C IN C INNAT ~b r h bi
Rose 3b
4 oo o
Gr iff ey rt
; toI
Morgan 2b
40 1 0

starter Fred N orman and T ~er e z lb
Dnessen d h
brought on ~o ck BillIngham, ' GFoster 11

elected UJ walk Morgan nnd
pitch to Perez.
"I won't second guess my- - ~' I respect Perez as a
self," said Sta nley. "He hitler, "
sa id
Martin ,
ex plainiug U1e strategy, "but
I'd still raUier pltch to him
than lhe olher goy

~pset

Kuhn.
As the temperature
steadily dropped , Yank
outfielder Elliott Maddox
recaited the 1961 World Series
between the Yanks and Reds.
"'nlat's when baseball was
played in the daytime , but
'that was before Roone
Arledge was commissioner,"
said Maddox. (Arledge is an
executive for ABC television
sports, which carried some
night playoff games, bui NBC
iS televising the seliesc)
Although a lot of the
players complained , hotblooded Pete Rose laughingly
tried to make the best of it.
''Cold weather!" Rose
yelled right before game
time. "It's all In your mind and your liands and feet.
·"Sure, I'd rather play In 95

After that, though, the cold ,
wca tller plus Hunter's sudden
effectiveness, ke!ll tile Reds'
In check· while the Yankees
began pecking away at the
lead. In the fourth, they
scored lhcir first run oo
singles by Munson, Olris
Chru11bllss and Gralg Nettles.
And in tile seventh they tied it
on a single by Willie
Randolph, a double into the
left field corner by Stanley, a
single by Roy White and
MlUison 's infield out. White's
single knocked oul Reds
1

~largat~

- olo ooo 001-4

F. Stanley. DP -

Cincinnat i I , ~OP New
York 7, Clnc Jnntt ti 10. 2b Driessen , Bench, F . Stanley .
3 b - M or gan. SB - Morgan,
Conce pc ion. ; SF - GrlffPv
ip h r er bb sa
Hunter (.LO· I ) 8 2-3 10 -4 .3 4 SNorma n
{! 1 3.933 12

Blll inghm IW. l-01

· · ·~~~

.... u

A

1 2-

3 0·0 0 0

T- 2.33. A- 54,816.

blooper power." moaned

Mm'lin. "We're down. but
we 've just gutta comr buck in
our own bltll park.

•

0

Series '76 schedule

SPECIAL

Uniled Pre ss Internation a l

All Times EOT·

Ci nCi nna ti leads New York , 2-

0
Oct. 16 -

Ci nci n1 1a li N.L. 5
New Yor k A L. 1
Oct . 17 - Ci nci nna ti N.L. 4
New York A.L J

Oc t. 19 - Cincinna ti N.L. a t

New York A.L. . 8: 30 p.m .
Oct. 20
Cincinna ti N.L. a t
New Yor k A. L. . 8· 30 p.m .
x-Oc l. 21- Cincinnati N.l . a t

New Yo r k A.L.. 8:30 p.m .
x-Oc l. 23 -· New York A.L. a t
Cinc inna ti N.L .• 1: 00 p .m .
New York A.l .

. x-Oc l. 24 -

at

Ci nci nnati N.L .. 1· ou p m .
x -if necessary

F11ct.~

OCT. 18 THRU OCT. 24

.

SLOPPY JOE
FRENCH FRIES
MED. SZ. DRINK

99~

FRENCH FRIES ......... 25t

&amp; Figures

CIN CINNATI UPI - Focts
and fi gures on th e second
ga m e of the World Ser ies
be t we en the New York
Yank ee s An d Cinci nna ti

Reds.
Att endance - 54,816. ·
·T o ta l Receip ts - $6 15,270 49 .
Comm ission er 's Sha r e -

$91,290.57.

Playe r s' Sha re -

Phol:'8

McClure's

992-5248

·DAIRY ISLE
Middleport,
Ohio

$313,787.95.

Leagues' and Cl ubs' Share s5 2. ~W .

SPeciaLs

Had to play

percentages

BOWLING

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.

.

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u

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campers. R:epo1rs and maintains
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Renews dried·au t, tratked 0$1l ha lt

An ospholt ·bose od hesrve lhol
won' t crock or cru mble. Ur, e on
roof, meto! yullenng ond flosh

shingles and roll roofing. Seals
s,-null )eoms ond noll holes. Dries lo
solid, wo terprool coot

1ngs Gives tovoh, elastic seol

1 GAllOII
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ONE GAllON
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PRI CE

Zachry will
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8" ~ 16" aluminum vent .

SALEPRICE

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2Vl ·· x 30'' long potch tope foc
roof and gutter. Cut ond press
rnfo ploce

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~;~E 147

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POMEROY CEMENT
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The Department Store of Building Since 1918

397'

�S-The O.UySentlnei.~IMleoort·Porneroy, 0., Monday,Oct. l8,1976
~

2-'1'he oauv ISellllnet, Mtddlepo, ~.-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Oct. 18,1976

Americans sweep Nobel Awards

'

''Knowledge of the subject about it all," he said at hla kind.*'
Their
two
prize
Held,
covering the bcranes office In the Europea n
(UP! ) - Prof. WWlam N.
eJJlOJiments
and
related
chemical
Nuclear
research
center.
were
made
Lipscomb of Harva rd
The Academy cited their lndependenUy of each other
Ualvenlty todsy won 1he 1976 compounds has tlua been
Nobel chemistry prize - the eiKJI'IIlously enriched," the "pioneering work In the at two of the "arlit's particle
discovery of .a hea vy accelerators, the Academy
lllslb American !D win a Academy said.
Profs. Richter and '11ng elementary particle of a new said In Its amouq,cement.
NOI!el prize this year ,
Ting and hill associates
Earlier today , In an Arneri· shared the physics award for
coostructed their equipemnt
can sweep of the awarda thus· "the .greatest dis covery
at the Brookhaven National
far, the Nobel physics prize ever" In a search for the
Laboratory. Richter's equlpsmallest
particle
m
earth.
was awarded jointly to Prof.
The
awards
carry
a
caah
Burtlm Rich!Alr, 45, of the
Tht Thursdoy Rejects
mentis comected to the twoThlindoY AHernoon Loogve mUe
linear
electron
&amp;anlord Unear Accelerator prize of $150,000 In each·
Stpt. 30. !976
. accelerator -at the Stanford
eer.ter, Stanford, Calli., and category ,... wit~ Joint
Prof. Samuel.C.C. Ting, 40, of wlnneM sharing the amount. T..m &lt;tandlnvs W ' L, Unear Accelerator Center.
.. N
Uslllg ·different forms
Today's laureates brought T.--the Mlissachuaetts IiiBtltute
eam
o. 1
26 14
h of
24 16 eipertmentatlon, bot men
of
Technology,
for to six the number of Welker's Ashland
22 18 discovered that when , a
discovering a new heayy Americans to win Nobel Teamoond2
High Individual games - stream of electrons and
Prizes In the 1976 series of
elementary particle.
Patt i Williams I6S : Ann
Lipscomb w~s given the awarda which began last Morris 159 ; sue Searles 127, positrons go around In ,
· High Ind. Il l games - opposite directions at very
chemistry prize for his ThU!'Bday.
Pattl Will iams 433 ; Ann high speeds and collide ~d·
E~
onomlcs
professor
aludies "m the structure of
oiO'I ; Sue Searles 321 . m, the energy produced a
boranes Illuminating Milton Friedman of the Morris
Team game - Team J
1
h
problems of chemical University of Chicago wm !Welker's
Ash land ) 271 ;' motion ess, very eavy
bonding," the Royal Swedish the ecooomlc award and the Team· 4. 2A6 ; Team 3 particle.
Richter named his particle
Academy of Sciences said. medicine prize was Bhared by 2.0. High team Ill Games
Team
No.
6
999;
Team
No.
peL
Ttng named his the J
professor
Barch
Blumberg,
Boranes Is thuccepted name
•
981
;
Welker's
Ashland
978.
perUcle.
'
of
Philadelphia,
and
Dr.
for heron hyprldes which are
Sun. Mixed League
Richter and Ting met Nov.
the compolUids of f!le element Carleton Gajdusek of
• I
Pick N Shovel W L II, 1974, at Stanford j and
Bethesda, Md. The 1976 Nobel
~roo with hydrogen.
44 12 foundtheyhaddlscoveredthe
Lipscomb, 56, received his p&lt;!ace prize was not awarded SalemSI. Mk t.
Farmers Bank
37 19 same· particle .
The
doctorate In chemistry from tlils y.ear,
Prof.
Goesta
Ekspong
of
Seldom
Res
t
Ceramics
32
24
announcement
appeared
in
the Calllornla Institute of
. Ed 's Crossroads Gro ,. 26 30 scientilic pUblications willlln
the
Academy
called
the
Technology In llH6 and then
~! ~~ a week. Ashort time later, it
transferred to the University physles award "the greatest f::~ ~~: ~
discovery
ever·Jn
the
field
of
Men
's
Hlgh Series -:- lst Stu
was confirmed at Frascati,
of Minnesota. He went w
elementary
,
particles"
and'
Blankenship
,
470.
2 ~d Clefts
Italy, and then at the
Harvard In 19S9.
.
added,
"It has changed the litlll ton 416, Jrd Roger Car- Deutches El ectronen
The Academy said there
~nter , 408.
Women 's High Series - 1st Synchrot ron In Hamburg,
were a grea~ number of work style of all laboratories
boranes but very little was lllroughout llle world which Kathie Lee, 504. 2nd Ann West Germany.
The Academy said that
: ,. known about them. They had due to this discovery are now Mo rri s, 410, 3rd Shirley
Honlnj
,
362.
during
the ·past 1~ years,
chasing
the
new
forma
of
to be studied at very low
Men_s High Game - 1st Stu
1 ·
matter
which
this particle Blankenship,
us,
2nd
Cletis
many
new e ementary
temperature, they were
Dalton. 112, Jrd Stu particleshadbeendiseovered
usually unstable
and promises."
"The amazing part of lllis Blankenship, 167.
which showed kinship willl
chemically aggressive,
Women 's Hi gh Game - 1st
one another in groups or
discovery
is
that
Richter
and
explosive and toxic.
Kathie lee, 189, 2nd Kath ie
"It was
not until Tlng worked completely In· Lee, 159, lrd Kathie ~~e 156: famllies, but the new particle
was separate and new and
Upacomb 's works from the dependent of each other,
completely
oblivious
to
the
Thursday
ReJects
formed
tile heglnni!Jg o! a
beginning of the 1950's nature of each other's work
t0-7-76
new
family
.
mwarda that the problems In and came upon the exact
Team Standings
"A
new
field
of research
borane chemistry could be
1st - Team No. Or1e
same
dlacovery
at
almost
the
has
b~
en
ope
"ned,"
the
2nd
T
eam
No.
Two
satisfactorily solved," the
same
point
of
time,"
Ekspong
Jrd
(Tie)
Welkers
Ashland
Academy
statement
said.
Academy s8Jd In Its aMOIUI·
and Team No. Four
said.
Richter was born In New
cement.
4th - Team No. Five
In
Stanford,
Prof.
Richter
York
In 1931. He took his Ph.D
l'ne
Academy
said
5th - Team No. Si x
at the Massachusetts
Individual high games Upacomb has been able to was "pleased and gratilled."
"You're kiddlllg,". he said. Sue Searles, 150 ; Char·lene Institute of Technology In
Identify
the
possible
Doczi, 139 ; Ann Morris, 136. 19~6 and then went to
"ObvioWiiy
I'm happy.
combinations of leasable
High team game ..... Team
Tlng,
In
Geneva,
Stanford.
bondlngs. He determined
No . One , 284 ; Welkers
Switzerland,
when
the
award
Tlng was born in the United
A shland , 25a ; Team No .
geometric structures through
was
annolUiced,
said
~ had
States
In 1938 of Chinese
!=our,
244.
x:ray' dlflractlons and by
High team ( 3) gameS' no
idea
he
was
in
the
running.
parents,
grew up In China In
using modern quantum
Ting,
40,
also
~aid he Welkers Ashland . 732; Team university surroundings but
mechanical calculations,
No . One, 726 ; Team · No. Four,
without regular schooling
'
predicted the stability and "certainly doeSn't mind at 664 ,
until he was 12, He came to
High Indi vidual {J) games
reacUons of the molecules all" sharing_the prize with
- Ann Morr is, 390 ; Charlene llle United States in 1956.
Richter.
Iinder varylllg condltloos.
"lrn still somewhat dazed Doc zi, 289 ; Sue Sea rles, 379.
Tlng did research work In
Berkeley, Calif., and later
went to the European Center
Wf!dnesday Early
· Letters of opiDioa are welcomed. They should be 1
Btrd
League
for Nuclear Research, In
leu 1llaa 300 words 10111 (or be aabJe« to redactloa by I
9-22-76
Switzerland.
He Is now with
lhe editor) aad muat be algaed wllh lhellpee'l ad· I
Pis.
MIT,
but
he
1.1
doii!g research
me11. Names may l!e withheld upoa ,.bU..IIoa. I Ben Tom 1
22
on
powerful.storage
rings at
1
Lighthouse
Restauran
t
21
Howe•er, oa rtotaat,.aamea wiD be dladGied. Lellm : Royal Cr own
.
16 the Swiss center.
should be ID good Iaiiie, addreaat.ac l1111ea, aol perKing Builders
16
The aMouncements of the
soaalltleo.
1 EvelynsGrocery
15 six Nobel prizes began
6
I No. 3
Thursday when llle Academy
Ind ividual high game
I Betty Whitlatc:h, 207 ; Flossi e ahd ·llle Karollnska Institute
I Ma xs on , 189 ; Marlen e
selected the economics and
I Wilson, 184.
I
Individual high series ~ medicine laureates, • all
I ~eHy Whi tlatch , 497; Floss ie Americans.
Maxson ,
471 ;
Marlene
Prof. Milton Friedman, 64,
. Wil son, 4S6.
of tile University of Chicago
won the Nobel prize for
WednudaV Early
She agrees with Mrs. Korn
economics.
Bird League
The medicine prize was
9-28-76
Pts. shared by Pr of. Baruch
Dear Sir:
30 Blumberg, ol, of the Institute
I read Mrs. Korn's letter to the editor and wish I could Ben Tom
Crown
24
have written it like she did. We shouta all be lllankful for a Royal
Evelyns Grocery
23 for Cancer Research,
..,.., . · hospital and staff as capable to treat and care for people as Lighthouse Rest .
21 'Philadelphia, and Dr .
,
Veterans Memorial Hospital. Also, lor doctors like Doclors King Builders
16 Carleton Gajdusek, 53, of the
. ":.,,.. Telle,
No. 3
•
6 National lnsUtute of Heallll,
Blamricz, Ridgway and all others oo duty.
Ind ividual high game
I
would
also
like
UJ
comment
on
the
tender
loving
care
:· (T.L.C.) as Mrs. Korn wrote about In her letter, I am sure lllis Flossie Ma xson , 189 ; Louise Bethesda , Md., for
••
Independent studies of InfecHarrison, 180; Jan Jel')kins,
,• . has helped many patients as much as the care given by the 171.lndhildual h i gh serieS, tious diseases.
doctors. In the past twelve months, my wife , l!lOther, and
The peace prize, which Is
~·
F lossi e Maxson , 493 ; Louise
'
mother~n~aw were given U1e same care that would have been
presented
by the Nobel Com·
Harri s, 48 4r Jan Jenkins, 484 .
given. in a larger hospital plus "T.L.C."
millee of the Norwegian
Wednesday Early
As for llle Emergency Room, members o! our family,
Bird League
Parliament In Oslo, will not
10-6-76
Including myself, have had to rely on it several Urnes.
he awarde&lt;) lllis year.
Stdqs.
Someone was always there to help, a nurse or doctor, Like Ben Tom
The prize for lite1·ature will
32
.. MrS. Korn'sletter impUed, II you have had a pain for days, Roya I Crown
he
presented Thursday by the
30
•
then It L• not an emergency when you do decide to go.
Evelyns GrocerY
25 Swedish Academy of Letters.
n
1would like to close this letter as Mrs. Korn did hers. She Uqhthouse Rest.
King
Builders
22
said It just right! Look It up In The Daily Sentinel, Letter to tlie Shirley Kays
12
Editor, October 13, 1976. - Don Rea, PO Box 422, P,9Jlleroy.
In 1776, the boundary
H i gh game
Flossie
MaJII:SOn,IW ; Mary Voss, 190 ;
between Maryland and
Louise Eads, 163.
Pennsylvania was finally
High series - Mary Voss,
settled.
It was to be known as
492 ; Flossie Ma x son, 474 ;
11
Myrtle Norman, 458.
The Mason-Dixoo l.J.ne."
STOCKHOLM ,

.

....

l

r'

.

.. ....
~

'

,.

~

DR. LAMB

11

by sundown."

Ip the !!!Iter, Rhodes said Sleblinl Otlllel' na eapeclali1

. Important In light of a bill he sllned lnw law Oftl' the ·
"eekend reforminc . alate workers' compensa«on
regulati0111.
"Our lawa are on!y u good u the people who
admlnlater lllem," !laid Rhodes.
'
RlJodes said he "and every working person In thla state
.will be watcl)big the acUon of the Senate In the apecil!l
session I have called."
Stebbins was OIC chairman under the prior Gilligan ad·
ministration. Rhodes demoted him after taking office.
"I hope .:. the working people of Ohio hope - that you
ana the other memhera of the Democratic caucus will
take a strong, meaningful stand m the question of
corruptioo and dereliction of duty In public office which Ia
before you,'~ Rhodes said.

Tight. security
imposed at trial
PHOENIX, Ariz. (UP!) Ofllctals said SUnday tight
security was helllg Imposed
for the !rial of John Adamson,
charged
with
killing
Investigative reporter Dm
Bolles, who had probed land
fraud schemes In one of
America's last real estate
frontiers.
The Maricopa County She·
riff 's Department said It
fears for Adamson's life
because of figures, wbo may
he ctted In .testimony, and
that he will "ear a
bulletproof · vest for his
· ·

'.

'·

related to wallting. That is
why you developed trouble in
keeping your balance.
A perm who takes folic
actd or gels too much In
vitamin pills one can buy
without a prescription and
also has a vitamin B-12
deficiency will not develop an
anemia. The patient feels fine
while the spinal cord Is
becoming permanently
damaged. If he had an
anemia he would feel bad and ,
go to llle doctor who coald
dlBcover the problem· belore
spinal cord degeneration
began.
Why would a person get B12 deficiency If he were
taking a daUy vitamin tablet
contained B-12 anyway as
well as folic acid? Simply
because some people caMot
absorb B-12 from the
digestive system. .This Ia
particularly true of people
who have had surgery of the
llomach.
That Is why your doctor Is
giving you 11-12 by llhota, to be
sure the B·l2 gels Into your
I

I

II

scheduled one·block ride
from )all to the courthouse
where jury aelectlbn will
begin todsy.
"There definitely is a
danger factor," a spokesman
for llle Sherlfrs Department
said.
Bolles, 47, a prtze.;wlnnlng
Arizona Republic r~r,
whose articles attacked the
Mafia, prominent politicians
and land fraud manipulators,
was fatally maimed June 2
when a bomb blew up hla car
as he backed out of a ~otel
parking lot af~ a tipster
failed lo show for an
appointment.
He died II days later after
losing both h1a legs and' an

arm.

down into lake

r-

MOIICOW (UP!) - Wjtll water for landing.
uld
efflll'll hampertd by ·Sbatalov

NEW YORK CUP!)
Sparliy Anderaon IIIH says
the Warld S.rles will go seven

lhe

and darkneu, iiplaahdown Saturday two~ CODCIIIUllaafely took place under "very hatd
ended an abortive ~y ·conditions," wltli frealng
and I racJng
apace mlulon with an templraturea
_ . _ . ....... ' to the',
IAJPiece4ellted spWildown 'ID IIIOw...,.u• ·-'0
huardl ol a nl&amp;bt landiDc.
• Central AliaD lite.
"'lbla wu the llrat lnltance
eo.nonaull Vyachealav
~. :~~,and Vatery RorJi. ol a IJIIMbdoWD,'; he said.
cleltvenUy' ll'l' IUI'VIved the "The ahlp'• crew and the
hollrG&gt;~a landlqj unatbed recovery party displayed
and reportedly we~ ''feeling hlcll courage."
The !allure once again
well" Sunday alta' arriving
at the Balkonur ~ce Center lUiderUned 1he technolocical
In Kaaakhatan. .
winerablllty of the ambitious
Gen. Vladlmlr A. Shatalov, Soviei1J18C8 program, which
head ol COIIlUIUIUI training, has ltlf!ered five major settold Soviet television· the bleb In the 1aat 18 manned
Soyuz 23 ntght was missions, including four
"complicated and dllllcult." deaths.
The Soviets released hw
'Sbatalov said "faults" In
. the Soyuz control system detalla of tile technical fault
forced the C(81101l8UII to call aboard ,Soyuz 23 or the
off a planned docking wllll the landiDc. They did not say If
Salyut 5 space Illation and the splaahdown had been
ground cmtrollers ordered Intentional.
Western space aperll em·
them to return.
eluded
the fault may have
Alta' just 48 hours In space,
been
In
a rocket cmtrol
the coimonauts splashed
system
and
that Soyuz was
down In Lake Tengiz, a 2().
mlle-loog lake In Kazakhstan, off course when It landed In
llle first time a maMed Tenglz, 121 mUes southwest
Soviet spacecraft baa used of the city of TselinOI(I'ad. _
heiV)' 111011'

Reedsville News Notes
Recent visitors of Mrs.
Beas Larkins were Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Smith and son, Tom
of Laurelville, Mr. and Mrs.
Kermit Evans ol Columbus,
and Rev. and Mrs. Bruce
~mllh nl Athens.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Cow·
dery and son UII'IStopher
have moved to ChJIIIcothe
where Mr. Cowdery bas
employment. &lt;(
The folloWUJg\Jllemhers of
the UMW recently held a
program at the ·Arcadia
Nursing Home and ate-out at
a restauranl at Belpre: Mrs.
Leona Ruth, Mrs. Mamie
Buckley, Mrs. Sue Reed, Mrs.
Darlene Reed, Mrs. Verna·
Bose, Mrs. Sandy Cowdery'
Mrs. Pat Mat:tln, Mrs. Vivian
Humphrey and the members
were Joined by Mrs. Dorotha
Riebel of Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson
spent a couple days with
Millard Wilson at Rittman:.
Mrs. Lyle Balderson has
returned home after being a
surgical patient at Camden·
Clark Hospital, Parkersburg,

w. Ya.

Mr. and Mrs. Grant Borlllg
are visiting with their son and
his wife, Mr, and Mrs.
Michael Boring at Teus.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward ChevaUer visited with Mr.
and· Mrs. Zenith Chevalier
and Alan at Belpre Rd.
VIsiting at tbe WilllaJns.
Balderson home Saturday
were Mrs. Roy Flck and
daughter, Beth Anne of
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. George Ar·
nold were weekend guests of
.Mr. and Mra. Lawrence
Arnold at Beaver Falls, Pa.
They also altended the Grove
City CoUege football game at
Grove City, Pa.
Mrs. oj&gt;al Harris is a
patient at Camden-Clark
Hospital, Parkersburg, W.
·va.
·

Pollee, who believe a con·
spiracy was involwd, said
A lamily reunion was held the appointment wu a
atllle home of Helen Johnson "setup," that the bombing
Sunday. Those attending Involved "big name political
were Mr. and Mrs. Carl figures" and that land frAud
Mourning of Elyria, Mrs. ·"deOnitely has come Into the
Cecil Glllogly, Steve, Jeff and ·lnvestlption."
Pn)Stan~
Ailsa of Albany, Mrs. KenAdarnson,32,adogbreeder
neth Grover, Jennifer of Long and sometime tow-truck
International Hockey
Bottom, Mrs. Byrne VaughaQ operator, was believed by
League Standings
of Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. pollee to have lured Bolles lo
United Press International
Harley Haning, Flatwood and the hotel by pl'GIIIIslng him
Norlll
w' LTptsgtga
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Lambert, Information about a land deal
Kalamazoo 2 0 0 4 II 6
Charlotte, Mr. and Mrs. Involving Se~. Barry
Flint
2 l 0 4 13 8
DaMy Abbott, Syracuse, Mr. Goldwater and RejJ, sam
Port Hurorl 1 1 0 2 5 8
Big
Raa
It Elk Raa
and Mrs. James Johnson, Steiger, a candldste for the
I 1 0 2 8 7
Carol Rhodes visited her Saginaw
Jamie Sue, Todd and Teresa, U.S. Senate.
Mus~egon
I 2 0 2 tO 13
South
Mr. and Mrs.' Larry Johnson,
Bolles told a colleague he parenta recently, Mr. and
gf ga
Gina, Tahnee and Brady, did not l!elleve the tip, and Mrs. Jewell story. Mrs. Story Fort WayneW IL 0Tpts.
0 2 5 2
Is
recovering
nicely
after
Mrs. Lee RouSh, Rodney, · Goldwater and Steiger
Columbus I 0 0 2 7 3
Cheryl, Joey and Elizabeth angrily denounced the having hlp surgery.
Dayton
0 2 0 0 4 12
Mrs • • Florence Schlot· Toled o
,0 2 0 o 7!1
Ann all of Pomeroy, and Mr. murder. Goldwater said:
Results
and Mrs. Homer Forrest of "It's all right If thoee things terbeck and son, John Ray m Fort Saturday's
Wayne 5 Toledo 2
spent
Thursdsywith
Mr.
and
Bradbury.
happen w an SOB, but not a
Saginaw 5 Muskegon 3
Pot luck dinner "as served. guy lllte this." President Mrs. Dorset Biggs and·Janel Port Huron 5 F)lnt 3
Kalamazoo S ai\:'fon 1
Mr . and Mrs. Charley Ford said he was "outraged. Biggs.
Denver Biggs spent Frl&amp;!y
Sunday's Rtsults
Smith were Sunday afternoon that a reporter In search of
Flint 5 Port Huron o
olght
with
Mark
Caughnour.
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Roy truth became an apparent
7 Dayton 3
Mr. and Mrs. Dorset BlggB . Columbus
Smith of Rock Springs.
victim of the underworld."
Muskegon 4 Saginaw 3
"ere In Point Pleasant
6 Toledo S
Mr. Earl Russell of KenBolles, who acquired many Monday consulting Mr. Biggs Kalamazoo
Monday's Games
tucky Is visiting 111a mother, enemies and admlrer8 for h1a physician, Dr. Alirom No games sCheduled
Mrs. Bertha Russell.
etposes, told peraons, who Boonsue.
Tuesday's Games
No games scheduled
Mrs. Paul Darnell and new treated him just after the
Maey Midkiff Ia visiting her
son, Jeffery Scott returned bombing, "The Malia ... got
paren~,
WHA Standings ·
home from hospital and are · me." He alao mentioned the Midkiff. Mr. and Mrs. Zlha · B•fUnited
Press International
spending a few days with her names "Adamson" and
1
Mrs. George Ziegler, Inez
!a~'r Pis. GF GA
parents Mr. and Mrs. James "Emprlae,' a maJU- sports Randolph
and
Bernice
Hawk,
Quebec
8 25 16
Reeves.
concesslmalre now.known u Mr. and Mrs. James Cincinnati ;2 2l o
2
6 37 32
Blr m inghm 2 3 1
5 21 24
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Ramccrpthatbaaan Interest Hazelton, Clnthla, Jane, lndienepois
2 2 o
4 13 19
Smith, local and Mr. Robert In all Blx Greyllound race Jessie White attended church Minnesota 2 4 0 4 22 24
Reeves, Bryan were Sunday tracks in Arizona,
at Zion Church of Chrlal. The New Englnd ~e!t 0 0 4 15
belore noon callers of Mr. and
Akey figure In the trial will Hemlock Grove Church
w L T Pts. GF GA
Mrs. Paul Darnell, Jeffery · he Neal Roberts, an attorney Youth Group sang a number san otego 3 1 1 ' 25 20
on
3 1 o
6 12 a
Scott and Mr. James Reeves. ~ho baa said Adamson was In and Zion Youth Group had a Houst
Phoen l ~
3 1 o 6 21 JB
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Sayre his,office minutes before the special Sunday evening Oct. Winnipeg
3 2 0
6 20 ll
Edmon ton
2 1 o
A 10 8
and son visited hla parents born bll)g and that he
0 5 0
0 e 21
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sayre; arranged for a chartered 10.Beatrice Bentz of Lan· CalgarySaturday's
Rt~ults
Sunda
plane lo fiy Adsmaon lo Lake
Quebec B New England 2
I
with
Houston 3 Birm ingham o
Y·
Havasu City, Ariz., 12 hours caster spent a ew da fS
San DiOllo 4 Col gory 2
after the eiPio!lon. ,Another her sister Pearl Randolph · Phoenix
6 Winn ipeg 4
k
tnst
figure, land developer Max
wee ·
(Only games scheduled)
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence E.
. Sunday's Result!
D\UIIap, said he deliwred
Bandolph
Jr
of
ChJIIIcothe
Minnesota
6 Birmingham l
$5,000 to $6,000 Ul Adamson
•
Edmonton 7 Indianapolis 2
spent
Tuesday
night
and
Ctnclnnott
s
Quebec 2
J\Uie lti In another attorney's
bloodstream.
Wedneaday
with
h1a
parents,
Son
DIOllo
3
Winnipeg
l
' home office.
How can other people avoid
Recent callers at the
••-a
C E Bandolph !Only gomes scheduled }
and
Mr
A nationwide . team of .
•
mi" • •
•
Monday' s Games
what has happened to you? of Mary Circle were Mrs.
!No go me• scheduled }
Don't become · a vitamin Donald Pierce of Athens, Investigative reporters has · Sr. and Inez Randolph.
popper in place of eating a Melvin Circle of Columbus, come lo Phoenix for the case, Donald Randolph and wife New EJg~:~~·~;~H~~~:~
proper balanced diet wlth all Mr. and Mrs. James Circle, along with some 100 and 2 sons spent Tuesday indlanoooll,.f Winnipeg
•• BirmlnghOm
the right vitamins. If you do Mrs. Geors~ Circle of New journallais fnm arOund the evening · at .the Randolph • Quebec
Phoenix at Edmonton
home
to
see
the
ne1f
.
son,
Cincinnati
at Minnesota
world.
Bolles,
a
father
of
take vitamins use only the Haven and Mrs. Laura Circle
James
Ermal
and
his
older
!Only
gomes
scheduled !
seven
and
Pulitzer
Prize
regular daily vitamin of Dorcas. ·
'!''·
:
• = !,.f
preparations and avoid the
Rev. and Mrs. Richard nominee In 1866, was , a brother ~ryan.
founder
of
the
lmutlcatlve
super
vltamln·lype Young and famlly and a
WI\ITE-IN URGED
,. ..., _
preparation a day. If you take friend of Sidney, Olllo spent Reporters and Editors
SKOWHEGAN, Maine
"':.:,~'*
too many and they contain the weekend with Mr. and Assoclatlm.
(UPIJ- Former Republican
even a small amount of folic Mrs. Edlon Rouah.. .
Senator Margaret Chase
.- .. ~··acid you may he getting
Mr, and Mrs. Lee Harris of
Smith, who baa llid &amp;he
enough to mask a B-12 Springfield, Ohio spent the
WDUld have peter red race
.
•••deficiency.
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. ELLA HONORED
he-n
HuiMrt
·
H
umphrey
,.._
"'"
· - ..._., ...
unt Q ,.._,"
, ......,..
n.ow..,...,.,.,u.t•••~·
To give you a more com· Homer Circle and other
BEVERLY •u'"""" """'· andRonaldReagan,laurglng Ill_,"·-... -~
plete concept of the role of 8- relatives.
(UP!) - Dionne Warwick, vOters to cast write-In ballots
..,1_
"""" " '·" · •
12 I am sending you The
Rev. Sieve Wilson cal!ed at Ray Charle., Mel Tonne and 11 they are lUihappy with ." '.:"":::.""~ . ,.,. ~
Health Letter number ~. 1he home of Homer-Circle and Sue Raney feted linger Ella Jimmy Carter or Gerald ~~.... _ ,
VItamin B-12, Folic Acid, farntty on Saturday. ,
Fitzgerald at dinner where Ford.
-.. . - · - · .....
Pernicious Anemia. Others
"It repreaenll a golden ' - ....._ . ..... m
William and
Cathy she received the second
who want this lnfonnatlon -Carleton of Racine and tshery nationaiAwardofDiatlnctlm · opportunity 1•-""'ca•1 -, -.,,•...
.... ,.._
u .••"·. . . . . . . . ~
...
lllllal
••
can send 50 cents with a long, LeAnn Johnson, local called from
the
National not only to espreas . . . _ - . - r i - ~·
stamped , self.-addressed at the home of Mrs. Dean Assoclatim for Sickle ~II ,themlelves with rapect to - · "' "'"' "'"" ...,... ~nvelope for it. Send your
Brlnk,t!r 011 Monday evenlllg. Disease lor her ''llntitlng •'wn::- Individual \;IIIIW
wo but
111 Ot.t.
..
·--•'cia"'•
-u.n . .,. -...n·w -w. v.~
letter ·to me in care of this
If any one folUid a knlf efforts on behalf of also u to IICIII1Inatlon by a •' -· · - ' " ' - "'""
newspaper, P!· 0 . Box 1551, along the road bet!'een the humanitarian causes:
direct (primary) system ~-:':'..:.,loo..!:;;,:.,
Rad io City Station, New home of Mrs. Dean Brinker
Charles W&lt;ll the group's rather than by the present ~ - ..._ York, NY 101119.
would they return It to her at first national award last convention system," ahe ~ • ..... •
call her on the phone.
year.
. ~d.
~

Vitamin deficiency causes problems
By Lawreaee E. Lamb, M.D. say though that he caught It
DEAR DR. LAMB - I at an early stage and my
would appreciate anything going on a diet didn't caUJelt,
you can tell me about my but may have aggravated it.
condition. About a year ago 1 At lim he tbought I might
· went m a !lrlct diet and lost have pernicious anemia.
L- • 30 po\Uids In . about three
DEAR READER - You
monthS. Then I began having are eaaentlally correct In
trouble with my ,.alklng and your Interpretation of your
keeping my balance. My Illness. You had a marked
••
regular doctor sent me to a deficiency In vitamin IH2.
neurologlst.-He went over me We have !D have thla vitamin
''\ and
I didn't have any reflexes for our cells to reproduce. We
·,
In the lltkle. Th1a has since manufacture about 200
Improved.
million new red blood cells
He dlagnoaed· my problem each minute to replace those
as subacute combined tha• have been destroyed,
degene~atlon with malab· When a peraon Ia·deficient In
eorpt!on. For a month he 11-12 he may not be able to
gave me two vitamin B-12 form these new cella and
lllaU a weei and' now flake becomes anemic. Th1a type of
one ahot I week.
anemia Ia pernicious anemia.
If I lUiderstand it right It
Other cella In the body are
has damaged the nerves In also affected. You need B-12
my IJilne. My walltlng has . to prote« the cells Inside
improved somewhat In the your spinal .cord. Folic acid
1ut few months. The doctor mar correct an anemia and
said I would hive trouble resolve other problems but It
with my walking for a couple · won't prevent cord dsmage,
of yean and then 1 may not 'I1le segments of the cord that
, • entirely get onr lt. He did . are damaged include the cella

-

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Gov. Jamu A. Rbodel asked
Republican and Democratic leldn of the Ohio Senate
todsy to "take a 11ron1 and meaningful stand on the
questlm of ~lkm. and dertllcllon of duty" u the
legislature conwned In apedalllllkln.
In a tw01)811e letter to Senate Majclrlty Leader Oliver
Ocasek and Mlncrlty leader Michael Maklley, Rbodea
outlined h1a cue fer removal of former Induatrla1
Commission chalrmlln Gregory J . Stebbins. ,
Rhodes called the leglalaturelntoapoda!IIOIIIdon earner
this mmth with 1he call that the Senate remove Stebbins

Wo'lfpen·
News Notes

---------------------------1

.

actiOn agatmt corruptiOn

Sweden

'"

.

sp·a rky still thinking seven

Cosmonauts set

Legislators uked to take

Carmel New8,
By the Day

MI,....A,.,.,•••

a

..,.:;:-.;n...

..

games. Lllcklly, he hasn't got
hll Cincinnati Reda players

believq II.
"I atlU think It's going w go
seven." 11id tbe evercautloua Anderaon Sonday
nilbt after the Reda, seeking
to become 1he 'flrit NaUonal
League team In M years to
win bacil-w-blick World .
Serl~ championships, left
home for Ylltkee Stadium
"lth . a \wo.games·to·norie
lead over the New York
Yankees,

That two.game bulge ,... Martin ordered Joe Morgan
achieved when Tony Perez walked Intentionally, "When.
wanned the 54,816 chilled 1got to the plate I didn't feel
Cincinnati fans , who !raved the cold. It was warm for me.
the oear.freezlng weather of 1 hit the hall so goud I didn't
the first-ever Sunday night feel a thing ."
Series game, with a game.
Perhaps so, but ·the
winning, nlnlll4nning single Yankees have certainly felt
lllat gave the Reda a 4-.'1 tile st~ of Perez, who is
victory over the Ylltkeea.
hitting .556for thetwo games.
"I lalew with the winning
"For 10 s(raight years, he
run on second base, I had to (Perez ) had over 90 RB!s,"
get him in,'' said Perez, who · said Anderson. "He's
was f!iven that opportlUIIty probably as tough as anyone
after Yankee ahortstop Fred with the winning run m
Stanley threw wUdly c:11 Ken base."
Griffey's · tw&lt;M~ut grounder
Still. Perez' line-drive,
for a two.hase error and first-pitch single might not
Yankee manager Billy

Players, fans, owners
CINCINNATI' (UP!) - "I
hope the commissioner
. freez~s his ears off, "
deadpanned New York
Yankee catcher . Ellie
Hendrlcka.
Baseball Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn wasn 't wearing
earmuffs, but they wouldn't
have been out of place at
Riverfront Stadium Sunday
night,

.

Kuhn and 54,816 fans
!raved chilly wlnda and cold
temperatures 10 watch the

Cincinnati Reds edge the New
York Yankees 4-.'1 In t~ first
Sunday night game In World
Series history.
Temperature at 6:30 p.m.
(EDT) game time was 43
degrees. The mercury
slipped !D41 midway through
tile contest and was dipping
Into llle 311&lt;1 by llle time Tony .
Perez was knocklllg In the
gam&amp;-endlng run shortly after
11 p.m.
The ·sunday night game
came about to suit televislm
executives and was OKed by

Perez makes it hot
for New York Yanks
.
By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - It
was a cold night, but Tony
Perez knew how to make It
hot for the New York
Yankees.
'

have happened had Stanley
not rushed his throw oo
Griffey • groWJder . Prior UJ
Stanley's error, Yankee ace
Ca tfish Hunter,
who
experienced a rocky first.
lllree innings, had retired IS
out or 16 batters and
appeared . in complete
command· o! the Reds
batsmen.
.The swift Griffey race&lt;\
around to second as Stanley's
throw went lnt~ f,he Reds
dugout and suddenly H\Uiter
and the Yankees were In
trouble again.

(Griffey) gO( 38 Infield hits
this year , so I knew he eou ld
run·. I didn't have time to
plant my foot, so I had to
throw o!f balance and I
hurried it.
.
" If. I had wanted lo play it
safe, I could have. I could
,have pl ayed back and
conceded the hit or I could
have charged it and taken an
extra step.' Eit}1er way, he
would've been safe."
It was then 'that Martin,
af ter

who wound up the wirming

pitcher by retiring all eight
haltrrS he faced.
. h 1 f' t
As m
t e r lfS game 1os., ,
the Yankees simply were

conferring wi\h HWltcr,

1Morgan).
Otherwise,

was

"otably Ul llle !ourth when
they fwd runners on set'Ond
and Ulird with one out before
Elliot Maddox struck oul und
Willie Randolph grounded
ou t , and in Ute sixth when,
with rwmers on fir st and
second and none out, Nettles
fouled oul and Maddox' hard·
hi t ground~ r to Conce pcion at
short resulted in n double
play.
"We're being beaten by

a

bopln g to be here tonight. I lackluster garne--jlrobably
don 't care i! il's 20 degrees due 'to the football-like
wealller which caused the
and snowing.u
Cincinnati Reds' hilting Yankees to bring their bats
coach Ted Kluszewski Inside and utilize hot water
recalled when he actually did bottles for their hands, while
th e Reds used sm a ll plugin
play in the snow.
"Opening day one year' it heaters and hand warmers.
"In wcatller like I his," said
was 28 degrees and snowing,
Reds
center fi elder Cesar
but we went ahead and
Geronimo,
"I wish tlJC World
played because it was a
Series
was
being played in
season opener/ ' said Klu.
the
Dominican
Republic."
"But I think we were snowed
out for our next three
Taking advantage of
games."
Hu nt e r 's ear l y- innin g
Blurted Yank manager adjustment problems wiU1
Billy Marttn; "! think it's the pitching mound, the Reds
ridiculous. This is football whacked out five hits in the
weather."
firs,t two Innings nnd sct~rt•l
Chimed in Reds manager three runs in the second.
Sparky Anderson, "I'd just as
"! just. could"'t get used to
soon the season ended the Ute mmmd at first," said
first day of September,
Hunter. "It was too hard and
"In this kind of weather the I kept landi"g ' on it
pitcher has all
the differently. I couldn 't get a
advantages. How would you hold on it."
like to whack against (hardDesigna ted hitter Dan
throw ing Phillie pitcher Driessen sta1'ted tlle UU'eeSteve) Carlton in this run Cincinnati second with a
weather? How would you like double orr the left-eenter field
to whack against Nolan Ryan wa ll a nd George Fos ter
... or Burt Blyleven '"
brought hln1 home wiU1 a
Reds' designated hitter sin gle t o cen ter . Yan~ee
Danny Driessen shuddered In ca tche r Thul'm an Munson
the cold.
helped Hun ter somewhat by
"I know I'm not a cold nailing Foster attemP.ling to
weather . hitter, " he said. steal second, but then Johnny
"Back In '721was playing for Bench doubled to left-center ,
Three Rivers up In Canada . It Cesar Geronimo wa lked and
was so cold at the start of the Dave Concepcion singled
season I was wearing work home the second run ol· the
glbves. I hit .1~0 ·the first inn ing. A sacrifice fl y by
month. I thought I'd lost my Griffey later gave the Reds a
ability to hit. I figured my 3.Q lea~ .
career was over. But then it
warmed up and I wound up
hitting .322."
'
Many players struggled
lllrough the night In long
underwear and Johnny Bench
summed it for a lot of them, 1
"Sonday night baseball in 30
degree weather. I don 't like

Griffey got Into scoring degree weather, but I don't
position for Perez thanka to care about the cold ,n insisted
his quickness. He reached Rose. "I'm just here to play
secorid after Yank shortstop ball._I went to spring training
Fred Stanley threw wide !D
first trying to nail the
This Week's
Insisting he felt "warm" at speedster on a high hopper.
Ohio College
"Griffey getting to secoQd
the
plate
despite
Football Schedule
temperatures In the high 30s, was another example of the
United Press International
Saturday
Perez he~ted up all of chilly way the Reds force llle issue
Riverfront Stadium late - pressure you all the time," Purdue at Ohio St.
Bowl ing Green et Miami
Sunday night with a sizzling noted Morgan . "Griffey's Eastern
M ichigan at Akron
" game-wlnnlllg single for the speed forced Stanley to hurry Kent St . at Virginia Tech
his throw. We're always Wi ll iam &amp; Mary at O~i o Univ.
Cincinnati Reds.
T oled o at Oay t_on
·
forcing
the issue."
And Perez' clutch hit really
And Griffey figured it was Ashland a t Sl ippery Rock
put the heat on the Yanks.
IPa.)
, The New Yorkers llmped likely Perez would continue Central St. at Eastern Illinoi s
back home todsy down :&gt;AI In to force the issue.
Youngstown St. at Villanova
"It seeli)S every time I'm Capital at Ohio Norther n
games, deep In the pressure
cooker against the red.!Jot oo second with Perez at hat Heidelberg at M uskl ngum
Wooster at Wittenberg .
Reds, who are threatenlllg W it's au~matic he drives me Baldwin-Wallace ~ t Ohi o
sweep the Yanks In four in," said Griffey. 0 He just Wesl eyan
·straight just like they tries to hit llle ball hard. He's Otterbe in at Denison
Onlnahed off Philadelphia In the toughest man at bat , in Marietta at Mount Un ion
' Grove City { Pa. I at Ken Yon
lllree straight In llle National that situation."
Bluffton a t Hanover (Ind .)
Despite the two wins at Findlay at Ea rlham lind .)
League playoffs .
Perez personally gave the home, \(eds manager Sparky Wilmington at Taylor (Ind .)
Reds viclory No, 2 Sonday Anderson still apparently Genev~ (Pa . ) at Cas e
Western
·
night. With the seore tied ~ isn't all that confident about _Wash . &amp; Jeff (Pa .l at Hirc1ro
and two out in the bottom or . winning at Yankee Stadium.: Thiel ( Pa .) at John Carroll it."
· . the ninth, Perez stroked a He said after Sunday night's
' Single to •core Ken Griffey win he still iS sticking with his
from second base with the earlier predlctiiln that the
• wInn'mg run.. "·
series will go seven games.
And, the Reds players were
"When I got to the plate I
didn't feel the cold,'' Perez rather subdued in the
said, ignorlllg temperatures clubhouse after Sunday
in the high 311&lt;1. "It was wann night's win.
Why?
for me. I hit llle ball so good I
"Because even if we sweep,
didn't feel a thlllg.
westUlhave
two more to go,''
with the percentages. When
"I knew we had the winning
By GENE cADDES
answered
Morgan.
"!feel the
run on second base and I
Billy came out, he said, 'do
UP! Sporta Writer
lalew· I had lo get him in. I same as I did before the
CINCINNATI (UP!) - .lim you want to walk this guy.' I
was looking for a fastball and ·aeries started, even more ~~catfish" Huntr and said , 'yes.' He said, 'how are
that's what I got (from losing confident.
manager Billy Martin you going UJ pitch the next
pitcher Catilsh HlUiter.)"
agreed. They had to play the guy?' And I said 'away.' "
· Perez, who went 0-15
Griffey reached second
percentages,
through the first four World
when
he hit a slow bouncer to
That nieant walk Joe
Series games a year ago , Is
Morgan and take their Yankee shortstop Fred
off to a sizzling start against
chances on getting Tony Stanley, who threw wildly
the Yankees - lllree hits
Perez, considered by HlUiter past first baseman Chris
Saturday and two more
as the Cincinnati Reds' "best Chambliss kod into the Reds'
Sunday night,·
dugout ..
-9- - - · clutch
hitter."
Reds manager Sparky - - - -Oct.
·
But, Hunter refused to put
It turned out tD be the
Anderson said there couldn't
Sat. Afternoon Junior
wrong decision, as Perez sent the blame on Stanley.
Nile Owls
" 46- 2
have been a better hitter at Road
"It wasn't his . fault, n'
Runners
24-24 a line drive over shortstop
the plate In Sunday night's Super Stars
Hunter
said in Stanley 's
24-24 Fred Stanley's head, easily
tense situation !han Perez. Gutter Busters
24-24 scoring Ken Griffey willl the defense, "I just made a bad
"For 10 straight years he's Bowlin~ Stones
20-28 winning run 1n the Reds' 4.,'! pitch to end llle game . I got
Barons
6-42
had over 90 RB!s," pointed Red
High game - Bob Ha~~y . wii! In the second game of the. llle ba llln the wrong place on
out Anderson. "He's probably 190 ; Bill Jeffers, 180.
· World Series Sunday night. Perez. I wanted to pilch him
aslo\llh as any man with the
High series - Bob DeMoss. · "He's (Per.. ) probably away and I threw it right over
wlnnlDc run on base."
449 ; Bob Haggy, 445.
tllelr best clutch hitter,'' said the plate.
Beamed teammate Joe
Team Game - Nile Owls, HIUI!Alr , "but you've got tog~ "As soon as he hit it, I said
Morgan about Perez, "Some 941.Team Series - Nite Owls ,
tD myself, 'Oh, hell, I know
guys' adrenatin flows better 2,697.
it's going to he tough." AB it
with men on base and Tony Ia
turned out, .leftfielder Roy
Pomefoy Bowling Lanes
a great clutch hitter."
White didn 't have a chance to
"""·
Oct. 2
catch
the ball or throw
Sat. Afternoon Jr.
Griffey out at the plate .
Saturday's
Nlte Owls
38
Ollio Coll011e
H\Uiter, who was touched
Road Runners
24 - CINCINNATI (UP!) Football Scores
Super Stars
22
for
eight hits In the first four
United Press International -· Gutter Busters
16 Rookie Pat Zachry will pitch innings but settled down to
Bowling Stones
1•. for the Cincinnati Reds and
Ohio State 30 Wisconsin 20
Akron 3 Ball State 0
Red 'Barons
• Dock Ellis will hurl for the retire 12 Reds In a row at one
Ash land 30 Fairmont State
High Individual qame .
New York Yankees when the stretch, said he had trouble
(W Val 7
Bruce Fisher, 161 ; second Worid Series switches to. with the mound at Riverfront
Baldwln,Wollace 23 Otterbein high Individual game - Bob y k , Stadi f th th ' d Stadium. ·
an ee
urn or e "
Ha•ggy, 1.9 '
12
"I couldn't get u:;ed w the
·~ Bethany (W. Va.l 22 Case
High series - Bob,Haggy, game Toesday nignt.
~. Western 7
mound," said Hunter,
441 ; secon9 high series . Zachry, a right· hander,
• Bowling Green 17 Kent State Bruce Fisher, 393.
ed
d ·h
Team high game - Gulter post a 14-7 recor Wit a admitting he !elt he was
~ 13
'
'
·Busters, 741, team high series 2.74 earned run average this within ooe batter of being
"1 Capital 20 Heidelberg 0
season and was the winning removed from tile game on a
Carnegie-Mellon 36 John - Gutter Busters - 2,0)1.
I' carroll o
'
pitcher In the second game of couple o! occasions. "Af!Alr I
Clntlnnatl !6 Tulsa 7
Monday Night Mixed
the Reds' three.game sweep got a hole dug, I could land In
' Hanover lind.) 24 Defiance 3 ~~W L of llle Philadelphia Phillies In the same spot every time.''
Team No. 4
44 • 12
: "'' Kenyon 52 Oberlin 0
Hunter,
who
beat
i ·~ Marietta 25 Denison 7
Team No.6
42 14 llle NatiooM League playoffs.
• Marshall 9 Dayton 0
Team No. 1
26 30
Ellis, also a right.!Jander, Cincinnati twice In the 1972
1
; , Musklngum 2A Wooster 0
Team No. 3
24 32 was 17-8 durlllg the regular World Series as a member of
24 32
•~ Ohio University 28 Miam i 14 Team No. 5 ·
Team No. 2
8 48 season after having been the Oakland A's, said he felt
~ Ohio Wesleyen 10 Mount
acquired from the Pittsburgh this year's Reds' team was
High
series
Moses
'·' Union 7
Norman, 542; lynn Shuler,
;;. Tar,lor (Ind.) !4 Bluffton 7
Pirates last winter. Ellis also better offensively.
1 Th el (Pa.) 10 Hiram 7
SOl ; Larry Hendricks, 432. won -the third game of the , "When you have (Juhnny 1
: • Waynesburg (Pa.) 17 Findlay
High series -,- Myrtle
I ,. 6
Norman, 404; Bess Henricks, American League playoffs Bench hatting seventh ,'' said
Hunter, "you know they've
against Kansas Cily.
' '• Western Mlchlgen .34 1oledo
3811; Naomi Floyd, 385 .
~ ~ 21
Bob • This will be Ellis' second got a heckuva hi tUng lineup ."
· High game ' ' Wilmington 21 An'derson Southern, 209; M oses Nor· appearance In World Series
Hunlcr said 'he fell &gt;Lrong
man, 193; Moses Norman ,
:~ (lnd.)O
,
at
the end of the game.
play.
He
was
the
losing
• , Wittenberg 30 Ohio Northern !87.
"'!
felt like I could haw
pitcher
for
Pittsburgh
In
tho
High game - Bess Hen !• 24
, Youngstown St. 33 Morehead drlck5. 146; Myrtle Norman , first. game of the 1971 Series pitched all night, bot, as it
l !Ky.) St. 7
' 141 ; Naomi Flovd, 137.
agaln•t B'altlmore.
·
1urned out, I didn't have to.' '
4

l

BtU

FLETCHER

!

PH. 992-7155

50 21
4 120

'

4 o 11

Bench c

4

Geroni mo cf
Cncpclon ss
Norman p
Bii Hnghm p
Total ·

"Seemeroi

120

2 10 0
4o l 1

llomeownen
InsuranCe from
State Farm- tbe

0 0 0·O

oo oo

IS 4 10 4

out w hen w inni ng r un
scored.
New York
000 , 100. 201)-3

Cincinnati

E -

Powell Sl,

1251

M iddleport , Oh io

un pble to C'apitalize on
scoring opporlunitii.'S- most Two

11

it

NEWYORK
Ployor
ob r h bl
Rivers cf
50 00
RWl\lle If
~ o 1o
M unson c
_. 1 1 1
Plnlella rf
4o2o
Chambllst b
• o 2o
G Nettle! lb
40 I l
E Maddox dh
3 'o 0 0
~~~~~~ 2b
~~~
F Stantons
3 111
Hun ter o
0 n oo
Tot al
3! 3 ' l
Player C IN C INNAT ~b r h bi
Rose 3b
4 oo o
Gr iff ey rt
; toI
Morgan 2b
40 1 0

starter Fred N orman and T ~er e z lb
Dnessen d h
brought on ~o ck BillIngham, ' GFoster 11

elected UJ walk Morgan nnd
pitch to Perez.
"I won't second guess my- - ~' I respect Perez as a
self," said Sta nley. "He hitler, "
sa id
Martin ,
ex plainiug U1e strategy, "but
I'd still raUier pltch to him
than lhe olher goy

~pset

Kuhn.
As the temperature
steadily dropped , Yank
outfielder Elliott Maddox
recaited the 1961 World Series
between the Yanks and Reds.
"'nlat's when baseball was
played in the daytime , but
'that was before Roone
Arledge was commissioner,"
said Maddox. (Arledge is an
executive for ABC television
sports, which carried some
night playoff games, bui NBC
iS televising the seliesc)
Although a lot of the
players complained , hotblooded Pete Rose laughingly
tried to make the best of it.
''Cold weather!" Rose
yelled right before game
time. "It's all In your mind and your liands and feet.
·"Sure, I'd rather play In 95

After that, though, the cold ,
wca tller plus Hunter's sudden
effectiveness, ke!ll tile Reds'
In check· while the Yankees
began pecking away at the
lead. In the fourth, they
scored lhcir first run oo
singles by Munson, Olris
Chru11bllss and Gralg Nettles.
And in tile seventh they tied it
on a single by Willie
Randolph, a double into the
left field corner by Stanley, a
single by Roy White and
MlUison 's infield out. White's
single knocked oul Reds
1

~largat~

- olo ooo 001-4

F. Stanley. DP -

Cincinnat i I , ~OP New
York 7, Clnc Jnntt ti 10. 2b Driessen , Bench, F . Stanley .
3 b - M or gan. SB - Morgan,
Conce pc ion. ; SF - GrlffPv
ip h r er bb sa
Hunter (.LO· I ) 8 2-3 10 -4 .3 4 SNorma n
{! 1 3.933 12

Blll inghm IW. l-01

· · ·~~~

.... u

A

1 2-

3 0·0 0 0

T- 2.33. A- 54,816.

blooper power." moaned

Mm'lin. "We're down. but
we 've just gutta comr buck in
our own bltll park.

•

0

Series '76 schedule

SPECIAL

Uniled Pre ss Internation a l

All Times EOT·

Ci nCi nna ti leads New York , 2-

0
Oct. 16 -

Ci nci n1 1a li N.L. 5
New Yor k A L. 1
Oct . 17 - Ci nci nna ti N.L. 4
New York A.L J

Oc t. 19 - Cincinna ti N.L. a t

New York A.L. . 8: 30 p.m .
Oct. 20
Cincinna ti N.L. a t
New Yor k A. L. . 8· 30 p.m .
x-Oc l. 21- Cincinnati N.l . a t

New Yo r k A.L.. 8:30 p.m .
x-Oc l. 23 -· New York A.L. a t
Cinc inna ti N.L .• 1: 00 p .m .
New York A.l .

. x-Oc l. 24 -

at

Ci nci nnati N.L .. 1· ou p m .
x -if necessary

F11ct.~

OCT. 18 THRU OCT. 24

.

SLOPPY JOE
FRENCH FRIES
MED. SZ. DRINK

99~

FRENCH FRIES ......... 25t

&amp; Figures

CIN CINNATI UPI - Focts
and fi gures on th e second
ga m e of the World Ser ies
be t we en the New York
Yank ee s An d Cinci nna ti

Reds.
Att endance - 54,816. ·
·T o ta l Receip ts - $6 15,270 49 .
Comm ission er 's Sha r e -

$91,290.57.

Playe r s' Sha re -

Phol:'8

McClure's

992-5248

·DAIRY ISLE
Middleport,
Ohio

$313,787.95.

Leagues' and Cl ubs' Share s5 2. ~W .

SPeciaLs

Had to play

percentages

BOWLING

PL.ASTJC

RCOF CEMENT

.

.

''

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u

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An ospholt ·bose od hesrve lhol
won' t crock or cru mble. Ur, e on
roof, meto! yullenng ond flosh

shingles and roll roofing. Seals
s,-null )eoms ond noll holes. Dries lo
solid, wo terprool coot

1ngs Gives tovoh, elastic seol

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ONE GAllON
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Zachry will
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roof and gutter. Cut ond press
rnfo ploce

16W' X lB'It "
aluminum ¥tnt.

~;~E 147

!

SALE

PRICE

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.
The Department Store of Building Since 1918

397'

�•

•.

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, OcU8,!9'16

.Cow oys drop first tilt 11
~ri.J.

49en !3, Salola 3:
Jim Plunkett threw a 54yard TD. pass to Gene
Washington and 17-yarder tn
Wilbur Jackson arid Tony
Leonard returned a punt 60
yards for a score in San
F rancisco's rout of New
Orleans. The 49ers dropped
Saints quarterbacks seven
limes to run their total sacks
In the' last three games to 23.
They have allowed only nine
points in that span.
Raiders 17, Bronc011 10:
Ken Stabler threw a 46yard TD pass to Cllff Branch
and Pete Banaszak plunged a
yard for a score to lead
Oakland over · penaltyplagued Denver. The Broncos
ralUed with 26 seconds left
when
Steve
Ramsey
completed passes to Otis
Armstrong and Haven Moses
but time ran out after
Armstrong's 17-yard fllll to
the Raiders' 25.
Chargers 30, Oilers Z7 :
Dan Fouts threw a 13-yard
TO pass to Dwight McDonald
and an 81-yarder to Charlie
Joiner tp spa'rk San Jjjego's
upset of Houston. Dan
Pastorini threw three TD
passes, including 54 and 67
yarders to K.en Burrough, In a
losing effort.
Ram8 20, Bears 12:
";
Lawrence McCutcheon·,
whose thirdi&gt;eriod fwnble set
up Chicago's only TD, burst
!6 yards for a score with ~ .:31
gone in the last quarter to lift
lAs Angeles past the Bears.
Monte Jackwn intercepted
· lhreo Bob Avellini passes for
the Rams, two of them in the
last period.

super catch," Landry said .

Sport Parade ·

' '

•

Dy MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Spotis Editor

NEW YORK 1UPi j - Before he even was called in, Tony
Perez was.ready for some bad news.
r-Ie wasn 't m Bob Howsmn 's priva te office five minutes when
· the presiden t and chief executive officer of the Cincinnati Heda
·got to tile point and told the big Cuban first baseman what he
had on his' mind .
,
It wasn't something·Howsum enjoyed doin~, and he tmd to
get Perez' . rmission·- first bcfon• he could do it, but he was
thinking of ti111ding him 10 another club.
Tony Per e~ listened quietly. He lu1d been in the Reds'
organization 17 years _and had mude many friends in it, never
dwciHng much on tllc thought he might have to leave them
some day, but he l'cn lizcd tl1a1 w:~s always u· possibility. Now
that possibility w.JS about to be come reality. What could he do
about it? Not a thing.
i\s a boy iu his nati\l·c Cam~l fJtJ'Cy, Cuba, his father had taught
him gtown ~n never cry . Nut un the outside :Jnyway. Inside,
that'''"' di ent. Nobody could see it, and inside Tony Perez
was crying, cause he considered the Reds U1e same way he
dues his fnmily and there is nobody in the world better to his
fa mily th:~n Tony Perez.
·"You lwve been with us alon~ lime, 10 .years, and this isn't
something we like to do by any means,' ' Howsam said. "I am
nut say in~ou will bt~ trJded rot sure , hut lf we can make the
·Ue-a l we Wont, lhcJ·e is n good chm1ce you will be. You
understand, of courSe, we cunnot trade you witiwut your

·

Pete Rose broke into professiQmil baseball together with
Tony Perez at Geneva, N.Y., in lhe Class D Pony League 16
years ago and they have bt'en g~llr ie nds since then. It was
Rose who hwtg the nickname' "

,,

'

(/)

DR .A. J .STAEH LI
DR . K.H.CHU NG
OR. VICTOR" V. LIANG

~

fOR PRI CES C~l l COlLECT ==AR EA COOE (614. l""71

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Co ngr.l lul.lti ons, Columbia Cas Customers.
Th rough vol untary conservati~n efforts, residential and
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Traffic accidents art often
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Maybe your mind 1.1

DUTTON'S DRUG STORE
I
I
I
I

Falcons

RJR KEEPING AN
ACCIDENT FROM
HAPPENING

•..SENIOR CITIZENS

\

DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE

I

In 1974, the Watergate
coverup trial jw-y heard a
tape recording, in which
President Nixon told aide
John -Dean to try to stop the
Watergate burglary
investigation before lt
lmpllcated White House
personnel.

edge by

BEST POLICY

SENIOR
CITIZENS!

\

-. Pere'l is father -confessor to all the other Latin pl.yers with
the Rc'&lt;is.lf they have any kind of problem, they go to hlm. He
counsels !hem, helps U1em and encourages them.
" If I t'Om e late to the ballpark sometime , he'll s~y to me ,
'C'mon now, Chief, you have to get here earlier,"' said center
fie lder Cesar Geronimo, who js from U1e Dominican Republic .
Dave Concepcion, who Is frmn Venezuela, rooms with Perez.
"He helps me in_a ~undre~l ways," said the ~eds' slender
shortstop. "Maybe I ·go oh~for -four some day and I start
worrying. He says 'Don't wohy, tomorrow is another day ."'
That's what has U1c Yankees worried, too.
·

j

Chief• 28, Dolpilfu 17 (ot):
Jan Stenerud's 34-yard
field goal with 17'seconds left
in a rainy overtime pushed
Kansas City o\ier Miami.
Garo Yepremlan'l 27-yard
field goal tied the gwne for
Miami with nine seconds left
in regulation. It was the third
straight loss for the Dolphin&amp;,
their longest since 1970, record.
Coach Doli Shula's first year
Ball State lost lts second
with the club.
straight after holding an 11·
Seahawb 13, Buceaneon 10: game winning streak when
Jlm Zorn threw a 1li-yard Jim Embick's 23-yard field
TD pass to Sam McQIUum goal in t~ third quarter gave
and John Leypoldt kicked two Akroo a :Hl nonconference
field goals as Seattle victory.
Akron
also
outlasted Tampa Bay in a intercepted three PllS$eS and
duel of previolllly winless . stopped the Car.dlnalB at the
expansion clubs. Zorn four yard Une in the same
connected with McCullum In quarter.
the second period alter the
Ohio, another contender at
Bucs had taken the lead on a
first-period field goal.

4-1 In the MAC, had lltUe
trouble handling winless
defending champion Miami
23-14 at Athens.
Junl&lt;r quarterback Andy
Vetttr scored one tnuchdown
and threw for another .tn Phll
Buckner. Other SC&lt;I'eS were
by taUback Kevin Babcock
and defensive back Joe
Callen l"ith a 30-yard
intercepllon return.
Jn' the weekend's other
conference matchup, backs
Jerome Parsell ' and Keith
Roglen
scored
two
touchdO'ti'N each as Western
Mlchlgan outlasted winless
Toledo to take a 34-21 declalon
in Kalamazoo. WMU Is now 22 in league play.
Two other !tams were
Involved' In nonconference
action. Quarterback Pete
Kraker passed 19 yards to
Jallll!S Lools to give Northern
Dlinols lta first victory of the
year, 7-3, over I1linol1l State.
Northern hack loflke PauU
ran for 123 yards in the game.
At Mount Pleasant, Central
Michigan kept a homecoming
crowd on edge until Mose
Rison ran two yards for a
· touchdown with 1:27 left to
give the · Chippewas a 111-13
win over Jndlana State. The
score capped a comeback
from ._a 13-0 halftime dellclt.

on your savings?

......

watch. n

I

four oeaions. Bowling Green
had loll it.l fourth MAC game,
recardls who It played.
But Saturday all that changed, thanks to second half
heroics of Mark Miller and
Dave Preston.
Trailing 10-3 after•Art lle5t
scored from three yards out
for Kent State, Bowling
Green got ltdlnrt spark when
MJJler boiled li6 yar&lt;!s BrOI,IIId ·
left end to even the score•
Kent State took the lead
later on Paul Marchese's 32yard field goal. But then the
Falcons got the ball and four
crucial Kent State penalties
to put .the ball on the one,
where Preston took It In for
the winning touchdown with
2:26 left in the galflC.
The victory kept Bowling
Green .at... the MAC with a 40 conference mark, followed
-by Ball State wlth a ~

Browns

PREVOOION
•
IS lHE

g" on him and now all the

Reds ca ll Per.:&lt; ." Doggie" or "Bi Dog.'JjJJ of them luve t.he
big, grinning slugger who has driven in 90 or more runs for
each of lhe' last 10 seasons.
"Why did I give him that na me' '' Rose repealed a question.
"Because, he just scratches and b'Tinds it out when he has to.
Nothing boU1ers him at all. Like last year, he was oh-for-15
aga inst the Red Sox in the World Seri es and wound up hittin g
tllrec horne runs."
Rose. Shook his he8d in udmil'ation .
"!t's always in the papers how they're gonria trade hlm here,
trade him U1erc;a nd a !otta n!her guys would. go crazy. !'lot
him, lhoughtfle just doesn't worry about anything. And when·
he 's in one ' Uwse streaks of his, he's a beautiful hiller to

,·

The Mid-American Conference croWn Jbay still be up for
grabs, but the stubborn
Bowling Green hllllecoming
jlnx has flnaUy been broken.
'lbe Falcons entered Satur·
day's contest against Kent
Stale with a record of .
homecoming lolises against
the Golden Flashes ·the past
three years. Also, In the last

1--------:

Rc'&lt;isldils 20, Lions 7:
Washington's defense came
permission. "
up with key interceptions by
Tonv Perez said he understood .
Pat Fischer and Joe
He f,ave lli.s consent -on one condj_tion. If he was going to he Lavender and added five
tr :tdcd, ho.• l"iSl~rl upun r oing with 11 contender. He didn't want quarterback sacks to defeat
Detroit . The inlerceptons led
(.{) hil\'1' ld :·.:m•t.:lll \J\.Pt :Jg.nin witb ·some nou-contendiog ball
to a field goal and a
i •b~. Nut at 32.
"'That wa' two winters a~o and although the Rt'&lt;ls nearly did touchdown after first half
1 swing a dea l for him with the Yankees involving Gralg Nettles, ,'l'oreless tie. Joe Thelsmann,
the trade fell through aml Perez stili wears a Cincinnati subbing for sore-armed Bill
KOmer, passed for the Skins'
tmjform.
I
}'or that, the RedS are in fine shape to become the first TO.
N ~tiona l League club in 54 years wwin two consecutive World
CHampionships.
'
They'Ve beaten the Yankees in the first. two games of the
World Sef.tes &amp;J far and the one chiefly responsible for .that is
Tony PerC'&lt;. He had a double mid two singles in their opening 5. I vi~tor,¥ and he cmne up with two more hits in Sunday's 4-3
dccisiOI\; wirming the game witl1 his iinc single to !ell field off
Catfish Hunter with two out in the ninth inning.
"He's the best clutch RBI man in baseball," offered Pete
Hose in U1e Reds' clu~house after it was all over. "Right now
you'd ruther have him up•.tHCl'&lt;&gt; than anybody else in the
world.''

Ro.adap
Ulllled Preu lalenlalloul

In other NFL action
Sunday :
Steelers 23, Bengals 6:
Franco Harris bad an NFL
record 41 carries .for 143
yards and two TDs to lead
Pittsbw-gh to an upset of
Cincinnati that tightened the
AJ&lt;' C Central race. Harris,
who broke former Penn State
teammate Lydell Mitchell's
1 record of 40 rushes, scored
twice oo one-yard runs. The
Steelers for ced three
turn overs and dumped
Bengal quarterback Ken
Anderson five limes.
Colts 31, Bllls 13:
Mil£hell pqshed Baltimore
ahead with a six-yard run and
Be.rt Jones added two short
TD passes as a.the ·colts .
downed Buffalo ond spoiled
Jim Ringo's coaching debut .
The Colts are now 5-l and ·
lead the AFC East.
VIkings 24, Giants 7:
Fran Tarkenton threw for
two TDs, including a 41·
yarder to Chuck Foreman,
and became the NFL's first
quarterback with 3,opo career
completions as the Vikings
beat the winless Giants. ·
f'oreman had 2111 total yards,
118 yards on eight receptions
and 83 yards an 23 .rushes.

1

Falco.n s top MAC

MJd.Amerleu Cllllfe,_,

came latt ln the third
on two field goals."
Hart threw a 04-yard TD when the Cowboys blocked a
P"SS to Mel Gray In the punt and took over at the
second period and then put St. Cardinals' eight. Tackle Mike
Louis ahead, 14·7, in the U1ird Dawson, the Cards' No. 1
period with a four·yard !lip to draft choice, then led a
Terry Metcalf. His 17-yard goal-!lne charge that turned
TD p&amp;l,.!n the fina l period to back "Charles Young on a
Gray, who had seven cal£hes fourth-and-one plunge.
Hart then hit four passes
for J ~Z yards, put the game
for
77 yards, the last one a 17·
out of reach and sent · the
yarder
which Cowboy safety
Cowbovs, who were the
Cli
ff
Harris
.lipped Into
NFL's only unbeaten, untied
Gray's
hands
in
the end zone.
team~
' their first loss.
"That touchdown to Mel
"It
big win ~ ny Ume yuu
beat 1 Uas ," said 1 Gray. Gray should have been
"There had be&lt;n talk that intercepted," Landry said.
they're U•e best team in the "That was reaUy the game.''·
Staubach hit Drew Pearson
at 5--1. ,
Nf'L , I was ready for the
"At halftime, I was mad, ~arne ::..psyched up. I with an 11-yard TD pass with
very mad·with myself," Hart couldn't get auy higher than! a lltlle more than a minutt
said. ' tT'ht!:'re were some was today .11
left in the game and Dallas
dumb moves on my part. You
Hart hit 22-of-32 passes and moved to the St. U!uis 21 In
have two optio,ns and you Dallas quarterback Roger the final seconds before a
wiSh you had nm the second Staubach, who entered the desperation pass bounced off
one. That way even if lhos&lt;J game with a 71- 1 t-omplction the hands of BUly JOf! Dupr..
two interceptions hau been percentage, h1t, for him, a in the end zone as the clock
incompletions, it W&lt;Juld have . ~bpar 21-&lt;&gt;f-42.
ran out.
!Jeen at least six points more ·hThe kl!Y poinl in the game
"It would have been a
BY JOE CARNICEW
~ IPI E;xecutlve Sports Editor
't doosn't pay to get Jim
1rl uo g~- The Du llus
owboys
rned that 111&lt;!
l1111'd way nday.
·
The Cowboys picked off two
lf Hart's p11S$es on their oneyard line just before halftime
and the St. U!uis quarterback
W~~S fuming . Hart &gt;•me back
in the second half to finish
v1 ith 346 yards passing,
including lhr.. touchdowns,
as he led the Cardinals to a 21·
17 victory over Dallas that
tied the clubs for first place in
the National Conference Ea't

fl- !ho l.Jal1y lllntinl.l, W~l'1mlroy;u., Monday, l.le\. lt,me

·-.~~:?.~t~~:~(.~:z:;:-~_:;~~.z~.::~t~Jz::t:;,::::;:*=m~::::3:~~;~~:=:~~f.@~_s~*~~~~~?~::~-::::8:::-rf.t:pA,
. &gt;:~·
lfwo-.«o:..«::W~M~msf7..-u~.-;o;o;.-mw-.::o,-:,...-;7/.-...-,..•,.....:.:.»'l·...W~....-nw..! ....~·..:·~dh""ff~WZ&lt;&amp;. ~·

....., """

The lUdlng AVlnp pill• 81'e 81 the IMdlngiiiYingl blnlt

ATLANTA (UP! )
Cle'4and Coach Forrest
Gregg delivered a five-word
aermon after his BrOWIUI' »17, etme.frQII-behind victory
over the oft-beaten. AUanta
Falcona:
"Thank God for Greg

Pruitt."

·•

Harris too much for Bengals Adyocacy program outlined
PITrSBtiRGH (UP! ) Steeler Franco Harris set
several-rec&lt;rds Sunday with
a 143-yard, two-touchdown
performance against
Clncipnati, but all he could
talk about was the team
efftrl that upset the Bengals,
23-6, and broke Pittsburgh's
three1Jame losing streak.
Harris set a National
Football League mark for
ruslles with · 41 and became
the Steelers' au:tlme leading
grouild-gainer, ahead of John
Henry Johnson, with a career
total of 4,484 yards,
-But Harris said the reason
he fell the game was the
biggest in hls flve-year

How the " Personal AdAnderson off balance. He vocacy, " or "Opera lion
completed only me-third of Special Friend" program
hls passes and was works In Meigs County 1B
Intercepted twice, by Glen explained below.
Edwards a nd Jae~ I.amhert,
Personal Advocacy ls a
who also recovered a way In which concerned
Cincinnati fumble.
individuals volunteer to help
The Steeler coaches called those who are retarded,
the plays for Kruczek, and cerebral palsied or epileptic
they were conserva tive, ln the community, the
relying on Harris' bu!Ush volunteer or advocate serves
spurts up the middle. But the in a one·t&lt;Hllle capacity.
team awarded ((ruczek the
Advocates are drawn from
game baU in hooor of hl.s · emotionally mature, ' stable
confident, steady perfor - · adults in the community who
mance.
express a concern for the
"This ls the biggest honor disa bled. Mo st volunteers
I've ever had in my life," had had no p~vlous exKruczek said. "A lot of perlence or knowledge of
guys-'- Franco, l.ambertdevelopmental disabilities.
had super games, They could They come .simply with a
haveg!venit toanyofthem." desire to help persons wlth ·
Kruczek predicted "I think mental retardation, cerebral
..._ we're _on OW' way," but palsy, or epilepsy ; a desire to
Harris reminded ever)lone learn more about these
that the two--time Super Bowl handicaps; and a willingness
champions are still ln last to receive training .and
place in the AFC's Central guidance in their volunteer
Division.
work. ·

career was not because of the
Harris' modesty was
records but "because of the appropriate in COI!Stdering
team's circumstances." ' He the aU-around lmproved and
was referring to the losing soum play of l&gt;oth offense
streak and the fact the team and defense.
was quarterbacked by rookie
"The whole team feels a
Mike Kruczek, maklrig his ·Ultle better this week," said
first pro start in place of Coach OIUck Noll. ' 'We're
injured Tury Bradshaw.
proud of the way Mlke
The win put the Steelers' Kructek played, and we're
record at 2-4, while the ·proud of the way the team
Bengal$ fell to 4-2.
rallled around him. The
''It reaUy was nice to see a offense \lldn't t"*e many
team play together for four mistakes _lhls week, ·anc! tbe
· quarters~" Harris said .. " It defense dld a fine jilb of
felt good. I was glad I could holding a strong team."
he a part ofit ... We just had to
The defense throtUed the
win this ooe. A losa again Bengals' ground game,
today could have been holding them to 75 yards
disastrous;"
rushing, and a strong pasa
rush kept quarterback Ken

Pruitt,
the
former
Oklahoma flash who bas
establlahed himself as one of
the premier offensive
performers in pro football,
ran for 191 yards arid two
touchdowns Sunday, and also
caught three passes.
"I was kidding Pruitt the
other day, except I wasn't
reaUy kidding," Gregg said
after the game. "I tnld hlm,
'Greg, you haven't·had a HIDyard lillY yet. It's al&gt;out time
-, you had one.' I hall meant It,
and haH didn't. I guess be
Coach · John Milhoan's
GaiUpoUs and Meigs
took me at my word."
Gallipolis Blue Devils edged completed the regulation tilPruitt's touchdown runs Coach Bob Oliver's Meigs
were for only I and 2 yards. Marauders In a " sudden hole tournament with
321
scores.
But he set another touchdown death" playoff to capture the Identical
NelSonville-York
was
third
with a classic 64-yard run school's lOth Class AA
with
327,
Jackson
fourth
at
that might have gone another District golf championship at
333;
New
Lexington
fifth
at
19 for a score ll Falcon Chillicothe late Saturday
337
and
Washington
Court
cornerback Frank Reed afternoon.
House last with a 339.
hadn't "had the angle on
The victory a11ured
Coach Milhoan sald the
me."
Gallipolis of a berth ln the "sudden death" playoff was
He also cootributed a. ~ 197f Class AA Oblo State Golf
yard burst up the middle to Toul'llllmenl, to be held al something to behold.
Here's whal happened.
set up the game winning Ohio Slate University In
0~
~he last hQle of
touchdown which he scored Coluinbus thlB weekend.
regulation
· play, Gallla 's
after time ran out In the third
It wlll be Gallipolis' 11th Dave Rice needed a par 5 for
perlnd. Reed ~ught hlm that appearance ln the stale
time, too, nine yards from tile tournament since 1938. The a 40 to tie Meigs, ·but instead
goal because "I saw one guy Glilllans advanced to the sank his third shot and had a
to tie the Marauders at
and he look the fake, but I state meet in 1938 as district six
321.
•
didn't see hlm (Reed)."
runnerup,
then
moved
to
the
After the- first three men
The underdog Falcons,
playing under a new coaching · big show wtth district tities in came In, Gallla was eight
reglme and without quarter- 1939, 1940, 1942, 1962, 1963, strokes behind, bUt with Jeff
back Steve Bartkowski (lost · 1964, 1965,1971, 1974 and 19'16. Clary's 40 and Rice's 41,
for the season wlth a knee Jn golf, there Is no regional GAHS gained a tie after
leading the field by four
injury),' were inside the tournament competition.
Gallipolis'
Rusty
Saunders
strokes
follo)VIng the first
Browns' 40 three times in the
tied
Jackson's
Jeff
Yerian,
nine
boles
of play.
final period, but cQuldn~ cash
and
Meigs'
Dale
Browning
On
the
first
"sudden death"
ln.
·
and
Chuck
Follrod
with
a
'
, The first two 'times, they
four-over-par 77 . in lhe hole, Gallia's Rusty Saun·
punted. The third, they were regulation
111-hole play for ders and Dave Rlce,
intercepted. ·
along with Meigs Dale
Pat Peppler, the Falcoos medslist honors.
Browning and Chuck ·Foil·
general manager who last · Then the GARS senior, In a rod
all
tied
with
Mooday took over ousted four-way playoff for In· par 4s. Meigs' Crenson Pratt
Mar!Qn Campbell's head dJvldual booon, came out on and Lance Oliver also parred.
coaching duties as weU, was top. ' Saunden and Yerian Gallia's Jeff Clary drove into
asked why he didn'ltry Nick both birdied the. flrsl bole,
Mike-Mayer field goals those and Saunders won u on the a trap and Brent Johnson
seeond bole with a par while droVe perfeclly, then put hill
first two llmes.
· second shotl2 feet away and
"Field goals at that Yerian bad 8 bogey;
sank a putt for a birdie 3.
.distance (57 and 55) didn't
Clary then got to the gr..n In
seem like good percentage
NHL S-tandings
three,
and had to sink a threeplays," said Peppler as he By United Pr ~ ss International foot putt for a bogie ~ to tie
campbell Conference
reviewed his first-ever game
Patrick Division ·
the match again.
·
as a professional head coach.
W L T Pts. GF GA
On
llie
second
bole,
Gallia's
a
S 2 0 10 25 26
"We figured if we could keep Atl~nt
NY lslndrs 4 0 1
9 20 8
them bottled up, we'd be in NY Rangers - 4 3 0 ~ 31 29 Rusty Saunden drove to the
2 3 1
5 17 n rlghl rough, Rice to the left
good positioo. We just didn't Ph i la Smythe
Divisi"on
rough . .Saunden bll bls
do it."
W L T Pfs. GF GA second' sbolslx feel away and
4 2 0
8 22 13
The kicks were fair caught Ch ic ag o
Louis
3 2 0
6 17 18 . sllllit a bllly pull for a birdie
at the 9 and 4 yard Iii)~. The · Sl
Colorado
2 4 0
&lt;1 19 21
first Ume, the Browns failed Van couver 1 4 0 2 13 24 three. Rice bit his second to
1 S 0, 2 16 28 the left of the green and
to make a first down and had M inne sota
Wales Conference
oeltled wltb a hogey five.
to punt out. The second time,
Norris Division
Both FoUrod and Browning
W
L
T
Pts.
GF
GA
they spent 10 minutes driving
Montr eat
5 2 0 10 35 16 parred the hole and It was
to the Atlanta 15 beltre losing . LOS Ang eles 3 '1 2 8 28 18
the ball with 41 seonds left to Pitt sbur gh 2 4 0' 4 20 31 tied again. Johnson and Clary
Detroit
1 3 1
3 16 18 hit their drives down the
play when Mlke Phipps Washington
1 3 1
3 111 25. middle. Crenson Pratt hil a
fumbled the snap on a field
Adams Division
W L T Pts. GF GA good drive, ' but It landed In
goal attempt.
Boston
5 1 o 10 J O 19 the right rough beneath a
Klni
McQullken, Buffalo
2 J 0
4 13 16
1 2 2
4 ' 21 23 Spruce tree. He could not hil
Bartkowski's replacement, Toro nto
1 2 ~
4 17 17 II out and had lo take a one
quickly passed the Falcons Cl eveland
Saturday's Results
stroke penalty and drop the
down tn the B~owns' 35 but Montreal 7 NV Rangers 4
hall. He hit on the green and
Cleveland
II
NY
Is
lander
s
4
then was intercepted by Philadelphia 5 Toronto 5
two-putted
for a bogey flv~
Thorn Darden.
Pittsburgh 4 Detro it 3
while
Oliver
parred for a
St.
Louis
6
Vancouver
3
McQuilken hlt on 11 of 14
Buffalo 2 Mir:mesota 1
team
Iota!
of
nine.
passes in the first half, Los Angeles 7 Washington 1
Clary shot his second shot
(Only ga mes scheduled)
, looking especially sharp in
Sunday's Resulh·
!8 feet from the pin, then
the second period when the NY Rang
ers 4 Co lorado J
Johnson's ball landed jast left
Falcons overcame a 1.4-0 Philadelph ia 7 Detroi t 4
of
the green.
6 Buffalo s
deficit to gain a 14-14 halftime Atlanta
Boston 5 Montreal 3
Johnson
chipped and It
tie. But he hit only four of 14 Chicago J Minn esota 0
ahnost
went
in for a birdie 3.
Los Ange les 6 St. Louis 2
the second half.
(Only games scheduled)
It
stopped
one
foot past the
"They weren't doing
Monday's Games
hole.
Clary
putted
thr .. feet
anything
differently
(No games scheduled )
Games
Tuesday's
short,
then
calmly
sank the
defensively in the second Vancouver at NY lslandrs
three-footer,
using
aU
the cup.
half," said McQui)ken. "We Montreal at Washington
for
the
victory.
Chicago
at
Cl
eveland
just couldn't get anything
at St . Lo uis
Besides the district trophy,
gulng with our running game Boston
(Onl y ga me.s scheduled )
Gallia
players also received
the first two downs and were
' '
individual plaques. Saunders
forced to throw long on third
got two plaques.
down.''
The title left Gallla
''It's kind of fun being down
Academy with a ~ season
on ·the sidelines," said Edinboro 25 Clar ion 20
record.
Peppler. "'lbe only thing thai Gettysb g 28 W. Marylnd 0
Grove
Cit
y
17
Geneva
8
Here are Saturday's
wasn'tfun was thai we lost. It Harvard 17 Dartmouth 10
resulls:
S\ll'e beats sitting behind a Hofstra 23 Fordham 21
Lyco ming 14 Jun iata 13
desk and
negotiating Mass.
GAHS 32t
11 RhOde !sind 7
Rusty Saunders 39-38-77
contracts."
Montcl r St . 28 Wm . Patrsn 6
Brent Johnson 40-43-83
McQuilken sliid he felt the New Hamp 34 Cent. Conn . 21
Kev Hawk 44-40-84
Nichols
34
Me
.
Maritime
33
Falcons were "surprisingly N .C. Cent 21 Delaware St. 16
Jeff Clary 41 -40-81
well prepared considering Penn St. 27 Syracuse J
Dave Rice J9,41 -80
Penn lS Lafayette 14
Total 159-162-321
what has been. going on here Pitt
36 M iami Fla . 19
Meigsl21
thla past week.
Ru tgers 28 Leh igh 21
Dale Browning 40-37-77'
Sh
ippnsbg
7
Lock
Haven
0
"There's been a tryout
Chuck Fullrod 3\1-38·77
Rock 42 Cal. ~a . 6
camp atmosphere. Our new Stppry
Crenson Pratt 41 -4t -82
S. Conn 27 USCG 6
Lance Oliver 43-42-85
coaching staff wanla tn find Trntn St. 21 Seton Hll 15
Tufts 9 Norwich 7
Mark
Gilkey 47-49-96
. out who can play and who Upsala 15 Del. Valley 9
Totals 163-158•321
can't.! gu~ that's good. But Wslyn 43 Wrcser Tech 21
. Nelsonville. York 327
y 0u get the feeling ihat Wm &amp; Mary 21 Nevy 13
Tim
Oakley 38-41 -79
Widener 26 Moravian 9
Tim Pi1ts 40·41 -81
they're looking to see who ls Willia ms 13 Bowdoin 0
Kent Fearnes -43-40-83
·going to he around ne.t )'ear. Yale 37 Columbia 6
Joe Holte! 43-41 -84
I was extremely nervous."
Rick Dane 46-43-89
·
. • South
A labama 20 Tenn . 13
Totals 164-163-327
Ala . A&amp;M 22 FISk 20
College Footbill Rtsuh:&gt;
Jackson 333
By United Press International Ga . Tech 2~ Auburn 10
Jeff
Yerian
.40-37-77
Crsn
-Nwrr.n
-41
Mars
Hll
.16
East
Brent
Wickline
44-40-84
Clemson
18
Duke
18
· Allegheny 24 wash&amp; Jeff 7
' Randy Wlls011 44·42-86
Duquesne 22 Cath U. a
Albright 48 susquhnna 7
T011y Yerian 41 -45 -86
Easl Carolina 17 VMl 3
Am Inti 20 ltho!ICll 19
Elon 38 Pr esbyterian 7
Greg Forsyth 44-43-87
Amherst 7 Bates J
Florida 33 Fl a. 51. 26
Boston Coli. 1-4 W.Va . 3
Totals 169-164-333
Georg ia 45 Vander bilt 0
Brown 28 Cornell 12
New Lexington 337
Grmblng 20 Miss. Val St. 7
Brdgewtr SI 24 W. Conn 7
Gary Wollenberg 43-39-82
Hmpdn -Sydny 15 Wash&amp;Lee 7
C.W. Post 16 Kings Pt . o
Tom Corney 43'-42-85
Howard -4 2 VIrg inia St . 15
Canlslus 35 Oswego I S
Tony Ellis 43-42-85
Kentucky 21 L SU 7
Crngle.MIIn 36 J . Ct~rrolt o

Blue Devils capture
district golf crown·

Colgate 17 Princeton 7
Delaware 2.4 Villanova 2-4
E Sfrol.idsbg. 54 Mansfld 8

'

Gregg Tillett 38--14-82 .
Gary Ftsher 43-42-85

N. W. I:,QMPTON, O.D.

Willie HaHield 43-43-86
John Moore 43-41 -89
Totals 164•175-339

OFFICE HOO~S': 1 :30 to 12, 2 to 5 (CLOSE·
AT NOON ON THURS.l- EAST COURT
ST. POMEI!Q.Y.

Washington Court House JJ9

Renlri Bonecu1ter 40·46·86

I

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This coupon g.ood for 100 Extra Top Value
Stamps with a purchase of $3.00 or more at Big
Jim's Plaza. 407 Pearl;5t., Middleport, Ohio.

,.,

I

_____
.
xou
shopw1thus
top value ••• and
Top
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Hont .,,
• lew ol the lhoullndl or hlgl&gt;quallty, brand· name Qlhl You c:1n get
lree tor Top Vo,lut Slompe.

Good Reason
To Switch!

Gifts Easy To Get?

In today's compelilive environ-·
ment. you need a good reason
lor switching stores. We_think
Top Value Stamps, and the gilts
they can be redeemed for , are a
very good reason.

You bet! ·Jf. ior example. you spend S50
a iveek at merchanls !hat give Top Value
SJ~mps. you Jill a book with Top Value
Stamps in 3 weeks _.. more than 17
books in just a year.

Make The Switch?

Holding The Line
0n Price.

We want your busine ... We're
oproving It with the ewa bonus ol
Top Value Stamps. Make lhe ewtlch
today and S1art enjoying our fine
food, low p1ices and some of lhe
wonderful gifts you get ''" tor
Top Value Stamps.

Do Top Value Stamps increase
food prices? We assure you, here
and now, that they do~'l. Some ol
our prices Vfi'Y from day 19 day .
as. they always have and always
will. As they do in every store. We
are determined to stay competitive on· price. as we always have.
You will not pay extra lor the bonus
of Top Value Stamps

How Do Top Value
Stamps Pay Off? .
In highly desirable. high quality
gifts. Thousands ot brand-name
gilts ... things !hat you wan! and
need. Thipgs you can now get
tree tor Top Value Stamps.

High Quality Gifts?
The very highest quality .. backed
by Top Va lue's· lamous 2-Way
Golden Guarantee: You can't get
beller gilts lor fewer stamps anywhale. And you must be 100%
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·.

Dave Kinsel 51 -49· 100

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WORTH

I1 TOP
.' VALUE
100 EXTRA
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STAMPS
1

· Tolals173-164-337

j

"·

OPTOMETRIST

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

Joe Morrow 44·41 -BS

l,..oulsvt 36 NE Loui siana 8
La . 'Teet\ 31 Lamar 1
M# . 17 Wake For cs 1 15

.

An . Advocate (Special noed.l and lnlenlll of bll
Friend) :
]li'Oiece, to help him edjflltio •
- Serves In a 'variety of community living. But 111001t
ways to deepen the life of the of all, the Advocate ...-- u
friend or "protege." The a friend, a " Big Brother," or
companionship he offers can "Big Sister," sharlnJ 1111
help lo give him emollonal lntereats, friendship, and
support and direction.
wannth.
- Widens the Umlled
"Special Fri. . ." hltd a
horb:ons of the protege's life bowllng part¥ for their
by involving hlm In new fr iends at the Pomeroy
actlvlUes and by challenging Bowling ~·- 'lbel'll w~
him ·to develop hts full , 2hdvocatennd their lrlenda '
potential.
· bowling. 1111 the pl&amp;n ~I the
- Helps with taslts that are advocacy to have ~r
"simple" for mOJ! people, bul bowling aeulons u a
difficult and complicated lor physical fllneaa program.
the disabled person : ~Its
such as writing a pter,
rl~ing a bicycle, or . going
A thought lor the day :
shopping.
.American poel . Joaquin
. - Can look out for the Miller sald, "The blgpll doc
has been a pup."

I·

I&lt;

.,

-

�•

•.

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, OcU8,!9'16

.Cow oys drop first tilt 11
~ri.J.

49en !3, Salola 3:
Jim Plunkett threw a 54yard TD. pass to Gene
Washington and 17-yarder tn
Wilbur Jackson arid Tony
Leonard returned a punt 60
yards for a score in San
F rancisco's rout of New
Orleans. The 49ers dropped
Saints quarterbacks seven
limes to run their total sacks
In the' last three games to 23.
They have allowed only nine
points in that span.
Raiders 17, Bronc011 10:
Ken Stabler threw a 46yard TD pass to Cllff Branch
and Pete Banaszak plunged a
yard for a score to lead
Oakland over · penaltyplagued Denver. The Broncos
ralUed with 26 seconds left
when
Steve
Ramsey
completed passes to Otis
Armstrong and Haven Moses
but time ran out after
Armstrong's 17-yard fllll to
the Raiders' 25.
Chargers 30, Oilers Z7 :
Dan Fouts threw a 13-yard
TO pass to Dwight McDonald
and an 81-yarder to Charlie
Joiner tp spa'rk San Jjjego's
upset of Houston. Dan
Pastorini threw three TD
passes, including 54 and 67
yarders to K.en Burrough, In a
losing effort.
Ram8 20, Bears 12:
";
Lawrence McCutcheon·,
whose thirdi&gt;eriod fwnble set
up Chicago's only TD, burst
!6 yards for a score with ~ .:31
gone in the last quarter to lift
lAs Angeles past the Bears.
Monte Jackwn intercepted
· lhreo Bob Avellini passes for
the Rams, two of them in the
last period.

super catch," Landry said .

Sport Parade ·

' '

•

Dy MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Spotis Editor

NEW YORK 1UPi j - Before he even was called in, Tony
Perez was.ready for some bad news.
r-Ie wasn 't m Bob Howsmn 's priva te office five minutes when
· the presiden t and chief executive officer of the Cincinnati Heda
·got to tile point and told the big Cuban first baseman what he
had on his' mind .
,
It wasn't something·Howsum enjoyed doin~, and he tmd to
get Perez' . rmission·- first bcfon• he could do it, but he was
thinking of ti111ding him 10 another club.
Tony Per e~ listened quietly. He lu1d been in the Reds'
organization 17 years _and had mude many friends in it, never
dwciHng much on tllc thought he might have to leave them
some day, but he l'cn lizcd tl1a1 w:~s always u· possibility. Now
that possibility w.JS about to be come reality. What could he do
about it? Not a thing.
i\s a boy iu his nati\l·c Cam~l fJtJ'Cy, Cuba, his father had taught
him gtown ~n never cry . Nut un the outside :Jnyway. Inside,
that'''"' di ent. Nobody could see it, and inside Tony Perez
was crying, cause he considered the Reds U1e same way he
dues his fnmily and there is nobody in the world better to his
fa mily th:~n Tony Perez.
·"You lwve been with us alon~ lime, 10 .years, and this isn't
something we like to do by any means,' ' Howsam said. "I am
nut say in~ou will bt~ trJded rot sure , hut lf we can make the
·Ue-a l we Wont, lhcJ·e is n good chm1ce you will be. You
understand, of courSe, we cunnot trade you witiwut your

·

Pete Rose broke into professiQmil baseball together with
Tony Perez at Geneva, N.Y., in lhe Class D Pony League 16
years ago and they have bt'en g~llr ie nds since then. It was
Rose who hwtg the nickname' "

,,

'

(/)

DR .A. J .STAEH LI
DR . K.H.CHU NG
OR. VICTOR" V. LIANG

~

fOR PRI CES C~l l COlLECT ==AR EA COOE (614. l""71

a:

!)

11.

zLlJ

somewher-e tllf, You're

daydreaming . Or ptri14PI

vou're Jri a hurry, so you
drive too tnt or take
chances.

There could be times
when you ' re Irritated,
uptight. Behind tht whttl
Is no place to Itt off steam .
If you're tired , restrno

wnlle driving could teed to
8 ·lono rest In e' hospital

bed .

· d

every motorist nee s

your NO . 1 priority .
our ·1 gency provides
financial protection and
service when eccldtntl
happen ... but many can be
prevented . That 's why we
sa - prevention Is the bet! .
policy .

DAl£ C. WARNER
INS.
992-2145
102 W.,...II'OY

Whdll pay you
•

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,.. - - - - - - - - - - - - :"'1
I

no mattefwhat you're lookjpg
.[orin savings or investment .
certificates...

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One or Two Day Full Dentu re
Servic e,. Partial s, Extract ions,

X·Ray

P4SSI100K S4VINOS

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~-MONTH

CEIITiflCATI

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1-YE.\R CERfiFICUE

2·YE4R CERTIFIC4TE

3•YEAR C!RTIFICATI

6~.
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4-YEAR C!RTIFIC4TE

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yOu'll find it at

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Wear-it.
You've ear11ed it.
.

•.

I

Co ngr.l lul.lti ons, Columbia Cas Customers.
Th rough vol untary conservati~n efforts, residential and
com merc ial customers of Co lumbia Cas of Ohio used ' lZ.4
per ce nt less ga s la st wint er than during the winler of '72--'73.
Fo r over three years the Cas Co mpany has been urging
you to co nserve gas. Most experts agreed that voluntary
co nservation efforts could cut natural gas consumption by
as mu ch as fifte en per cent . You have proved conservation ·
works!
·
A IZ.4 per ce nt cut in gas consumption means a lot was
sa ved. And the natural ga s that was saved was used to lessen
•.
the shortage in Ohio and help protect jobs.
·
Congratulations. Keep up the goo d work .

• ,.,.., tttrftfiJ • •,..... &lt;......

.

Z'.:j.-

.

OhioValley Bank
Why settle for lell8 than the best?
When it comes to your savings, you

on rea80nable notice of withdraW..
!'his if exactly what Ohici V,Jiey

want a fair return, the highest legaily
possible, with
a ' guarantee of
•
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Bank wanta and promilea their eli!
positors. ~ wond~r·. .uvinga# de-

safety for your funds, and aC·
cessibility to these funds

.'

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111,

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Cl

Gallloollt. Ohio ,

'you 'If SmiL-e .TomotrQ il ' If l' ou Take f:ar(' 0 j YutJr 1"ct fit

MOMJAY THROUGH FR IDAY
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·~

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good driving attitude.
Make sate, sensible driving

MIDDUPORI, 0.

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TIS TRY

•

Traffic accidents art often
uused by non-tr1fflc ,
problems.
Maybe your mind 1.1

DUTTON'S DRUG STORE
I
I
I
I

Falcons

RJR KEEPING AN
ACCIDENT FROM
HAPPENING

•..SENIOR CITIZENS

\

DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE

I

In 1974, the Watergate
coverup trial jw-y heard a
tape recording, in which
President Nixon told aide
John -Dean to try to stop the
Watergate burglary
investigation before lt
lmpllcated White House
personnel.

edge by

BEST POLICY

SENIOR
CITIZENS!

\

-. Pere'l is father -confessor to all the other Latin pl.yers with
the Rc'&lt;is.lf they have any kind of problem, they go to hlm. He
counsels !hem, helps U1em and encourages them.
" If I t'Om e late to the ballpark sometime , he'll s~y to me ,
'C'mon now, Chief, you have to get here earlier,"' said center
fie lder Cesar Geronimo, who js from U1e Dominican Republic .
Dave Concepcion, who Is frmn Venezuela, rooms with Perez.
"He helps me in_a ~undre~l ways," said the ~eds' slender
shortstop. "Maybe I ·go oh~for -four some day and I start
worrying. He says 'Don't wohy, tomorrow is another day ."'
That's what has U1c Yankees worried, too.
·

j

Chief• 28, Dolpilfu 17 (ot):
Jan Stenerud's 34-yard
field goal with 17'seconds left
in a rainy overtime pushed
Kansas City o\ier Miami.
Garo Yepremlan'l 27-yard
field goal tied the gwne for
Miami with nine seconds left
in regulation. It was the third
straight loss for the Dolphin&amp;,
their longest since 1970, record.
Coach Doli Shula's first year
Ball State lost lts second
with the club.
straight after holding an 11·
Seahawb 13, Buceaneon 10: game winning streak when
Jlm Zorn threw a 1li-yard Jim Embick's 23-yard field
TD pass to Sam McQIUum goal in t~ third quarter gave
and John Leypoldt kicked two Akroo a :Hl nonconference
field goals as Seattle victory.
Akron
also
outlasted Tampa Bay in a intercepted three PllS$eS and
duel of previolllly winless . stopped the Car.dlnalB at the
expansion clubs. Zorn four yard Une in the same
connected with McCullum In quarter.
the second period alter the
Ohio, another contender at
Bucs had taken the lead on a
first-period field goal.

4-1 In the MAC, had lltUe
trouble handling winless
defending champion Miami
23-14 at Athens.
Junl&lt;r quarterback Andy
Vetttr scored one tnuchdown
and threw for another .tn Phll
Buckner. Other SC&lt;I'eS were
by taUback Kevin Babcock
and defensive back Joe
Callen l"ith a 30-yard
intercepllon return.
Jn' the weekend's other
conference matchup, backs
Jerome Parsell ' and Keith
Roglen
scored
two
touchdO'ti'N each as Western
Mlchlgan outlasted winless
Toledo to take a 34-21 declalon
in Kalamazoo. WMU Is now 22 in league play.
Two other !tams were
Involved' In nonconference
action. Quarterback Pete
Kraker passed 19 yards to
Jallll!S Lools to give Northern
Dlinols lta first victory of the
year, 7-3, over I1linol1l State.
Northern hack loflke PauU
ran for 123 yards in the game.
At Mount Pleasant, Central
Michigan kept a homecoming
crowd on edge until Mose
Rison ran two yards for a
· touchdown with 1:27 left to
give the · Chippewas a 111-13
win over Jndlana State. The
score capped a comeback
from ._a 13-0 halftime dellclt.

on your savings?

......

watch. n

I

four oeaions. Bowling Green
had loll it.l fourth MAC game,
recardls who It played.
But Saturday all that changed, thanks to second half
heroics of Mark Miller and
Dave Preston.
Trailing 10-3 after•Art lle5t
scored from three yards out
for Kent State, Bowling
Green got ltdlnrt spark when
MJJler boiled li6 yar&lt;!s BrOI,IIId ·
left end to even the score•
Kent State took the lead
later on Paul Marchese's 32yard field goal. But then the
Falcons got the ball and four
crucial Kent State penalties
to put .the ball on the one,
where Preston took It In for
the winning touchdown with
2:26 left in the galflC.
The victory kept Bowling
Green .at... the MAC with a 40 conference mark, followed
-by Ball State wlth a ~

Browns

PREVOOION
•
IS lHE

g" on him and now all the

Reds ca ll Per.:&lt; ." Doggie" or "Bi Dog.'JjJJ of them luve t.he
big, grinning slugger who has driven in 90 or more runs for
each of lhe' last 10 seasons.
"Why did I give him that na me' '' Rose repealed a question.
"Because, he just scratches and b'Tinds it out when he has to.
Nothing boU1ers him at all. Like last year, he was oh-for-15
aga inst the Red Sox in the World Seri es and wound up hittin g
tllrec horne runs."
Rose. Shook his he8d in udmil'ation .
"!t's always in the papers how they're gonria trade hlm here,
trade him U1erc;a nd a !otta n!her guys would. go crazy. !'lot
him, lhoughtfle just doesn't worry about anything. And when·
he 's in one ' Uwse streaks of his, he's a beautiful hiller to

,·

The Mid-American Conference croWn Jbay still be up for
grabs, but the stubborn
Bowling Green hllllecoming
jlnx has flnaUy been broken.
'lbe Falcons entered Satur·
day's contest against Kent
Stale with a record of .
homecoming lolises against
the Golden Flashes ·the past
three years. Also, In the last

1--------:

Rc'&lt;isldils 20, Lions 7:
Washington's defense came
permission. "
up with key interceptions by
Tonv Perez said he understood .
Pat Fischer and Joe
He f,ave lli.s consent -on one condj_tion. If he was going to he Lavender and added five
tr :tdcd, ho.• l"iSl~rl upun r oing with 11 contender. He didn't want quarterback sacks to defeat
Detroit . The inlerceptons led
(.{) hil\'1' ld :·.:m•t.:lll \J\.Pt :Jg.nin witb ·some nou-contendiog ball
to a field goal and a
i •b~. Nut at 32.
"'That wa' two winters a~o and although the Rt'&lt;ls nearly did touchdown after first half
1 swing a dea l for him with the Yankees involving Gralg Nettles, ,'l'oreless tie. Joe Thelsmann,
the trade fell through aml Perez stili wears a Cincinnati subbing for sore-armed Bill
KOmer, passed for the Skins'
tmjform.
I
}'or that, the RedS are in fine shape to become the first TO.
N ~tiona l League club in 54 years wwin two consecutive World
CHampionships.
'
They'Ve beaten the Yankees in the first. two games of the
World Sef.tes &amp;J far and the one chiefly responsible for .that is
Tony PerC'&lt;. He had a double mid two singles in their opening 5. I vi~tor,¥ and he cmne up with two more hits in Sunday's 4-3
dccisiOI\; wirming the game witl1 his iinc single to !ell field off
Catfish Hunter with two out in the ninth inning.
"He's the best clutch RBI man in baseball," offered Pete
Hose in U1e Reds' clu~house after it was all over. "Right now
you'd ruther have him up•.tHCl'&lt;&gt; than anybody else in the
world.''

Ro.adap
Ulllled Preu lalenlalloul

In other NFL action
Sunday :
Steelers 23, Bengals 6:
Franco Harris bad an NFL
record 41 carries .for 143
yards and two TDs to lead
Pittsbw-gh to an upset of
Cincinnati that tightened the
AJ&lt;' C Central race. Harris,
who broke former Penn State
teammate Lydell Mitchell's
1 record of 40 rushes, scored
twice oo one-yard runs. The
Steelers for ced three
turn overs and dumped
Bengal quarterback Ken
Anderson five limes.
Colts 31, Bllls 13:
Mil£hell pqshed Baltimore
ahead with a six-yard run and
Be.rt Jones added two short
TD passes as a.the ·colts .
downed Buffalo ond spoiled
Jim Ringo's coaching debut .
The Colts are now 5-l and ·
lead the AFC East.
VIkings 24, Giants 7:
Fran Tarkenton threw for
two TDs, including a 41·
yarder to Chuck Foreman,
and became the NFL's first
quarterback with 3,opo career
completions as the Vikings
beat the winless Giants. ·
f'oreman had 2111 total yards,
118 yards on eight receptions
and 83 yards an 23 .rushes.

1

Falco.n s top MAC

MJd.Amerleu Cllllfe,_,

came latt ln the third
on two field goals."
Hart threw a 04-yard TD when the Cowboys blocked a
P"SS to Mel Gray In the punt and took over at the
second period and then put St. Cardinals' eight. Tackle Mike
Louis ahead, 14·7, in the U1ird Dawson, the Cards' No. 1
period with a four·yard !lip to draft choice, then led a
Terry Metcalf. His 17-yard goal-!lne charge that turned
TD p&amp;l,.!n the fina l period to back "Charles Young on a
Gray, who had seven cal£hes fourth-and-one plunge.
Hart then hit four passes
for J ~Z yards, put the game
for
77 yards, the last one a 17·
out of reach and sent · the
yarder
which Cowboy safety
Cowbovs, who were the
Cli
ff
Harris
.lipped Into
NFL's only unbeaten, untied
Gray's
hands
in
the end zone.
team~
' their first loss.
"That touchdown to Mel
"It
big win ~ ny Ume yuu
beat 1 Uas ," said 1 Gray. Gray should have been
"There had be&lt;n talk that intercepted," Landry said.
they're U•e best team in the "That was reaUy the game.''·
Staubach hit Drew Pearson
at 5--1. ,
Nf'L , I was ready for the
"At halftime, I was mad, ~arne ::..psyched up. I with an 11-yard TD pass with
very mad·with myself," Hart couldn't get auy higher than! a lltlle more than a minutt
said. ' tT'ht!:'re were some was today .11
left in the game and Dallas
dumb moves on my part. You
Hart hit 22-of-32 passes and moved to the St. U!uis 21 In
have two optio,ns and you Dallas quarterback Roger the final seconds before a
wiSh you had nm the second Staubach, who entered the desperation pass bounced off
one. That way even if lhos&lt;J game with a 71- 1 t-omplction the hands of BUly JOf! Dupr..
two interceptions hau been percentage, h1t, for him, a in the end zone as the clock
incompletions, it W&lt;Juld have . ~bpar 21-&lt;&gt;f-42.
ran out.
!Jeen at least six points more ·hThe kl!Y poinl in the game
"It would have been a
BY JOE CARNICEW
~ IPI E;xecutlve Sports Editor
't doosn't pay to get Jim
1rl uo g~- The Du llus
owboys
rned that 111&lt;!
l1111'd way nday.
·
The Cowboys picked off two
lf Hart's p11S$es on their oneyard line just before halftime
and the St. U!uis quarterback
W~~S fuming . Hart &gt;•me back
in the second half to finish
v1 ith 346 yards passing,
including lhr.. touchdowns,
as he led the Cardinals to a 21·
17 victory over Dallas that
tied the clubs for first place in
the National Conference Ea't

fl- !ho l.Jal1y lllntinl.l, W~l'1mlroy;u., Monday, l.le\. lt,me

·-.~~:?.~t~~:~(.~:z:;:-~_:;~~.z~.::~t~Jz::t:;,::::;:*=m~::::3:~~;~~:=:~~f.@~_s~*~~~~~?~::~-::::8:::-rf.t:pA,
. &gt;:~·
lfwo-.«o:..«::W~M~msf7..-u~.-;o;o;.-mw-.::o,-:,...-;7/.-...-,..•,.....:.:.»'l·...W~....-nw..! ....~·..:·~dh""ff~WZ&lt;&amp;. ~·

....., """

The lUdlng AVlnp pill• 81'e 81 the IMdlngiiiYingl blnlt

ATLANTA (UP! )
Cle'4and Coach Forrest
Gregg delivered a five-word
aermon after his BrOWIUI' »17, etme.frQII-behind victory
over the oft-beaten. AUanta
Falcona:
"Thank God for Greg

Pruitt."

·•

Harris too much for Bengals Adyocacy program outlined
PITrSBtiRGH (UP! ) Steeler Franco Harris set
several-rec&lt;rds Sunday with
a 143-yard, two-touchdown
performance against
Clncipnati, but all he could
talk about was the team
efftrl that upset the Bengals,
23-6, and broke Pittsburgh's
three1Jame losing streak.
Harris set a National
Football League mark for
ruslles with · 41 and became
the Steelers' au:tlme leading
grouild-gainer, ahead of John
Henry Johnson, with a career
total of 4,484 yards,
-But Harris said the reason
he fell the game was the
biggest in hls flve-year

How the " Personal AdAnderson off balance. He vocacy, " or "Opera lion
completed only me-third of Special Friend" program
hls passes and was works In Meigs County 1B
Intercepted twice, by Glen explained below.
Edwards a nd Jae~ I.amhert,
Personal Advocacy ls a
who also recovered a way In which concerned
Cincinnati fumble.
individuals volunteer to help
The Steeler coaches called those who are retarded,
the plays for Kruczek, and cerebral palsied or epileptic
they were conserva tive, ln the community, the
relying on Harris' bu!Ush volunteer or advocate serves
spurts up the middle. But the in a one·t&lt;Hllle capacity.
team awarded ((ruczek the
Advocates are drawn from
game baU in hooor of hl.s · emotionally mature, ' stable
confident, steady perfor - · adults in the community who
mance.
express a concern for the
"This ls the biggest honor disa bled. Mo st volunteers
I've ever had in my life," had had no p~vlous exKruczek said. "A lot of perlence or knowledge of
guys-'- Franco, l.ambertdevelopmental disabilities.
had super games, They could They come .simply with a
haveg!venit toanyofthem." desire to help persons wlth ·
Kruczek predicted "I think mental retardation, cerebral
..._ we're _on OW' way," but palsy, or epilepsy ; a desire to
Harris reminded ever)lone learn more about these
that the two--time Super Bowl handicaps; and a willingness
champions are still ln last to receive training .and
place in the AFC's Central guidance in their volunteer
Division.
work. ·

career was not because of the
Harris' modesty was
records but "because of the appropriate in COI!Stdering
team's circumstances." ' He the aU-around lmproved and
was referring to the losing soum play of l&gt;oth offense
streak and the fact the team and defense.
was quarterbacked by rookie
"The whole team feels a
Mike Kruczek, maklrig his ·Ultle better this week," said
first pro start in place of Coach OIUck Noll. ' 'We're
injured Tury Bradshaw.
proud of the way Mlke
The win put the Steelers' Kructek played, and we're
record at 2-4, while the ·proud of the way the team
Bengal$ fell to 4-2.
rallled around him. The
''It reaUy was nice to see a offense \lldn't t"*e many
team play together for four mistakes _lhls week, ·anc! tbe
· quarters~" Harris said .. " It defense dld a fine jilb of
felt good. I was glad I could holding a strong team."
he a part ofit ... We just had to
The defense throtUed the
win this ooe. A losa again Bengals' ground game,
today could have been holding them to 75 yards
disastrous;"
rushing, and a strong pasa
rush kept quarterback Ken

Pruitt,
the
former
Oklahoma flash who bas
establlahed himself as one of
the premier offensive
performers in pro football,
ran for 191 yards arid two
touchdowns Sunday, and also
caught three passes.
"I was kidding Pruitt the
other day, except I wasn't
reaUy kidding," Gregg said
after the game. "I tnld hlm,
'Greg, you haven't·had a HIDyard lillY yet. It's al&gt;out time
-, you had one.' I hall meant It,
and haH didn't. I guess be
Coach · John Milhoan's
GaiUpoUs and Meigs
took me at my word."
Gallipolis Blue Devils edged completed the regulation tilPruitt's touchdown runs Coach Bob Oliver's Meigs
were for only I and 2 yards. Marauders In a " sudden hole tournament with
321
scores.
But he set another touchdown death" playoff to capture the Identical
NelSonville-York
was
third
with a classic 64-yard run school's lOth Class AA
with
327,
Jackson
fourth
at
that might have gone another District golf championship at
333;
New
Lexington
fifth
at
19 for a score ll Falcon Chillicothe late Saturday
337
and
Washington
Court
cornerback Frank Reed afternoon.
House last with a 339.
hadn't "had the angle on
The victory a11ured
Coach Milhoan sald the
me."
Gallipolis of a berth ln the "sudden death" playoff was
He also cootributed a. ~ 197f Class AA Oblo State Golf
yard burst up the middle to Toul'llllmenl, to be held al something to behold.
Here's whal happened.
set up the game winning Ohio Slate University In
0~
~he last hQle of
touchdown which he scored Coluinbus thlB weekend.
regulation
· play, Gallla 's
after time ran out In the third
It wlll be Gallipolis' 11th Dave Rice needed a par 5 for
perlnd. Reed ~ught hlm that appearance ln the stale
time, too, nine yards from tile tournament since 1938. The a 40 to tie Meigs, ·but instead
goal because "I saw one guy Glilllans advanced to the sank his third shot and had a
to tie the Marauders at
and he look the fake, but I state meet in 1938 as district six
321.
•
didn't see hlm (Reed)."
runnerup,
then
moved
to
the
After the- first three men
The underdog Falcons,
playing under a new coaching · big show wtth district tities in came In, Gallla was eight
reglme and without quarter- 1939, 1940, 1942, 1962, 1963, strokes behind, bUt with Jeff
back Steve Bartkowski (lost · 1964, 1965,1971, 1974 and 19'16. Clary's 40 and Rice's 41,
for the season wlth a knee Jn golf, there Is no regional GAHS gained a tie after
leading the field by four
injury),' were inside the tournament competition.
Gallipolis'
Rusty
Saunders
strokes
follo)VIng the first
Browns' 40 three times in the
tied
Jackson's
Jeff
Yerian,
nine
boles
of play.
final period, but cQuldn~ cash
and
Meigs'
Dale
Browning
On
the
first
"sudden death"
ln.
·
and
Chuck
Follrod
with
a
'
, The first two 'times, they
four-over-par 77 . in lhe hole, Gallia's Rusty Saun·
punted. The third, they were regulation
111-hole play for ders and Dave Rlce,
intercepted. ·
along with Meigs Dale
Pat Peppler, the Falcoos medslist honors.
Browning and Chuck ·Foil·
general manager who last · Then the GARS senior, In a rod
all
tied
with
Mooday took over ousted four-way playoff for In· par 4s. Meigs' Crenson Pratt
Mar!Qn Campbell's head dJvldual booon, came out on and Lance Oliver also parred.
coaching duties as weU, was top. ' Saunden and Yerian Gallia's Jeff Clary drove into
asked why he didn'ltry Nick both birdied the. flrsl bole,
Mike-Mayer field goals those and Saunders won u on the a trap and Brent Johnson
seeond bole with a par while droVe perfeclly, then put hill
first two llmes.
· second shotl2 feet away and
"Field goals at that Yerian bad 8 bogey;
sank a putt for a birdie 3.
.distance (57 and 55) didn't
Clary then got to the gr..n In
seem like good percentage
NHL S-tandings
three,
and had to sink a threeplays," said Peppler as he By United Pr ~ ss International foot putt for a bogie ~ to tie
campbell Conference
reviewed his first-ever game
Patrick Division ·
the match again.
·
as a professional head coach.
W L T Pts. GF GA
On
llie
second
bole,
Gallia's
a
S 2 0 10 25 26
"We figured if we could keep Atl~nt
NY lslndrs 4 0 1
9 20 8
them bottled up, we'd be in NY Rangers - 4 3 0 ~ 31 29 Rusty Saunden drove to the
2 3 1
5 17 n rlghl rough, Rice to the left
good positioo. We just didn't Ph i la Smythe
Divisi"on
rough . .Saunden bll bls
do it."
W L T Pfs. GF GA second' sbolslx feel away and
4 2 0
8 22 13
The kicks were fair caught Ch ic ag o
Louis
3 2 0
6 17 18 . sllllit a bllly pull for a birdie
at the 9 and 4 yard Iii)~. The · Sl
Colorado
2 4 0
&lt;1 19 21
first Ume, the Browns failed Van couver 1 4 0 2 13 24 three. Rice bit his second to
1 S 0, 2 16 28 the left of the green and
to make a first down and had M inne sota
Wales Conference
oeltled wltb a hogey five.
to punt out. The second time,
Norris Division
Both FoUrod and Browning
W
L
T
Pts.
GF
GA
they spent 10 minutes driving
Montr eat
5 2 0 10 35 16 parred the hole and It was
to the Atlanta 15 beltre losing . LOS Ang eles 3 '1 2 8 28 18
the ball with 41 seonds left to Pitt sbur gh 2 4 0' 4 20 31 tied again. Johnson and Clary
Detroit
1 3 1
3 16 18 hit their drives down the
play when Mlke Phipps Washington
1 3 1
3 111 25. middle. Crenson Pratt hil a
fumbled the snap on a field
Adams Division
W L T Pts. GF GA good drive, ' but It landed In
goal attempt.
Boston
5 1 o 10 J O 19 the right rough beneath a
Klni
McQullken, Buffalo
2 J 0
4 13 16
1 2 2
4 ' 21 23 Spruce tree. He could not hil
Bartkowski's replacement, Toro nto
1 2 ~
4 17 17 II out and had lo take a one
quickly passed the Falcons Cl eveland
Saturday's Results
stroke penalty and drop the
down tn the B~owns' 35 but Montreal 7 NV Rangers 4
hall. He hit on the green and
Cleveland
II
NY
Is
lander
s
4
then was intercepted by Philadelphia 5 Toronto 5
two-putted
for a bogey flv~
Thorn Darden.
Pittsburgh 4 Detro it 3
while
Oliver
parred for a
St.
Louis
6
Vancouver
3
McQuilken hlt on 11 of 14
Buffalo 2 Mir:mesota 1
team
Iota!
of
nine.
passes in the first half, Los Angeles 7 Washington 1
Clary shot his second shot
(Only ga mes scheduled)
, looking especially sharp in
Sunday's Resulh·
!8 feet from the pin, then
the second period when the NY Rang
ers 4 Co lorado J
Johnson's ball landed jast left
Falcons overcame a 1.4-0 Philadelph ia 7 Detroi t 4
of
the green.
6 Buffalo s
deficit to gain a 14-14 halftime Atlanta
Boston 5 Montreal 3
Johnson
chipped and It
tie. But he hit only four of 14 Chicago J Minn esota 0
ahnost
went
in for a birdie 3.
Los Ange les 6 St. Louis 2
the second half.
(Only games scheduled)
It
stopped
one
foot past the
"They weren't doing
Monday's Games
hole.
Clary
putted
thr .. feet
anything
differently
(No games scheduled )
Games
Tuesday's
short,
then
calmly
sank the
defensively in the second Vancouver at NY lslandrs
three-footer,
using
aU
the cup.
half," said McQui)ken. "We Montreal at Washington
for
the
victory.
Chicago
at
Cl
eveland
just couldn't get anything
at St . Lo uis
Besides the district trophy,
gulng with our running game Boston
(Onl y ga me.s scheduled )
Gallia
players also received
the first two downs and were
' '
individual plaques. Saunders
forced to throw long on third
got two plaques.
down.''
The title left Gallla
''It's kind of fun being down
Academy with a ~ season
on ·the sidelines," said Edinboro 25 Clar ion 20
record.
Peppler. "'lbe only thing thai Gettysb g 28 W. Marylnd 0
Grove
Cit
y
17
Geneva
8
Here are Saturday's
wasn'tfun was thai we lost. It Harvard 17 Dartmouth 10
resulls:
S\ll'e beats sitting behind a Hofstra 23 Fordham 21
Lyco ming 14 Jun iata 13
desk and
negotiating Mass.
GAHS 32t
11 RhOde !sind 7
Rusty Saunders 39-38-77
contracts."
Montcl r St . 28 Wm . Patrsn 6
Brent Johnson 40-43-83
McQuilken sliid he felt the New Hamp 34 Cent. Conn . 21
Kev Hawk 44-40-84
Nichols
34
Me
.
Maritime
33
Falcons were "surprisingly N .C. Cent 21 Delaware St. 16
Jeff Clary 41 -40-81
well prepared considering Penn St. 27 Syracuse J
Dave Rice J9,41 -80
Penn lS Lafayette 14
Total 159-162-321
what has been. going on here Pitt
36 M iami Fla . 19
Meigsl21
thla past week.
Ru tgers 28 Leh igh 21
Dale Browning 40-37-77'
Sh
ippnsbg
7
Lock
Haven
0
"There's been a tryout
Chuck Fullrod 3\1-38·77
Rock 42 Cal. ~a . 6
camp atmosphere. Our new Stppry
Crenson Pratt 41 -4t -82
S. Conn 27 USCG 6
Lance Oliver 43-42-85
coaching staff wanla tn find Trntn St. 21 Seton Hll 15
Tufts 9 Norwich 7
Mark
Gilkey 47-49-96
. out who can play and who Upsala 15 Del. Valley 9
Totals 163-158•321
can't.! gu~ that's good. But Wslyn 43 Wrcser Tech 21
. Nelsonville. York 327
y 0u get the feeling ihat Wm &amp; Mary 21 Nevy 13
Tim
Oakley 38-41 -79
Widener 26 Moravian 9
Tim Pi1ts 40·41 -81
they're looking to see who ls Willia ms 13 Bowdoin 0
Kent Fearnes -43-40-83
·going to he around ne.t )'ear. Yale 37 Columbia 6
Joe Holte! 43-41 -84
I was extremely nervous."
Rick Dane 46-43-89
·
. • South
A labama 20 Tenn . 13
Totals 164-163-327
Ala . A&amp;M 22 FISk 20
College Footbill Rtsuh:&gt;
Jackson 333
By United Press International Ga . Tech 2~ Auburn 10
Jeff
Yerian
.40-37-77
Crsn
-Nwrr.n
-41
Mars
Hll
.16
East
Brent
Wickline
44-40-84
Clemson
18
Duke
18
· Allegheny 24 wash&amp; Jeff 7
' Randy Wlls011 44·42-86
Duquesne 22 Cath U. a
Albright 48 susquhnna 7
T011y Yerian 41 -45 -86
Easl Carolina 17 VMl 3
Am Inti 20 ltho!ICll 19
Elon 38 Pr esbyterian 7
Greg Forsyth 44-43-87
Amherst 7 Bates J
Florida 33 Fl a. 51. 26
Boston Coli. 1-4 W.Va . 3
Totals 169-164-333
Georg ia 45 Vander bilt 0
Brown 28 Cornell 12
New Lexington 337
Grmblng 20 Miss. Val St. 7
Brdgewtr SI 24 W. Conn 7
Gary Wollenberg 43-39-82
Hmpdn -Sydny 15 Wash&amp;Lee 7
C.W. Post 16 Kings Pt . o
Tom Corney 43'-42-85
Howard -4 2 VIrg inia St . 15
Canlslus 35 Oswego I S
Tony Ellis 43-42-85
Kentucky 21 L SU 7
Crngle.MIIn 36 J . Ct~rrolt o

Blue Devils capture
district golf crown·

Colgate 17 Princeton 7
Delaware 2.4 Villanova 2-4
E Sfrol.idsbg. 54 Mansfld 8

'

Gregg Tillett 38--14-82 .
Gary Ftsher 43-42-85

N. W. I:,QMPTON, O.D.

Willie HaHield 43-43-86
John Moore 43-41 -89
Totals 164•175-339

OFFICE HOO~S': 1 :30 to 12, 2 to 5 (CLOSE·
AT NOON ON THURS.l- EAST COURT
ST. POMEI!Q.Y.

Washington Court House JJ9

Renlri Bonecu1ter 40·46·86

I

I
I

This coupon g.ood for 100 Extra Top Value
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tree tor Top Value Stamps.

High Quality Gifts?
The very highest quality .. backed
by Top Va lue's· lamous 2-Way
Golden Guarantee: You can't get
beller gilts lor fewer stamps anywhale. And you must be 100%
1
salislied.

·.

Dave Kinsel 51 -49· 100

•

I

WORTH

I1 TOP
.' VALUE
100 EXTRA
I
STAMPS
1

· Tolals173-164-337

j

"·

OPTOMETRIST

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

Joe Morrow 44·41 -BS

l,..oulsvt 36 NE Loui siana 8
La . 'Teet\ 31 Lamar 1
M# . 17 Wake For cs 1 15

.

An . Advocate (Special noed.l and lnlenlll of bll
Friend) :
]li'Oiece, to help him edjflltio •
- Serves In a 'variety of community living. But 111001t
ways to deepen the life of the of all, the Advocate ...-- u
friend or "protege." The a friend, a " Big Brother," or
companionship he offers can "Big Sister," sharlnJ 1111
help lo give him emollonal lntereats, friendship, and
support and direction.
wannth.
- Widens the Umlled
"Special Fri. . ." hltd a
horb:ons of the protege's life bowllng part¥ for their
by involving hlm In new fr iends at the Pomeroy
actlvlUes and by challenging Bowling ~·- 'lbel'll w~
him ·to develop hts full , 2hdvocatennd their lrlenda '
potential.
· bowling. 1111 the pl&amp;n ~I the
- Helps with taslts that are advocacy to have ~r
"simple" for mOJ! people, bul bowling aeulons u a
difficult and complicated lor physical fllneaa program.
the disabled person : ~Its
such as writing a pter,
rl~ing a bicycle, or . going
A thought lor the day :
shopping.
.American poel . Joaquin
. - Can look out for the Miller sald, "The blgpll doc
has been a pup."

I·

I&lt;

.,

-

�:r
lilt

Class plans hayride
James Thoma• talked on
the Pomeroy Citltens Action
Group and Jane Brown R N
on the tuberculosis renewal
levy at tile Thursday night
meeting of Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Beta S gma
Phi Sorority at the home of
• M~ LUiian Moore
Thomas out !ned the
reasons for organization of
the Action Committee and
IJy MRS EDISON HOLWN
discussed proposed lm
• WUdwood Gardea Club
Towering over the forest floor the ~e standa In silence provements for the general
Jftll!lltlng a tranquility that belles the actlvtty taking place a(lpearance and restoration
of the village He called for
beneath Its surface
Within It highly effi cient organs are functioning w1th the r "' n .. r.v.XJJJ,Jb •• JJJJ
:.:.e ~ ·
ac!entlflc wmder the creation of food (sugar) out of th nair
witer and minerals
The tree performs this miracle through a process known
as photosyntllesis which takes place In the leaves
Let s C&lt;JnBider ooe year rn tile life of a hardwood
(deciduous Latin meaning to fall off as do the leaves rn
811lumn )
In the spring when dtiys lengthen and sun warms the soU
the tree begins Its annual cycle of growth M croscoplc feeder
MONDAY
roots beneatll the eartllabsorb water and mmerals and pass t
EASTERN Athleti c
m to the leaves through tubes In the sapwood Buds are Boosters Monda)' at high
forming new twigs and leaves for the renewal of the food school Plans for yard sale to
making procesa
be completed and Eastern
Within each leaf are millions of tiny bodies called bouster Jackets lo be sold will
chlcnpluta each containing many layers of chlorophyll the be on dlsplav
substance tllat gives tile leaf Its green color In photosynthes s
MEIGS-GALLIA Chapter
the water ent.errng the leaf comes rn cootact with the Ohio CIVIl Serv ces Em
chlorophyll at the same time that air containing minlllcule ployees Association (OCSEA)
amounts of carbon dlollide penetrates the lea(s lower surface
7 30 p m at Gu drng
Sunlight striking the leaf supplies energy to prnduce a Monday
Hand Schoo m Chesh re
chemical reactloo In wh ch the water Is broken down nto Is
RUTLAND PTO 7 30
baalc elements of hydrogen and oxygen The two elements Monday at the school Plans
C(ll)bfne wltll carbon dioxide rn the chlorophyll to produce a w ll be made for the annual
simple sugar glucose the tree s source of food
!aU fesllval
It has been estimated that a typical 4i).foot tree takes In
MEIGS BAND Boosters
about 50 gallons of water converts 11 Into 10 pounds of glucose Monday 7 30 p m m the
and releues 60 cub c feet of pure oxygen Into tile air each day band room All parents of
of tile growing season along wltll most of tile water used o band students urged to attend
transport the nutr ents up from the roota
and support the band and
Alter t11ta process Is completed tile g ucose hegms a directors
journey back down the tree providing food to all I ving cells
MIDDLEPORT BUSINESS
through more tubes located between the bark and camb urn
and Professions Women s
As the tree grows taller el!lending ts branches It Increases ts Club Monday 7 30 p m at
tr1ri; girth Iii order to support tile weight of Its crown It does
Gas Office All
tills through the cambium the thin layers of cells between the Columbia
members
urged
to attend
wood and bark Throughout tile life of the tree these cells
SPECIAL
MEETING
continue to dlvtde creating sapwood or xylem on one side and
Pomeroy Mason c Lodge 164
bark on tile other
It Is JX'O(Iuctlon of the xylem that creates the rings by F&amp;AM 7 p m Monday at
witch the tree sage Is determined In the spring when water temple w Ill work rn the
and food abound the cells get large and light rn color Wlien less Masler Mason degree all
water Is avallable In summer growth slows cells get smaller Master Masons Invited
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC
and darker Each prnr of rings denotes ooe year rn the life of
Boosters
7 30 p m Monday
the tree
at
high
school
All persons
As the sapwood ages cells harden and die creating the
rnterested
rn
all
programs
heartwood tllat serves as a supporting column for the tree All
p
ease
attend
spring and early sununer the cycle continues as tile tree grows
PAST
PRESIDENTS
and stores food agamst the commg winter mootlls
eY
of
Drew
Webster Post
Par
Wl\h the onaet of shorter days and colder drier weather of
Amer
can
Leg
on
Aux llary
autumn the tree prepares !self for the dormant winter
39
Wednesday
evening
at the
season It does tills by sealing off the supJlly o! water to ts
home
of
Mrs
0
n
Knapp
leaves
At the baae of each stem where tile leaf fastens to the tw g Syracuse
a band of cells called tile absciSSIOO laye• forms cult ng off the RACINE ~ ementary PTO
water Beneath the m tial abscission layer a second layer Monday 7 30 p m TB levy
begins to fonn which will eventually cover the wound lei by will be discussed
CHESTER PTA Monday
the falling leaf
7
30
p m at the school
This Is tile lime of autumn beauty
With the leafs water supply cut off the photosynthes s Grandparents rught will be
stops and the chlorophyll gradually disappears along w th ts observed Final p ans for
dominant green color What remainS In some of tbe hardwoods school cam1val to be h~ld
are the vibrant orange yellow and scarlet p gments tllat were Oct 23 will be made
tllere all along obscured by the dominant chlorophyll In others
CANDYSTRIPERS
tile leaf merely turns dolvn before droppmg Thus sealed off Monday 8 p m m the
frool the elements the tree stands dormant durmg winter cafeter a at Velerans
Some of Its life functions continue and n sprrng another life Memor al Hosp tal
cycle Is renewed
MIDDLEPORT BPW
Soltwood (coniferous) trees experience nearly the same CLUB 1 30 p m Mooday
cycle but they retam the II' leaves or needles all year by Columbia Gas Co off1ce
growing new ooes as older ones drop off These tough and
TUESDAY
leathery needles are protected against water Joss durmg
CHESTER COUNCIL 323
winter by a weatherproof waxy covering
Daughters of Amenca 7 30
Tuesday n ght at the hall w th
refreshment&lt;
VE1 t:rtANS MEMORIAL
Hosp ta Auxiliary l 30 n the
hospital cafeteria Tuesday
night Mrs Clara Burrs and
Mrs Mldred Fry to have the
program
GROUP II M ddleport
First United Presbyter an
Church Tuesday night 7 30
By Polly cramer
at the home of Mrs Helen
POIJ.Y S PROBLEAI
after a su11 IS cleaned he Shuler Mrs Dwight Zavltz
DEAR POIJ.Y - I would writes the date on the small co-hostess Mrs Lewis Sauer
like aome lnformatloo on a cleaner slag and puts this n to bave devol ons Bible study
bow-ll&gt;&lt;lo-lt yourself way to the coin pocket of the jacket from Book 2 Chapter 3
WORLD WAtt 1 veterans
MRS N L R Jr
preserve and store my fairly
heavy pole de sole wedding
DEAR POLLY- To make w II be honored Tuesday 8
drea One of my greatest extra hangers for your p m at the annual oyster
concerns Is hav!ng the dress slacks use wire coat hangers stew dinner spoosored by
turn yellow with age Do tile and the round cardboard members of Drew Webster
dry cleaning chemicals or tubes from w1de gift wrap- Post 39 Members who cannot
profellional pressing have an ping paper Cut off a piece of drive are asked to phone Pau
effect 011 speeding up or the roll to f t the length of the Case! or Leonard Jewell for
slowing down yellowing I hanger silt lengthwise and transportation
SOUTHERN LOCAL Band
would surely appreciate put over the hanger bar Tape
Boosters Tuesday 1 30 p m
aome help since I think It beck together
would be neat ., have my
Also to absorb moisture rn at high school All parents
wedding drw worn by a a lettuce keeper lay a folded urged to attend
FRIENDLY CIRCLE
daughter In years to come paper towel on top of the
Trrn ty Church 7 30 Tuesday
CHARLENE
lettuce It will keep longer night at the church M ss
DEAR CHARLENE ,- 01 MRS PJW
etane lbe llfHI aad wllelt
DEAR POIJ.Y - A handy Erma Sm th to have the
lllflc to do II to have your badget In the garage iB a program
pwg prefeulo..Uy cleaned small soft rubber ball
SALISBURY PTO Tuesday
-.1 ,.eked for Joac time banging on a string from the 7 30 p m Program w II be on
•llln&amp;e Saeb a drtaa lhould celllng It should hang so 11 phys1cal education
lllw171 be po~eked aloae Tbe will touch the driver s side of
Nau.al IDIIIIDte of Dry the windshield This way one
Cleaablc IIIUetla that If I will know If tile car Is far yean after the Pointer apweddlq cowa Is po~eked ID a enough In to close the door peared my family wa• ocpiMtle Jlldqe tllal II Dol W1th tllta simple device there cupying a rented bouse in
vaeaam ualed tllere Ia Is no guesswork Involved In Mleblcao
due• of IWeallq Tbe driving Into a garage Thank We found such a device in
nnh .,.... tbeD be mBdew you for the many time and lbe prage so ooe of tbe
11J1C11L Tile con, 10 IIley uy money savers - EVELYN gaaclcblldreo lnnpedlately
DEAR EVELYN- Your said the owners must be
..-.tbelabllntudalnd
perladlealJJ te remove aay Pointer appeared Ia Ibis IUden of the colUllltl We
melltue ud It prenat tolama many yean ago when felt we were amoa1 friends
lllldt . . fermJac of ......... can llere geiiiDc wider and - POIJ.Y
at ftldl that IDI&amp;bl weaken were bard to get Ia IUny
PoUy will sead you one of
Of ceane, neb • prmeat older and urrow garages II her peachy tbaak you
mut be llaWplllcJuly elean Is really a good one IF you do cards Ideal lor framing or
wbell paebd. - POIJ.Y
not do as one reader wbo plachtg Ia your family
wrote lbal be bad lhougbt- scrapbook, If she uses your
DEAR POLLY - My lesoly put a croquet ball on favorite Pointer Peeve or
holband UJed to hln trouble lhe end of bls otrlog wllh the Problem Ia her columo Write
l'fl!lemberlng whea he had retail a complete dl..ster to Polly s PoiDters Ia care of
had bls lUlls cleaned Now tbe wladsbleld A couple of Ibis oewspaper

•

·-=

Soc1al
Calendar

Polly's Pomters

I

!

Speczal stonng ttps
to save weddtng gown

j

volunteers from each
organization and volun
teerrng from tile Preceptor
Chapter were Mro Ann Ru~
Mrs Moore and Mrs Teresa
Swatzel
Mrs Brown talked on the
renewal levy and dlacu.ssed
w1tll the group the telephone
contact program AU three
chapters of Beta Sigma Phi
will be participating on the
committee to telephone
voters urging support of the
levy
Mrs June Van
Vranken representative to
the sorority s c ty council
discussed the telephone
romm ttee project and also
reported that CouncU had
decided not to conduct the
g1rl scout fund drive A
request from Mrs Mary
Skmner for a dooatlon for the
Per s onal
Advocacy
recreallon fun~ was not acted
on at the meeting with the
dec s1on be ing postponed
until the budget report IS
g ven

The blldllet J:OIIlmittee II
composed of tbe social
committee ways and means
and u:ecutlve officert As a
special ways and means
project donaUOill are being
tak111 oo an afgban.
A letter will be Wjitten to
National asking about a pin
or other symbol to be given In
recognition of the sliver
circle members of the
chapter At the request of

1\Jra Debbie Buck It wu
decided that on an Individual
volllllleer buil members will
contribute baked goods for
the March of Dimes carnival
to be held Oct 31 In the old
senior high auditorium
A trip to the Mountaineer
dinner theater was pliiUied
for the nezt meeting
Refrethmentl were served
by Mrs Moore Mrs Mlldred
Karr and Mrs Ruby Baer

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION

A hayride was planned for members of the claas wbo are
Oct 30 at the Jim Clifford hospitalized DevotlOill and
residence when the Young singing were led by Dennis
Adult Class met Tuesday Moore Mrs Judy Pape and
night at the Asbury United Mrs Janice Lille served

Methodist Chlli'ch
It was reported tha\ the
lllorm windows have been
paid off It was decided that
planteu will be sent to

5

refreshments 1be November
9 meeting of the claas will be
at the hOme of Dennis and
Katlly Moore In Syracuse

PJ\OrOSF.D CONSTITUUONAL AMI!Nil~IEN f
Ta adopt new Ar de XX Oh o Con•t u on

REI ATIVI TO PRO\IllJN( ¥OR REIIU SFNTAriON OF m~n:&gt;EN
TfAI UTII ITY CONSIJMIIIS IN t Til IW REGUlA TORY ACIIONS
AFFECTING riiEIR IN1 EIIES1 S

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION

4

The pro1 o•ed nn en

lm~nt

~uld

prov le

I For n non 1rofit m•mlersh p corporal on kno\\
the Re' len( a!
Uti t ( on$umer Ac on Group (Ill C I( ) 1th
t 1 1o er md
dut es n I d II( rr( e ental on of th• nt orc Is of ••• I n al t ty
ronsumer~ an ar o s t
ty proccc n ~

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

2 For cerl n controls o p1ll c t I ts the r offictu"s an I emplo cs
and on ltUCAf

To adopt new Art &lt;le XIX Oh o Conotlut on

3

Fifth graders

ttELATIVE TO LIMITING THE RATES WHICH MAY BE CHARGED
TO RESIDENTIAL CONSUMERS FOH FIXED AMOUNTS OF GAS AND
EI ECTRICITY -

team about

The proposed amendment would reqmre

For

o unlar

mem

4 fhat RUCAC n
cl eel oiT CXJ en'
mC'nl of f'

1 That res1dent al cons umtrs of gas be charged per cub1c foot no more
tha11 the average rate charged bv the r uhl ty to II t sers of gas
Thts rate shall apply for the first 30 000 cub1c feet of gas used each
month durmg the wmter month s In addtllon those consumers may
be charged no more than 50 % add I onal Jler cub1c foot for the next
20 000 cub c feet of gas used per month durmg the w nt er months

our plants
As a part of the Retired
Sen or Volunteer Program
Mrs Rose Gmther member
of the Chester Garden Club
and w1nner of more tllan 100
blue ribbons for horticulture
excellence led the discussion
of Plants on our Planet rn
Mrs Mary Hysel s I flh
grade at the Pomeroy
Elementary School
Meeting w th the chlldren
Fr1day
Mrs
Gmther
stressed nature hikes as one
good way of viewing and
1dentifyrng plants ')'hrough
dlscuss1on t was established
that a weed s any plant that
grows where It sn t wanted
In order to have a colorful
flower garden next spring
Mrs Grnther advised the
class members tllat bulbs
need to be planted now She
noted that they are avallable
from several toea mer
chants The class discussed
hotarusts and how to dentify
monocot from dlcot by
structure of the flowers
leaves and seeds

Eynon famzly

holds reunton
RACINE - The five
ch ldren of the late Reed and
Emma Eynon were together
for a reunion recently at the
home of Mr and Mrs Robert
(Wilma) Reiber Racine
Attending were Mr and
Mrs Bernard Eyoon Belfast
Marne Mr and Mrs Emll
Eynon Racine Mr and Mrs
Carrol (Wanda Nelgler
Syracuse Mr and Mrs !von
(Marjorie) Walson Sterling
Heights Michigan
Also attending was the
ch ldren s aunt Mrs Gladys
Croy Cheater Mr and Mrs
Randall Reiber Rachel and
Robert Mr and Mrs Terry
Reiber Vincent and Jessica
Mr and Mrs Dennis Eynon
and Christina all of Racine
Mr and Mrs Clyde Davis
and Lisa Galllpolls Glenn
Collins Ashland Ky David
Collins Racine Miss Catlly
Barringer Reedsv lie and
Mr and Mrs Richard
Bryant Belfast Marne
'!'UESDAY
UN1 ~D Methoalst Wome
of the Forest Run United
Methodist Church Tuesday
7 30 p m at the church Mrs
Richard Rupe will be the
guest speaker AU ladles of
the community Invited

2 That res1Ient a! cons mers of eleclr~ c tv be charged for the first 400
k1lo \att hours of electr c1tv per month no more per k1lo vall hour than
the average rate charge I by the r ullhtv to all users Consumers w1lh
all electr c homes that vere subslanl allv completed by the effective
date of th s amendment shall be charged no more tha t1 s rate for
the first 2 000 k lo all hours of e eel c ly used Jler month durmg the
wmfer months

THURSDAY
DAUGHTERS OF
AI\IERICA District 13 an
nual friendship night
Thursday Chesler Grade
School auditorium Potluck
dinner at 6 3Q with meeting t
follow Mrs Dorothy Ritchie
L' the district deouty

7 Tl at I o r 1 n eml crs
for ncccs:s
h cl
tor ar.
llUCAG s n
s st e t
Ih tl

3 That part of those rates "h1ch are descr1bed above are called hfel ne
rates and shall not be m reased bv add ng any fuel or purchased gas
adjustments or other expense except \ hen rates are set or reset

8 Penalt es for

oint on of n p ov s n of the an c In en!

\

(P opus d by In a

4 That any re\enues lost to a publ c uti I I) from the Implementation of

A najo

the hfehne rates be made up equ tabh from all other rates

5 That any rate changes necessary to complv wtth th1s amendment be
Implemented w1th n 60 lays of the effect ve

~ate

of the amendment

A major ty affi

~at

e

TH~

PROPOSED AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

NO

ARGUMENT
AMENDMENT

FOR

THE

PROPOSED Sec on 4( Bl the life ne ate sha apP. y to the f rst four
hundred 400 k lowell hou s of e ectr c ty used d~ ng each
mon h y b ng period

ISSUE 4 WILL LOWER RATES FOR
AVERAGE RESIDENTIAL CONSUMERS OF
GAS AND ELECTRICITY IN OHIO
W th rap dly rls ng utility bills It s essential
that the res denllal consumers pay the highest
rates Wtth today s ut hty rate structure the
more electr c1ty or gas a customer uses the less
he pays per umt of energy This d1scr mlnates
against small users and promotes wasteful
consumption

) Fo all total e edr c dwe ng un ts as de ned n

Sect on 4( B) the llfel ne ole sha app y to the f rst two
housand 2000) k owatt hours of elec r c ty used durlnR
each mon h y b ng per od between October lth and Apr
llh of each year Between Ap I 5th and October 15th of
eoch year the I~ ne ra e sha apply on y to the first four
hund ed 400 k lowatt hou s of e ecfr c y used dur ng each
moo h y b ng porod
l The I fe ne a e sha apply to the st thirty
housand 30 000 cub c feet of gas used dur ng each month y
b I ng per od be ween Oc obe 5 h and Apr 5th of each
yeo
Bl The I lei ne ate charged by any pub c ut I ly sha
be se not to exceed the ave age evenue requl emment for

each k owatt hour of e ect c ty or cub c foot of gas so d to a

Issue 4 establ shes needed rate reform
known as
Lifeline
that will provide all
res dential consumers with basic monthly
amounts of gas and electricity at no more than
the average rate charged by the r utility to all
users Life! ne also benefits needy resident al
consumers without add t1onal tax money and
w thQut singling them out for pub! c assistance
ISSUE
4
WILL
ENCOURAGE
CONSERVATION BY REWARDING THOSE
WHO SAVE
The more you con serve the more money you
w II save over the present rate structure Energy
conservation besides being a national pr or ty
s key to holding down utility rates In the future
S1mple Lifeline rates will help residential
consumers to be more aware of their
consumption and will promote energy efficiency
ar ong large users The conservation benef ts
that Issue 4 brings will benefit all consumers n
the long run
ISSUE
4
UPDATES THE
RATE
STRUCTURES IN OHIO TO REFLECT
CHANGING REALITIES
The present method for setting rates In Clllo
Is outmoded Today we no longer need rate
structures to promote use of energy Instead we
need rate ~tructures to encour.age conservation
and to make sure that residential consumers pay
only for the energy that they use Issue 4
Incorporates these needed reforms Into Clllo s
rate-making process
Committee For the Amendment Robert P
Weaver Robert L l..o tz Edward A Harter
Pauline L Brokaw Brady E Bancroft

IE IT RESOLVED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF
OHIO THAT ARTICLE XIX OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
IE ENACTED AS FOLLOWS
Sect on 1 I s hereby dec ared to be a proper pub c
pur- and he public policy of thl• state to insure tha the
res dent at ut lty consume s of Ohio are cha ged a
reasonab e rate here n te e e ed to as the fe ne rate
for them nlmum amounts of e ectrlc ty and gas necessary to
ma nta n a min mum s aneta d of living
Sect on 2 Public ut lly ales set In Oh o for consumers of
gu and elec c ty shall lnsu e that
(A) Every res den al consumer n Oh o sho be charged
• lie ne ole for the fo ow ng quont t es of gas and
e ectr c y
( ) Except for Iota e ect c dwe ling units as del ned n

use s by the u ty

C) n the case o res dent a gas c-onsumers th(! tota

cha ge pe cub c foot fo the next twen y thousand (20 000)
cub c fee of Qlls used afte

he fel ne amount dur ng each

moo h y b ng pe od between Octobe 15th and Afjr 15th of
each year shal be no more han I tty 50) per cent h gher
than the feline ate
0) Ln no case sha any fe ne ale be nc eased by
add ng to t any fue or pu chased gas adjustment ncreased

cost o expense ncu red by a uti lty except when rates are

set or rese

E) Any evenues lost to a pub cut lily from the direct
mp ementatloo of the fe ne ra e sha be made up

equ tably from a othe ra es
Section 3 Each rub c u ly whose ales are set br a
d v son or agency o the s1ate or loca government sha
e
w h hat dlv son o agency ev sed ate schedu es n

canto monee w th th s amend men within th ty (30) days of
lhe effect ve dale of lh s amendment The d v sian or agency

of the state o

oca governmen sha

mp ement any rate

changes necessa y to comply w lh h s amendment w th n
s x v 601 days of the effect ve date of this amendment A
other pub cut es as are affected by th s amendment sha I
mp ement such

ate changes as are requ red by th s

amendment w lh n s xty
amendment

60) days o

the effect ve date of th s

Section 4 As used n Art cle X IX
A) A res dentla consume

s any natura pe son or

pe sons who ve In one dwe ng un I as a p nclpal place of
es dence and who a e charged d eel y or nd reel y for the
use o gas or electr c y for heat ng o ght ng or otherwise
for the benet toflhose pe sons wh e n that unit
Bl Alot ale ectr c dwell ng un I sa dwelling un I which
s heated from October 5th to Ap
5th of each yeer
pr nc pa y th ough the use of e ectr c ly and which wos
e her n use as a tota elec c dwe ng un t as of the
effec1 ve date of th s amendmen or was not yet In use as of
the effect ve date of lh s amendment but was tu y one osed
as o that date and was never used as other than a total
e ectr c dwe ng unl
(C Month v b n~ pe od Is that oe lod of lim~ '"'

which he publ c u lily normally b lis Is res dental
consumers For the pu pose of delermln ng the quantities of
e eclr c ty and gas to which the te lne rate shal apply all
pub c ul il lies shall have twe ~~e 2 monthly b II ng periods
In each co enda year a of wh ch she be as aqua In englh
as s eosonab y posslb e I any port on of the pub lc ut ty 1
moo h y bll ng per od sha fa I w h n the October 15th to
Af&gt;r 5th per od spec ed n Sect on 2(A) (II) and I that
ent e monthly b ling per od sha be eated as II all oflt was
nc uded w th n that per od
( 0) A pub c ut ty
ncludes every corporal on
company co partne sh p pe son or assoc at on the r
lessees t ustees or receivers who a e
( engaged In the bus ness of supply ng electr c ty for
gh heat or powe pu poses to coosumers w th n h s state
or
( engaged n !be bus ness of supp y ng art I c al or
natu a gas for hgh ng power or heat ng purposes to
consume s w thin the state
Sect on 5 I any prov

slon of lh s Art c e shall be
declo ed unconslltut onal or nvalld the other prov slons
sllal be declo ed uncon!l lui ona o nvalld the olhor
prov sons sha emaln In effect nolwllhsland ng

ole s n ess

SHALL 11iE PIIOPOSED

NO

ARGUMENT
AMENDMENT

ote s necessary for passage

y nfl mat e

c I e t on)
Co

p

suge

YES

-

YES
SHALI

-

(Propooed by \ tat ve Pet ton)

FULL TEXT OF THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
WEDNESDAY
ROSE GARDEN t.:1ub
Wednesday B p m at the
home of Mrs JamesStout

5

6 F&amp; fi

It was

decided that most spring
flowering
bulbs
are
mono cots
Mrs Grnther told tile blass
that new plants many times
may be started by takrng side
shoots from an old plant and
plac ng them rn water until
they form roots
Some of the many plants
she brought to exhibit were
the a r plant Moses In the
Bullrushes begonias coleus
the money plant sudan
grass cactus and wheat

and m• lall1t on of

FOR

THE

A~IENUMENT

llE ADOPTED•

-

PROPOSED

ISSUE 5 WILL PROVIDE EXPERTS TO
FIGHT UNNECESSARY RATE INCREASES
II would create the Res dent Ia Ul ly
Consumer Act on Group ( RUCAG) a non profit
organ zal on wh ch w II employ attorneys and
ut lly experts to do research draft laws and
rep esent consumers of natural gas e ectr c ty
and elephone
The Public Uti I es Commission of Oh o
(PUCO) claims t must sir ke a balance
between the ut lly and the consumer Today
when government bodes make Important
decls ons on tlie price and qual ly of uti ly
service they are overwhelmed by the army of
pro utility forces Reside tal ut I ty consume s
need an advocate to match h gh pad uti ty
experts lobby sis and lawyers before the PUCO
eglslalure c ly counc Is and courts
ISSUE 5 WONT ADD TO GOVERNMENT
BUREAUCRACY
RUCAG won I be a government agency at
al and I will be Independent RUCAG wll be
funded by voluntary annual membership dues of
$6 Consumers who choose membership will
control R UCAG through an elected board of
directors
RUCAG S VOLUNTARY FUNDING WILL
INSURE ITS ACCOUNTABILITY AND
INDEPENDENCE
To aid collection of voluntary conlr bullons
a check off prov son w II be Included w th
regular b I ng statements from utilities
Cus omers can conveniently contr bute a small
amount and Include I w th the r usual payment
The ut Illy will transfer contributions and a list
of contributors to RUCAG RUCAG will
reimburse the utility for admln stral ve costs
RUCAG WILL PROTECT CONSUMERS
WITHOUT INCREASING TAXES OR UTILITY
BILLS
Membersh p IS totally voluntary RUCAG
will be accountable to res dent a consumers who
will only contr bule I RUCAG adequately
represents the r Interests RUCAG IS the best
way to assure that the consumers vo ce Is heard
and that we have fair ut Illy rates fo residential
consumers now and n the tutu e
Committee For the Amendment Robert P
Weaver Robert L L.o tz Edward A Harter
Pauline L Brokaw Brady E Bancroft
FULL TEXT OF THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
BE'IT RESOLVED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF
OHIO THAT ARTICLE XX OF THE OHIO CONST TUT ON
BE ENACTED AS FOLLOWS
Sect on
t s the po cy and n en of he peop e o he
SateafOhoto
A Establsh w th a necesse y autho ty a not f9'
pro membersh p corpqrat on o be caled he Res den a
U1 ty Consum~ Ac on Group Inc w h the au ho ty and
respons b
to assu e adequa e represents on and
pro ect on o res dent a ut ty consume s and

tr

B Prov de or es dent a u vconsumer membe sh p
In the corporat on and consume espons b y or the
ac Ions of the co po at on

Sect on 2

ott1erw se requ

A!~ used

n th s Ar cle un ess the context

r~t~~

A The te m res den al consume
o
n den a
ut y onsume sh.!iill mean any na ura pe son or pe sons
who 1ve n one dwe ng un no as ans ents who a e
charged directly or nd rectly o the use of gas e ectr c ty or
e ephone for heat ng
~h ng or commun est on rx
ott1erw 1e tor the benefit of fhose pe sons wh e n tha un t
8 The term
egu a ed pub c u ty
ut ty
publ c ut I t:; or 'uti ty corporal on meal')s eve 'I
corporat on comp&amp;ny co.pa tne sh p person or asso c af on
their 1-.sees t ustees or ece ve s who are
Te ephone com pan es who a e engaged n the
bul ntiS of t ansm tt ng menages o I om h ough o
w hnthes stae
Elect lc L aht Com pen es engaged n the bus ness o
supp y ng etect c fy o gh hea o powe pu poses o
cansume s with n th s state
Gila com pan n ..gaged n he bus ness of supply nQ

I

John T Looney 283 Cres wood Ave Wadswo th 4428
Edward A Ha te 509 C s de 0 Co umbus 43202
Susan E C a k 62 N B ach Ak on 44JOJ
Cha es S To~kas
E Ph ade ph a Youngslown

F ed Shutt esworth

o N C esen Ave

C nc nnat

065 9 andon Rd

C eve and

�:r
lilt

Class plans hayride
James Thoma• talked on
the Pomeroy Citltens Action
Group and Jane Brown R N
on the tuberculosis renewal
levy at tile Thursday night
meeting of Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Beta S gma
Phi Sorority at the home of
• M~ LUiian Moore
Thomas out !ned the
reasons for organization of
the Action Committee and
IJy MRS EDISON HOLWN
discussed proposed lm
• WUdwood Gardea Club
Towering over the forest floor the ~e standa In silence provements for the general
Jftll!lltlng a tranquility that belles the actlvtty taking place a(lpearance and restoration
of the village He called for
beneath Its surface
Within It highly effi cient organs are functioning w1th the r "' n .. r.v.XJJJ,Jb •• JJJJ
:.:.e ~ ·
ac!entlflc wmder the creation of food (sugar) out of th nair
witer and minerals
The tree performs this miracle through a process known
as photosyntllesis which takes place In the leaves
Let s C&lt;JnBider ooe year rn tile life of a hardwood
(deciduous Latin meaning to fall off as do the leaves rn
811lumn )
In the spring when dtiys lengthen and sun warms the soU
the tree begins Its annual cycle of growth M croscoplc feeder
MONDAY
roots beneatll the eartllabsorb water and mmerals and pass t
EASTERN Athleti c
m to the leaves through tubes In the sapwood Buds are Boosters Monda)' at high
forming new twigs and leaves for the renewal of the food school Plans for yard sale to
making procesa
be completed and Eastern
Within each leaf are millions of tiny bodies called bouster Jackets lo be sold will
chlcnpluta each containing many layers of chlorophyll the be on dlsplav
substance tllat gives tile leaf Its green color In photosynthes s
MEIGS-GALLIA Chapter
the water ent.errng the leaf comes rn cootact with the Ohio CIVIl Serv ces Em
chlorophyll at the same time that air containing minlllcule ployees Association (OCSEA)
amounts of carbon dlollide penetrates the lea(s lower surface
7 30 p m at Gu drng
Sunlight striking the leaf supplies energy to prnduce a Monday
Hand Schoo m Chesh re
chemical reactloo In wh ch the water Is broken down nto Is
RUTLAND PTO 7 30
baalc elements of hydrogen and oxygen The two elements Monday at the school Plans
C(ll)bfne wltll carbon dioxide rn the chlorophyll to produce a w ll be made for the annual
simple sugar glucose the tree s source of food
!aU fesllval
It has been estimated that a typical 4i).foot tree takes In
MEIGS BAND Boosters
about 50 gallons of water converts 11 Into 10 pounds of glucose Monday 7 30 p m m the
and releues 60 cub c feet of pure oxygen Into tile air each day band room All parents of
of tile growing season along wltll most of tile water used o band students urged to attend
transport the nutr ents up from the roota
and support the band and
Alter t11ta process Is completed tile g ucose hegms a directors
journey back down the tree providing food to all I ving cells
MIDDLEPORT BUSINESS
through more tubes located between the bark and camb urn
and Professions Women s
As the tree grows taller el!lending ts branches It Increases ts Club Monday 7 30 p m at
tr1ri; girth Iii order to support tile weight of Its crown It does
Gas Office All
tills through the cambium the thin layers of cells between the Columbia
members
urged
to attend
wood and bark Throughout tile life of the tree these cells
SPECIAL
MEETING
continue to dlvtde creating sapwood or xylem on one side and
Pomeroy Mason c Lodge 164
bark on tile other
It Is JX'O(Iuctlon of the xylem that creates the rings by F&amp;AM 7 p m Monday at
witch the tree sage Is determined In the spring when water temple w Ill work rn the
and food abound the cells get large and light rn color Wlien less Masler Mason degree all
water Is avallable In summer growth slows cells get smaller Master Masons Invited
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC
and darker Each prnr of rings denotes ooe year rn the life of
Boosters
7 30 p m Monday
the tree
at
high
school
All persons
As the sapwood ages cells harden and die creating the
rnterested
rn
all
programs
heartwood tllat serves as a supporting column for the tree All
p
ease
attend
spring and early sununer the cycle continues as tile tree grows
PAST
PRESIDENTS
and stores food agamst the commg winter mootlls
eY
of
Drew
Webster Post
Par
Wl\h the onaet of shorter days and colder drier weather of
Amer
can
Leg
on
Aux llary
autumn the tree prepares !self for the dormant winter
39
Wednesday
evening
at the
season It does tills by sealing off the supJlly o! water to ts
home
of
Mrs
0
n
Knapp
leaves
At the baae of each stem where tile leaf fastens to the tw g Syracuse
a band of cells called tile absciSSIOO laye• forms cult ng off the RACINE ~ ementary PTO
water Beneath the m tial abscission layer a second layer Monday 7 30 p m TB levy
begins to fonn which will eventually cover the wound lei by will be discussed
CHESTER PTA Monday
the falling leaf
7
30
p m at the school
This Is tile lime of autumn beauty
With the leafs water supply cut off the photosynthes s Grandparents rught will be
stops and the chlorophyll gradually disappears along w th ts observed Final p ans for
dominant green color What remainS In some of tbe hardwoods school cam1val to be h~ld
are the vibrant orange yellow and scarlet p gments tllat were Oct 23 will be made
tllere all along obscured by the dominant chlorophyll In others
CANDYSTRIPERS
tile leaf merely turns dolvn before droppmg Thus sealed off Monday 8 p m m the
frool the elements the tree stands dormant durmg winter cafeter a at Velerans
Some of Its life functions continue and n sprrng another life Memor al Hosp tal
cycle Is renewed
MIDDLEPORT BPW
Soltwood (coniferous) trees experience nearly the same CLUB 1 30 p m Mooday
cycle but they retam the II' leaves or needles all year by Columbia Gas Co off1ce
growing new ooes as older ones drop off These tough and
TUESDAY
leathery needles are protected against water Joss durmg
CHESTER COUNCIL 323
winter by a weatherproof waxy covering
Daughters of Amenca 7 30
Tuesday n ght at the hall w th
refreshment&lt;
VE1 t:rtANS MEMORIAL
Hosp ta Auxiliary l 30 n the
hospital cafeteria Tuesday
night Mrs Clara Burrs and
Mrs Mldred Fry to have the
program
GROUP II M ddleport
First United Presbyter an
Church Tuesday night 7 30
By Polly cramer
at the home of Mrs Helen
POIJ.Y S PROBLEAI
after a su11 IS cleaned he Shuler Mrs Dwight Zavltz
DEAR POIJ.Y - I would writes the date on the small co-hostess Mrs Lewis Sauer
like aome lnformatloo on a cleaner slag and puts this n to bave devol ons Bible study
bow-ll&gt;&lt;lo-lt yourself way to the coin pocket of the jacket from Book 2 Chapter 3
WORLD WAtt 1 veterans
MRS N L R Jr
preserve and store my fairly
heavy pole de sole wedding
DEAR POLLY- To make w II be honored Tuesday 8
drea One of my greatest extra hangers for your p m at the annual oyster
concerns Is hav!ng the dress slacks use wire coat hangers stew dinner spoosored by
turn yellow with age Do tile and the round cardboard members of Drew Webster
dry cleaning chemicals or tubes from w1de gift wrap- Post 39 Members who cannot
profellional pressing have an ping paper Cut off a piece of drive are asked to phone Pau
effect 011 speeding up or the roll to f t the length of the Case! or Leonard Jewell for
slowing down yellowing I hanger silt lengthwise and transportation
SOUTHERN LOCAL Band
would surely appreciate put over the hanger bar Tape
Boosters Tuesday 1 30 p m
aome help since I think It beck together
would be neat ., have my
Also to absorb moisture rn at high school All parents
wedding drw worn by a a lettuce keeper lay a folded urged to attend
FRIENDLY CIRCLE
daughter In years to come paper towel on top of the
Trrn ty Church 7 30 Tuesday
CHARLENE
lettuce It will keep longer night at the church M ss
DEAR CHARLENE ,- 01 MRS PJW
etane lbe llfHI aad wllelt
DEAR POIJ.Y - A handy Erma Sm th to have the
lllflc to do II to have your badget In the garage iB a program
pwg prefeulo..Uy cleaned small soft rubber ball
SALISBURY PTO Tuesday
-.1 ,.eked for Joac time banging on a string from the 7 30 p m Program w II be on
•llln&amp;e Saeb a drtaa lhould celllng It should hang so 11 phys1cal education
lllw171 be po~eked aloae Tbe will touch the driver s side of
Nau.al IDIIIIDte of Dry the windshield This way one
Cleaablc IIIUetla that If I will know If tile car Is far yean after the Pointer apweddlq cowa Is po~eked ID a enough In to close the door peared my family wa• ocpiMtle Jlldqe tllal II Dol W1th tllta simple device there cupying a rented bouse in
vaeaam ualed tllere Ia Is no guesswork Involved In Mleblcao
due• of IWeallq Tbe driving Into a garage Thank We found such a device in
nnh .,.... tbeD be mBdew you for the many time and lbe prage so ooe of tbe
11J1C11L Tile con, 10 IIley uy money savers - EVELYN gaaclcblldreo lnnpedlately
DEAR EVELYN- Your said the owners must be
..-.tbelabllntudalnd
perladlealJJ te remove aay Pointer appeared Ia Ibis IUden of the colUllltl We
melltue ud It prenat tolama many yean ago when felt we were amoa1 friends
lllldt . . fermJac of ......... can llere geiiiDc wider and - POIJ.Y
at ftldl that IDI&amp;bl weaken were bard to get Ia IUny
PoUy will sead you one of
Of ceane, neb • prmeat older and urrow garages II her peachy tbaak you
mut be llaWplllcJuly elean Is really a good one IF you do cards Ideal lor framing or
wbell paebd. - POIJ.Y
not do as one reader wbo plachtg Ia your family
wrote lbal be bad lhougbt- scrapbook, If she uses your
DEAR POLLY - My lesoly put a croquet ball on favorite Pointer Peeve or
holband UJed to hln trouble lhe end of bls otrlog wllh the Problem Ia her columo Write
l'fl!lemberlng whea he had retail a complete dl..ster to Polly s PoiDters Ia care of
had bls lUlls cleaned Now tbe wladsbleld A couple of Ibis oewspaper

•

·-=

Soc1al
Calendar

Polly's Pomters

I

!

Speczal stonng ttps
to save weddtng gown

j

volunteers from each
organization and volun
teerrng from tile Preceptor
Chapter were Mro Ann Ru~
Mrs Moore and Mrs Teresa
Swatzel
Mrs Brown talked on the
renewal levy and dlacu.ssed
w1tll the group the telephone
contact program AU three
chapters of Beta Sigma Phi
will be participating on the
committee to telephone
voters urging support of the
levy
Mrs June Van
Vranken representative to
the sorority s c ty council
discussed the telephone
romm ttee project and also
reported that CouncU had
decided not to conduct the
g1rl scout fund drive A
request from Mrs Mary
Skmner for a dooatlon for the
Per s onal
Advocacy
recreallon fun~ was not acted
on at the meeting with the
dec s1on be ing postponed
until the budget report IS
g ven

The blldllet J:OIIlmittee II
composed of tbe social
committee ways and means
and u:ecutlve officert As a
special ways and means
project donaUOill are being
tak111 oo an afgban.
A letter will be Wjitten to
National asking about a pin
or other symbol to be given In
recognition of the sliver
circle members of the
chapter At the request of

1\Jra Debbie Buck It wu
decided that on an Individual
volllllleer buil members will
contribute baked goods for
the March of Dimes carnival
to be held Oct 31 In the old
senior high auditorium
A trip to the Mountaineer
dinner theater was pliiUied
for the nezt meeting
Refrethmentl were served
by Mrs Moore Mrs Mlldred
Karr and Mrs Ruby Baer

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION

A hayride was planned for members of the claas wbo are
Oct 30 at the Jim Clifford hospitalized DevotlOill and
residence when the Young singing were led by Dennis
Adult Class met Tuesday Moore Mrs Judy Pape and
night at the Asbury United Mrs Janice Lille served

Methodist Chlli'ch
It was reported tha\ the
lllorm windows have been
paid off It was decided that
planteu will be sent to

5

refreshments 1be November
9 meeting of the claas will be
at the hOme of Dennis and
Katlly Moore In Syracuse

PJ\OrOSF.D CONSTITUUONAL AMI!Nil~IEN f
Ta adopt new Ar de XX Oh o Con•t u on

REI ATIVI TO PRO\IllJN( ¥OR REIIU SFNTAriON OF m~n:&gt;EN
TfAI UTII ITY CONSIJMIIIS IN t Til IW REGUlA TORY ACIIONS
AFFECTING riiEIR IN1 EIIES1 S

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION

4

The pro1 o•ed nn en

lm~nt

~uld

prov le

I For n non 1rofit m•mlersh p corporal on kno\\
the Re' len( a!
Uti t ( on$umer Ac on Group (Ill C I( ) 1th
t 1 1o er md
dut es n I d II( rr( e ental on of th• nt orc Is of ••• I n al t ty
ronsumer~ an ar o s t
ty proccc n ~

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

2 For cerl n controls o p1ll c t I ts the r offictu"s an I emplo cs
and on ltUCAf

To adopt new Art &lt;le XIX Oh o Conotlut on

3

Fifth graders

ttELATIVE TO LIMITING THE RATES WHICH MAY BE CHARGED
TO RESIDENTIAL CONSUMERS FOH FIXED AMOUNTS OF GAS AND
EI ECTRICITY -

team about

The proposed amendment would reqmre

For

o unlar

mem

4 fhat RUCAC n
cl eel oiT CXJ en'
mC'nl of f'

1 That res1dent al cons umtrs of gas be charged per cub1c foot no more
tha11 the average rate charged bv the r uhl ty to II t sers of gas
Thts rate shall apply for the first 30 000 cub1c feet of gas used each
month durmg the wmter month s In addtllon those consumers may
be charged no more than 50 % add I onal Jler cub1c foot for the next
20 000 cub c feet of gas used per month durmg the w nt er months

our plants
As a part of the Retired
Sen or Volunteer Program
Mrs Rose Gmther member
of the Chester Garden Club
and w1nner of more tllan 100
blue ribbons for horticulture
excellence led the discussion
of Plants on our Planet rn
Mrs Mary Hysel s I flh
grade at the Pomeroy
Elementary School
Meeting w th the chlldren
Fr1day
Mrs
Gmther
stressed nature hikes as one
good way of viewing and
1dentifyrng plants ')'hrough
dlscuss1on t was established
that a weed s any plant that
grows where It sn t wanted
In order to have a colorful
flower garden next spring
Mrs Grnther advised the
class members tllat bulbs
need to be planted now She
noted that they are avallable
from several toea mer
chants The class discussed
hotarusts and how to dentify
monocot from dlcot by
structure of the flowers
leaves and seeds

Eynon famzly

holds reunton
RACINE - The five
ch ldren of the late Reed and
Emma Eynon were together
for a reunion recently at the
home of Mr and Mrs Robert
(Wilma) Reiber Racine
Attending were Mr and
Mrs Bernard Eyoon Belfast
Marne Mr and Mrs Emll
Eynon Racine Mr and Mrs
Carrol (Wanda Nelgler
Syracuse Mr and Mrs !von
(Marjorie) Walson Sterling
Heights Michigan
Also attending was the
ch ldren s aunt Mrs Gladys
Croy Cheater Mr and Mrs
Randall Reiber Rachel and
Robert Mr and Mrs Terry
Reiber Vincent and Jessica
Mr and Mrs Dennis Eynon
and Christina all of Racine
Mr and Mrs Clyde Davis
and Lisa Galllpolls Glenn
Collins Ashland Ky David
Collins Racine Miss Catlly
Barringer Reedsv lie and
Mr and Mrs Richard
Bryant Belfast Marne
'!'UESDAY
UN1 ~D Methoalst Wome
of the Forest Run United
Methodist Church Tuesday
7 30 p m at the church Mrs
Richard Rupe will be the
guest speaker AU ladles of
the community Invited

2 That res1Ient a! cons mers of eleclr~ c tv be charged for the first 400
k1lo \att hours of electr c1tv per month no more per k1lo vall hour than
the average rate charge I by the r ullhtv to all users Consumers w1lh
all electr c homes that vere subslanl allv completed by the effective
date of th s amendment shall be charged no more tha t1 s rate for
the first 2 000 k lo all hours of e eel c ly used Jler month durmg the
wmfer months

THURSDAY
DAUGHTERS OF
AI\IERICA District 13 an
nual friendship night
Thursday Chesler Grade
School auditorium Potluck
dinner at 6 3Q with meeting t
follow Mrs Dorothy Ritchie
L' the district deouty

7 Tl at I o r 1 n eml crs
for ncccs:s
h cl
tor ar.
llUCAG s n
s st e t
Ih tl

3 That part of those rates "h1ch are descr1bed above are called hfel ne
rates and shall not be m reased bv add ng any fuel or purchased gas
adjustments or other expense except \ hen rates are set or reset

8 Penalt es for

oint on of n p ov s n of the an c In en!

\

(P opus d by In a

4 That any re\enues lost to a publ c uti I I) from the Implementation of

A najo

the hfehne rates be made up equ tabh from all other rates

5 That any rate changes necessary to complv wtth th1s amendment be
Implemented w1th n 60 lays of the effect ve

~ate

of the amendment

A major ty affi

~at

e

TH~

PROPOSED AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

NO

ARGUMENT
AMENDMENT

FOR

THE

PROPOSED Sec on 4( Bl the life ne ate sha apP. y to the f rst four
hundred 400 k lowell hou s of e ectr c ty used d~ ng each
mon h y b ng period

ISSUE 4 WILL LOWER RATES FOR
AVERAGE RESIDENTIAL CONSUMERS OF
GAS AND ELECTRICITY IN OHIO
W th rap dly rls ng utility bills It s essential
that the res denllal consumers pay the highest
rates Wtth today s ut hty rate structure the
more electr c1ty or gas a customer uses the less
he pays per umt of energy This d1scr mlnates
against small users and promotes wasteful
consumption

) Fo all total e edr c dwe ng un ts as de ned n

Sect on 4( B) the llfel ne ole sha app y to the f rst two
housand 2000) k owatt hours of elec r c ty used durlnR
each mon h y b ng per od between October lth and Apr
llh of each year Between Ap I 5th and October 15th of
eoch year the I~ ne ra e sha apply on y to the first four
hund ed 400 k lowatt hou s of e ecfr c y used dur ng each
moo h y b ng porod
l The I fe ne a e sha apply to the st thirty
housand 30 000 cub c feet of gas used dur ng each month y
b I ng per od be ween Oc obe 5 h and Apr 5th of each
yeo
Bl The I lei ne ate charged by any pub c ut I ly sha
be se not to exceed the ave age evenue requl emment for

each k owatt hour of e ect c ty or cub c foot of gas so d to a

Issue 4 establ shes needed rate reform
known as
Lifeline
that will provide all
res dential consumers with basic monthly
amounts of gas and electricity at no more than
the average rate charged by the r utility to all
users Life! ne also benefits needy resident al
consumers without add t1onal tax money and
w thQut singling them out for pub! c assistance
ISSUE
4
WILL
ENCOURAGE
CONSERVATION BY REWARDING THOSE
WHO SAVE
The more you con serve the more money you
w II save over the present rate structure Energy
conservation besides being a national pr or ty
s key to holding down utility rates In the future
S1mple Lifeline rates will help residential
consumers to be more aware of their
consumption and will promote energy efficiency
ar ong large users The conservation benef ts
that Issue 4 brings will benefit all consumers n
the long run
ISSUE
4
UPDATES THE
RATE
STRUCTURES IN OHIO TO REFLECT
CHANGING REALITIES
The present method for setting rates In Clllo
Is outmoded Today we no longer need rate
structures to promote use of energy Instead we
need rate ~tructures to encour.age conservation
and to make sure that residential consumers pay
only for the energy that they use Issue 4
Incorporates these needed reforms Into Clllo s
rate-making process
Committee For the Amendment Robert P
Weaver Robert L l..o tz Edward A Harter
Pauline L Brokaw Brady E Bancroft

IE IT RESOLVED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF
OHIO THAT ARTICLE XIX OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
IE ENACTED AS FOLLOWS
Sect on 1 I s hereby dec ared to be a proper pub c
pur- and he public policy of thl• state to insure tha the
res dent at ut lty consume s of Ohio are cha ged a
reasonab e rate here n te e e ed to as the fe ne rate
for them nlmum amounts of e ectrlc ty and gas necessary to
ma nta n a min mum s aneta d of living
Sect on 2 Public ut lly ales set In Oh o for consumers of
gu and elec c ty shall lnsu e that
(A) Every res den al consumer n Oh o sho be charged
• lie ne ole for the fo ow ng quont t es of gas and
e ectr c y
( ) Except for Iota e ect c dwe ling units as del ned n

use s by the u ty

C) n the case o res dent a gas c-onsumers th(! tota

cha ge pe cub c foot fo the next twen y thousand (20 000)
cub c fee of Qlls used afte

he fel ne amount dur ng each

moo h y b ng pe od between Octobe 15th and Afjr 15th of
each year shal be no more han I tty 50) per cent h gher
than the feline ate
0) Ln no case sha any fe ne ale be nc eased by
add ng to t any fue or pu chased gas adjustment ncreased

cost o expense ncu red by a uti lty except when rates are

set or rese

E) Any evenues lost to a pub cut lily from the direct
mp ementatloo of the fe ne ra e sha be made up

equ tably from a othe ra es
Section 3 Each rub c u ly whose ales are set br a
d v son or agency o the s1ate or loca government sha
e
w h hat dlv son o agency ev sed ate schedu es n

canto monee w th th s amend men within th ty (30) days of
lhe effect ve dale of lh s amendment The d v sian or agency

of the state o

oca governmen sha

mp ement any rate

changes necessa y to comply w lh h s amendment w th n
s x v 601 days of the effect ve date of this amendment A
other pub cut es as are affected by th s amendment sha I
mp ement such

ate changes as are requ red by th s

amendment w lh n s xty
amendment

60) days o

the effect ve date of th s

Section 4 As used n Art cle X IX
A) A res dentla consume

s any natura pe son or

pe sons who ve In one dwe ng un I as a p nclpal place of
es dence and who a e charged d eel y or nd reel y for the
use o gas or electr c y for heat ng o ght ng or otherwise
for the benet toflhose pe sons wh e n that unit
Bl Alot ale ectr c dwell ng un I sa dwelling un I which
s heated from October 5th to Ap
5th of each yeer
pr nc pa y th ough the use of e ectr c ly and which wos
e her n use as a tota elec c dwe ng un t as of the
effec1 ve date of th s amendmen or was not yet In use as of
the effect ve date of lh s amendment but was tu y one osed
as o that date and was never used as other than a total
e ectr c dwe ng unl
(C Month v b n~ pe od Is that oe lod of lim~ '"'

which he publ c u lily normally b lis Is res dental
consumers For the pu pose of delermln ng the quantities of
e eclr c ty and gas to which the te lne rate shal apply all
pub c ul il lies shall have twe ~~e 2 monthly b II ng periods
In each co enda year a of wh ch she be as aqua In englh
as s eosonab y posslb e I any port on of the pub lc ut ty 1
moo h y bll ng per od sha fa I w h n the October 15th to
Af&gt;r 5th per od spec ed n Sect on 2(A) (II) and I that
ent e monthly b ling per od sha be eated as II all oflt was
nc uded w th n that per od
( 0) A pub c ut ty
ncludes every corporal on
company co partne sh p pe son or assoc at on the r
lessees t ustees or receivers who a e
( engaged In the bus ness of supply ng electr c ty for
gh heat or powe pu poses to coosumers w th n h s state
or
( engaged n !be bus ness of supp y ng art I c al or
natu a gas for hgh ng power or heat ng purposes to
consume s w thin the state
Sect on 5 I any prov

slon of lh s Art c e shall be
declo ed unconslltut onal or nvalld the other prov slons
sllal be declo ed uncon!l lui ona o nvalld the olhor
prov sons sha emaln In effect nolwllhsland ng

ole s n ess

SHALL 11iE PIIOPOSED

NO

ARGUMENT
AMENDMENT

ote s necessary for passage

y nfl mat e

c I e t on)
Co

p

suge

YES

-

YES
SHALI

-

(Propooed by \ tat ve Pet ton)

FULL TEXT OF THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
WEDNESDAY
ROSE GARDEN t.:1ub
Wednesday B p m at the
home of Mrs JamesStout

5

6 F&amp; fi

It was

decided that most spring
flowering
bulbs
are
mono cots
Mrs Grnther told tile blass
that new plants many times
may be started by takrng side
shoots from an old plant and
plac ng them rn water until
they form roots
Some of the many plants
she brought to exhibit were
the a r plant Moses In the
Bullrushes begonias coleus
the money plant sudan
grass cactus and wheat

and m• lall1t on of

FOR

THE

A~IENUMENT

llE ADOPTED•

-

PROPOSED

ISSUE 5 WILL PROVIDE EXPERTS TO
FIGHT UNNECESSARY RATE INCREASES
II would create the Res dent Ia Ul ly
Consumer Act on Group ( RUCAG) a non profit
organ zal on wh ch w II employ attorneys and
ut lly experts to do research draft laws and
rep esent consumers of natural gas e ectr c ty
and elephone
The Public Uti I es Commission of Oh o
(PUCO) claims t must sir ke a balance
between the ut lly and the consumer Today
when government bodes make Important
decls ons on tlie price and qual ly of uti ly
service they are overwhelmed by the army of
pro utility forces Reside tal ut I ty consume s
need an advocate to match h gh pad uti ty
experts lobby sis and lawyers before the PUCO
eglslalure c ly counc Is and courts
ISSUE 5 WONT ADD TO GOVERNMENT
BUREAUCRACY
RUCAG won I be a government agency at
al and I will be Independent RUCAG wll be
funded by voluntary annual membership dues of
$6 Consumers who choose membership will
control R UCAG through an elected board of
directors
RUCAG S VOLUNTARY FUNDING WILL
INSURE ITS ACCOUNTABILITY AND
INDEPENDENCE
To aid collection of voluntary conlr bullons
a check off prov son w II be Included w th
regular b I ng statements from utilities
Cus omers can conveniently contr bute a small
amount and Include I w th the r usual payment
The ut Illy will transfer contributions and a list
of contributors to RUCAG RUCAG will
reimburse the utility for admln stral ve costs
RUCAG WILL PROTECT CONSUMERS
WITHOUT INCREASING TAXES OR UTILITY
BILLS
Membersh p IS totally voluntary RUCAG
will be accountable to res dent a consumers who
will only contr bule I RUCAG adequately
represents the r Interests RUCAG IS the best
way to assure that the consumers vo ce Is heard
and that we have fair ut Illy rates fo residential
consumers now and n the tutu e
Committee For the Amendment Robert P
Weaver Robert L L.o tz Edward A Harter
Pauline L Brokaw Brady E Bancroft
FULL TEXT OF THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
BE'IT RESOLVED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF
OHIO THAT ARTICLE XX OF THE OHIO CONST TUT ON
BE ENACTED AS FOLLOWS
Sect on
t s the po cy and n en of he peop e o he
SateafOhoto
A Establsh w th a necesse y autho ty a not f9'
pro membersh p corpqrat on o be caled he Res den a
U1 ty Consum~ Ac on Group Inc w h the au ho ty and
respons b
to assu e adequa e represents on and
pro ect on o res dent a ut ty consume s and

tr

B Prov de or es dent a u vconsumer membe sh p
In the corporat on and consume espons b y or the
ac Ions of the co po at on

Sect on 2

ott1erw se requ

A!~ used

n th s Ar cle un ess the context

r~t~~

A The te m res den al consume
o
n den a
ut y onsume sh.!iill mean any na ura pe son or pe sons
who 1ve n one dwe ng un no as ans ents who a e
charged directly or nd rectly o the use of gas e ectr c ty or
e ephone for heat ng
~h ng or commun est on rx
ott1erw 1e tor the benefit of fhose pe sons wh e n tha un t
8 The term
egu a ed pub c u ty
ut ty
publ c ut I t:; or 'uti ty corporal on meal')s eve 'I
corporat on comp&amp;ny co.pa tne sh p person or asso c af on
their 1-.sees t ustees or ece ve s who are
Te ephone com pan es who a e engaged n the
bul ntiS of t ansm tt ng menages o I om h ough o
w hnthes stae
Elect lc L aht Com pen es engaged n the bus ness o
supp y ng etect c fy o gh hea o powe pu poses o
cansume s with n th s state
Gila com pan n ..gaged n he bus ness of supply nQ

I

John T Looney 283 Cres wood Ave Wadswo th 4428
Edward A Ha te 509 C s de 0 Co umbus 43202
Susan E C a k 62 N B ach Ak on 44JOJ
Cha es S To~kas
E Ph ade ph a Youngslown

F ed Shutt esworth

o N C esen Ave

C nc nnat

065 9 andon Rd

C eve and

�y-.
,
.
,
"-1
? Helen Help

1'\-1 ne • Nl lV ~tu el Mmruepon YOJneray

v roo ay vc Jo •• o

•*-""-'11:&lt;'1&gt;~~ &lt;

~

Us •••

i~

By Helen Bottel

&gt;J:

The Old 'Picture Protection Game
Dear Helen
My new doctor has a picture of hla wife and children
prominently displayed on his desk However I ve learned he Ia
divorced and his kids live w th the ex ~
He s a very attractive man 1 m an attractive divan.'ee

There s no reason why we shouldn I get together so should I
play Ute modem woman and Invite him to lunch• - WANTS
WHAT! WANT
Dear Wants
Only If you can shrug off a No thank you w th the
nonchAlance of a man who gets a turndown (And most women
ca I never mind Uberallon ~
Your doctor diSplays his wife s picture for good reason to
discourage female patients The day I dlaappears start
hoplr g - H

+++

Dear Helen
What do you doWltha 19-year.old who wont work cons his
Daddy uses every excuse m the bOok for not finding a job•
He has a car gas clothes spending mon,ey and a drug and
dnnkll11! problem He s charming clever Daddy s UtUe angel
and his stepmother s cross We aren I well-off and he drams
most of the ready cash so we often do without My husband
fusses a but but still shells out
No matter how I try I ca t convince him he s being used
He says How can we throw him out to starve• I know for a
fact be s turned down employment and refused college
trammg for techmc an s work Should !leave my husband or
what• - DISGUSTED WITH LEECHES
Dear Dis
Don t leave Instead do a 18!klegree turn use the boy s
1r cks to prove your pomt
I mear be as charming and clever as he IS Give what he
asks (though t temporarily crunps the budget) Take his side
when yo ur husband resents his wild spendjng Stop playmg the
heavy stepmother who doosn t understand my chlld and
soon Daddy may see tbe c'On artist underneath - even realize
U e role HE played n creating hun
I d guess your resenlmel t haq turned your husband
stubborn so let h m convmce YOU the free ride Is over Then
work together on an ultunatum and hopefully rehabilitatiOn

- H

Mr and Mn Lewll Smith
hav• returned from a
vacation that look them to
Jacksonville Florida where
they visited her uncle and
aunt Mr and Mrs John L
Rawllngs (lonner residents
here i and her cousin Mrs
Charles McCall (Bernice)
who Uveo at Orange Pari&lt;
Florida
The Umted Methodist
Womens Group from Temple
Church met on Wednesday
evenmg
Mrs
Arthur
Crabtree President con
dueled a short business
session Lucy Thomas
assisted bY Elizabeth Jordan
gave devotions using Our
Country as the theme A
group from the Carpenter
Baptist Church were guests
A letter ol Invitation from
Albany Church was read
District Officers w1ll be
present at the November 27th
meeting at Albany
Mr and Mrs LewiB Snnth
were In Westerville on
Sunday to vla1t their son m
law and daughter Mr and
Mrs Raece Prather and also
called on his parents Mr and
even ng
Lucy Thomas local ac Mrs Manford Smith In
companied by Evelyn Ward Carroll Mr Sm1th Is
Athens were m Columbus on somewhat Improved from his
Sunday where they v1s ted recent Illness
Lucy s sister Amy Caldwell
and the sisters celebrated
their October birthdays
Alfred
Mr and Mrs Mike Lawson
Alfred Church will begin a
Columbus spent the weekend revival on Sunday evening
w th their psrents Katherme Nov 7 at 7 30 each evening
Lawson and Cheryl and Mr
Mr and Mrs Clarence
and Mrs Gene Jeffers and Henderson are having a
lam iy
garage built

Mr and Mra Arthur
Crabtree and her mother
Gold e Gillogly were guests
o1 the•r son and daughter m
law Mr and Mrs Carl
Crabtree and sons on Sunday
when they were hosts to the
members of Mrs Carl
Crabtree s family (The
Harry
Hawk
family
Hebardsville) for a gathermg
at the Crabtree home
Ethel Shell Steubenville
spent Friday everung with
Mr and Mrs Mendal Jordan
Unda Shell who Is Uvmg m
Athellll celebrated her b r
thday on Friday and her
mother came to be with her
and called here before
retummg home on Saturday
The Busy Bee Soc ely of the
Carpenter Baptist Church
met at the church on Tuesday
evenmg Vivian Gaston gave
devotiOns Plans were made
for a harvest supper to be
served at the church soc1al
room on November 6 Asilent
auct1on was held Plans were
made for members to attend
the Temple Women s Group
meellng on Wednesday

Dear T
You re talking about a easual get-acquamteddlnner not a
horse trade Where IS 1t written a woman must show her birth
certificate on a IU'st date•
Later when VItal statistics time comes I m sure this
fellow will be neither surpriSed noc upset wlearn you re 45lsh
Younger men often prefer older women these days and 1t s
seldom a mother complex as psychiatriSts once claimed
I ve SBld I repeatedly What counts IS not the years but
bow you wear tbem Age makes no difference If two people are
compatible
H

+++

Dear Helen

Carpenter Personals

I met a fme man two years ago He was married then so
nothmg came of t U10ugh we were attracted
Last mght he called saying he was now dlvorC'ed and
a'ked f I would have dmner with hlffi
PI oblcm s I ve learned he s only 34 which Is 10 years
t 1 us younger than me Do I teU hlffi pretend I m 351sh or
refuse to rob the cradle
T Y
P S Peop esay I look much youngerthan my age

11-'lbollooUvSentlnel Middleport Po!oeroy 0 Monday Oct 18 1976

Bicentennial theme used for meet
Cal'I')Mg out the blcen Fun by Mrs Martbl Chlldl
tennial theme members ol Today a Grandma bY Mlaa
the Philathea Women of the Frances RoWJb llld a riddle
Middleport Church of Chrlat by Allee Robelon
attended the Thursday nigh\ l\llaa Roush presided at the
meeting wearing old clothing
or bicentennial costuming
and carrying sac!l. lunchea
Program for the special
meeting Included a reading
Make
Today Happy
Remembering Yesterday s

Honor list published

meeting whicb opened wltb completed lor ~ the
lbe Pllilllbea IGilC Mrs Homebullderl dbm« on Oct •

c-geGiuebadlbe..,...l•g 11 Attelldlng the meetlni
prayer and Mrs Cbl1da read were 21 members and seven
scripture
Plana were guestl

~

RACINE - The honor roll
lor Soulbem HiCh School for
the lint lix weeb grading
period bu bHD IIIIOunced
Mlkinl 1 grade ol B or
abon In aU their subjects to
be Jilted (natnea In capital
IA!tlerl are all A1) were

SENIORS - PATRICIA
AUTHERSON Sharon
Baker Bobbl Chapman Greg
CUndlll ERIC DUNNING
carol Glenn Owaln Hall
Dreama Jenkl11• Carl
·J~=~ABrenda Lawrence
B
LEWIS. NINA
ROUSH
DENISE TABUTfT, KEVIN
WILLFORD Danny Wolle
SCOTT WOLFE
JUNIORS - Lola Bailey
Steve
Baker
Shelly
Chevalier DONNY DUO
DING Larry Fisher Lori
Guinther PERRY HILL
TERF3A MEADOWS JAYE

POTLUCK PLANNED
CHESTER - Annual
lrlendohlp night of the
Daughters ol America
District 13 will be held
Thursday Oct 20 at the
Chester Grade School
auditorium with a potluck at
6 30 p m and the meeting to
follow Mrs Dorothy Ritchie
Ia the district deputy

SERVICES A'ITENDED
Albert Roush and Gerrl
were
In
Kessinger
Blacksville W Va Tuesday
and Wednesday for the
funeral services of a relative
Lee Skmner at the Owens
Funeral Home Bunal was In
Morgantown W Va

ORD IVAUNNA POWELL,

Jean Rltchhart Cheryl
Roaeberry John Sayre
SCOTT SOUDER Richard
Teaford Barbara The1ss
Reunna Walker Barbara
White Myra Woods
SOPHOMORES - Brian
Grindstaff Brice Hart SETH
WLL Sharon Hill Loyal
Holman Carol Morns Brent
Patterson Oebb1e Pickens
Curtis Price Susie Scar
berry Kelly Taylor N1ck1
VanMeter Oenms Wolfe
Terri Zirkle
FRESHMEN
Meg
Amberger Carmen Car
penter Ray Deem Kim
Ongan Amy Fisher Oav1d
Foreman Pamela Harden
Rosemary Hubbard MeliSsa
lhle Bnan Johnson Cannen
Manuel James Meadows
Troy Manuel Amy Souder

Grade honor list announced
RACINE - Principal Diana Simpson Tamara
Robert Beegle has announced Theiss Tamara Wolfe
the honor roll for the Racine .,.Wendy Wolfe
Elementary School for the/ Grade Three - Lor1
first six weeks gradmg Adams Dixie Dugan Mandy
period
H1ll Mells•a lhle L1sa
Making a B or above In Parsons Kelly Rizer Kenda
aU their subjecta to be Usted Rizer
Robin Savage
on the roll (no grades given m Rebecca VanMeter
grade one for the firs! six
Grade Four - Alan Cnsp
weeks) were
Ralph Fisher Sandra Har
Grade Two - Damon den LoiS lhle Oav1d PoweU
Fisher Matthew Jewell Lofl Sunll'"n
Angle Ours Rachael Reiber
Grade Five - Rhonda

Otester
By Clarice Allen
Mr and Mrs Cla)'t9n Allen
spent the weekend In
Columbus With Mr and Mrs
Billy Robert Allen They also
caUed on Mr and Mrs Roger
Serrott and ch ldren
0 0 Clelland Columbus
caUed orl Mrs Clayton Allen
and Denzel Cleland Tuesday
Mr and Mrs Arthur Orr
viSited recently with Mr and
Mrs Bob Lee and family
Bashan and Mr and Mrs
Blythe Theiss Dorcas
Or and Mrs Roger
Grueser and ]iris Logan
were recent visitors of Mr
and Mrs Arihur Orr

Celebrate

the J~4th feeli on
November2n
Vote. Its the Bicentennial thing to do.

~

~

•

~

•

7

~

~

eo Th s P bl ca on heArne ca nRevolu on 8 ten ennaa Adm n s a 100 and The Ad ert s gCounc

Year's first

Racine Social Events

honors listed
at Portland

By Mn Frucll Morril

PORTLAND - Principal
Larry Wolfe bas announced
the first six weeks honor roll
at the Portland Elementary
School Named to the roll
w1th names m capital letters
rece1vmg all As were
Lorle Cornell Annette
F1tch Joyce Foreman
Krista Sellers KARLA
SMITH Lor1e Wolfe grade 2
Mae Barber CHARLIE
BOSO Lee Cornell Tammi
Proffitt grade 3 RAY
LAWRENCE Kevin Teaford
grade 4 Vicky Barber
CHRISTLE LAWRENCE
DANNY WEDDLE David
White grade 5 Debbie
Bryant CINDY EVANS
BRUCE JOHNSON TAMMY
MEADOWS Danny Pickens
Kltlie Sellers DaVId Talbott
Oaruttte Weddle grade 6
Sherrie Lawson special
education
Serving on the safety pstrol
at the school this year are
Bruce Johnson Kim White
Kittle Sellers
Danny

Mrs Frances Wilcoxen was
hostess for lbe Esther Circle

at First Baptist Church
Monday evening Oct II
Mrs Grella Simpson
opened the meet ng w1th
group singing It Pays To
Serve Jesus scrl\).\ure Ps
ll3 and readmgs If Jesus
Came To Your House and
For Release From Tension
a business session followed
An offering for the
scholars!Up fund was given
The White Cross Work was
discussed and plans were
made to serve refreshmenta
for the Bertha M Sayre
Society In November A
program by Mrs L lllan
!layman Included a playlet
ent1lled Fault finding by
Mrs Dorothy Badgley Mrs
Helen Simpson and Mrs &gt;
Mildred Hart There were
other readings on the subject
and SCripture from Psabns

P1ckens Danelle Weddle
and Robert McHa!Ue
Wumers of a poster contest
were Carol Sellers Christie
Lawrence VIcky Barber
Dave Bryant Patricia
Pauley Cmdy Evans Kittle
Sm th Laren Wolfe
Sellers and Paul Ours
Grade Six - Kathy Baker Selected for having the best
Zane Beegle Becky Lee art m another conies! were
Cla1r Morris Terry Pat Bruce Johnson Debbie
terson John Porter Oav1d Bryant Patricia Pauley
Sabnons Tonya Salser Lon Vicky Barber Charlie Boso
Warden
and Steve Teaford

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION

~

~

A Publ Se

...

I'ROI OSED CONSTITUTIONAl AMEN!JMFNT

•

fu ndo t n~w S o I of \rt 1.- II nnd nt&gt;w \rt de XIV
nnd t., f('( I Rert o H 1 lb lc 1 l le If
Anti 1~ of \rt I II Ul o l st lut on

~
~

•

•"

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION

G

I

Ul

S ll ( lNSIIlU II( NA I AMI

I o dopl ;\-r

Nf Ml

r\ I

c XV Sect on 11 01 o Consltu on

Ill I \I lVI I 0 IS i \I II SIII NG I HO( F.DT ltES FOR I 1\( lSI \TIVI
Jll i\1!11'&gt;( S \Nil \IIIWI II Oi S\11 I\ II \llltl S 01 Nt (II Alt
I 0.\11 rt I I I N I s \ !\ ll HI I \II I) I \( IIIII I S lltiOit I 0 I Jill lit
CO:&gt;\ S I HlJC II()'&gt; OH F. XI \N SIO i'&gt; \N ll I Wt l llUHI S I Olt CO 'II EN
SA liO N 01 II HSO :\S IIIlO \I !l iN Jlltl )) On ll \ ~1 \( f ll BY THEIR
01 EH \11 0:-1 Olt E\ISII :'-:( E
I he pro1 sc I

IC

cnl

]J

JlrOI I

Je

1

n clear 1 o vcr pant or
I I c ol t
I \p J ro a I
c I res n I I e mn;:o 1111st
lfc s t II
t n r nee
l o lave
n(urclor

rc

approve construct on of future nuclear power
plants after publ1c hear ngs The heanngs
prov de c1t zen nput before accountable elected
off c1als Unresolved problems of nuclear fuel
supply safety systems radloact ve waste
management secunty and economics will
receive the scrut1ny of experts testifying before
the state leg s alure The leg slature must find
that safety syslems are effective and methods
for handling and d sposlng of rad oact ve wastes
are safe
Issue 6 w II assure that nuclear power
lac I t es have nsurance or lndemn I cat on to
fully compensate v ctlms of nuclear ace dents
All ndustrles In Oh1o are liable for hazards to the
public ut•l t es should be no different
ISSUE 6 WILL PROTECT THE PEOPLE
AND BUSINESSES OF OHIO By nsur ng that
demonstrated lechn ques exist for the safe
mana_gement of nucrear power and that the
publili remains financially protected agamst any
nuclear power r sks Issue 6 entrusts our elected
representallves to make sure that safety and
fmanc1al accountab l1ty are Integral components
of our state energy policy
Comm lttee For the Amendment Robert P
Weaver Robert L Loitz Edward A Harter
Paul ne L Brokaw Brady E Bancroft
FULL TEXT OF THE PROP:I&gt;SED AMENDMENT
BE IT I SOLVED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF
OHIO THAT ARTICLE XV OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
BE AMENDED BY THE ADDITION OF A NEW SECTION
TO READ
r
Sect on II
01 The people of the State of Oh o des re by tn s

2 Exc 1 t ons fr o1
t l
( es
3

of tl e

e

leq ac

and acc uracy of
n t C\Ol nf
!he Rille

C( I

t

th
c Ie" '""
en '

n I le s
for non rom1 hancc ' th JlrOVISions of
tl &lt;nt Ul on 1eh on I tl c Allurne ( en cral or an)

(I ro1 os d by In

A n a)O t ) am nat c

ole s

cess r, for

SII7\ i I 1 HE PHOI OSED An!ENDMENT BE ADOPTED•
NO

ARGUMENT
FOR
THE
PROPOSED
AMENDMENT
Bal ot T tie (prepared by Secretary of State)
PROPOSED
CONSITUTIONAL
AMENDMENT RELATIVE TO
ESTABLISHING
PROCEDURES
FOR
LEGISLATIVE HEARINGS AND APPROVAL
OF SAF~TY FEATURES OF NUCLEAR
POWER
PLANTS
AND
RELATED
FACILITIES
PRIOR
TO
THEIR
CONSTRUCTION OR EXPANSION AND
PROCEDURES FOR COMPENSATION OF
PERSONS WHO ARE INJURED OR
DAMAGED BY THEIR OPERATION oR
EXISTENCE

ISSUE 6 1S DESIGNED TO ASSURE THAT
FUTURE NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS IJI
OH I 0
ARE A SAFE
AND SOUND
INVESTMENT OF RATEPAYERS MONEY
Each new nuclear power plant env s ons a b Ilion
dollar mvestment by the utilit ies of Oh1p The
safety rei abilly and economics of the energy
sources on which our state economy runs are too
Important to delegate solely to federal
authoritieS and ulllty off Cia is and are of nght a
matter of State nterest

establishment fhat uses radioactive mate lals solely for

or enlargement of any such nuclear fission powe plant or
r"la1ect fac:!llty
4) (1!1) Judicial rev ew and pun shment fo v olaf un o

disposa use manufacture process ng or reprocessing of
radioactive mate als wastes or fuels for use In or produced
In the course of the product on of e ectr c ty w th the use of

County Common pteas Court of the county where n he
res des or where n the lnlury dam~e or loss occurred to
recover fu l compensation for the II'! ury damage or loss

facilities f not f no y approved by January 1976 may be
app oved by the Governor or any state ocol or counfy
agency and may reman n effect only after all the following
conditions are mel for each plant or lac I ty under

Su t for strict liability under this sect on shall be In addlt on
to any other remedy Inc udlng workmen • compensation to
assure recovery n fu ll of compensat on for the n ury
damage or oss
(d) The provisions of fhls secflon shall be self execuf ng
and no court •hall sfoy operation hereof or to any porf on
hereof fo the benet 1 of an unsuccessful party In the first

commence or conllnue construction of any nuclear fission
power planf o elated lac ty w thouf a fina l va d

(S) 1•1 The Governor shall annually publ 1h r,ub lclze and
release to the news media and to approprla e off c als of

construct on license from the federal government issued by

affected commun ties

or any person o

group of persons may

January 1 l2l6 on yalter all the following c.ondlllons ore met
fo each such p ont or facility
T~e applicant has obtained sufflc ent nsurance or
w&lt; n f cation to assure thof victims of any personal InJury
property damage econom c oss or olher damage fhat
results In whole or n part from the existence or operation of
the plan! or fac I ty are assured fu I compensoflon for fhe
In ury damage or loss
(b) The General Assembly through •!clnf comm lfee
has solicited op nlons and ln!ormallon rom lnlerestec
persons concerning the safe and economical operation of the
Pant or facllty and has made the materials submitted by the
appl cant and olhe sovollab e to such persons for comment
Wdely publicized open hearings throughout the stale shall be
held consequent to this sollclfat on g vlng full and edequate
not ce and an oppor unity to any person fo test fy II baing a
condlflon of such hear ngs fhat all oral and wr !ten op non
nformaton orothe teatlmonysha begvenunde oalh AI
parllclponfs shall be sub eel lq cross examination by
members of ttle Oln comm t ee and subject to reasoMb e
m Is posed by the oint comm ttee by other nterestec
persons at the hea lngs
Ic) The General Assembly at any regu ar sess on
enacfs speclf c enabling leglslallon perm ltlng approval
Such leg s at on sha Irequire a ma orlly afflrmallve vote of

ISSUE
6 WILL HELP END THE
CONFUSION ABOUT NUCLEAR POWER
SAFETY AND ECONOMICS
he memoers e ected to each house In add tlon no 5uch
The legiSlature by Simple majority vole w11l enab ng leg slat on sha I be passed unlll the public hearings

•

and no Ia

•

...-.
....
--..•
.-.
M

6 That mumc pal tics a n I counties • hall have the right to mttmhvc and
ref erend m as may be prov1ded b) I w

7 That no Ia v may be m1t1aled bv pel t on winch coull not be passed
by the General Assemhlv Other specl11c I m1lal ons on tie [lOWer. of
IDliiBhve and refetendum 11h1ch relate to taxahon of
IJfOJ erty
arc repealed

•'

*

(Proposed by In tint ve Pet bon)

A majonty affirmahvo voto is necessary for passage

q

••

~

"•

YES
-=1---1---1
--

SHALL TilE II,OPOSED AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

NO

ARGUMENT
AMENDMENT

n a manner designed to Inform

to this end the prov stons of tf'l s section are severab e

n

the

parents Mr and Mrs
Frar c1s Moms Sunday af
ternoon
Guests over till! weekend of
Rev and Mrs Don Walker
were Mr and Mrs James
Vance and four children of
South Carolina Mr and Mrs
Larry Gawthrop and two
children of SummersvlUe W
Va Mr and Mrs Gerald
Cogar and daughter of
Ravenswood W Va Darrell
Cogar of Wlnf1eld and fr1end
ol N1tro
Miss Pam Hill of Columbus
spent the weeke 1d with ~er
psrents Mr and Mrs Billy
H1U
Mr and Mrs Roy R rne
spent Tuesday afternoon with
Mr and Mn Bill McKenzie
at GaU polls
Bruce Hart of Ohio State
University Columbus spent
the weekend with his psrents
Mr and Mrs Robert Hart
The Nazarene Church
Cottage Prayer meeting was
held at the home of Ml"8
V1vl an ~ohnson Tuesday
mormng Oct 12 several
attendc') Mrs Elizabeth
Coffman led the devotiOns
Mrs Eug1a Johnson of
Middleport spent a couple
days w1th Mrs Vlvwn
Johnson

the leg s ature may enact and perhaps Improve
upon the n llated law If the legs ature fa Is to
act or enacts an unacceptable vers on
pelt oners may ask that the or gmal proposal be
put d rectly on the ballol
In l1at ve and referendum are an established
check and balance
but t Into our Qh o
Constitution They are the purest form of
democracy prov1d ng an essent1al complement
to the leg slat ve process and actually Improving
the leg slature s performance and effectiveness
These processes shou d be read ly ava lable to
the c t zens
Comm1ttee For the Amendment Robert P
Weaver Robert L Lo tz Edward A Harter
Paul ne L Brokaw Brady E Bancroft

BE IT RESOLVED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF
OHIO THAT ARTICLE II EXISTING SECTION 1 and
SECTION Ia lb lc ld le If AND g BE REPEALED AND
NEW ARTICLE II SECTION 1AND NEW ARTICLE XIV OF
THE OHIO CONSTITUTION BE ENACTED AS FOLLOWS
ARTICLE

II

Sect an

The legs at ve power of he state shall be
vested n a Gene al Assembly cons s ng of a Senate and
House of Representatives bu the peop e eserve to
themselves he powe of n t at ve and eferendum as

prov ded n Arl cle XIV of h s Cons

ARTICLE XIV

Sect on 1 The subm ss on of a

ut on

p oposed amendment of

th s Cons! lullon d ectly o the eleclors may be demanded by

~

...•
~

.••
...
~

•

FOR

THE

PROPOSED valves
to assure slate government IS
respons ve to the people Issue 7 would enable
c t zens to adopt utility reform measures
ISSUE 7 WILL SIMPLIFY INITIATIVE promotll'l!l fair rates and sound uti! ty pol c1es
AND REFERENDUM BASED ON THE even when the legislature falls to act
RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE OHIO
ISSUE 7 BRINGS OHIO INTO LINE WITH
•CONSTITUTIONAL REVISION COMMISSION THE OTHER 22 STATES WITH INITIAtiVE
~
In Its 1975 report the prestigious bipartisan LAWS
~mmlsslon
viewing the entire body of
Oh 0
h
d
constitutional language on the Initiative and
now as very s1rmgen 1 proce ura1
:"referendum concluded that the provisions were requ rements The signature Iotas re.qu red by
! confusing and in need of rev sion
Issue 7 are h1gh enough to keep frivolous
measures off the ballot The Commission found
•
INITIATIVE AND REFERENDUM ARE lhese processes have been used w1th reslra1nt
,..BASIC TOOLS OF
CITIZEN
SELF by Ohioans m the past and there seemed no
GOVERNMENT
reason they should not continue to be ava Ia pie n
:
They permit citizens to propose laws and the future
'\
"constitutional
amendments
for
voter
ISSUE 7 IMPROVES THE LEGISLATIVE
:COnsideration or to overr de Ill conceived laws INITIATIVE BY COMBINING TKE BEST
l!nacted by the legislature The 1912 Oh 0 FEATURES OF BOTH THE INDIRECT AND
. Constitution established 1n1tlat ve and DIRECT INITIATIVE PROCESSES
referendum as crucially Important
safety
Petit oners collect 150 000 signatures then

Parable of the Sower
Attendance at lhla servlee
was 25
The U M W will hold Ita
regular monthly meeting on
Tuesday evening Oct 19 at8
p m at the home of Thebna
Henderson
with June
Steams leading the Pledge
Service (We WISh to correct
a statement made earlier
that June Steams was reelected vice-president again
for 77 as Thelma Henderson
1s to be our new vlee
president as June Is movb1g
away some time In the
future )
Mr and Mrs Charles 0
Woode attended revival
services at the RuUand U M
church on Oct 13 where their
broUer In law Rev Frank
Cheesebrew of Shawnee 0
was the speaker for the
eve ng
Mr and Mrs Paul Buckley
and reresa attended the
Oa1ry Convent on meeting at
Columbus last Mo day
even ng Oct I where Teresa
sang In the Ohio State Choir
of which she Is a member
While at this meeting they
met Clair Woode a District
COBA Sales Manager in his
round of duty who sent his
regards to his perents and
friends I the Alfred area
After the meeting th e
Buckleys visited relatives In
Columbus arriving home In
tl e curly morning hours We
wish to add that we are very
proud of Teresa fo her

musical talenta an~ lor what
she has been able to accomplish as a result or
cooperation on the part of her
psrents and others May God
grant success In all her Wl
dertaklngs
Nina Robinson and Charles
and Helen Wuode attended
the Gospel Hy nn Sing held
at North Bethel U M church
Saturday night Oct 9
The Northeut Cluster
Hymn Sing wlU be held at the
Alfred Church her e on
Saturday ev~nllll{ Oct 30
Weekend guests of Mr and
Mrs Arthur Atherton have
bee• their daughter son In
)aw and grandson Mr and
Mrs Emest Vb1cyard and
so of Michigan
William Carr ond Russell
Flndling are doing a roofing
job In Parkersburg
Other folk s ore having
repelr work done u the way
of stonn windows and smaU
jobs In preparation for
winter
Russell Findling and
Hobart Swortz have pur
chased new cars and Leonard
Amos a new truck
~
So111e folks are having colda
due to the change In the
weather Do hope the flu
doesn t hit before folks get
their shots
Nino Robinson Clara
Follrod and Charles and
Helen Woode c 11led o Mr
and Mrs Clifford Hayes In
Middleport last Tuesday
Mrs Hayes has been In
trat1lon but not hi the present
though she ren alns bedfast
nt her home there

Sec on 4 Laws p ovid ng fat fa)( eves epp op a ont
fo he cu ent ex penses of ll e sta e gove n nen and state
nsf u ons and emergency aws neces$ery lo
the
mmed a e p ese va t on a tt c pub c peace health or
safety sha go no mm ed a e eff ect Such emergency aws
upon a yea and nay vo e n ust ece ve tl e vo e of two hirds of
all th e membe s e ec ed to each house o th e Generft
Assembly al')d the easons fo sud necess t y sha ll be set
fo t n one sec on of he aw wh ch sec on sha be pr~ssed
only upon a yea and nay vo e upon a sepa rate oil celt
th e eo n The aws nc uded n h s sec t on a e not sub ect to
the rete endum
Sect on 5 I con fl ct ng an e dments to he Co sf utlon
a e app o~ed at the sa m e e ec on by a m a o ty of the
e ecto s vat ng hereon U e one ece v ng the h gt es number
a at mal ve vo es Is he amend men o th e Cons! tut on
I confl ct ng ma te s o law a e app aved a the same
elect on by a mal o ly of the el ector s vat ng th er eon he pne
ece v g tt e h ghes numbe of a I me t ve vo es s he law
Secllo 6 Th e s y e of a canst t ut ona amendments
subm tf ed t o th ee ec to s by pet on sha be Be 1 csolved
by the peop e of the St al e. of Ot o The style ol al aws
subm t ed f r s a the Gene a As se nbly by n t at \le pe ltlon
sha I be Be II enac ed by the Genera Assemb y n esponse
to an n t a ve pe t Qn
Whoe~er seeks to f e an n a ve o r efe endum pe It on
shal f r st e w t h he sec etarv ot state and he Oh o Ballot
Boa d a copy of the fu I te&gt;c of the p oposa o be S\Jbm tt ed
en consents ot
together wlth he names addresseS and w
no fewer than three nor mo e than ve e ec ors who have
ag eed to serve as membe s of a committee w th a
designated cha man thereof to epresent the pet oners n

a mailers elat ng lo he petl on The board sh• ll with n

f fteen days after t rece ves he ex t p epare an dontify ng
c11pt on &amp;nd a a and truthfu summary at the praposa and
subm t them to the secretary of s a e and to the cha rman of
the comm tee The committee sha
then prepare the
pet on wh ch sha cant a n a ue copy of the cttpt on end
he summa y prepa ed by the boa d and sl all f e a copy of
he Pe ton with the sec retarv o sta e before so c a on of
s gna ures to the pet t on The pe f on may be c cu ll ect and

an In 1 at ve peflt on hav ng p n ed across the top

I led n parts but each part shall be dent ca l to the coby f ed

for an amendment to

w h he secre a y of sjate The pet on need not contain the
full ext o the p oposal but f t does not ee r;h salle tor of
s gna Ures to the pet tion sha carrv ll true copy of 1he full

Pet t on
he Canst tut on to be subm tted
s gned by wo hundred f f1y thousand

d rect y to the voters
electo s ce rt111ed as prov ded n Sect on 6 of th s art c e and
f ed w th the secreta y of state The secretary sha I subm t
the proposed amendment to he electo s at the next
succeed ng general e ect on or at a special eledlon on 1he
date fixed by law for h~d ng the primary e ect on wh chever
s earlier occu r ng subsequent to one hundred twenty days

after the f I ng of the pet t on

It the amendmenl Is adop

ed by
t t becomes a pa of the
Consfltutlon and shall be publ shed by the secretary of slale
Sec! on 2

{A) The submlss on of a proposed law to the General
Assemb y may be demanded by an nit at ve pet ton hav ng
pr nted across the top pet t on to a law to be ~ubm ed t s
to !he Geoe a Assembly s gned by one hundrec and t fly
thousand electo s ce t fled as prov ded n Section 6 of th s
a t cle and fled w th the secretllry of sta e The secreta y
shal transm t the fu text 'Of he p oposed law forthw h to

the General Assemb y
A law proposed by Initial ve pelltlon shall no be

proposed nor enacted by the Genera Assembly as an
eme gency measure If a law proposed by n tat ve pe t on
becomes law e ther as proposed o in amended fo m It sha
be treated as a aw orlglnat ng n the Generll Assemb y

except that f the

proposed~aw

Is amended by the Genera

Assemb ly and becomes lew and If a request fo subm ss on
at an e ectlon s fled as prov ded In th s sect on the law

court during o pending appeals

res dents of the affeded communities the entlra evacuaf on
Pons speclflec In the licensing of each nuc ear fission power
Pant or related facility affecting fhe state Copes of the
Pans shal be made available to fht public upon request ol
no more than the cosf of reproduction
(b) The Governor shall osfabllsh procedures for annual
review by stale and ocol officials of emergency medical old
Pans and established evacuation plans specified In the
llcens ng of each nuclear flss on power plant or relafed
lac lly affect ng fhe state with regard for but noll mltec lo
such foctors os the adequacy and accuracy of such plans
changes In traffic pofterns populot on denslfles schools and
ndustrlal developn,.nls and the avalla 1ty of sufficient
hosp tal and tl!lergency focllltes fo core for v ctlms of
nuclear accidents and olher factors as requested by locally
electec ollie a s The procedures shall prov de tor full public
partie potion n fhe rev ew
(61Totheextentthatthlsuctonlslnconsslentwlfhany
prev ously existing provls on of the Oh o Canst fuflon !he
prov slons of th s section shall control
(7) If any provision of this sect on or the application
thereof to any person or clrcumsfancesls held nvaild under
the lows ol the Unlftd Stales such Invalidity shall not affect
other provls ons or appllcot ons of fhla section which can be
given effect wlfhout the Invalid provision or oppl calion and

on~ subJect
appro\Cd bv the \Oter. mav be vetoed by the Governor

5 That no I IW proposed b' m•tmh ve sl 11 have more than

divers on of redloactlvlty or radloact ve chemically lox c

for wh ch any defendants Jointly and severally sho be
strictly abe wlfhout proof of neg I gence /Jlly person who
has suffered such Injury damage or loss moy sue In the

That an amen lment to the Oh o C01 1luhon may be 1mtiated by a
pchlwn s gne I b) 1t le 1St ?aO 000 electors

I rocrd11CO for II II ~ of the l"'l of 1 pr posed law or amendment
or la11 lobe refellt I for pr p r tt 01 1f a nmn 1 by the Ohw I 11lot
Ilo ml for tl c prc1 ar t on of tl c 1 cllh o co 1tam ng the summary for
r Ill fell cnlo lo c I ula
llld s
nh the I t I 01 for the n llot
Uo ml to 1 res r I e I llol 1m g ! c 1d ext lan 1t10 1s for pretmr 1l1on
and pub calion of a1" menl ' 111 u ;: and t&gt;JlOS n~ the law or
amenumcnl and for placement of ll c questwn on the ballot at a general
or spec al elect un

lo any nuclear fission power plonf or relatec faclllfy with a
va d f no consfructlon license obfa ned from the Unlfed
States Atomic Energy Commission or Its successor agency
by January 1 1976 but shall apply to exJ!Onslon alteraf on

ln!ure qu ck and speedy relief acts resu lting In such n ury
damage or loss shall be deemed ultraharardous act v ties

refreshments

basement social rooms with
decorations In keeP.mg of
HaUower
Mr ur d Mrs Larry
Gnmm Mr and Mrs Nell
Baker Mr and Mrs Bob
Wmes of Westerville and
Mrs Linda Cleland of
Cleveland were here over the
weekend to be at the beds1de
of their father Mr Clyde
Wines
Mrs Cora Webb entered
Grant Hosp tal Columbus for
surgery
Mrs Carla Shuler un
derwent surgery Tuesday at
Pleasant VaUey Hospital PI
Pleasant W Va
Mr and Mrs Bud Sbnpson
of Seymour lnd spent
several days with his mother
Mrs Grella Simpson and her
mother Mrs Marguer te
Winebrenner
Mrs V1vlan Johnson spent
Sunday with her brother m
law and sister MF and Mrs
Marvm MorriS at Albany
Mr and Mrs Pete Gould of
Nelsonville viSited her

Sunday School attendance
on Oct 10 was 50 the offering
$21 66 Worship services were
held at 10 45 with Rev
Charles Oomlgan speaking
from Malt 13 I 23 on

a mal or ty of thee ecto s vat ng on

materia s testing purposes
medica purposes or
educational purposes In a publ cor private school system or

ex st ng nuclear f ss on powe plant or fo the author ty to
conslruct expand enlarge or operate any fa ell ty or act v fy
lotheextenfthat It s lnvolvec In !he slorage transporlatlon

conslderat on

YES

not apply to any sme scale nuclear flss on reactor used
solely for educational or research purposes any p ace or

said materials used n or producec In the course of the
production of electric ty wlfh the use of nuo ear fission to

en arge or operate any electrical transm sslon ne corridors
or any t ansportat on routes to ad from such pants l!lnd or

pa ssa~e

harmfu or rod oactlve
\31 The provls ons of subsecllon 12 of this sect on shall

or other harmful materfats or as a result of other njury
damage or loss resulting from the existence or operat on of
a nuc ear f sslon power plant or related fac I ty or activity to
the e)(tent that t Is lnvo ved In the stor~e ransportatlon
d sposal use manufacture processing or reprocess ng of

pron le

3 That Hcept for emergency Ia 1s I \X lev~es and apJlropnallons for cu~
rent ex11enscs 11) l1 sccilo 1 of
or 1 ) 1lcm of l1 v UJ[Iropr~atmg
mo e' 11 he nferrcd to the •olers f len tndcd b a [lctlhon s gned
b 1t le st I Oil l ele lors m I fil e i 1th n 90 d vs C cr such law
has 1 l.Socd St cl Ia or Item v II l o mto etTect only 1f 1ppruvc I by
am IJOI h of the elector:; volmg on 11

dUrlng which such fuel and or waste s or may continue to

2) Any oppl cat on for any pe m t certificate or license
to be obta ned f om any agency df stale loco or county

nuc ear fission cr fo1 the authority to construct expand

at c I ct on)

env ronment n excess of

standards then selby proper author ties cha ged by law with
sett ng such standards due fo mperfed storage technologies
or conta nment or transportation techniques earthquakes or
other acts of God thefl. sabotage governmantal or social
nstabll t es o whatever other causes the Genera l Assembly
moy deem to be reasonably possible for any pe od of time
be

11 ould

2 That a Ia v ma1 be 11 t ted b1 s 11 m1lt n a ~ct1hon s 1~ned by at
least 1 0 000 electors If the Gener I \s emil does not )lass the la1v
as sui m ttcd
lim s ' mo11tl
r
cis an amende I 1 ers10n of the
Ia 1 the comn 11l c of the JI C( t o ers Sl ons r o tl c pel l on may rc
~ue•t th 1t the Ia v as 1 ropu cd or
t h lc 11111 c unr dments be put
to a 1 ole of the people

foreseeable posslb lfy of endanger ng the health safety and
welfare of the people of the Stale of Ohio by lntenf ona or
un ntented escape or diversion of harmful materials or of

(c) In any action brought to recover compensat on or
damages for personal Injury property damage econom c
loss or other damage suffered as a result of escape or

government for the consturdlon of any nuclea flss on power
plant or for the authority to e)(pand or en arge o operate an

I

I I) The fuels rad loact ve materials and rad oact ve
wastes of each such p ant or fee I ty can be stored
transported conta ned or disposed of w th no reasonable

welfare s tlng of nuc ear flss on power pants and other
nuclea fact It es and the regulation of a act v ties
nvolvlng and re at ng to nuclear f ss on power plants and
sa e v and welfa e of both present and future generat ons
the construction or expansion or en argement o operation of
nuclear f ss on power plants or other nuclear facilities and
the management of adloact ve wastes Is a matte of state
nterest

The proposed amen lm cn l

( I The effect veness of a I necessary safeguards and
safety systems nclud ng but no! lim fee to the emergency
core cooling system of each such plant o faclllfy has been
demonstratec to the satisfaction of the General Assembly by
comprehens ve and successfu lest ng of subslanllaliy
slm ar phys cal systems n actua operat on to protect and
safeguard fhe peop e ofthe Sf ate of Ohio and

the areas of land use planning pub c health safety and
nuclear fac lilies The people furlher dec are that the health

I r J I

!hat

adloact lv ty Into the natura

The hymn I Surrender All
and prayer by Mrs Hayman
After which the Love Gift
program was presented by
Mrs Frances Wilcoxen which
opened with singing 0
Master Let Me Walk With
Thee scripture Eph 5 6-9
The Love Gift offering was
given and Mrs Wilcoxen
closed w1th prayer The
hostess served lovely

FULL TEXT OF THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT

cons derat on on tl'le bas 5 of clear and con~lnc ng evidence

noncompliance with the provisions of th s section shall be
considered by any County Common Pleas Court when
pelltloned by the Attorney General or any c tlzen
b) If any Court finds fhofl requlrementof lhlssecllon s
not be ng complied wllh 11 shall order fhe offend ng person
agency or the General Assembly to comply w fh such
requirement of this section
failure to comply shall
conslltute contempt of court The Court may also aword
attorney s fees and cosls to a prevailing plaintiff

amendment to exe c se the ful power vested In them and In
th s slate by the Co~st tullon and ews of the Unltec Stales In

ltEI \11VE I 0 SIMPLIP\JNG 'li!E PHOCEDUJlES FOR INITIA1IVE
AND REFERENDUM

as descr bed In subsect on 2 (b have been held and all
lesf mony Is complete Each such oct shall Include n Its
preamble a spec if c finding as to each plant or facility under

Alfred Social Notes

enacted by the Genera Assembly sha take effect only

he

law proposed by he equest tor subm ss on at an e ect on s
re1ected by a malo ty of the electors vot ng thereon
If w th n six mon hs from the time the propose s
rece ved by the Genera Assembly the proposed aw has not
become law as proposed its subm ssion to t he electors may

be demanded by a recuest f lee wllh the secretary ot slate lo

submlss on of the law to the people at an e ect on s gned by
the members of the comm ttee of pet toners within h ty
davs after 'fhe ex(?irat on of the s x months except that t he
p oposed taw has become law In amended form t he reques
for submission at an e ection shall be f led w th n th r y days

offer the amended law has been flied wllh the secretary of
state and the secretary of state has not fled he comm t ee of
petitioners of such filing . A request for subfTI ss on at an
e ect on may demand subm ss on of the proposed law e her
as f st p oposed o w th any one or mo e of the amendments

wh ch have been lncorpo aled therein by ellher or both
houses of he Genera Assembly and t must be ace om pan ed
by the le~t of the proposed submission
B Upon the f ll ng of a request for subm ss on at an
elect on under D v slon (AI of !his sect on the secretary of

state shall subm t the aw p o_posed there n to thb. electo sa t
the next succeed "9 Genera Elect on or at a special e eel on
on !he date f xec by law for hold ng the p lma y e ectlon
whichever s earlier 6ccurrlng subsequent to one hund ed
twenty days after the f I ng of the request f such law Is
appfoved by a majority of the e ectors voting thereon t

texl wh le sol c ng and the pelt on sha ll slate Immediately

follow ng the summary
The sol c tor of your s gna ure s
requ red to have a true copy of the full e)C of the proposal
summa zed In his petit on Upon r eques he must p esen t It
to you for e-:em nat on
Each s gnar of a petit on must be an electo of he state
and shalt s gn his own name ndel b y on the par pe ltlon
The s gne s address and the da e of s1gnlng sha 1be p aced
a"~ the pet t on af e the name Such address shall nc ude the
townsh p lind coun y for a res den outside a mun c pallty
end 1he name of the municipal ty and the street and number
ly
f any, for a res dent ot a mun c
01 each pa t petit on sha llppear the so c tor s
cert f cat on sta ng the numbe of he signers of such part
pet on hat each of the signatures was made on the sta ted
date n the presence of the so l c tor and hat at all times
wh le sol citing he carried and made llva able on request a
true copy of the full tex of the propose and sta t ng that to
he bes of h s knowledge and belief each signature s the
genu ne s gnatu e of the person whose name t purports 1o be
and tha such person s an elector es d ng at the stated
address who had knowledge of the contents of the pet ton No
aff dav or othe cert fi cetlon he eto shal be r equ red
Every pet ton shall contain a stll emenf 1o the effec hat any
fa slflce tlon s sub ect to pen a ties as presc bed by aw
As soon as a ce t t ed pe flon conta n ng ft proposal to be
submllled to !he electors s fllec w lh the sec eta y of state
the secre a y sha I transm t the proposa to the Oh o Bat o
Board wh ch shall pr@scr be the ballot language lind an
explana on of the p oposal n the same manner and sub jec t
to th e same te ms and cond ons as app y to Issues
subm tted by the General Assemb y pu suan t to Sect on 1of

r·

Arl cle XV Iof th s Const tut on The ballollanguage sha ll be

presc bed so as o pe mit an af rmat ~e or negat ~e vote
upon eacl'l canst ut on a amendment law section or tem
subm ed
The camm ttee epresenting the petit oners shall
prepare an argument support ng her position The General

Assembly may prov de by law for fhe preparat on of

opposing argumen s The ex~anatlon and the ar~uments
sha not exceed h ee hundred wo ds each The proposal 1he

ballol anguage the exp lanat on and lhe a gumen s shall be

publ shed once a week for three consecutive weeks preceding
the e ectlon n at east one newspaper of general c r culatlon
In each coun y of the state where ll newspaper Is pub shed
The secretary of state shal cause to be placed on the

ballo the caption and the ba lot language prepared by the
Ballot Board for each proposal conh!Jined

n

&amp;

properly

cerllf ed pe lion f led w th not lesslhan the requ red numbe

of s gnatures The pe ton and s gnatures sha ll be p esumed
to be n all respec s suff c ent unless not later than seventy

five days before !he election !he pet lion s proved o be

C) No law proposed by In tat ve or supplementary
pet ton sha I conta n more than one sub lee wh ich sha be
c early exp essed in ts t tie No such aw app oved by th e
voters s sub ject to veto by he gave nor The lm a ons
expressed In th s Canst t ut on on the powe of the Gene a
Assemb y to enact aws shall be deemed m tatlons on he
power of the people to enact aws

nvaldorthe sgnatures nsuffcento anactloncha englng
the va d ty of the pe on or ooe or more 5 gnatu es s
pend ng wh ch action was begun no ate han one hundred
days be ore he elect on No proposlll voted on by thee ectors
sha be he d uncons tut anal or vo d after the e ectlon
because of an nsuff c ency o va d s gnatures or an nvalld
pe ton
Th e nltla v.e and referendum prov sons of thi s
Constl l u on sha ll be se lf execut ng except as otherw se

sec etary 1:&gt; sf ate except as otherw se prov ded In th s
section or Sect on 2 or Sect on .t of th s article During such
n ne y day per od the submlss on to the electors of such law
section of such law or tern n any such law appropr at ng
money may be demanded by a referendum petition hav n~
printed across the top Refe endum Petition fo ~oter

but n nr&gt;-way lmit ng or restr ct ng either such provls ons or
the powers reserved to the people
Sect on 7 The n tlatlve and referendum powers are
reserved to 1he peop e of each mun c pa ty ~nd each county
on all maHers wh ch such munlclpa tr, or tounty may noW or
hereafter be author zed to contro by eg slat ve act on Sucl'l
powe s shal be exe clsed In the mMner now or hereafter

s gned by one hundred thousand electors

no so pro\1 ded n he manner now or hereafter provided by

lakes effect th rty days after the elect on

Section 3 No law pa ..ed by !he Genera Assemb y sha
go Into effect until n nety days after t s 1 ed with !he

conslde aflon of ow enactec by the General Assemb y

certU ed as

provided n Secllon 6 of th s article and lllec w lh he

secreta y ot state The secr.etary shall subm t such law
section or tern to thee ectorsa the neJIC succeed ng genera
elect on or at a spec a elec 'Jn f'l ~" rtate f xed by aw f o
hold ng the p rna y e ect on wh cheve sea ller occu nq
subsequent to one hundred twen y days'6tte the 11119 o e
pet on No such aw section o Item sha go n o e fee
un ess appro~ed by a ma or ty of the electors voting on 1 If

so app oved It shall go Into effecl th rly days af e lhe
election The filing of a referendum pet t on propos ng lhe
subm ss on or a section or Item does no thereby prevent the

P ovlded Laws may be passed to lac tale their operallon

prov dec by the cha rier of the munlclpallfy or county or 1
aw
Effective Date and Repeal
p ed by a na or ty of the electo s vat ng on this
"' he am ndni&lt;'n shall eke Immediate elfect and
cl on of 1\rt c e II and Sect ons la lb lc ld e

x t nn
It a d ~ o I
c e of the Const
repea ed om such effect ve date
(9) 20 27

0 4

tullon of Ohio sh• be

B Sic

romalnde olfhe aw trom going nto effect

•

1

�y-.
,
.
,
"-1
? Helen Help

1'\-1 ne • Nl lV ~tu el Mmruepon YOJneray

v roo ay vc Jo •• o

•*-""-'11:&lt;'1&gt;~~ &lt;

~

Us •••

i~

By Helen Bottel

&gt;J:

The Old 'Picture Protection Game
Dear Helen
My new doctor has a picture of hla wife and children
prominently displayed on his desk However I ve learned he Ia
divorced and his kids live w th the ex ~
He s a very attractive man 1 m an attractive divan.'ee

There s no reason why we shouldn I get together so should I
play Ute modem woman and Invite him to lunch• - WANTS
WHAT! WANT
Dear Wants
Only If you can shrug off a No thank you w th the
nonchAlance of a man who gets a turndown (And most women
ca I never mind Uberallon ~
Your doctor diSplays his wife s picture for good reason to
discourage female patients The day I dlaappears start
hoplr g - H

+++

Dear Helen
What do you doWltha 19-year.old who wont work cons his
Daddy uses every excuse m the bOok for not finding a job•
He has a car gas clothes spending mon,ey and a drug and
dnnkll11! problem He s charming clever Daddy s UtUe angel
and his stepmother s cross We aren I well-off and he drams
most of the ready cash so we often do without My husband
fusses a but but still shells out
No matter how I try I ca t convince him he s being used
He says How can we throw him out to starve• I know for a
fact be s turned down employment and refused college
trammg for techmc an s work Should !leave my husband or
what• - DISGUSTED WITH LEECHES
Dear Dis
Don t leave Instead do a 18!klegree turn use the boy s
1r cks to prove your pomt
I mear be as charming and clever as he IS Give what he
asks (though t temporarily crunps the budget) Take his side
when yo ur husband resents his wild spendjng Stop playmg the
heavy stepmother who doosn t understand my chlld and
soon Daddy may see tbe c'On artist underneath - even realize
U e role HE played n creating hun
I d guess your resenlmel t haq turned your husband
stubborn so let h m convmce YOU the free ride Is over Then
work together on an ultunatum and hopefully rehabilitatiOn

- H

Mr and Mn Lewll Smith
hav• returned from a
vacation that look them to
Jacksonville Florida where
they visited her uncle and
aunt Mr and Mrs John L
Rawllngs (lonner residents
here i and her cousin Mrs
Charles McCall (Bernice)
who Uveo at Orange Pari&lt;
Florida
The Umted Methodist
Womens Group from Temple
Church met on Wednesday
evenmg
Mrs
Arthur
Crabtree President con
dueled a short business
session Lucy Thomas
assisted bY Elizabeth Jordan
gave devotions using Our
Country as the theme A
group from the Carpenter
Baptist Church were guests
A letter ol Invitation from
Albany Church was read
District Officers w1ll be
present at the November 27th
meeting at Albany
Mr and Mrs LewiB Snnth
were In Westerville on
Sunday to vla1t their son m
law and daughter Mr and
Mrs Raece Prather and also
called on his parents Mr and
even ng
Lucy Thomas local ac Mrs Manford Smith In
companied by Evelyn Ward Carroll Mr Sm1th Is
Athens were m Columbus on somewhat Improved from his
Sunday where they v1s ted recent Illness
Lucy s sister Amy Caldwell
and the sisters celebrated
their October birthdays
Alfred
Mr and Mrs Mike Lawson
Alfred Church will begin a
Columbus spent the weekend revival on Sunday evening
w th their psrents Katherme Nov 7 at 7 30 each evening
Lawson and Cheryl and Mr
Mr and Mrs Clarence
and Mrs Gene Jeffers and Henderson are having a
lam iy
garage built

Mr and Mra Arthur
Crabtree and her mother
Gold e Gillogly were guests
o1 the•r son and daughter m
law Mr and Mrs Carl
Crabtree and sons on Sunday
when they were hosts to the
members of Mrs Carl
Crabtree s family (The
Harry
Hawk
family
Hebardsville) for a gathermg
at the Crabtree home
Ethel Shell Steubenville
spent Friday everung with
Mr and Mrs Mendal Jordan
Unda Shell who Is Uvmg m
Athellll celebrated her b r
thday on Friday and her
mother came to be with her
and called here before
retummg home on Saturday
The Busy Bee Soc ely of the
Carpenter Baptist Church
met at the church on Tuesday
evenmg Vivian Gaston gave
devotiOns Plans were made
for a harvest supper to be
served at the church soc1al
room on November 6 Asilent
auct1on was held Plans were
made for members to attend
the Temple Women s Group
meellng on Wednesday

Dear T
You re talking about a easual get-acquamteddlnner not a
horse trade Where IS 1t written a woman must show her birth
certificate on a IU'st date•
Later when VItal statistics time comes I m sure this
fellow will be neither surpriSed noc upset wlearn you re 45lsh
Younger men often prefer older women these days and 1t s
seldom a mother complex as psychiatriSts once claimed
I ve SBld I repeatedly What counts IS not the years but
bow you wear tbem Age makes no difference If two people are
compatible
H

+++

Dear Helen

Carpenter Personals

I met a fme man two years ago He was married then so
nothmg came of t U10ugh we were attracted
Last mght he called saying he was now dlvorC'ed and
a'ked f I would have dmner with hlffi
PI oblcm s I ve learned he s only 34 which Is 10 years
t 1 us younger than me Do I teU hlffi pretend I m 351sh or
refuse to rob the cradle
T Y
P S Peop esay I look much youngerthan my age

11-'lbollooUvSentlnel Middleport Po!oeroy 0 Monday Oct 18 1976

Bicentennial theme used for meet
Cal'I')Mg out the blcen Fun by Mrs Martbl Chlldl
tennial theme members ol Today a Grandma bY Mlaa
the Philathea Women of the Frances RoWJb llld a riddle
Middleport Church of Chrlat by Allee Robelon
attended the Thursday nigh\ l\llaa Roush presided at the
meeting wearing old clothing
or bicentennial costuming
and carrying sac!l. lunchea
Program for the special
meeting Included a reading
Make
Today Happy
Remembering Yesterday s

Honor list published

meeting whicb opened wltb completed lor ~ the
lbe Pllilllbea IGilC Mrs Homebullderl dbm« on Oct •

c-geGiuebadlbe..,...l•g 11 Attelldlng the meetlni
prayer and Mrs Cbl1da read were 21 members and seven
scripture
Plana were guestl

~

RACINE - The honor roll
lor Soulbem HiCh School for
the lint lix weeb grading
period bu bHD IIIIOunced
Mlkinl 1 grade ol B or
abon In aU their subjects to
be Jilted (natnea In capital
IA!tlerl are all A1) were

SENIORS - PATRICIA
AUTHERSON Sharon
Baker Bobbl Chapman Greg
CUndlll ERIC DUNNING
carol Glenn Owaln Hall
Dreama Jenkl11• Carl
·J~=~ABrenda Lawrence
B
LEWIS. NINA
ROUSH
DENISE TABUTfT, KEVIN
WILLFORD Danny Wolle
SCOTT WOLFE
JUNIORS - Lola Bailey
Steve
Baker
Shelly
Chevalier DONNY DUO
DING Larry Fisher Lori
Guinther PERRY HILL
TERF3A MEADOWS JAYE

POTLUCK PLANNED
CHESTER - Annual
lrlendohlp night of the
Daughters ol America
District 13 will be held
Thursday Oct 20 at the
Chester Grade School
auditorium with a potluck at
6 30 p m and the meeting to
follow Mrs Dorothy Ritchie
Ia the district deputy

SERVICES A'ITENDED
Albert Roush and Gerrl
were
In
Kessinger
Blacksville W Va Tuesday
and Wednesday for the
funeral services of a relative
Lee Skmner at the Owens
Funeral Home Bunal was In
Morgantown W Va

ORD IVAUNNA POWELL,

Jean Rltchhart Cheryl
Roaeberry John Sayre
SCOTT SOUDER Richard
Teaford Barbara The1ss
Reunna Walker Barbara
White Myra Woods
SOPHOMORES - Brian
Grindstaff Brice Hart SETH
WLL Sharon Hill Loyal
Holman Carol Morns Brent
Patterson Oebb1e Pickens
Curtis Price Susie Scar
berry Kelly Taylor N1ck1
VanMeter Oenms Wolfe
Terri Zirkle
FRESHMEN
Meg
Amberger Carmen Car
penter Ray Deem Kim
Ongan Amy Fisher Oav1d
Foreman Pamela Harden
Rosemary Hubbard MeliSsa
lhle Bnan Johnson Cannen
Manuel James Meadows
Troy Manuel Amy Souder

Grade honor list announced
RACINE - Principal Diana Simpson Tamara
Robert Beegle has announced Theiss Tamara Wolfe
the honor roll for the Racine .,.Wendy Wolfe
Elementary School for the/ Grade Three - Lor1
first six weeks gradmg Adams Dixie Dugan Mandy
period
H1ll Mells•a lhle L1sa
Making a B or above In Parsons Kelly Rizer Kenda
aU their subjecta to be Usted Rizer
Robin Savage
on the roll (no grades given m Rebecca VanMeter
grade one for the firs! six
Grade Four - Alan Cnsp
weeks) were
Ralph Fisher Sandra Har
Grade Two - Damon den LoiS lhle Oav1d PoweU
Fisher Matthew Jewell Lofl Sunll'"n
Angle Ours Rachael Reiber
Grade Five - Rhonda

Otester
By Clarice Allen
Mr and Mrs Cla)'t9n Allen
spent the weekend In
Columbus With Mr and Mrs
Billy Robert Allen They also
caUed on Mr and Mrs Roger
Serrott and ch ldren
0 0 Clelland Columbus
caUed orl Mrs Clayton Allen
and Denzel Cleland Tuesday
Mr and Mrs Arthur Orr
viSited recently with Mr and
Mrs Bob Lee and family
Bashan and Mr and Mrs
Blythe Theiss Dorcas
Or and Mrs Roger
Grueser and ]iris Logan
were recent visitors of Mr
and Mrs Arihur Orr

Celebrate

the J~4th feeli on
November2n
Vote. Its the Bicentennial thing to do.

~

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•

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•

7

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eo Th s P bl ca on heArne ca nRevolu on 8 ten ennaa Adm n s a 100 and The Ad ert s gCounc

Year's first

Racine Social Events

honors listed
at Portland

By Mn Frucll Morril

PORTLAND - Principal
Larry Wolfe bas announced
the first six weeks honor roll
at the Portland Elementary
School Named to the roll
w1th names m capital letters
rece1vmg all As were
Lorle Cornell Annette
F1tch Joyce Foreman
Krista Sellers KARLA
SMITH Lor1e Wolfe grade 2
Mae Barber CHARLIE
BOSO Lee Cornell Tammi
Proffitt grade 3 RAY
LAWRENCE Kevin Teaford
grade 4 Vicky Barber
CHRISTLE LAWRENCE
DANNY WEDDLE David
White grade 5 Debbie
Bryant CINDY EVANS
BRUCE JOHNSON TAMMY
MEADOWS Danny Pickens
Kltlie Sellers DaVId Talbott
Oaruttte Weddle grade 6
Sherrie Lawson special
education
Serving on the safety pstrol
at the school this year are
Bruce Johnson Kim White
Kittle Sellers
Danny

Mrs Frances Wilcoxen was
hostess for lbe Esther Circle

at First Baptist Church
Monday evening Oct II
Mrs Grella Simpson
opened the meet ng w1th
group singing It Pays To
Serve Jesus scrl\).\ure Ps
ll3 and readmgs If Jesus
Came To Your House and
For Release From Tension
a business session followed
An offering for the
scholars!Up fund was given
The White Cross Work was
discussed and plans were
made to serve refreshmenta
for the Bertha M Sayre
Society In November A
program by Mrs L lllan
!layman Included a playlet
ent1lled Fault finding by
Mrs Dorothy Badgley Mrs
Helen Simpson and Mrs &gt;
Mildred Hart There were
other readings on the subject
and SCripture from Psabns

P1ckens Danelle Weddle
and Robert McHa!Ue
Wumers of a poster contest
were Carol Sellers Christie
Lawrence VIcky Barber
Dave Bryant Patricia
Pauley Cmdy Evans Kittle
Sm th Laren Wolfe
Sellers and Paul Ours
Grade Six - Kathy Baker Selected for having the best
Zane Beegle Becky Lee art m another conies! were
Cla1r Morris Terry Pat Bruce Johnson Debbie
terson John Porter Oav1d Bryant Patricia Pauley
Sabnons Tonya Salser Lon Vicky Barber Charlie Boso
Warden
and Steve Teaford

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION

~

~

A Publ Se

...

I'ROI OSED CONSTITUTIONAl AMEN!JMFNT

•

fu ndo t n~w S o I of \rt 1.- II nnd nt&gt;w \rt de XIV
nnd t., f('( I Rert o H 1 lb lc 1 l le If
Anti 1~ of \rt I II Ul o l st lut on

~
~

•

•"

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION

G

I

Ul

S ll ( lNSIIlU II( NA I AMI

I o dopl ;\-r

Nf Ml

r\ I

c XV Sect on 11 01 o Consltu on

Ill I \I lVI I 0 IS i \I II SIII NG I HO( F.DT ltES FOR I 1\( lSI \TIVI
Jll i\1!11'&gt;( S \Nil \IIIWI II Oi S\11 I\ II \llltl S 01 Nt (II Alt
I 0.\11 rt I I I N I s \ !\ ll HI I \II I) I \( IIIII I S lltiOit I 0 I Jill lit
CO:&gt;\ S I HlJC II()'&gt; OH F. XI \N SIO i'&gt; \N ll I Wt l llUHI S I Olt CO 'II EN
SA liO N 01 II HSO :\S IIIlO \I !l iN Jlltl )) On ll \ ~1 \( f ll BY THEIR
01 EH \11 0:-1 Olt E\ISII :'-:( E
I he pro1 sc I

IC

cnl

]J

JlrOI I

Je

1

n clear 1 o vcr pant or
I I c ol t
I \p J ro a I
c I res n I I e mn;:o 1111st
lfc s t II
t n r nee
l o lave
n(urclor

rc

approve construct on of future nuclear power
plants after publ1c hear ngs The heanngs
prov de c1t zen nput before accountable elected
off c1als Unresolved problems of nuclear fuel
supply safety systems radloact ve waste
management secunty and economics will
receive the scrut1ny of experts testifying before
the state leg s alure The leg slature must find
that safety syslems are effective and methods
for handling and d sposlng of rad oact ve wastes
are safe
Issue 6 w II assure that nuclear power
lac I t es have nsurance or lndemn I cat on to
fully compensate v ctlms of nuclear ace dents
All ndustrles In Oh1o are liable for hazards to the
public ut•l t es should be no different
ISSUE 6 WILL PROTECT THE PEOPLE
AND BUSINESSES OF OHIO By nsur ng that
demonstrated lechn ques exist for the safe
mana_gement of nucrear power and that the
publili remains financially protected agamst any
nuclear power r sks Issue 6 entrusts our elected
representallves to make sure that safety and
fmanc1al accountab l1ty are Integral components
of our state energy policy
Comm lttee For the Amendment Robert P
Weaver Robert L Loitz Edward A Harter
Paul ne L Brokaw Brady E Bancroft
FULL TEXT OF THE PROP:I&gt;SED AMENDMENT
BE IT I SOLVED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF
OHIO THAT ARTICLE XV OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
BE AMENDED BY THE ADDITION OF A NEW SECTION
TO READ
r
Sect on II
01 The people of the State of Oh o des re by tn s

2 Exc 1 t ons fr o1
t l
( es
3

of tl e

e

leq ac

and acc uracy of
n t C\Ol nf
!he Rille

C( I

t

th
c Ie" '""
en '

n I le s
for non rom1 hancc ' th JlrOVISions of
tl &lt;nt Ul on 1eh on I tl c Allurne ( en cral or an)

(I ro1 os d by In

A n a)O t ) am nat c

ole s

cess r, for

SII7\ i I 1 HE PHOI OSED An!ENDMENT BE ADOPTED•
NO

ARGUMENT
FOR
THE
PROPOSED
AMENDMENT
Bal ot T tie (prepared by Secretary of State)
PROPOSED
CONSITUTIONAL
AMENDMENT RELATIVE TO
ESTABLISHING
PROCEDURES
FOR
LEGISLATIVE HEARINGS AND APPROVAL
OF SAF~TY FEATURES OF NUCLEAR
POWER
PLANTS
AND
RELATED
FACILITIES
PRIOR
TO
THEIR
CONSTRUCTION OR EXPANSION AND
PROCEDURES FOR COMPENSATION OF
PERSONS WHO ARE INJURED OR
DAMAGED BY THEIR OPERATION oR
EXISTENCE

ISSUE 6 1S DESIGNED TO ASSURE THAT
FUTURE NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS IJI
OH I 0
ARE A SAFE
AND SOUND
INVESTMENT OF RATEPAYERS MONEY
Each new nuclear power plant env s ons a b Ilion
dollar mvestment by the utilit ies of Oh1p The
safety rei abilly and economics of the energy
sources on which our state economy runs are too
Important to delegate solely to federal
authoritieS and ulllty off Cia is and are of nght a
matter of State nterest

establishment fhat uses radioactive mate lals solely for

or enlargement of any such nuclear fission powe plant or
r"la1ect fac:!llty
4) (1!1) Judicial rev ew and pun shment fo v olaf un o

disposa use manufacture process ng or reprocessing of
radioactive mate als wastes or fuels for use In or produced
In the course of the product on of e ectr c ty w th the use of

County Common pteas Court of the county where n he
res des or where n the lnlury dam~e or loss occurred to
recover fu l compensation for the II'! ury damage or loss

facilities f not f no y approved by January 1976 may be
app oved by the Governor or any state ocol or counfy
agency and may reman n effect only after all the following
conditions are mel for each plant or lac I ty under

Su t for strict liability under this sect on shall be In addlt on
to any other remedy Inc udlng workmen • compensation to
assure recovery n fu ll of compensat on for the n ury
damage or oss
(d) The provisions of fhls secflon shall be self execuf ng
and no court •hall sfoy operation hereof or to any porf on
hereof fo the benet 1 of an unsuccessful party In the first

commence or conllnue construction of any nuclear fission
power planf o elated lac ty w thouf a fina l va d

(S) 1•1 The Governor shall annually publ 1h r,ub lclze and
release to the news media and to approprla e off c als of

construct on license from the federal government issued by

affected commun ties

or any person o

group of persons may

January 1 l2l6 on yalter all the following c.ondlllons ore met
fo each such p ont or facility
T~e applicant has obtained sufflc ent nsurance or
w&lt; n f cation to assure thof victims of any personal InJury
property damage econom c oss or olher damage fhat
results In whole or n part from the existence or operation of
the plan! or fac I ty are assured fu I compensoflon for fhe
In ury damage or loss
(b) The General Assembly through •!clnf comm lfee
has solicited op nlons and ln!ormallon rom lnlerestec
persons concerning the safe and economical operation of the
Pant or facllty and has made the materials submitted by the
appl cant and olhe sovollab e to such persons for comment
Wdely publicized open hearings throughout the stale shall be
held consequent to this sollclfat on g vlng full and edequate
not ce and an oppor unity to any person fo test fy II baing a
condlflon of such hear ngs fhat all oral and wr !ten op non
nformaton orothe teatlmonysha begvenunde oalh AI
parllclponfs shall be sub eel lq cross examination by
members of ttle Oln comm t ee and subject to reasoMb e
m Is posed by the oint comm ttee by other nterestec
persons at the hea lngs
Ic) The General Assembly at any regu ar sess on
enacfs speclf c enabling leglslallon perm ltlng approval
Such leg s at on sha Irequire a ma orlly afflrmallve vote of

ISSUE
6 WILL HELP END THE
CONFUSION ABOUT NUCLEAR POWER
SAFETY AND ECONOMICS
he memoers e ected to each house In add tlon no 5uch
The legiSlature by Simple majority vole w11l enab ng leg slat on sha I be passed unlll the public hearings

•

and no Ia

•

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M

6 That mumc pal tics a n I counties • hall have the right to mttmhvc and
ref erend m as may be prov1ded b) I w

7 That no Ia v may be m1t1aled bv pel t on winch coull not be passed
by the General Assemhlv Other specl11c I m1lal ons on tie [lOWer. of
IDliiBhve and refetendum 11h1ch relate to taxahon of
IJfOJ erty
arc repealed

•'

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(Proposed by In tint ve Pet bon)

A majonty affirmahvo voto is necessary for passage

q

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YES
-=1---1---1
--

SHALL TilE II,OPOSED AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

NO

ARGUMENT
AMENDMENT

n a manner designed to Inform

to this end the prov stons of tf'l s section are severab e

n

the

parents Mr and Mrs
Frar c1s Moms Sunday af
ternoon
Guests over till! weekend of
Rev and Mrs Don Walker
were Mr and Mrs James
Vance and four children of
South Carolina Mr and Mrs
Larry Gawthrop and two
children of SummersvlUe W
Va Mr and Mrs Gerald
Cogar and daughter of
Ravenswood W Va Darrell
Cogar of Wlnf1eld and fr1end
ol N1tro
Miss Pam Hill of Columbus
spent the weeke 1d with ~er
psrents Mr and Mrs Billy
H1U
Mr and Mrs Roy R rne
spent Tuesday afternoon with
Mr and Mn Bill McKenzie
at GaU polls
Bruce Hart of Ohio State
University Columbus spent
the weekend with his psrents
Mr and Mrs Robert Hart
The Nazarene Church
Cottage Prayer meeting was
held at the home of Ml"8
V1vl an ~ohnson Tuesday
mormng Oct 12 several
attendc') Mrs Elizabeth
Coffman led the devotiOns
Mrs Eug1a Johnson of
Middleport spent a couple
days w1th Mrs Vlvwn
Johnson

the leg s ature may enact and perhaps Improve
upon the n llated law If the legs ature fa Is to
act or enacts an unacceptable vers on
pelt oners may ask that the or gmal proposal be
put d rectly on the ballol
In l1at ve and referendum are an established
check and balance
but t Into our Qh o
Constitution They are the purest form of
democracy prov1d ng an essent1al complement
to the leg slat ve process and actually Improving
the leg slature s performance and effectiveness
These processes shou d be read ly ava lable to
the c t zens
Comm1ttee For the Amendment Robert P
Weaver Robert L Lo tz Edward A Harter
Paul ne L Brokaw Brady E Bancroft

BE IT RESOLVED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF
OHIO THAT ARTICLE II EXISTING SECTION 1 and
SECTION Ia lb lc ld le If AND g BE REPEALED AND
NEW ARTICLE II SECTION 1AND NEW ARTICLE XIV OF
THE OHIO CONSTITUTION BE ENACTED AS FOLLOWS
ARTICLE

II

Sect an

The legs at ve power of he state shall be
vested n a Gene al Assembly cons s ng of a Senate and
House of Representatives bu the peop e eserve to
themselves he powe of n t at ve and eferendum as

prov ded n Arl cle XIV of h s Cons

ARTICLE XIV

Sect on 1 The subm ss on of a

ut on

p oposed amendment of

th s Cons! lullon d ectly o the eleclors may be demanded by

~

...•
~

.••
...
~

•

FOR

THE

PROPOSED valves
to assure slate government IS
respons ve to the people Issue 7 would enable
c t zens to adopt utility reform measures
ISSUE 7 WILL SIMPLIFY INITIATIVE promotll'l!l fair rates and sound uti! ty pol c1es
AND REFERENDUM BASED ON THE even when the legislature falls to act
RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE OHIO
ISSUE 7 BRINGS OHIO INTO LINE WITH
•CONSTITUTIONAL REVISION COMMISSION THE OTHER 22 STATES WITH INITIAtiVE
~
In Its 1975 report the prestigious bipartisan LAWS
~mmlsslon
viewing the entire body of
Oh 0
h
d
constitutional language on the Initiative and
now as very s1rmgen 1 proce ura1
:"referendum concluded that the provisions were requ rements The signature Iotas re.qu red by
! confusing and in need of rev sion
Issue 7 are h1gh enough to keep frivolous
measures off the ballot The Commission found
•
INITIATIVE AND REFERENDUM ARE lhese processes have been used w1th reslra1nt
,..BASIC TOOLS OF
CITIZEN
SELF by Ohioans m the past and there seemed no
GOVERNMENT
reason they should not continue to be ava Ia pie n
:
They permit citizens to propose laws and the future
'\
"constitutional
amendments
for
voter
ISSUE 7 IMPROVES THE LEGISLATIVE
:COnsideration or to overr de Ill conceived laws INITIATIVE BY COMBINING TKE BEST
l!nacted by the legislature The 1912 Oh 0 FEATURES OF BOTH THE INDIRECT AND
. Constitution established 1n1tlat ve and DIRECT INITIATIVE PROCESSES
referendum as crucially Important
safety
Petit oners collect 150 000 signatures then

Parable of the Sower
Attendance at lhla servlee
was 25
The U M W will hold Ita
regular monthly meeting on
Tuesday evening Oct 19 at8
p m at the home of Thebna
Henderson
with June
Steams leading the Pledge
Service (We WISh to correct
a statement made earlier
that June Steams was reelected vice-president again
for 77 as Thelma Henderson
1s to be our new vlee
president as June Is movb1g
away some time In the
future )
Mr and Mrs Charles 0
Woode attended revival
services at the RuUand U M
church on Oct 13 where their
broUer In law Rev Frank
Cheesebrew of Shawnee 0
was the speaker for the
eve ng
Mr and Mrs Paul Buckley
and reresa attended the
Oa1ry Convent on meeting at
Columbus last Mo day
even ng Oct I where Teresa
sang In the Ohio State Choir
of which she Is a member
While at this meeting they
met Clair Woode a District
COBA Sales Manager in his
round of duty who sent his
regards to his perents and
friends I the Alfred area
After the meeting th e
Buckleys visited relatives In
Columbus arriving home In
tl e curly morning hours We
wish to add that we are very
proud of Teresa fo her

musical talenta an~ lor what
she has been able to accomplish as a result or
cooperation on the part of her
psrents and others May God
grant success In all her Wl
dertaklngs
Nina Robinson and Charles
and Helen Wuode attended
the Gospel Hy nn Sing held
at North Bethel U M church
Saturday night Oct 9
The Northeut Cluster
Hymn Sing wlU be held at the
Alfred Church her e on
Saturday ev~nllll{ Oct 30
Weekend guests of Mr and
Mrs Arthur Atherton have
bee• their daughter son In
)aw and grandson Mr and
Mrs Emest Vb1cyard and
so of Michigan
William Carr ond Russell
Flndling are doing a roofing
job In Parkersburg
Other folk s ore having
repelr work done u the way
of stonn windows and smaU
jobs In preparation for
winter
Russell Findling and
Hobart Swortz have pur
chased new cars and Leonard
Amos a new truck
~
So111e folks are having colda
due to the change In the
weather Do hope the flu
doesn t hit before folks get
their shots
Nino Robinson Clara
Follrod and Charles and
Helen Woode c 11led o Mr
and Mrs Clifford Hayes In
Middleport last Tuesday
Mrs Hayes has been In
trat1lon but not hi the present
though she ren alns bedfast
nt her home there

Sec on 4 Laws p ovid ng fat fa)( eves epp op a ont
fo he cu ent ex penses of ll e sta e gove n nen and state
nsf u ons and emergency aws neces$ery lo
the
mmed a e p ese va t on a tt c pub c peace health or
safety sha go no mm ed a e eff ect Such emergency aws
upon a yea and nay vo e n ust ece ve tl e vo e of two hirds of
all th e membe s e ec ed to each house o th e Generft
Assembly al')d the easons fo sud necess t y sha ll be set
fo t n one sec on of he aw wh ch sec on sha be pr~ssed
only upon a yea and nay vo e upon a sepa rate oil celt
th e eo n The aws nc uded n h s sec t on a e not sub ect to
the rete endum
Sect on 5 I con fl ct ng an e dments to he Co sf utlon
a e app o~ed at the sa m e e ec on by a m a o ty of the
e ecto s vat ng hereon U e one ece v ng the h gt es number
a at mal ve vo es Is he amend men o th e Cons! tut on
I confl ct ng ma te s o law a e app aved a the same
elect on by a mal o ly of the el ector s vat ng th er eon he pne
ece v g tt e h ghes numbe of a I me t ve vo es s he law
Secllo 6 Th e s y e of a canst t ut ona amendments
subm tf ed t o th ee ec to s by pet on sha be Be 1 csolved
by the peop e of the St al e. of Ot o The style ol al aws
subm t ed f r s a the Gene a As se nbly by n t at \le pe ltlon
sha I be Be II enac ed by the Genera Assemb y n esponse
to an n t a ve pe t Qn
Whoe~er seeks to f e an n a ve o r efe endum pe It on
shal f r st e w t h he sec etarv ot state and he Oh o Ballot
Boa d a copy of the fu I te&gt;c of the p oposa o be S\Jbm tt ed
en consents ot
together wlth he names addresseS and w
no fewer than three nor mo e than ve e ec ors who have
ag eed to serve as membe s of a committee w th a
designated cha man thereof to epresent the pet oners n

a mailers elat ng lo he petl on The board sh• ll with n

f fteen days after t rece ves he ex t p epare an dontify ng
c11pt on &amp;nd a a and truthfu summary at the praposa and
subm t them to the secretary of s a e and to the cha rman of
the comm tee The committee sha
then prepare the
pet on wh ch sha cant a n a ue copy of the cttpt on end
he summa y prepa ed by the boa d and sl all f e a copy of
he Pe ton with the sec retarv o sta e before so c a on of
s gna ures to the pet t on The pe f on may be c cu ll ect and

an In 1 at ve peflt on hav ng p n ed across the top

I led n parts but each part shall be dent ca l to the coby f ed

for an amendment to

w h he secre a y of sjate The pet on need not contain the
full ext o the p oposal but f t does not ee r;h salle tor of
s gna Ures to the pet tion sha carrv ll true copy of 1he full

Pet t on
he Canst tut on to be subm tted
s gned by wo hundred f f1y thousand

d rect y to the voters
electo s ce rt111ed as prov ded n Sect on 6 of th s art c e and
f ed w th the secreta y of state The secretary sha I subm t
the proposed amendment to he electo s at the next
succeed ng general e ect on or at a special eledlon on 1he
date fixed by law for h~d ng the primary e ect on wh chever
s earlier occu r ng subsequent to one hundred twenty days

after the f I ng of the pet t on

It the amendmenl Is adop

ed by
t t becomes a pa of the
Consfltutlon and shall be publ shed by the secretary of slale
Sec! on 2

{A) The submlss on of a proposed law to the General
Assemb y may be demanded by an nit at ve pet ton hav ng
pr nted across the top pet t on to a law to be ~ubm ed t s
to !he Geoe a Assembly s gned by one hundrec and t fly
thousand electo s ce t fled as prov ded n Section 6 of th s
a t cle and fled w th the secretllry of sta e The secreta y
shal transm t the fu text 'Of he p oposed law forthw h to

the General Assemb y
A law proposed by Initial ve pelltlon shall no be

proposed nor enacted by the Genera Assembly as an
eme gency measure If a law proposed by n tat ve pe t on
becomes law e ther as proposed o in amended fo m It sha
be treated as a aw orlglnat ng n the Generll Assemb y

except that f the

proposed~aw

Is amended by the Genera

Assemb ly and becomes lew and If a request fo subm ss on
at an e ectlon s fled as prov ded In th s sect on the law

court during o pending appeals

res dents of the affeded communities the entlra evacuaf on
Pons speclflec In the licensing of each nuc ear fission power
Pant or related facility affecting fhe state Copes of the
Pans shal be made available to fht public upon request ol
no more than the cosf of reproduction
(b) The Governor shall osfabllsh procedures for annual
review by stale and ocol officials of emergency medical old
Pans and established evacuation plans specified In the
llcens ng of each nuclear flss on power plant or relafed
lac lly affect ng fhe state with regard for but noll mltec lo
such foctors os the adequacy and accuracy of such plans
changes In traffic pofterns populot on denslfles schools and
ndustrlal developn,.nls and the avalla 1ty of sufficient
hosp tal and tl!lergency focllltes fo core for v ctlms of
nuclear accidents and olher factors as requested by locally
electec ollie a s The procedures shall prov de tor full public
partie potion n fhe rev ew
(61Totheextentthatthlsuctonlslnconsslentwlfhany
prev ously existing provls on of the Oh o Canst fuflon !he
prov slons of th s section shall control
(7) If any provision of this sect on or the application
thereof to any person or clrcumsfancesls held nvaild under
the lows ol the Unlftd Stales such Invalidity shall not affect
other provls ons or appllcot ons of fhla section which can be
given effect wlfhout the Invalid provision or oppl calion and

on~ subJect
appro\Cd bv the \Oter. mav be vetoed by the Governor

5 That no I IW proposed b' m•tmh ve sl 11 have more than

divers on of redloactlvlty or radloact ve chemically lox c

for wh ch any defendants Jointly and severally sho be
strictly abe wlfhout proof of neg I gence /Jlly person who
has suffered such Injury damage or loss moy sue In the

That an amen lment to the Oh o C01 1luhon may be 1mtiated by a
pchlwn s gne I b) 1t le 1St ?aO 000 electors

I rocrd11CO for II II ~ of the l"'l of 1 pr posed law or amendment
or la11 lobe refellt I for pr p r tt 01 1f a nmn 1 by the Ohw I 11lot
Ilo ml for tl c prc1 ar t on of tl c 1 cllh o co 1tam ng the summary for
r Ill fell cnlo lo c I ula
llld s
nh the I t I 01 for the n llot
Uo ml to 1 res r I e I llol 1m g ! c 1d ext lan 1t10 1s for pretmr 1l1on
and pub calion of a1" menl ' 111 u ;: and t&gt;JlOS n~ the law or
amenumcnl and for placement of ll c questwn on the ballot at a general
or spec al elect un

lo any nuclear fission power plonf or relatec faclllfy with a
va d f no consfructlon license obfa ned from the Unlfed
States Atomic Energy Commission or Its successor agency
by January 1 1976 but shall apply to exJ!Onslon alteraf on

ln!ure qu ck and speedy relief acts resu lting In such n ury
damage or loss shall be deemed ultraharardous act v ties

refreshments

basement social rooms with
decorations In keeP.mg of
HaUower
Mr ur d Mrs Larry
Gnmm Mr and Mrs Nell
Baker Mr and Mrs Bob
Wmes of Westerville and
Mrs Linda Cleland of
Cleveland were here over the
weekend to be at the beds1de
of their father Mr Clyde
Wines
Mrs Cora Webb entered
Grant Hosp tal Columbus for
surgery
Mrs Carla Shuler un
derwent surgery Tuesday at
Pleasant VaUey Hospital PI
Pleasant W Va
Mr and Mrs Bud Sbnpson
of Seymour lnd spent
several days with his mother
Mrs Grella Simpson and her
mother Mrs Marguer te
Winebrenner
Mrs V1vlan Johnson spent
Sunday with her brother m
law and sister MF and Mrs
Marvm MorriS at Albany
Mr and Mrs Pete Gould of
Nelsonville viSited her

Sunday School attendance
on Oct 10 was 50 the offering
$21 66 Worship services were
held at 10 45 with Rev
Charles Oomlgan speaking
from Malt 13 I 23 on

a mal or ty of thee ecto s vat ng on

materia s testing purposes
medica purposes or
educational purposes In a publ cor private school system or

ex st ng nuclear f ss on powe plant or fo the author ty to
conslruct expand enlarge or operate any fa ell ty or act v fy
lotheextenfthat It s lnvolvec In !he slorage transporlatlon

conslderat on

YES

not apply to any sme scale nuclear flss on reactor used
solely for educational or research purposes any p ace or

said materials used n or producec In the course of the
production of electric ty wlfh the use of nuo ear fission to

en arge or operate any electrical transm sslon ne corridors
or any t ansportat on routes to ad from such pants l!lnd or

pa ssa~e

harmfu or rod oactlve
\31 The provls ons of subsecllon 12 of this sect on shall

or other harmful materfats or as a result of other njury
damage or loss resulting from the existence or operat on of
a nuc ear f sslon power plant or related fac I ty or activity to
the e)(tent that t Is lnvo ved In the stor~e ransportatlon
d sposal use manufacture processing or reprocess ng of

pron le

3 That Hcept for emergency Ia 1s I \X lev~es and apJlropnallons for cu~
rent ex11enscs 11) l1 sccilo 1 of
or 1 ) 1lcm of l1 v UJ[Iropr~atmg
mo e' 11 he nferrcd to the •olers f len tndcd b a [lctlhon s gned
b 1t le st I Oil l ele lors m I fil e i 1th n 90 d vs C cr such law
has 1 l.Socd St cl Ia or Item v II l o mto etTect only 1f 1ppruvc I by
am IJOI h of the elector:; volmg on 11

dUrlng which such fuel and or waste s or may continue to

2) Any oppl cat on for any pe m t certificate or license
to be obta ned f om any agency df stale loco or county

nuc ear fission cr fo1 the authority to construct expand

at c I ct on)

env ronment n excess of

standards then selby proper author ties cha ged by law with
sett ng such standards due fo mperfed storage technologies
or conta nment or transportation techniques earthquakes or
other acts of God thefl. sabotage governmantal or social
nstabll t es o whatever other causes the Genera l Assembly
moy deem to be reasonably possible for any pe od of time
be

11 ould

2 That a Ia v ma1 be 11 t ted b1 s 11 m1lt n a ~ct1hon s 1~ned by at
least 1 0 000 electors If the Gener I \s emil does not )lass the la1v
as sui m ttcd
lim s ' mo11tl
r
cis an amende I 1 ers10n of the
Ia 1 the comn 11l c of the JI C( t o ers Sl ons r o tl c pel l on may rc
~ue•t th 1t the Ia v as 1 ropu cd or
t h lc 11111 c unr dments be put
to a 1 ole of the people

foreseeable posslb lfy of endanger ng the health safety and
welfare of the people of the Stale of Ohio by lntenf ona or
un ntented escape or diversion of harmful materials or of

(c) In any action brought to recover compensat on or
damages for personal Injury property damage econom c
loss or other damage suffered as a result of escape or

government for the consturdlon of any nuclea flss on power
plant or for the authority to e)(pand or en arge o operate an

I

I I) The fuels rad loact ve materials and rad oact ve
wastes of each such p ant or fee I ty can be stored
transported conta ned or disposed of w th no reasonable

welfare s tlng of nuc ear flss on power pants and other
nuclea fact It es and the regulation of a act v ties
nvolvlng and re at ng to nuclear f ss on power plants and
sa e v and welfa e of both present and future generat ons
the construction or expansion or en argement o operation of
nuclear f ss on power plants or other nuclear facilities and
the management of adloact ve wastes Is a matte of state
nterest

The proposed amen lm cn l

( I The effect veness of a I necessary safeguards and
safety systems nclud ng but no! lim fee to the emergency
core cooling system of each such plant o faclllfy has been
demonstratec to the satisfaction of the General Assembly by
comprehens ve and successfu lest ng of subslanllaliy
slm ar phys cal systems n actua operat on to protect and
safeguard fhe peop e ofthe Sf ate of Ohio and

the areas of land use planning pub c health safety and
nuclear fac lilies The people furlher dec are that the health

I r J I

!hat

adloact lv ty Into the natura

The hymn I Surrender All
and prayer by Mrs Hayman
After which the Love Gift
program was presented by
Mrs Frances Wilcoxen which
opened with singing 0
Master Let Me Walk With
Thee scripture Eph 5 6-9
The Love Gift offering was
given and Mrs Wilcoxen
closed w1th prayer The
hostess served lovely

FULL TEXT OF THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT

cons derat on on tl'le bas 5 of clear and con~lnc ng evidence

noncompliance with the provisions of th s section shall be
considered by any County Common Pleas Court when
pelltloned by the Attorney General or any c tlzen
b) If any Court finds fhofl requlrementof lhlssecllon s
not be ng complied wllh 11 shall order fhe offend ng person
agency or the General Assembly to comply w fh such
requirement of this section
failure to comply shall
conslltute contempt of court The Court may also aword
attorney s fees and cosls to a prevailing plaintiff

amendment to exe c se the ful power vested In them and In
th s slate by the Co~st tullon and ews of the Unltec Stales In

ltEI \11VE I 0 SIMPLIP\JNG 'li!E PHOCEDUJlES FOR INITIA1IVE
AND REFERENDUM

as descr bed In subsect on 2 (b have been held and all
lesf mony Is complete Each such oct shall Include n Its
preamble a spec if c finding as to each plant or facility under

Alfred Social Notes

enacted by the Genera Assembly sha take effect only

he

law proposed by he equest tor subm ss on at an e ect on s
re1ected by a malo ty of the electors vot ng thereon
If w th n six mon hs from the time the propose s
rece ved by the Genera Assembly the proposed aw has not
become law as proposed its subm ssion to t he electors may

be demanded by a recuest f lee wllh the secretary ot slate lo

submlss on of the law to the people at an e ect on s gned by
the members of the comm ttee of pet toners within h ty
davs after 'fhe ex(?irat on of the s x months except that t he
p oposed taw has become law In amended form t he reques
for submission at an e ection shall be f led w th n th r y days

offer the amended law has been flied wllh the secretary of
state and the secretary of state has not fled he comm t ee of
petitioners of such filing . A request for subfTI ss on at an
e ect on may demand subm ss on of the proposed law e her
as f st p oposed o w th any one or mo e of the amendments

wh ch have been lncorpo aled therein by ellher or both
houses of he Genera Assembly and t must be ace om pan ed
by the le~t of the proposed submission
B Upon the f ll ng of a request for subm ss on at an
elect on under D v slon (AI of !his sect on the secretary of

state shall subm t the aw p o_posed there n to thb. electo sa t
the next succeed "9 Genera Elect on or at a special e eel on
on !he date f xec by law for hold ng the p lma y e ectlon
whichever s earlier 6ccurrlng subsequent to one hund ed
twenty days after the f I ng of the request f such law Is
appfoved by a majority of the e ectors voting thereon t

texl wh le sol c ng and the pelt on sha ll slate Immediately

follow ng the summary
The sol c tor of your s gna ure s
requ red to have a true copy of the full e)C of the proposal
summa zed In his petit on Upon r eques he must p esen t It
to you for e-:em nat on
Each s gnar of a petit on must be an electo of he state
and shalt s gn his own name ndel b y on the par pe ltlon
The s gne s address and the da e of s1gnlng sha 1be p aced
a"~ the pet t on af e the name Such address shall nc ude the
townsh p lind coun y for a res den outside a mun c pallty
end 1he name of the municipal ty and the street and number
ly
f any, for a res dent ot a mun c
01 each pa t petit on sha llppear the so c tor s
cert f cat on sta ng the numbe of he signers of such part
pet on hat each of the signatures was made on the sta ted
date n the presence of the so l c tor and hat at all times
wh le sol citing he carried and made llva able on request a
true copy of the full tex of the propose and sta t ng that to
he bes of h s knowledge and belief each signature s the
genu ne s gnatu e of the person whose name t purports 1o be
and tha such person s an elector es d ng at the stated
address who had knowledge of the contents of the pet ton No
aff dav or othe cert fi cetlon he eto shal be r equ red
Every pet ton shall contain a stll emenf 1o the effec hat any
fa slflce tlon s sub ect to pen a ties as presc bed by aw
As soon as a ce t t ed pe flon conta n ng ft proposal to be
submllled to !he electors s fllec w lh the sec eta y of state
the secre a y sha I transm t the proposa to the Oh o Bat o
Board wh ch shall pr@scr be the ballot language lind an
explana on of the p oposal n the same manner and sub jec t
to th e same te ms and cond ons as app y to Issues
subm tted by the General Assemb y pu suan t to Sect on 1of

r·

Arl cle XV Iof th s Const tut on The ballollanguage sha ll be

presc bed so as o pe mit an af rmat ~e or negat ~e vote
upon eacl'l canst ut on a amendment law section or tem
subm ed
The camm ttee epresenting the petit oners shall
prepare an argument support ng her position The General

Assembly may prov de by law for fhe preparat on of

opposing argumen s The ex~anatlon and the ar~uments
sha not exceed h ee hundred wo ds each The proposal 1he

ballol anguage the exp lanat on and lhe a gumen s shall be

publ shed once a week for three consecutive weeks preceding
the e ectlon n at east one newspaper of general c r culatlon
In each coun y of the state where ll newspaper Is pub shed
The secretary of state shal cause to be placed on the

ballo the caption and the ba lot language prepared by the
Ballot Board for each proposal conh!Jined

n

&amp;

properly

cerllf ed pe lion f led w th not lesslhan the requ red numbe

of s gnatures The pe ton and s gnatures sha ll be p esumed
to be n all respec s suff c ent unless not later than seventy

five days before !he election !he pet lion s proved o be

C) No law proposed by In tat ve or supplementary
pet ton sha I conta n more than one sub lee wh ich sha be
c early exp essed in ts t tie No such aw app oved by th e
voters s sub ject to veto by he gave nor The lm a ons
expressed In th s Canst t ut on on the powe of the Gene a
Assemb y to enact aws shall be deemed m tatlons on he
power of the people to enact aws

nvaldorthe sgnatures nsuffcento anactloncha englng
the va d ty of the pe on or ooe or more 5 gnatu es s
pend ng wh ch action was begun no ate han one hundred
days be ore he elect on No proposlll voted on by thee ectors
sha be he d uncons tut anal or vo d after the e ectlon
because of an nsuff c ency o va d s gnatures or an nvalld
pe ton
Th e nltla v.e and referendum prov sons of thi s
Constl l u on sha ll be se lf execut ng except as otherw se

sec etary 1:&gt; sf ate except as otherw se prov ded In th s
section or Sect on 2 or Sect on .t of th s article During such
n ne y day per od the submlss on to the electors of such law
section of such law or tern n any such law appropr at ng
money may be demanded by a referendum petition hav n~
printed across the top Refe endum Petition fo ~oter

but n nr&gt;-way lmit ng or restr ct ng either such provls ons or
the powers reserved to the people
Sect on 7 The n tlatlve and referendum powers are
reserved to 1he peop e of each mun c pa ty ~nd each county
on all maHers wh ch such munlclpa tr, or tounty may noW or
hereafter be author zed to contro by eg slat ve act on Sucl'l
powe s shal be exe clsed In the mMner now or hereafter

s gned by one hundred thousand electors

no so pro\1 ded n he manner now or hereafter provided by

lakes effect th rty days after the elect on

Section 3 No law pa ..ed by !he Genera Assemb y sha
go Into effect until n nety days after t s 1 ed with !he

conslde aflon of ow enactec by the General Assemb y

certU ed as

provided n Secllon 6 of th s article and lllec w lh he

secreta y ot state The secr.etary shall subm t such law
section or tern to thee ectorsa the neJIC succeed ng genera
elect on or at a spec a elec 'Jn f'l ~" rtate f xed by aw f o
hold ng the p rna y e ect on wh cheve sea ller occu nq
subsequent to one hundred twen y days'6tte the 11119 o e
pet on No such aw section o Item sha go n o e fee
un ess appro~ed by a ma or ty of the electors voting on 1 If

so app oved It shall go Into effecl th rly days af e lhe
election The filing of a referendum pet t on propos ng lhe
subm ss on or a section or Item does no thereby prevent the

P ovlded Laws may be passed to lac tale their operallon

prov dec by the cha rier of the munlclpallfy or county or 1
aw
Effective Date and Repeal
p ed by a na or ty of the electo s vat ng on this
"' he am ndni&lt;'n shall eke Immediate elfect and
cl on of 1\rt c e II and Sect ons la lb lc ld e

x t nn
It a d ~ o I
c e of the Const
repea ed om such effect ve date
(9) 20 27

0 4

tullon of Ohio sh• be

B Sic

romalnde olfhe aw trom going nto effect

•

1

�10-The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport~y, 0., Monday, O&lt;t
FIRE TltUC"
Seattc:l bids will bt rtctlvtd
In tt'te ttfltt of the VIllage
Pom~rov .

Oh io until 12

0 1C:IQck ~0011 on Oct . 22, 1974
tor 1 1952 GMC Truck with the

follow ing equipment :
500. G PM

3 section 24 too t wood ladder
2 . 10 fl . secl!on ~ Inch hard

suc1•on hose

1 . 10 H 2'/t Inch herd suction
hose
200 foot reel hose
-4 fnch str liner
l 'l1 Inch strainer
15 lb . co~ extingu isher
Sod• acid extinguisher

Axe

5 gatlon Indian FIre F lghter

2 1 Inch mmles
l 2 11:~ Inch nozzle
llgl'lr and siren

'truck presently . In servic e

and has less tl'tan 10,000 actual

miles

·

Th e right Is reur\led
relect anv and 111 bids

'
{10) 11 . 18, 1tc

to

Jane Walton
Clerk
VIllage of
Pomeroy , Oh io

AstraGraph
Berntce Bede Osol
For Tuttdoy, oct. 1t, 111e
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 11)
There are some~ sudden and
unusual career choices
available today. Don'l mull
ove r them too long or you'll
lose fait h and lose out
TAURUS {April 20·Moy 20)
Stick to the fun things thai will
pop up lor you today. It's no
time to get Involved tn hig hrisk ventures
GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) An
unexpected opportunity to
perform an eltceptlonal service will come to you today
Jump at the chance
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)
Peculiar feelings cou ld lead
you IQ o'o'erlndulge In the
good things of life You may
do lt, knowing you 11 have to
pay the ptper
LEO {July 23·lug. 22) You'll
start the day w1th a lot of
enterprise in acqulrmg
possess ions Toward evening, you could celebrate a bit
too much
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Stpl. 22)
Your alert mi nd w111 lead you
to dei&lt;Je 1nto the unusual to.
day or \llslt peculiar places
It' ll be fun lor a change
LIBRA {8tpl. 23-0cl. 23) You
could be unexpectedly extravagant today and enjoy
every minute of It Some gu1lty
thoughts may later depress
you .
SCORPIO {Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Today youll be original and
creative You could skillfully
assert yourself to achle"&lt;~e
whatever you desire
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 21·
OK. 21} Act upo n unusual
feelings' or Insights you have
today without trepidation
Inves tigate the phJiqsophy,
ralh er than the phenome non
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22•Jtn.
11) You 'll be around ex.traordlnary people today . The~
could bring you unexpected
benefits. later you might find
yourself a tittle env1ou s

•

AOUAAIUS{Jon. 20-Fob. 11)
Keep gains or promotion that
occurs today to yourself
Friends you tell could com·
plicate things for you.
PISCES (Fob. 20-Mtrch 20)
An enthusiasm tor pushing
progressive tdeas co uld
backfire today Guard aga.msl
lett 1ng zeal become
foolishness

___. .Your
~Birthday
Oct. 11, 1171

You ha\le gooct earning
powers th1s year lf you follow
your hunches and are also
very energetic Take care not
to blow all you make!

Chester
\
-~: News Notes
..

Oiriilis

•'

Eichinger, student

at Ohio state and Donald
Eichinger, student at Rlo
Grande, spent lhe weekend
with Mrs. Opal Eichinger and
Laura Jean.

'

'
..

For Sale

·'
~

DODGE II

ton pickup, low
mUeage, S cylinder motor.
Good 6 ply tlrea, cHoad
springs, body rough. Phone

,.
~

•

Bm stra!ISS, 99Z.2828.

&gt;

"''

Wanted to Do
l , WILL care for elderly woman
.. ' in my home. Trained and
experienced. Phone 992-

7314.

·'···
.

·''

--.,....---

'.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Bids will be received at the
Mayor ' s Office until 4:00
P .M., October 25, 1976, 237
Race Street for a.ooo gattons
(more or len ) unleaded
gasoline and a.ooo gallons
(more or lfUJ leaded gas~llne
for a period of one c.i;'ear
commencing November L
1916.

'

j Bidder will be responsible

lOi' . furnish ing and meln ·
talnlng two (2) metered
pumps and two (2) un .
derground tanks
,
, The Vlll11ge reserves the
right to acceptor reject any or
111. bids .
Gene.Grate,
Clerk .Trtuurer
Village of
Mlddtepo~t

'

INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P .M
oav
BeforePubllntlon .
Cancellat ions.
correc
t ions aCupted rtrst CIIY of
REGULATIONS
Ttle Publlshrr res~r1.1es
lhe r ight to edit or reject
anv ldl detmed ob ·
' tctlonal The publ isher
wilt not be responsible ror
mo re tnan one Incorrect
1nsert lon .
'

RATES

cents .

\"

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

,Television log for easy viewing

CHEVE~~E MA~IBU

IS95

1969 V.W. 2 DR .
Runs good, n~w tires, radio

1971 VO~KSWAGEN 2 DR.
S1S95
Red finish , good tires, clean Interior, automatic trans.,
good economy .

addltlonal word 3

BLIND AO$
Additional 2Sc Charge
per Adnrtlsement .
OFFICE HOURS
a.JO a .m . to s 00 p m
Dellv , 8 30 a .m to 12 00
Noon Saturdav
Pnone today 992 2tS6

~

PLEASURE HORSES and pome~
also will buy horses and
pan1es. Phone ('614} 698·3m,
Ruth Reeves .
AKC Regisfervd Saint 8ernord
Pupp1e1 2 male I female , 3
months old. Strong ond
healthy. Phone (304} 773 ·S..05
or (3()..( ) 675·2310, PI Plvasant
_....._
W Vo.
AKC Reg. Beegle pups. $.10
Phone~- ~---- .
AKC Dobvrmon puppy, female. 4
months, bred from champion·
ship lmes for prolec: lion ond
good temperament Phone
742 3054
AKC Regtstered Chtnese 1\Jg
female , 7 months old, shots,
wormed. excellent blood l1ne
Phone 985 3896.

____

1972
$141}..
H T. cpe ., good tire•. radio, v.a, oulomollc. P.S., P. B..
bucket seats, runs good, needs paint. (

~minimum .

B~AGL_E p_ups

Business Services
e .llumlnr.~m

Oulf.r~

!idl-e

• Ro0fll'tl Alwminum

I SaHIIs
$1.3011.

kliiAIIed

•••• 1•1
•

Phon•"'

Construction

'""

•••••

'lirt~C: :lory
hom•

111~

hmla5pm

EvtnintiHM)'JO

' IP I mo.

Call949· 20~

FREE K1ttens Altce Capehart Ap·
pie St , Syracuse See after 5
pm

We repair the uld tnd build
the new . Plptring, Pllnf.

C.API'AIN EASY

Int. plntUntJ window
replacemenh,
ttilu ,
roofing, hot mix., s\dlnl.
Slorm wmdow1, doors,
remodel kitchens lnd
bilths , etc . Phone '4' · ~02:1.
No SundJy C1ils Please .
10·14 1 mo pd .

'V THEY'RE; CRU;;&gt;e :&gt;HeLL
GAM6~ COMPAI!.IOD TO
AM&amp;RICAtJ
THE MCI&lt;5T THAT 1&lt;/D
5P105D
AND HI~ UNC~E' V&amp; GOT
J!,QY,

TA~K A~OIJT

TRAP~~

--

WILL DO odd jObs, roofing , pai n

~-

~

1970 Ponttac Bontivtlle, fu ll power
hng, hauling, tree work and
wtlh atr $750 Phone 949·2739
--·--'-~- .
~m
~•:.w.:.';ng
.;=P~':.~~
--7~4~
1967 8u1ck , loSabre 2 door,
wil1te good runn1ng cond111on
Mublle ;l_tool;s 4&gt;~ ~e $20()_. Phone 992 51 0S
1973 Buick Cvnlu rionl LvSobre,
MOBILE home fo r sole or rent 3
one owne r 38,000 m1les , Off
bedrooms, ol ul1i •l1es po1d
condt llon ,hlt whvel
trunk
Pilone 992·7751 .
re l eo~e 60 40 front seot rod1al
t•r4:1s , 455 ,ngme, vinr l lop
IN THE
Phone 7.42 ·221 1 before 5 00 or
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
742·2025
after 5 00
.
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY , OH 10
1973 Ponhoc leMan1, om-fm , 8
track lope 01r , low m1leage,
IN THE MATTER OF SETexcellen t cond1l1on. Call (61 4)
TLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS ,
378 6307 or see, Pork Manager
PROBATE COURT, MEIGS
Forked Run Stole Pork
COUNTY , OHIO
..
- 19666u~tk Phone985 3920 .
Accounts and vouchers of
the
l ol low 1ng
named
fiduc iaries have been flied m
ltle Probate Courl , Me1gs
Countv , Oh1o, for appro\lat
We w1sh to thank everyone who
and selllement
was so kmd ond thoughtful
CASE NO 1~ . 925 Seventh
Annua l Accounf of Dorothy
alter lhe deatil of our wtf e,
Gilmore. Guardian of Delbert
mother and grandmother
Norman Ca lL a n 1nco mpetent
Q:eorgto Otl er We wish to ex·
person
tend spectol tha nks to Or John
CASE NO 20,639 F;ourth
R1dgway and the nurses 1n !he
Current Accoun t of Norman F
emregency room Or Lew1s
Hoover , Guard1an of the
Estate of Esmeralda Barbara
Telle, and the Rawlmgs·Coats
Wil!sh1re , incbm petent
Funeral Home. We also w1sh to
CASE NO 21 ,568 Ftrst and
thank our many frie nds end
Fmal Account of Mary 0
ne1ghbors for their flowers ond
Thompson. Admmlstra trix. of
onythtng else wh1ch they did to
ttle Estate of Charles w\
help us dunng th1s lime Hvs·
Thompson , dece ased
bond George , ch1jdren Mono
CASE NO 21 ,670 FirSt and
Lee Neol , Gene Oiler. and
F1nat Acco unt of Evel.,.n s
Folk and Mildred F Betzing .
grondch1ldren, Janet, Eric end
Co ex.ccutr1ces of the Last W ill
LISO
and Testament of Dorsel
Sm1th , deceased
CASE NO . 2L7lt F1r st and
Final AccoUnt of Ve rnon H
Ban ciS, Admin iStrato r Wll h THE RACINE Fire Oeportmvnl w1ll
the Will Ann exed at the Estate
hove 0 gun shoo t Saturday at
Emmet P
B.ntels . , v.. .30 p.m. ot t h e1r •··ld"
of
Deceased
uul mg ·m
CASE NO 21 ,7 84 First,
Bashon
F 1n a I &amp; D1-9 In bu I i v e Ac co un t PET::E=a-"n'-;
d-;:G:-e~ne-:-s·-;:
G-:o,:-=o-g-:e :-,.-n~
ow in
of Jose~fl Alton Swa1n,
h
d d
EKec utor of the estate of Lida
operot1on. Mec omc on bo y
Sw ain aka Ltdda Swain ,
work North Second Slreel in
deceased
Mtddleport. Formerly Bran
CASE NO 21.804 Ftrst and
non 's G~rage Phone 992·5450
F1nal Account of James E
or c~a ft er5~m 992·7135
S1 mpson , Administrato r of the
Es ta te ol Aro,ur Lynch . NOW occepllng ptono students .
De&lt;! eased
beg1nners , mtermedtoles, ad.
Unless exceptions ar e filed
vanced students Coli
m
the reto , sa1d accounts w1t1 be
2270
tor heanng before sa1d Court
on the 16t h dev of No\lember , NOW selling Bee l1ne fosiltons
19?6, at whtch ltme satd ac
HoYe a par1v ond wm tree
counts will be cons1dered and
clothing Col\949·2786
.contmued from day to day ·unti l finallv disposed of
Hunt's Pvt Shop has a nvw sh1p·
Any person mteres te d may
men t of f1 sh ond supplies
lite written ex.ceptlons to said
Stock 15 expondmg and there
accounts or to matters per
are manv spedo ls each week
Just 2 '!, mile n orlil~tasl af
taining to the execution of th e
Chesler on rt 248 .
trust no t less than ftve days
pnor to the date set tor ------~
--·-ilearlng

--

_

-

- ------- --

~

-~

Manning E Webster
JUDGE
COMMON PLEAS COURT , MRS Oeon Brmker lost a pa r·
PROBATE DIVIS ION
mgkn1fv of senltmentol im·
,
MEIGSCOUNTY , OHIO · portonce to her between her
I 10) 18, He
home on Roctne·Boshan Rood
and Racine If found. please
_phone her ot949·2539 ·
Lost ladtes leather billfold 1n
front of Outtons 1n Middleport
PUBLIC NOTICE
On November 4, 1976, in
Coii949·2SIO
accordance w!fh chapter
15150114 Rev1sed Code of Found-1971 Clan ring. South,
Parkersburg · Please 1dvntdy
Oh1o , the O,h io Soi l and Water
Conser\lallon Commission will
to claim , found of Me1gs High
cause an election to be tleld i!ltj
Sc1'1ool grounds P1'1one 992·
Chester E lemenlarv School,
2n9.
at B 00 p m , electing two
~--~-supervisors to fill the expiring Lost In Long Hollow-Bunker Hi ll
3 vear terms of Thereon
area , female Siamese cot ,
Johnson and Roy Miller .
Family pet . Reword to fmder
NOminees ro fill the ex.p1ring
Coii992·66S
1
terms are : James Car nahan
of Sutton Twp : Thereon
Johnson of Letart Twp ,
James Lucas ot R,ullend
Twp ; and Rov Miller of
Chester Twp
HIGH school gtrl-semor ava ilable
Nominations will be ac
for part ·tlme work . secre1ory
cepted from the floor at the
wMk preferred, on school work
time of elect ion or by petition
program. Coll992·3940
submitted one week pr ior to .
election
cOI'llalnlng
the GALVIN ·FARRIS·ROSS Contract
signatures of 25 landowners .
U46 $200 weeklv po111ble
Only landowners and oc
stuff ing en11elopes. Send self .
cupier~ are eligible tO
addressvd,
stomped
Polls will also be open a the
enYelope Edroy Moils. Bo11
Me igs So11 &amp; Water Con
188, Dept 516, Albo0y, MO
servatton Dtstrtet otf1ce ,
b&lt;402.
second floor of the Farmers
Bank Building . from 8 00 a m
to 4:00 p m on the election
PUBLIC NOTICE
date
The annua l election at the
Meigs Coun t v Agricultural
(lOt 18 (11) t, 2tc
Society Directors wt ll be held
Tuesday, November 9 , 1976 at
lhe olf1ce of the Meigs Counly
Commissioners In the Court
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT ho use al Pomerov , Oh io from
~
Case No . 21951 5 to 9 P m.
Est1te ot W1lllam F Harril,
Quallffc&amp;tions for dlrecrors
are that they must be a
Deceased
Nollce is hereby given thai qualified v.oter of Meigs
Phyllis E Harris, of R o 1. Cou nty and r:nust have .a
Racine , Ohio , has been dulv membership ttckel in sa1d
$ppolnted Adm lnlstratr l11 of .. soc1ety ot t9Hi
the Eslate of Will 1am F
Candidates petlllnns must
Ha rris, dtceased . late of R o be flied wllh the Secreterv no
1, Raclpe. Meigs County , Oh 1o tater than S P m Tuesdav ,
Creq1tors are requ 1red to No veiT)ber ,2. 1976 Only
file the 1r claims w 1th said persons holdmg memb(lrshlp
fiduc1ary wlltlln four months , ltckets at t~t close of the 1976
Dated th is 12th day of oc County Fa•r or a1 least (151
faber 1976
calendar days before the date
ol elect10n are quallfleCI to
Mann ing D Webster vote
The Me igs Agricultural
Judge
Court or Common Pleas. societv By Mrs . Wallace
Proba 1e Div ision Br&amp;dford. Secretary
1

y•••

( 101 11. 18. 25, 31t

~

GIJTIE~JININGS

LARRl,,~J.~~DER
Ph. t92 3993

BRIN5 HER.

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

---

~·

,_

t!l-2174

!t&amp;; ;~~~~~;~ ~:~

---

----------

~~-

-- -- --

-----

Anti-Freeze

Cll , ~.TIIHtD~I!&gt;

IS CDMif.lb ~ 1

I Sf&gt;.W IT AT Ac:RIV6·1~
1H!'AToR B/&gt;.C.K IN i~M5 1

t A6
•AKQJ3
Both vulnerable

CODNER'S
CAMPERS

FABRIC
.
sota , cnatr cushions,

For
mallresses, paddin~. Ideal
for campers. Vartety of

sizes.

Rilinbow Ridge
Bashan Arn
long Bottom, Ohio
Showing
Swiss Co lony ,
Maple Leaf. PJaymor1
Cricket
Sales , rental.
ser\ltCe, supplies Travel
tra tlers, truck campers,
camp1ng trailers, truck
caps Spec1al Saturday
n1ghts Open evenmgsor by
appo 1ntment, cont&amp;ct
Robert Codner
(10 ll . lmo . pd)

.

Velvets, nylon prints,
herculons, vinyl solids, and
fancy pr1nts, accessories .

DIRECT
FABRIC SALES
)28 Mam Stree1
Pf. Pleasan1

Ph. 675·3469
9.30-l :OO Daily
TiiiB:OOO Fridays

-

-...

KEN GROVER

PHOTOGRAPHY

..'
..

r\CROSS

,.

door

aeragllo •

Down, polltical

maxim
(4

11 Robert E.
was one
(2 wdll.)

rr Vlnlcullural

official.
5 Terrified

&amp; Candle

It Conrad's

H "Salome"

Glenn

7 Black
cuckoo

heroine

II Three, In

I See 3

17 Composer,
FernandoII Mitch or

21 Require
2% AI that

(3

C•~rsey,

~

Novella~

George -

LOVE~ Y 6 years otd. 3 BR ,
w-large closets. 2 balhs,
modern kitchen w-dlsposal,
dishwasher, etc. Full
basement w-utillty space, 3
car garage &amp; workshop.
storage bldg., NG furnoce,
cen1ral air cond. 2 ACRES.
POMEROY - Over an
acre. Mobile home hookup,
sewer, water, eoncrete
polio. JUST 12,000.00.
VERY NICE older homeoverlooks
river.
3
bedrooms, bath, dining R.,
liv1ng R. has fireplace.
N.G. furnace, lovely front
porch . A LOW PRICE OF

BUSINESS &amp; HOUSE - 7
rooms, 2 baths, porches,
leve l corner lot. 2 car
garage, in good repair
Rutland .

.

FR1DAY TI.L8
e •• •••• •

e•

r:oo-Rich Mon, Poor Man 6. 13 ; M·A·S-H 8, 10; Puzzle
Child ren : A WOUB Follow-Up 20; Whof'o .Wrong
With My Child? 33.

311\111111

9 · ~C~ ~:~:Wt.u~ j~~·

Hagen

3'1 St.·Tropez
Ia one

142~ fLA~~l~~R~l~~lU~tlAND =

•

a,10; Puzzte, Chlldren : A

10:GO-Fomlly 6,13; Switch 8,10; Wha1's Wrong With
My Children? 20; Killers 33.
10:3()-News 20
10:55-Polltlcol Program 6,8, 10, 13.
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 151 Block Poropectlve on the
News 20.
11 :31&gt;-Jbhnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie " Hit lody" 6, llt
Kojak 8; M~~~ry Hartman 10: ABC NI)Ws 33
ll:oo-Movte "E mbaosy" 10; Janokl 33.
12:3o-Movle "Monty to Burn" I.
1·oo-lomorrow 3,4. News 13.

vehicle

f&amp; Nigerian
lribesman

N!GHT?MRF - IFalLY TH~Y GUNCED
AL!C£
f:¥la&lt;, THBiV 5'E~THAT _.;(
L/£0 70
/JSt!'.
'.
''
'.

"'

..

N16HTM.ARG" ALia:; SFOK~

1HE /!&lt;LITH 1l''

zt ~:,
11 Kind
dance
3Z Purpose
33 Suftlx lor

oi

Charles
SS Guarlintee
17 Fann
building

-+-+-.,-i .JJW/Wffi~;ll.l
U111&lt;rambteth- foor Jumblos,
ono leiter lo eoch oquare, lo
form rour ordlnar1 wortla.

-=- 38 Wile old
man ·

===WJJ=

Odlst

A"'&lt;...-- a Sycophant

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
Is

how

to

work

It:

A X Y D L B A A X.a
LONGFELLOW

MUPIO

'

.

DSKLK
FYDXJHN
QKKEXHR

'

CIIYPTOQUOTES
Y L K
A J L ·N K
XH

y

DSXN

COUI.l7 R

MaR!

Vl611!5~E 'v\H!~Ol.C'ER.

J TT Z•

AJLEO

AJGYH'N

I

I 0 [) I

One letter olmply atanda lor anothor. In thlo umple A IJ
used lor the three L's, X lor the two 0 '&gt;, etc. Sln&amp;le letlera,
apoolrophes, the length and formation ol the words are all
hints. Each day the code letteno are dUierenl.

DSYH
au

FZENK

NDKLHK

ell1oan.

!Mill _ _ _

I (J I I) (I III]

•· -·

(.....,.... ....rt'O.)

JombiHo EXCIL BULGY I~ POCKET
SMwrday'•

.•

~

S.rles 3.4.15.

8 : 30-~averne &amp; Shirley 6, 13.

garb

2 FAMI ~ Y - 10 rooms, 2
bedrooms each with ba1h
112 acre of land . Only
$12.000

t

25

reprile

8 : 1~World

2f Caesarean

11 ACRES - Good new
fence.
4
bedroom
residence, 1112 baths , sprtng
water near No . 2 mine

•

wda.)

role

30 Rental silln
34 A line or
two

Killers"

------

.Pomeroy l.andmartl

ment

character

----

•a

Z3 Island In
N.Y. Bay
Z4 Crown

23 Unpleasant 1% Placid
soow
~~~~~

27 Heavy

e

!! TaWil

I Gave a

point

establish

"VIctory"

Down

Messina

DEXTER - 30M40 bu ild ing
su1table for store , ch urch
or residence $3500

Slit.l~

Yesterday's A01wer

wdl.)

4 Ottoman

the meek"

C(H)P BRAND

~~~;~/on

•

(F.Dr a copy ol JACOBY
MODERN. send $1 to "Win
8(
Bridge. " CIO th i S
newspaper. P. 0. Bo• 489.
Radto Ctly Siation. Now York.
N Y 10019)

3 With 8

10 Allevlale
11 Churchmen
13 Coxey's14 For each
IS Cambric 16 "Blessed -

li"The

e

1

quo -

or !right

NEW LISTING - 5 yrs.
old, 4 bedroom's, balh, gas
F.A. furnace. city water,
eaf . in kitchen in Mid
dleport, 113,000

C
t •e e•

An Iowa reader wants to
know il dummy can remind
declarer that he held honors
The answer is that dummy
certainly may do that Also
hon ors can be declared any
hme before the rubber 1s over.
Although. if declared late the
opponents may object

DOWN
I Kind of bell
z Belles In a

relative
5 Kind of

HOMESITES for sole, I acre and
up Mtdcfleport , near Rutland.
Coll992·7.481.

$375

SALE

~~~~

41 Slatus

I Herring's

TEAFORD

COUN=
TR:::Y
:-M
:c-:
obC"il:e·
- Home Pork . Rt
THR EE bedroom tmmobile home
IN THE COUNTRY - 3
POMEROY - 2 slory brick
wilh 2.4 acre lot. Two rooms
33, ten m1les nor th of Pomvroy
Only
Gal.
bedrooms, tiath, nice eat-in
:. Upper floor has 3 BR.
buh on permanently Wall to
Lorge lots with concrete patios
kitchen . Basement, porch
bath , very nice kitchen,
wall carpel , range , refrlgerolor
sidewalks, runn&amp;rs and off
&amp; la rge yard . S20,000.
ond gorobe Cl1!posol located
lower has 2 furnished
streel parking. Phone 99!~47 9
3.41 Rutland Street , M1ddleport .
renlals . Excellent neigh.
ONE bedroom opartments qt
RUTLAND - 4 bedrooms,
A good mveSII)'Ient at only
borhood. ASKING JUST
VILLAGE MANOR m M'ddleport
S10 ,000.
bath, front "porch. nat gas,
120,000.00.
lor $10.. monthly plus elec. or
.
cdy water &amp; nice location.
~E T US SE ~l YOUR
ApprOXImatelv 2 acres of ground,
$130 mdud1ng electnc LOWER
$12,000.
PROPERTY
.
2 mo'bile homes, garo9fi, bose·
RA1ES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS
HENRY E. C~Elj\ND
ment, form eqUJ pmenl and
Conventetlt to shoppmg on 9a-~ Jack w. Carsey, Mgr.
..
Phon• 992·2181 •
WE .' HAVE 45 PROPER.
BROKER
welding equipment Phone
Tilird and Mill Streets m Mid
TIES FOR YOU TO SEE.
985-3a37
dleport Brand new high qual1·
--~
ty apartments
See the
manager at Apl 28, or call COAL limestone, and calcium
m -n21 .
chlonde ond calc1um brme for
dust ~n trol and spvciol mixing · LOCUST POSTS, round or split. •
AVAILABLE ot Riverside Aport·
menh , I bedroom aport
soh fOr farmers Mo1n Street, :;P~h~o~n~e-9:49:·2~7;7-;4.:;====~
ments, $100 per month. 2
Pomeroy Ohio or phone 992 •
..:::, •
•
• ••
1
bedroom apa rtments, $133 per
38~' · - - - - ~- -·
month Phon&amp; 992 3273
1971 HONDA CL-450 12 .000
New wood,burni ng s1ove.
Mon., Tues., Wecl. '
•'
'-- --·-·
2 Bedroom trailer. Brown 's Trailer
miles. sissy bor. crash bon .
R011. S288.1S
•
..
8·
.
00111
5•,00
••
pull back handle bars , new lirv
Now S238 95
Park . Pilone 992·3324 .
ond seals, Scrambler s1de
New futl oil stovt. Reg.
•
I
3 Bedroom mobtle home fvrn1sh·
.fip_e~c~~·'!.J49·24!!&lt;l.
m 2.37
Now m 2.31
:.
Thursday 8 11112 noon
,
eel and unfurnished , adu lts on
ly , Wo1er and heat pa1d POTATOES ond pumpkitlS C. W
•
New Co.op wa ter sottene~
I
1
Phone
. -'742·'2692
. .
land. Ohoa Phone
ROG. 1349.9$ Now
••
EFFICIENCY apartment Ideal for
•
1 used Homelite chain saw11ngle
Mulberry
Ave , COAL for sa le. Open 6 days per
$200
I
week and evenings. For further
a .
rele renc es PhonE' 9'.J2 20:ro or
informallon coli (614) 367·72'Ht ' 1 used MccUiJough chain
..
.~
992·76/iJ
saw
175
. • •
Close! Sat. At 5 p.m . I
Very n1ce 1'2 x 6S houie trailer lor SWEET polaloes. R w lew&gt;&lt;. Rl
rent m Mason. W Vo Ad ults
124 Racone. Ohio Phone 843
~
o11ly , no pets Cor tuct Sa n~ ro
2m
.
J
a
c
k
W.
l.'sr
•
992 5693. Monday lh• uur/' GRAIN fed beol , 3Sc lb. Phone
Dhont 9fl 2181
,..
Fnday , 9 ft ll 3.
95 1
Furn" hcd 2 bedroorn ,"(') lith~&lt;
:L E: ::JZPATRICK ORCHARD.
•••
•
Rock!iprmgs odulls ont~ Pl · '" · AP&gt;rAlE
ROUTE 0119. PHONE
992·2789
WILKESVILLE (614 )669 3785
• .t• • • • • o o S S S ·~' t f •,;, • • • 9 ~I . . ....

- --

6•

~Hta•"e!t'
loy THOMAS JOSEPH

ALLEY OOP

$12,500.00.

Pomeroy Landmark

,.

Pa~s
Pa~s

Schapiro is a collectiOn of
hands !rom actual play He
starts w1th a chapter on
bridge humor. "
Oswald . "The humor in this
hand was not appreciated by
East and West. South really
should have opened one club
With live very good clubs and
live very bad spades you
break the rul~ ol bidding the
higher-ranking, fiVe-card su1t
1\rst Anyway. he opened one
spade. North raised to two
spades and South Julnped to

Weddings

NEW ~!STING - Near
Gavtn at Gall1a ·Meigs line.
A 3 bedroom home wllh
bath, nat. gas F.A. furnace.
N1ce compact kit., dining,
garage &amp; trader spot
$22,000.
'

24

Br~tish 1nternaUonalist Bons

Aerial
Commercial
Schools

-----

Pass
Pass

South

J1m; "Bridge analysis by

·'
'

PHOTOGRAPHY

NEW 3 bedroom llovse, 2 ba ths,
{614) IBS·41S5
all elec. I ac re . M1ddleport,
Chesler, Olllo
close Ia Rutland Phone 992·
7481
10.17·1 mo IPd)
~·
-·---SMALL farm fo r sale 10% down,
owner fmonced Monroe Coun· BRADFORD , Auctioneer. Com·
plete Service Phone 949·2487
ty W Vo Phono (304) 772·
at
949-2000 Rac1nv, Ohio Crill
310~ orj~04 J 7~_2 ·3_2~ --Bradford
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toasters irons, all
small opplton ces Lawn mower,
next to Stole H1ghwoy Garage
V~rgil B. Sr., Realtor
on
Route 7 Pl'1 one (614) 9851.10 Mechante Pomeroy, 0 .
3825
Phone 992-m~
REMODELING. Plumb1ng. ~eating
NEW LISTING - a room
and all types of general repo1 r
house 1n Middleport, 2
Work guaranteed 20 yeors eM
baths, na tu ral gas heat,
perience Phone 992.2409
carpeting tn living and
sta~rway. Corner lot with
garage Only $12,000.

North Ea1t

By Oswa ld &amp; James Jacoby

PROFESSIONAl:

-

West

Pass
Openmg lead - K •

D&amp;D TREE Tr1mmmg, 20 years ex

penence . Insu re d free
est1mates Coli 992 2384 or
_j 61 4) 6~57_~~~"''-'-- - SEWING MACHINE Repo1rs, ser·
vtce, all makes , 992 22s.t The
Fobnc Shop , Pome roy.
Authonzed Smger Soles and
Serv 1ce We sharpen Sc1ssors

~AST

•QJ

.A

PO!...Y·FOAM

UPHOLSTERY

WEST
• A92

9 KQ 10
.987512
• J 987
• 32
• 8 52
.971
SOUTH IDI
.IOB763

BORN LOSER

AI 141·2101
Or
941·2160
PLEASE
NO SUNDAY CA~LS
9-30-1 mo.

~---

_

• K 51

t K Q 10 51
.lOB

GLEN R. BISSELL

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

/8

' NORTH
• J 63

CONTACT

I

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

~

UP~~

FREE ESTIMATES!

410 I mo

1'i73 VW THING 35 mpg. near
perfect
condition
Rtck
G1lmore, Rt 1 Reedsville (Sue·
ces~ R ~~d) o~h~ne 992 5323
ANY PITCH
1976 Chevrole t 4 wheel dri ve
truck Phone 949·2132
ANY SIZE
REGISTERED Black Angus bul 5
- '
1970 Ford L. T 0 2 door ,
years old Coli 98S·425S
q01ck sale, $375 Albert Hdl ,
O.NE and t.,;:;o bedr;~ m h.trmshed
Roc me Ol'11o Phone 949 2261.
apls Ca \1 992 312.9 or 992·5434
--NOVA 6 cylmder. good condtllon ,
ONE and 2 bedroo m furn1 shed
, $600 Call 992· 7054
Box 28-A
oportmena Call 992 3129 or
Rutland, Ohio 45775
1970 Ford L T D , 2 door, qutck
~2 ·54?4
Ph. 1614) 742-2409
sole , 5375 Albert Hill RaCine
LOWREY organ, Lmcoln wood
Oh1o Pho ne 949·2261 .
We Deliver
model Phone (614) 378 6330
7·28·4 mos.
PA RT S fo r 1968 For.d, three fourth
1
1973
/ r ton p1ckup truck Also, 23
ton pickup truck. Ph . 992 ·3640
channel rno b1le C B rodto
EXCAVATING , dozer , loader and
1%8 Mustang Fostbock Moch 1:
Phone 949·2470
backhoe work dump trucks
1970 Ford custom phone 843·
J D -150 darer 6 wor blade
and lo·boys fo r h1re, w•!l huul
2667
Phone 949·246.3
till d1r1 lo s01 l l1mes1m~ e ond
grovel Coli Bob or Roger Jef .
SCHOOL SEWING MAC~INES
fers , day phone 992 7089
Smgers 1n wolnvt consolelle,
n1gh1 phone 992 3525 or 992·
feotunng buttonholes blmd
OLD furmture , tee bo)(es , brass
5232 .
hem Sews on knil!&gt; Cqsh or
beds wall telephones and
terms Co\1992 5146
EXCAVATING darer bock hoe
porh, or cornplee households
ond d1tcher. Charles R Hot Wnte M. D M1iler Rt 4 ELECTROL UX sWEEPERs Rebwlt
he ld Bock Hoe Serv1ce
wilh o il o!lochmenls $29 Also
Pomerov, Oh 1o Ca\1992·7760
Rutland , Oil •o Phone 742 2008
Hoover Sweepers ta nks · or
CASH po1d for oil makes and
upr1ghts $1..8 Coll992 5146
SEPTIC Syslems mstolied by
models ~f mobile homes
ltcensed mstoller Shepard
Phone area code 614 423 9531
CAMPER , $600 Also , horse
Contrac to rs Phone 742 2409
1ro1ler
$450
Phon"e
(61.4)
698·
TIMBER Pomeroy Fores t Pro
3290
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Moder n
ducts Top pnce fo r standmg
Somtollon, 992 ·31154 or 99'2 ·
sawtimber Co!l Kent Hanby , USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT
242a.
, ...... 6·8570
T•mbeqock 2400 Sk1dder ,
Ttmberjock
3bO Grapple Skid· WILL , do roofmg. construcfton
$$CASH$$ lor JUnked au las
der Case 350 Crawler Loader
plumb1ng and heahng No rob
Phone 7.o42 2081 Frye's Truck &amp;
with l og Forks. Bush 60 m
lao Iorge or too small .Phone
Auto Paris Rutland
"" Metollu rg~t~&lt;~l Ch1pper Contoc!
742·2348
COINS 1929 and older curnmcy,
Don GroveS , or l yons Equtp
gold and stlver , scrap W1ll buy
men! Co , Inc C1rclevd le Ohm CARPENT ~R . floormg ce1ltng ,
panelmg Phone 992 2759
sell or trade, foro good selec·
4311 3 Phone (614 ) 474 ·6028 or
110n of cams Hove suppl1vs for
(614)596 4769.
DOZER
work and weld1ng Co n·
.
me tal
detectors
Roger BABY bed , bassmet 1n good
tact Ja mes Parsons, Rt 1,
con
·
Wamsley on Leodmg Creek
Ro cme, on Carmel Rood
dth on Phone (61.4) 667 3330 m
ond Rutland Roqd Phone 742·
evcnmgs
or
985-3988
do~s
EXCAVATING BACKHOES AND
2331 for on offer
- - DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL
WANTED (k•lpw~od Poles max· TWO Iorge meta l mob1 le home
SEPTIC rANKS INSTAll EO LOW
steps.
Also,
5 pc breakfast se1
1mum dia meter, 10 1nchefi on
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS BI LL
Phone 842·216-11 or 742·3096
largest end $8 00 per ton,
PUlliNS PHONE 992-2478 DAY
bundled slobs , $6.00 per ton TWO Iorge me ta l mobde home
OR NIGHT
Deliver to Oh1o Pollet Com·
steps Also, S ptece breoklo~t
set Phone 742-2164 or 742 WILL tnm or cut trees and sh rub·
pony, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, Oh •o.
bery Phone 9.49·2545 o r 7-12·
3096
Phone 992·2689
3167
Wa~-;d!~~Yo7"r'"e-;- -Si ,de-:n C 8. Rod10s , Cobra 135 SSB
truck camper , 8 or 10 fl . Must
Real1shc novv o m l:loth mobile MOBILE Home Repotr Elec ,
plu mb1ng and heotmg Phone
hove gas refngerator and
or bose. Phone 992·7066
992-SaSB
healer Quale pnce and loco· PIGS for sole and one Durock
liOn Replv to Box 15 , Long
malE! hog Phone992 31~ _ NEIGLER 8Luldmg Suppl1es for
Bottom, Ohto 45743
butldmg hous es , cobmets ,
t973 Yomoila TX750cc 6 300
plumbmg Phone 9.49·2508,
mtl es , recently (614) 698 2380,
Rocme, Oh1o
even mgs
GAS and 0 1l Heatmg Soles and
Serv1ce 24 ilour s Pilone 8-43·
IF YOU hove a serv1ce to offer, Arthur Wheat su 1table for seed,
Chorlvs Goegletn , Pomeroy .
2165or843 2341.
wo nt to buy or sell somelhmg,
Phone
992
7625
oe looking for work
. or
:.
_,__..
whatever
you'll get results Excellent 1968 Dodge Dorl, Also ,
foster wtth a Sentinel Wont Ad
gas rang e. Pho_n.~ 99} · 7~8 _
Call992·2156.
Complele set of Premere drum!&gt;, COUNTRY lormlond w1th seclud ·
ODDS ond Ends Sale October 16,
$250. Phone 985 4268
ed 'f!OOds, water ond good oc ·
17th , 1976 at Five Pomts, State
cess m Monroe County , W Vo
Shenandoah wood heater Phone
Rl. 7, 10:0011115, rom or shfne
$1 000 down coli (304) 772
985 3920
GARAGE Sale contmuing Oct 18,
_
31
~-o.ci_30~ ~:?_E2_7_
19 . More tte ms and ontlques 12 x 60 rpobile home w1th 2 ceres
TUPPERS
Plams new 3 bedroom
of
land
near
Me1gs
Mme
No
I
added
Ftr s l house post
homes , buih·ln kilcilens tiled
Phone 842·2746
Metilod1st Chu rc h In ChestP.r
bolhs , carpeted with attached
we'elo. old p1gs also robbns
-· Opo~o_i_!_c:~-- - - - - - Sil(Phone
garage,
1 acre lot $22,900
949·2115
Yard Sole, Tvesdoy Oct 19, 780
Phon". (61_4L667·6304 __ . ~- ~----South Third . 9.00 t1IIJ·OO Plen· Wesltnghouse spin dryer &amp;
HOUSE for sale 5 roo ms and
washer , $50 . Phone 992·5955
-~ ~f_b_o~!~~ Jl~~~~
both , all electric por tl olly
after6p m
carpeted , pot10 See Irene Cun ·
d11f , Fourlh Street, Syracuse ,
Oh1o
S111 room house, both end 'li m
3 AND 4 RM furn1shed and un ·
Mtddleport . Phone 992 3129 or
fu rnished opts Phone 992·
992 5434
5434 .

six.""
Jim : "West opened the king
of hearts and . instead of show·
lng any signs ol distress.
South took h11 slnsteton ace,
cashed the ace ol deamonds
and led a low spade toward
dummy. West hopped up with
his ace, dropping his partner's
jack Then he tried to cash the
queen ol hearts South ruffed,
dropped East's queen ol
spades and brought home hi s
ridiculous slam "
Oswald: "The humor here
is very British At hrst glance
West looks like an 1diot. Ac·
tually, the fault lay with East
He d•opped his deuce of
diamonds on that first dia·
mond lead! It was an 'expert,
or supposed expert . game
Had East played the three
spot, West would have read
him !or two diamonds and
seen wha! South was up to."

TO 190 A&gt;JO

You can 11¥1 hundrtlh
tVtn lhoUIInds of dolill'l
will! olumlnum or vlnrl
siding.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, lfl6
6:oo-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6:15-Farm Report 13.
6:30-Not For Women Only 13.
6:30-Teachers' Classroom 4; News 6: Sunrise
Semester 8; Cono!8rns and Comments 10.
6:45-Morn/ng Report'·
6:50--Good Mornl"ll, Wet! Vlrglnlo 13 ·
6:55-Good Morning, Trl Stall 13 .
7:oo-Todoy 3,4,15; Good Morning, Amorlce 6,13; CBS
• News 8; Chuck White Reports 10.
7:05-Bugs Bunny ond Friends 10.
7:3o.-Schoolles 101 Lassie 6; Coptaln Kongnroo 8, 10,
Sesame Street 33.
1:31&gt;-Big Volley 6.
9:oo-A.M . 3; Phil Donahue 4; Lucy Show 8; Mlko
Douglas 10; Phil Donahue 13; Phil Oonahue 15 .
9:30-Cross-Wits 31 One Lift tollvt 6; Good Oavl . 8.
10 .(!0-Sonford ond Son 3,4,15. Mogarlno 8.10; Mike
Douglas 13
10'15-Generol HoiPifal &amp;.
·
10 : 31)...Hollywood Squores 3,4, 15
11 · oo-WhHI ot Fortune 3, IS; WHkday 4: Edge ot
Nlghl6; Gambill, 10; Morning wtth D. J 13 .
11 :3o.-Stumpers 3.4,15; Hoppy Doyl6, 13; Love of Ule
8, 10 ; Sesame Slreet 20.
11 :55-Toke Kerr 8; Ms . Flx lt 10.
11 ·oo-News 3.6. 10.13,
12:oo-HQt Soot 3.6.8 1n • Hot Seat 13; Bob Brnun 4; 50
Grond Slom 15.
ll :3o.-Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13, Search
lor Tomorrow 8, lo.
'
12 ·55-NBC News3,15.
1:oo-Somersel3; Ryon 's Hope 6, 13, Cocenlrollon 8;
Young and lhe Rest Ieos 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1 :31&gt;-Days 'of our Lives 3,4, 15; Family Feud 6. 13; As
the World Turns 8, 10.
•
2 .oo-uo.ooo Pvramld 13; Dlnohto 6.
2:31&gt;-Docton 3,4,15; One life lo live 13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3·oo-Another World 3,4, 15; All tn The Fnmlly 8.10:
Consumer Survival Kit 20.
3:15-Generol Hospltol 13.
3: Jo.-Bewllched 6; Motch Game a, 1O; llllns, Yogo and
You 1b
4:00--Misler Cortoon 3; Marcus Welby, M.D. •:
Somersel15; Howdy Doody 6; Mickey Mouse Club
8; Sesome Slreet 20,33; Movie "Tho Oandty Bees"
10; Dlnahl 13 .
4.3()-My ThreeSono3; Emergency Onel 6; Partridge
Family 8; Fllnhlones 15.
5:oo-Big Valley 3; Merv Griffin 4; Brody Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers 20,33; Star Trek 15.
'11....
5· 3()-Nows 6; Family Affolr 8; Eleclr lc C9mpony
20,33; Adam-12 13.
6 ·oo-Newo 3,4,1,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20:
Consumer E•perlonce 33.
6:31&gt;-NBC News3,4, 15 ; ABC Nowt13; Andy Grlffllh 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgopodg, ~odge 20; lTV
Ullllzotlon 33.
7·oo-nuth or Congquenceo 3J On Loutlon 4;
Bowling For Dollars 6; Let's Go To The Races a;
News 10; To Tell The Truth 13; Fomlly Affair 15;
Cooking With o Contlnenlal Flavor ~0; American
Issues F oru111 33.
7:31&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3,4; ~t!'s ~eol With t1 6;
Motch Gome PM 8; MocNell·lehrer Report l0,33J
In The Know 10; Wild Kingdom 13J Nashvlllo on tho
Road 15.
8:00-.Joe Garoglola 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13; Tony
Orlando &amp; Dawn 8, 10; Puzzle Children 20,33

South gets ·laugh from slam

~~i~* !til&gt;!!
WHY'D I HAVE

FIIIIICIIII Rt~lllblt

FULLER Brush Products for sole
PhOne 992 3410.
ASSdRTEO lumber 2x4 s 2x8's,
2x6
. s Phone 247 2272. •
MODERN stereo, AM FM rod1o, 8
track tope comblnol 1o n
Bolonce $97 40 or terms Cell
9923965
WANTED ResponSible port~ to
assume net balance on thts
sp1net ptono wtth bench by
K1mball. Wa lnu t tn perleCI con
d1tmn , free deltverv tn your
urva Wr1te Liquidators , 272 E
Mo1n Street , Onll tco the Oh1o
4S601.

WIN AT BRIDGE

GOI&gt;Jt:&gt; FOR THEM!

FREE ESTIM TES
Blown 1nto Wills &amp; AHIU
SlDRM
WINIIOWS I DOORS
REPlACE ME/IT
WINDOWS
IIUMINUM
SIOING&lt;SOffiTT

WOULDtJ'T SURPRISe M&amp;
IF THE'Y WER!f IN CAHOOTS
WITH THAT &amp;.LOND&amp; WHO
RIPPE j) OFF MV CARl ~
Gl&lt;RR·-!

Blllwn
Insulation SeiYicts

1973 Go lo•1e 500, air , p.s., p.b ,, 1970 8utck Riviera, good cond1·
good !Ires ond good condllton
lion, new tires , $900 Phone
11650 Call992-297a
742·2796
RALLY Novo , ora nge wtlh black 1975 MONTE CARlO, outomottc,
top. 6 .cyl lnder, 3 speed, with 4
powvr steering, power brakes .
cragers, L50 t1re1 . No rust ,
otr condlf1omng, AM radto and
or1gmal pomt Perfect instde
stereo , rallv whvvls, wtll sell
and out, $1500 Phone 949
. reasonable Phone 992·7006
2860
19b9 Novo e•tro sharp, new
1966 Mus1ang $275 See ot 2HC,
paint bucket seats, 01r shocks .
Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy.
~~~&amp; !~!..~~9-2460

.

D&amp;D

&amp;

00Wr1100Uh

Tennille 6.1 ~ Phoda e.10; Adams Chronlt ln 20,J3.
8:30-s1le,ooo Quest ion I; Phyllis 1u.
9:1»-Mcvle " Shtr lock Holmes In New York " 3,4,15;
NF~ Foo1bllll6,13; Moudt 1,10J 4n Performa nce •(
Wolf Trap 20,33.
9:30-AII's Fair 8,10.
10:oo-he&lt;utlvt Sullt 8, 10.
, 10:55-Pol/!lcal Program 8, 10.
ll :oo-Nows 3,4,8,10,15.
11 :30-Johnny Corson3,4, 15; McMillon&amp; Wife I ; Mary
Hartman 10; Newt 20; ABC News 33.
11:oo-News6, 13; Movie "Wives&amp; Lovers" 10; Janokl
33.
12:30-'--CollOGt Footbll/1 '76 "6; tronsldo 13.
'
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4.
1:31&gt;-News 13.

MONDAY OCTOBER fl. 1974
S:oo-Big Vauoy 3; Morv Griffin ., Brady Bunch 8;
Mister ROllers 2Q,33; S1or Trek 15.
'
5:30-Ntw$61 Family Affaire: Elec. Co. 20,33; Adem 12 13.
6:oo-Ntw$ 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
E ctuc:atlon In Transltlon 33.
6:»-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge lodgt 20.
7:oo-Trulh or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth4 ; Bowling lor
Dollars 6: Buck Owons 8; News 10; To Toll 1ho
Truth 13; Fomlly Atfolr 15; Ohio's Wild Ploces 20;
Know Your Schools ·33.
7:30-That Good Ole Noshvltlo Music 3; Bobby VInton
4; Muppot Show 6; Gong Show 8; Price Is Right 10;
Candid Comera 13; Friends of Man 15.
8:00-lll11e HouM on the Prairie 3,4, 15; Capt. &amp;

GunER SERVICE

--

-----~

NOTICES
ATTN . · ll
ALL J10USEWIVES
Al l Yard Sales. Rummage ,
Porch and B&amp;Sement Porch
and Besemertt Sa les, etc .
must be paid in advance .
Get yours In eartv bv
stopping bv our office at
Tnt Da lly S~:~nHnel, I I 1
Court St or writ ing Box.
729, Pomerov , Ohio 45769
with your remittance

( 10) 18, ?5 ( II ) 1, lie

r

2 SIGNS
Of
QUALITY

For Wanr Ad Strvlct
S cents per word one
1nstrt lon
Minimum Ch arge St.OO
1-1 cents pl!!r word three
c on~ecut l vt ln!lerHons .
26 cent; r,er wotd six.
consecut lvt nsertlons .
25 Per cent Discount on
paid ads and ads pafd
within 10 davs
CARO OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
n .oo for 50 word
Eac~·

'D1t:llnK.oo.; v

p.,,. fur Sale

pwblle~tlon .

front mount pump
JAO Gallon bi)Otter t1nk

11- The Doily llentlnel, Mlddleoort-Pomeroy, o .. Monday, Oct. IS, lWo

F~r Fast Results Us.e The Sentinel Classifieds

WANT AOI

FOR SALE

Cl&amp;rk,

1R,Ifiij

·

A 006 SCHOOL?!!

•

\ An1werr Otftlll'!ftNf(

~ERE'S 'THAT

•lfR,.. ,.... I forMGI

ololl-THIIIU

ATTC.IEt'
OF MINE?! I'LL WltiN~
HIS FVZZ't' NECK!

•

�10-The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport~y, 0., Monday, O&lt;t
FIRE TltUC"
Seattc:l bids will bt rtctlvtd
In tt'te ttfltt of the VIllage
Pom~rov .

Oh io until 12

0 1C:IQck ~0011 on Oct . 22, 1974
tor 1 1952 GMC Truck with the

follow ing equipment :
500. G PM

3 section 24 too t wood ladder
2 . 10 fl . secl!on ~ Inch hard

suc1•on hose

1 . 10 H 2'/t Inch herd suction
hose
200 foot reel hose
-4 fnch str liner
l 'l1 Inch strainer
15 lb . co~ extingu isher
Sod• acid extinguisher

Axe

5 gatlon Indian FIre F lghter

2 1 Inch mmles
l 2 11:~ Inch nozzle
llgl'lr and siren

'truck presently . In servic e

and has less tl'tan 10,000 actual

miles

·

Th e right Is reur\led
relect anv and 111 bids

'
{10) 11 . 18, 1tc

to

Jane Walton
Clerk
VIllage of
Pomeroy , Oh io

AstraGraph
Berntce Bede Osol
For Tuttdoy, oct. 1t, 111e
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 11)
There are some~ sudden and
unusual career choices
available today. Don'l mull
ove r them too long or you'll
lose fait h and lose out
TAURUS {April 20·Moy 20)
Stick to the fun things thai will
pop up lor you today. It's no
time to get Involved tn hig hrisk ventures
GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) An
unexpected opportunity to
perform an eltceptlonal service will come to you today
Jump at the chance
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)
Peculiar feelings cou ld lead
you IQ o'o'erlndulge In the
good things of life You may
do lt, knowing you 11 have to
pay the ptper
LEO {July 23·lug. 22) You'll
start the day w1th a lot of
enterprise in acqulrmg
possess ions Toward evening, you could celebrate a bit
too much
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Stpl. 22)
Your alert mi nd w111 lead you
to dei&lt;Je 1nto the unusual to.
day or \llslt peculiar places
It' ll be fun lor a change
LIBRA {8tpl. 23-0cl. 23) You
could be unexpectedly extravagant today and enjoy
every minute of It Some gu1lty
thoughts may later depress
you .
SCORPIO {Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Today youll be original and
creative You could skillfully
assert yourself to achle"&lt;~e
whatever you desire
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 21·
OK. 21} Act upo n unusual
feelings' or Insights you have
today without trepidation
Inves tigate the phJiqsophy,
ralh er than the phenome non
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22•Jtn.
11) You 'll be around ex.traordlnary people today . The~
could bring you unexpected
benefits. later you might find
yourself a tittle env1ou s

•

AOUAAIUS{Jon. 20-Fob. 11)
Keep gains or promotion that
occurs today to yourself
Friends you tell could com·
plicate things for you.
PISCES (Fob. 20-Mtrch 20)
An enthusiasm tor pushing
progressive tdeas co uld
backfire today Guard aga.msl
lett 1ng zeal become
foolishness

___. .Your
~Birthday
Oct. 11, 1171

You ha\le gooct earning
powers th1s year lf you follow
your hunches and are also
very energetic Take care not
to blow all you make!

Chester
\
-~: News Notes
..

Oiriilis

•'

Eichinger, student

at Ohio state and Donald
Eichinger, student at Rlo
Grande, spent lhe weekend
with Mrs. Opal Eichinger and
Laura Jean.

'

'
..

For Sale

·'
~

DODGE II

ton pickup, low
mUeage, S cylinder motor.
Good 6 ply tlrea, cHoad
springs, body rough. Phone

,.
~

•

Bm stra!ISS, 99Z.2828.

&gt;

"''

Wanted to Do
l , WILL care for elderly woman
.. ' in my home. Trained and
experienced. Phone 992-

7314.

·'···
.

·''

--.,....---

'.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Bids will be received at the
Mayor ' s Office until 4:00
P .M., October 25, 1976, 237
Race Street for a.ooo gattons
(more or len ) unleaded
gasoline and a.ooo gallons
(more or lfUJ leaded gas~llne
for a period of one c.i;'ear
commencing November L
1916.

'

j Bidder will be responsible

lOi' . furnish ing and meln ·
talnlng two (2) metered
pumps and two (2) un .
derground tanks
,
, The Vlll11ge reserves the
right to acceptor reject any or
111. bids .
Gene.Grate,
Clerk .Trtuurer
Village of
Mlddtepo~t

'

INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P .M
oav
BeforePubllntlon .
Cancellat ions.
correc
t ions aCupted rtrst CIIY of
REGULATIONS
Ttle Publlshrr res~r1.1es
lhe r ight to edit or reject
anv ldl detmed ob ·
' tctlonal The publ isher
wilt not be responsible ror
mo re tnan one Incorrect
1nsert lon .
'

RATES

cents .

\"

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

,Television log for easy viewing

CHEVE~~E MA~IBU

IS95

1969 V.W. 2 DR .
Runs good, n~w tires, radio

1971 VO~KSWAGEN 2 DR.
S1S95
Red finish , good tires, clean Interior, automatic trans.,
good economy .

addltlonal word 3

BLIND AO$
Additional 2Sc Charge
per Adnrtlsement .
OFFICE HOURS
a.JO a .m . to s 00 p m
Dellv , 8 30 a .m to 12 00
Noon Saturdav
Pnone today 992 2tS6

~

PLEASURE HORSES and pome~
also will buy horses and
pan1es. Phone ('614} 698·3m,
Ruth Reeves .
AKC Regisfervd Saint 8ernord
Pupp1e1 2 male I female , 3
months old. Strong ond
healthy. Phone (304} 773 ·S..05
or (3()..( ) 675·2310, PI Plvasant
_....._
W Vo.
AKC Reg. Beegle pups. $.10
Phone~- ~---- .
AKC Dobvrmon puppy, female. 4
months, bred from champion·
ship lmes for prolec: lion ond
good temperament Phone
742 3054
AKC Regtstered Chtnese 1\Jg
female , 7 months old, shots,
wormed. excellent blood l1ne
Phone 985 3896.

____

1972
$141}..
H T. cpe ., good tire•. radio, v.a, oulomollc. P.S., P. B..
bucket seats, runs good, needs paint. (

~minimum .

B~AGL_E p_ups

Business Services
e .llumlnr.~m

Oulf.r~

!idl-e

• Ro0fll'tl Alwminum

I SaHIIs
$1.3011.

kliiAIIed

•••• 1•1
•

Phon•"'

Construction

'""

•••••

'lirt~C: :lory
hom•

111~

hmla5pm

EvtnintiHM)'JO

' IP I mo.

Call949· 20~

FREE K1ttens Altce Capehart Ap·
pie St , Syracuse See after 5
pm

We repair the uld tnd build
the new . Plptring, Pllnf.

C.API'AIN EASY

Int. plntUntJ window
replacemenh,
ttilu ,
roofing, hot mix., s\dlnl.
Slorm wmdow1, doors,
remodel kitchens lnd
bilths , etc . Phone '4' · ~02:1.
No SundJy C1ils Please .
10·14 1 mo pd .

'V THEY'RE; CRU;;&gt;e :&gt;HeLL
GAM6~ COMPAI!.IOD TO
AM&amp;RICAtJ
THE MCI&lt;5T THAT 1&lt;/D
5P105D
AND HI~ UNC~E' V&amp; GOT
J!,QY,

TA~K A~OIJT

TRAP~~

--

WILL DO odd jObs, roofing , pai n

~-

~

1970 Ponttac Bontivtlle, fu ll power
hng, hauling, tree work and
wtlh atr $750 Phone 949·2739
--·--'-~- .
~m
~•:.w.:.';ng
.;=P~':.~~
--7~4~
1967 8u1ck , loSabre 2 door,
wil1te good runn1ng cond111on
Mublle ;l_tool;s 4&gt;~ ~e $20()_. Phone 992 51 0S
1973 Buick Cvnlu rionl LvSobre,
MOBILE home fo r sole or rent 3
one owne r 38,000 m1les , Off
bedrooms, ol ul1i •l1es po1d
condt llon ,hlt whvel
trunk
Pilone 992·7751 .
re l eo~e 60 40 front seot rod1al
t•r4:1s , 455 ,ngme, vinr l lop
IN THE
Phone 7.42 ·221 1 before 5 00 or
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
742·2025
after 5 00
.
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY , OH 10
1973 Ponhoc leMan1, om-fm , 8
track lope 01r , low m1leage,
IN THE MATTER OF SETexcellen t cond1l1on. Call (61 4)
TLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS ,
378 6307 or see, Pork Manager
PROBATE COURT, MEIGS
Forked Run Stole Pork
COUNTY , OHIO
..
- 19666u~tk Phone985 3920 .
Accounts and vouchers of
the
l ol low 1ng
named
fiduc iaries have been flied m
ltle Probate Courl , Me1gs
Countv , Oh1o, for appro\lat
We w1sh to thank everyone who
and selllement
was so kmd ond thoughtful
CASE NO 1~ . 925 Seventh
Annua l Accounf of Dorothy
alter lhe deatil of our wtf e,
Gilmore. Guardian of Delbert
mother and grandmother
Norman Ca lL a n 1nco mpetent
Q:eorgto Otl er We wish to ex·
person
tend spectol tha nks to Or John
CASE NO 20,639 F;ourth
R1dgway and the nurses 1n !he
Current Accoun t of Norman F
emregency room Or Lew1s
Hoover , Guard1an of the
Estate of Esmeralda Barbara
Telle, and the Rawlmgs·Coats
Wil!sh1re , incbm petent
Funeral Home. We also w1sh to
CASE NO 21 ,568 Ftrst and
thank our many frie nds end
Fmal Account of Mary 0
ne1ghbors for their flowers ond
Thompson. Admmlstra trix. of
onythtng else wh1ch they did to
ttle Estate of Charles w\
help us dunng th1s lime Hvs·
Thompson , dece ased
bond George , ch1jdren Mono
CASE NO 21 ,670 FirSt and
Lee Neol , Gene Oiler. and
F1nat Acco unt of Evel.,.n s
Folk and Mildred F Betzing .
grondch1ldren, Janet, Eric end
Co ex.ccutr1ces of the Last W ill
LISO
and Testament of Dorsel
Sm1th , deceased
CASE NO . 2L7lt F1r st and
Final AccoUnt of Ve rnon H
Ban ciS, Admin iStrato r Wll h THE RACINE Fire Oeportmvnl w1ll
the Will Ann exed at the Estate
hove 0 gun shoo t Saturday at
Emmet P
B.ntels . , v.. .30 p.m. ot t h e1r •··ld"
of
Deceased
uul mg ·m
CASE NO 21 ,7 84 First,
Bashon
F 1n a I &amp; D1-9 In bu I i v e Ac co un t PET::E=a-"n'-;
d-;:G:-e~ne-:-s·-;:
G-:o,:-=o-g-:e :-,.-n~
ow in
of Jose~fl Alton Swa1n,
h
d d
EKec utor of the estate of Lida
operot1on. Mec omc on bo y
Sw ain aka Ltdda Swain ,
work North Second Slreel in
deceased
Mtddleport. Formerly Bran
CASE NO 21.804 Ftrst and
non 's G~rage Phone 992·5450
F1nal Account of James E
or c~a ft er5~m 992·7135
S1 mpson , Administrato r of the
Es ta te ol Aro,ur Lynch . NOW occepllng ptono students .
De&lt;! eased
beg1nners , mtermedtoles, ad.
Unless exceptions ar e filed
vanced students Coli
m
the reto , sa1d accounts w1t1 be
2270
tor heanng before sa1d Court
on the 16t h dev of No\lember , NOW selling Bee l1ne fosiltons
19?6, at whtch ltme satd ac
HoYe a par1v ond wm tree
counts will be cons1dered and
clothing Col\949·2786
.contmued from day to day ·unti l finallv disposed of
Hunt's Pvt Shop has a nvw sh1p·
Any person mteres te d may
men t of f1 sh ond supplies
lite written ex.ceptlons to said
Stock 15 expondmg and there
accounts or to matters per
are manv spedo ls each week
Just 2 '!, mile n orlil~tasl af
taining to the execution of th e
Chesler on rt 248 .
trust no t less than ftve days
pnor to the date set tor ------~
--·-ilearlng

--

_

-

- ------- --

~

-~

Manning E Webster
JUDGE
COMMON PLEAS COURT , MRS Oeon Brmker lost a pa r·
PROBATE DIVIS ION
mgkn1fv of senltmentol im·
,
MEIGSCOUNTY , OHIO · portonce to her between her
I 10) 18, He
home on Roctne·Boshan Rood
and Racine If found. please
_phone her ot949·2539 ·
Lost ladtes leather billfold 1n
front of Outtons 1n Middleport
PUBLIC NOTICE
On November 4, 1976, in
Coii949·2SIO
accordance w!fh chapter
15150114 Rev1sed Code of Found-1971 Clan ring. South,
Parkersburg · Please 1dvntdy
Oh1o , the O,h io Soi l and Water
Conser\lallon Commission will
to claim , found of Me1gs High
cause an election to be tleld i!ltj
Sc1'1ool grounds P1'1one 992·
Chester E lemenlarv School,
2n9.
at B 00 p m , electing two
~--~-supervisors to fill the expiring Lost In Long Hollow-Bunker Hi ll
3 vear terms of Thereon
area , female Siamese cot ,
Johnson and Roy Miller .
Family pet . Reword to fmder
NOminees ro fill the ex.p1ring
Coii992·66S
1
terms are : James Car nahan
of Sutton Twp : Thereon
Johnson of Letart Twp ,
James Lucas ot R,ullend
Twp ; and Rov Miller of
Chester Twp
HIGH school gtrl-semor ava ilable
Nominations will be ac
for part ·tlme work . secre1ory
cepted from the floor at the
wMk preferred, on school work
time of elect ion or by petition
program. Coll992·3940
submitted one week pr ior to .
election
cOI'llalnlng
the GALVIN ·FARRIS·ROSS Contract
signatures of 25 landowners .
U46 $200 weeklv po111ble
Only landowners and oc
stuff ing en11elopes. Send self .
cupier~ are eligible tO
addressvd,
stomped
Polls will also be open a the
enYelope Edroy Moils. Bo11
Me igs So11 &amp; Water Con
188, Dept 516, Albo0y, MO
servatton Dtstrtet otf1ce ,
b&lt;402.
second floor of the Farmers
Bank Building . from 8 00 a m
to 4:00 p m on the election
PUBLIC NOTICE
date
The annua l election at the
Meigs Coun t v Agricultural
(lOt 18 (11) t, 2tc
Society Directors wt ll be held
Tuesday, November 9 , 1976 at
lhe olf1ce of the Meigs Counly
Commissioners In the Court
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT ho use al Pomerov , Oh io from
~
Case No . 21951 5 to 9 P m.
Est1te ot W1lllam F Harril,
Quallffc&amp;tions for dlrecrors
are that they must be a
Deceased
Nollce is hereby given thai qualified v.oter of Meigs
Phyllis E Harris, of R o 1. Cou nty and r:nust have .a
Racine , Ohio , has been dulv membership ttckel in sa1d
$ppolnted Adm lnlstratr l11 of .. soc1ety ot t9Hi
the Eslate of Will 1am F
Candidates petlllnns must
Ha rris, dtceased . late of R o be flied wllh the Secreterv no
1, Raclpe. Meigs County , Oh 1o tater than S P m Tuesdav ,
Creq1tors are requ 1red to No veiT)ber ,2. 1976 Only
file the 1r claims w 1th said persons holdmg memb(lrshlp
fiduc1ary wlltlln four months , ltckets at t~t close of the 1976
Dated th is 12th day of oc County Fa•r or a1 least (151
faber 1976
calendar days before the date
ol elect10n are quallfleCI to
Mann ing D Webster vote
The Me igs Agricultural
Judge
Court or Common Pleas. societv By Mrs . Wallace
Proba 1e Div ision Br&amp;dford. Secretary
1

y•••

( 101 11. 18. 25, 31t

~

GIJTIE~JININGS

LARRl,,~J.~~DER
Ph. t92 3993

BRIN5 HER.

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

---

~·

,_

t!l-2174

!t&amp;; ;~~~~~;~ ~:~

---

----------

~~-

-- -- --

-----

Anti-Freeze

Cll , ~.TIIHtD~I!&gt;

IS CDMif.lb ~ 1

I Sf&gt;.W IT AT Ac:RIV6·1~
1H!'AToR B/&gt;.C.K IN i~M5 1

t A6
•AKQJ3
Both vulnerable

CODNER'S
CAMPERS

FABRIC
.
sota , cnatr cushions,

For
mallresses, paddin~. Ideal
for campers. Vartety of

sizes.

Rilinbow Ridge
Bashan Arn
long Bottom, Ohio
Showing
Swiss Co lony ,
Maple Leaf. PJaymor1
Cricket
Sales , rental.
ser\ltCe, supplies Travel
tra tlers, truck campers,
camp1ng trailers, truck
caps Spec1al Saturday
n1ghts Open evenmgsor by
appo 1ntment, cont&amp;ct
Robert Codner
(10 ll . lmo . pd)

.

Velvets, nylon prints,
herculons, vinyl solids, and
fancy pr1nts, accessories .

DIRECT
FABRIC SALES
)28 Mam Stree1
Pf. Pleasan1

Ph. 675·3469
9.30-l :OO Daily
TiiiB:OOO Fridays

-

-...

KEN GROVER

PHOTOGRAPHY

..'
..

r\CROSS

,.

door

aeragllo •

Down, polltical

maxim
(4

11 Robert E.
was one
(2 wdll.)

rr Vlnlcullural

official.
5 Terrified

&amp; Candle

It Conrad's

H "Salome"

Glenn

7 Black
cuckoo

heroine

II Three, In

I See 3

17 Composer,
FernandoII Mitch or

21 Require
2% AI that

(3

C•~rsey,

~

Novella~

George -

LOVE~ Y 6 years otd. 3 BR ,
w-large closets. 2 balhs,
modern kitchen w-dlsposal,
dishwasher, etc. Full
basement w-utillty space, 3
car garage &amp; workshop.
storage bldg., NG furnoce,
cen1ral air cond. 2 ACRES.
POMEROY - Over an
acre. Mobile home hookup,
sewer, water, eoncrete
polio. JUST 12,000.00.
VERY NICE older homeoverlooks
river.
3
bedrooms, bath, dining R.,
liv1ng R. has fireplace.
N.G. furnace, lovely front
porch . A LOW PRICE OF

BUSINESS &amp; HOUSE - 7
rooms, 2 baths, porches,
leve l corner lot. 2 car
garage, in good repair
Rutland .

.

FR1DAY TI.L8
e •• •••• •

e•

r:oo-Rich Mon, Poor Man 6. 13 ; M·A·S-H 8, 10; Puzzle
Child ren : A WOUB Follow-Up 20; Whof'o .Wrong
With My Child? 33.

311\111111

9 · ~C~ ~:~:Wt.u~ j~~·

Hagen

3'1 St.·Tropez
Ia one

142~ fLA~~l~~R~l~~lU~tlAND =

•

a,10; Puzzte, Chlldren : A

10:GO-Fomlly 6,13; Switch 8,10; Wha1's Wrong With
My Children? 20; Killers 33.
10:3()-News 20
10:55-Polltlcol Program 6,8, 10, 13.
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 151 Block Poropectlve on the
News 20.
11 :31&gt;-Jbhnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie " Hit lody" 6, llt
Kojak 8; M~~~ry Hartman 10: ABC NI)Ws 33
ll:oo-Movte "E mbaosy" 10; Janokl 33.
12:3o-Movle "Monty to Burn" I.
1·oo-lomorrow 3,4. News 13.

vehicle

f&amp; Nigerian
lribesman

N!GHT?MRF - IFalLY TH~Y GUNCED
AL!C£
f:¥la&lt;, THBiV 5'E~THAT _.;(
L/£0 70
/JSt!'.
'.
''
'.

"'

..

N16HTM.ARG" ALia:; SFOK~

1HE /!&lt;LITH 1l''

zt ~:,
11 Kind
dance
3Z Purpose
33 Suftlx lor

oi

Charles
SS Guarlintee
17 Fann
building

-+-+-.,-i .JJW/Wffi~;ll.l
U111&lt;rambteth- foor Jumblos,
ono leiter lo eoch oquare, lo
form rour ordlnar1 wortla.

-=- 38 Wile old
man ·

===WJJ=

Odlst

A"'&lt;...-- a Sycophant

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
Is

how

to

work

It:

A X Y D L B A A X.a
LONGFELLOW

MUPIO

'

.

DSKLK
FYDXJHN
QKKEXHR

'

CIIYPTOQUOTES
Y L K
A J L ·N K
XH

y

DSXN

COUI.l7 R

MaR!

Vl611!5~E 'v\H!~Ol.C'ER.

J TT Z•

AJLEO

AJGYH'N

I

I 0 [) I

One letter olmply atanda lor anothor. In thlo umple A IJ
used lor the three L's, X lor the two 0 '&gt;, etc. Sln&amp;le letlera,
apoolrophes, the length and formation ol the words are all
hints. Each day the code letteno are dUierenl.

DSYH
au

FZENK

NDKLHK

ell1oan.

!Mill _ _ _

I (J I I) (I III]

•· -·

(.....,.... ....rt'O.)

JombiHo EXCIL BULGY I~ POCKET
SMwrday'•

.•

~

S.rles 3.4.15.

8 : 30-~averne &amp; Shirley 6, 13.

garb

2 FAMI ~ Y - 10 rooms, 2
bedrooms each with ba1h
112 acre of land . Only
$12.000

t

25

reprile

8 : 1~World

2f Caesarean

11 ACRES - Good new
fence.
4
bedroom
residence, 1112 baths , sprtng
water near No . 2 mine

•

wda.)

role

30 Rental silln
34 A line or
two

Killers"

------

.Pomeroy l.andmartl

ment

character

----

•a

Z3 Island In
N.Y. Bay
Z4 Crown

23 Unpleasant 1% Placid
soow
~~~~~

27 Heavy

e

!! TaWil

I Gave a

point

establish

"VIctory"

Down

Messina

DEXTER - 30M40 bu ild ing
su1table for store , ch urch
or residence $3500

Slit.l~

Yesterday's A01wer

wdl.)

4 Ottoman

the meek"

C(H)P BRAND

~~~;~/on

•

(F.Dr a copy ol JACOBY
MODERN. send $1 to "Win
8(
Bridge. " CIO th i S
newspaper. P. 0. Bo• 489.
Radto Ctly Siation. Now York.
N Y 10019)

3 With 8

10 Allevlale
11 Churchmen
13 Coxey's14 For each
IS Cambric 16 "Blessed -

li"The

e

1

quo -

or !right

NEW LISTING - 5 yrs.
old, 4 bedroom's, balh, gas
F.A. furnace. city water,
eaf . in kitchen in Mid
dleport, 113,000

C
t •e e•

An Iowa reader wants to
know il dummy can remind
declarer that he held honors
The answer is that dummy
certainly may do that Also
hon ors can be declared any
hme before the rubber 1s over.
Although. if declared late the
opponents may object

DOWN
I Kind of bell
z Belles In a

relative
5 Kind of

HOMESITES for sole, I acre and
up Mtdcfleport , near Rutland.
Coll992·7.481.

$375

SALE

~~~~

41 Slatus

I Herring's

TEAFORD

COUN=
TR:::Y
:-M
:c-:
obC"il:e·
- Home Pork . Rt
THR EE bedroom tmmobile home
IN THE COUNTRY - 3
POMEROY - 2 slory brick
wilh 2.4 acre lot. Two rooms
33, ten m1les nor th of Pomvroy
Only
Gal.
bedrooms, tiath, nice eat-in
:. Upper floor has 3 BR.
buh on permanently Wall to
Lorge lots with concrete patios
kitchen . Basement, porch
bath , very nice kitchen,
wall carpel , range , refrlgerolor
sidewalks, runn&amp;rs and off
&amp; la rge yard . S20,000.
ond gorobe Cl1!posol located
lower has 2 furnished
streel parking. Phone 99!~47 9
3.41 Rutland Street , M1ddleport .
renlals . Excellent neigh.
ONE bedroom opartments qt
RUTLAND - 4 bedrooms,
A good mveSII)'Ient at only
borhood. ASKING JUST
VILLAGE MANOR m M'ddleport
S10 ,000.
bath, front "porch. nat gas,
120,000.00.
lor $10.. monthly plus elec. or
.
cdy water &amp; nice location.
~E T US SE ~l YOUR
ApprOXImatelv 2 acres of ground,
$130 mdud1ng electnc LOWER
$12,000.
PROPERTY
.
2 mo'bile homes, garo9fi, bose·
RA1ES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS
HENRY E. C~Elj\ND
ment, form eqUJ pmenl and
Conventetlt to shoppmg on 9a-~ Jack w. Carsey, Mgr.
..
Phon• 992·2181 •
WE .' HAVE 45 PROPER.
BROKER
welding equipment Phone
Tilird and Mill Streets m Mid
TIES FOR YOU TO SEE.
985-3a37
dleport Brand new high qual1·
--~
ty apartments
See the
manager at Apl 28, or call COAL limestone, and calcium
m -n21 .
chlonde ond calc1um brme for
dust ~n trol and spvciol mixing · LOCUST POSTS, round or split. •
AVAILABLE ot Riverside Aport·
menh , I bedroom aport
soh fOr farmers Mo1n Street, :;P~h~o~n~e-9:49:·2~7;7-;4.:;====~
ments, $100 per month. 2
Pomeroy Ohio or phone 992 •
..:::, •
•
• ••
1
bedroom apa rtments, $133 per
38~' · - - - - ~- -·
month Phon&amp; 992 3273
1971 HONDA CL-450 12 .000
New wood,burni ng s1ove.
Mon., Tues., Wecl. '
•'
'-- --·-·
2 Bedroom trailer. Brown 's Trailer
miles. sissy bor. crash bon .
R011. S288.1S
•
..
8·
.
00111
5•,00
••
pull back handle bars , new lirv
Now S238 95
Park . Pilone 992·3324 .
ond seals, Scrambler s1de
New futl oil stovt. Reg.
•
I
3 Bedroom mobtle home fvrn1sh·
.fip_e~c~~·'!.J49·24!!&lt;l.
m 2.37
Now m 2.31
:.
Thursday 8 11112 noon
,
eel and unfurnished , adu lts on
ly , Wo1er and heat pa1d POTATOES ond pumpkitlS C. W
•
New Co.op wa ter sottene~
I
1
Phone
. -'742·'2692
. .
land. Ohoa Phone
ROG. 1349.9$ Now
••
EFFICIENCY apartment Ideal for
•
1 used Homelite chain saw11ngle
Mulberry
Ave , COAL for sa le. Open 6 days per
$200
I
week and evenings. For further
a .
rele renc es PhonE' 9'.J2 20:ro or
informallon coli (614) 367·72'Ht ' 1 used MccUiJough chain
..
.~
992·76/iJ
saw
175
. • •
Close! Sat. At 5 p.m . I
Very n1ce 1'2 x 6S houie trailer lor SWEET polaloes. R w lew&gt;&lt;. Rl
rent m Mason. W Vo Ad ults
124 Racone. Ohio Phone 843
~
o11ly , no pets Cor tuct Sa n~ ro
2m
.
J
a
c
k
W.
l.'sr
•
992 5693. Monday lh• uur/' GRAIN fed beol , 3Sc lb. Phone
Dhont 9fl 2181
,..
Fnday , 9 ft ll 3.
95 1
Furn" hcd 2 bedroorn ,"(') lith~&lt;
:L E: ::JZPATRICK ORCHARD.
•••
•
Rock!iprmgs odulls ont~ Pl · '" · AP&gt;rAlE
ROUTE 0119. PHONE
992·2789
WILKESVILLE (614 )669 3785
• .t• • • • • o o S S S ·~' t f •,;, • • • 9 ~I . . ....

- --

6•

~Hta•"e!t'
loy THOMAS JOSEPH

ALLEY OOP

$12,500.00.

Pomeroy Landmark

,.

Pa~s
Pa~s

Schapiro is a collectiOn of
hands !rom actual play He
starts w1th a chapter on
bridge humor. "
Oswald . "The humor in this
hand was not appreciated by
East and West. South really
should have opened one club
With live very good clubs and
live very bad spades you
break the rul~ ol bidding the
higher-ranking, fiVe-card su1t
1\rst Anyway. he opened one
spade. North raised to two
spades and South Julnped to

Weddings

NEW ~!STING - Near
Gavtn at Gall1a ·Meigs line.
A 3 bedroom home wllh
bath, nat. gas F.A. furnace.
N1ce compact kit., dining,
garage &amp; trader spot
$22,000.
'

24

Br~tish 1nternaUonalist Bons

Aerial
Commercial
Schools

-----

Pass
Pass

South

J1m; "Bridge analysis by

·'
'

PHOTOGRAPHY

NEW 3 bedroom llovse, 2 ba ths,
{614) IBS·41S5
all elec. I ac re . M1ddleport,
Chesler, Olllo
close Ia Rutland Phone 992·
7481
10.17·1 mo IPd)
~·
-·---SMALL farm fo r sale 10% down,
owner fmonced Monroe Coun· BRADFORD , Auctioneer. Com·
plete Service Phone 949·2487
ty W Vo Phono (304) 772·
at
949-2000 Rac1nv, Ohio Crill
310~ orj~04 J 7~_2 ·3_2~ --Bradford
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toasters irons, all
small opplton ces Lawn mower,
next to Stole H1ghwoy Garage
V~rgil B. Sr., Realtor
on
Route 7 Pl'1 one (614) 9851.10 Mechante Pomeroy, 0 .
3825
Phone 992-m~
REMODELING. Plumb1ng. ~eating
NEW LISTING - a room
and all types of general repo1 r
house 1n Middleport, 2
Work guaranteed 20 yeors eM
baths, na tu ral gas heat,
perience Phone 992.2409
carpeting tn living and
sta~rway. Corner lot with
garage Only $12,000.

North Ea1t

By Oswa ld &amp; James Jacoby

PROFESSIONAl:

-

West

Pass
Openmg lead - K •

D&amp;D TREE Tr1mmmg, 20 years ex

penence . Insu re d free
est1mates Coli 992 2384 or
_j 61 4) 6~57_~~~"''-'-- - SEWING MACHINE Repo1rs, ser·
vtce, all makes , 992 22s.t The
Fobnc Shop , Pome roy.
Authonzed Smger Soles and
Serv 1ce We sharpen Sc1ssors

~AST

•QJ

.A

PO!...Y·FOAM

UPHOLSTERY

WEST
• A92

9 KQ 10
.987512
• J 987
• 32
• 8 52
.971
SOUTH IDI
.IOB763

BORN LOSER

AI 141·2101
Or
941·2160
PLEASE
NO SUNDAY CA~LS
9-30-1 mo.

~---

_

• K 51

t K Q 10 51
.lOB

GLEN R. BISSELL

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

/8

' NORTH
• J 63

CONTACT

I

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

~

UP~~

FREE ESTIMATES!

410 I mo

1'i73 VW THING 35 mpg. near
perfect
condition
Rtck
G1lmore, Rt 1 Reedsville (Sue·
ces~ R ~~d) o~h~ne 992 5323
ANY PITCH
1976 Chevrole t 4 wheel dri ve
truck Phone 949·2132
ANY SIZE
REGISTERED Black Angus bul 5
- '
1970 Ford L. T 0 2 door ,
years old Coli 98S·425S
q01ck sale, $375 Albert Hdl ,
O.NE and t.,;:;o bedr;~ m h.trmshed
Roc me Ol'11o Phone 949 2261.
apls Ca \1 992 312.9 or 992·5434
--NOVA 6 cylmder. good condtllon ,
ONE and 2 bedroo m furn1 shed
, $600 Call 992· 7054
Box 28-A
oportmena Call 992 3129 or
Rutland, Ohio 45775
1970 Ford L T D , 2 door, qutck
~2 ·54?4
Ph. 1614) 742-2409
sole , 5375 Albert Hill RaCine
LOWREY organ, Lmcoln wood
Oh1o Pho ne 949·2261 .
We Deliver
model Phone (614) 378 6330
7·28·4 mos.
PA RT S fo r 1968 For.d, three fourth
1
1973
/ r ton p1ckup truck Also, 23
ton pickup truck. Ph . 992 ·3640
channel rno b1le C B rodto
EXCAVATING , dozer , loader and
1%8 Mustang Fostbock Moch 1:
Phone 949·2470
backhoe work dump trucks
1970 Ford custom phone 843·
J D -150 darer 6 wor blade
and lo·boys fo r h1re, w•!l huul
2667
Phone 949·246.3
till d1r1 lo s01 l l1mes1m~ e ond
grovel Coli Bob or Roger Jef .
SCHOOL SEWING MAC~INES
fers , day phone 992 7089
Smgers 1n wolnvt consolelle,
n1gh1 phone 992 3525 or 992·
feotunng buttonholes blmd
OLD furmture , tee bo)(es , brass
5232 .
hem Sews on knil!&gt; Cqsh or
beds wall telephones and
terms Co\1992 5146
EXCAVATING darer bock hoe
porh, or cornplee households
ond d1tcher. Charles R Hot Wnte M. D M1iler Rt 4 ELECTROL UX sWEEPERs Rebwlt
he ld Bock Hoe Serv1ce
wilh o il o!lochmenls $29 Also
Pomerov, Oh 1o Ca\1992·7760
Rutland , Oil •o Phone 742 2008
Hoover Sweepers ta nks · or
CASH po1d for oil makes and
upr1ghts $1..8 Coll992 5146
SEPTIC Syslems mstolied by
models ~f mobile homes
ltcensed mstoller Shepard
Phone area code 614 423 9531
CAMPER , $600 Also , horse
Contrac to rs Phone 742 2409
1ro1ler
$450
Phon"e
(61.4)
698·
TIMBER Pomeroy Fores t Pro
3290
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Moder n
ducts Top pnce fo r standmg
Somtollon, 992 ·31154 or 99'2 ·
sawtimber Co!l Kent Hanby , USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT
242a.
, ...... 6·8570
T•mbeqock 2400 Sk1dder ,
Ttmberjock
3bO Grapple Skid· WILL , do roofmg. construcfton
$$CASH$$ lor JUnked au las
der Case 350 Crawler Loader
plumb1ng and heahng No rob
Phone 7.o42 2081 Frye's Truck &amp;
with l og Forks. Bush 60 m
lao Iorge or too small .Phone
Auto Paris Rutland
"" Metollu rg~t~&lt;~l Ch1pper Contoc!
742·2348
COINS 1929 and older curnmcy,
Don GroveS , or l yons Equtp
gold and stlver , scrap W1ll buy
men! Co , Inc C1rclevd le Ohm CARPENT ~R . floormg ce1ltng ,
panelmg Phone 992 2759
sell or trade, foro good selec·
4311 3 Phone (614 ) 474 ·6028 or
110n of cams Hove suppl1vs for
(614)596 4769.
DOZER
work and weld1ng Co n·
.
me tal
detectors
Roger BABY bed , bassmet 1n good
tact Ja mes Parsons, Rt 1,
con
·
Wamsley on Leodmg Creek
Ro cme, on Carmel Rood
dth on Phone (61.4) 667 3330 m
ond Rutland Roqd Phone 742·
evcnmgs
or
985-3988
do~s
EXCAVATING BACKHOES AND
2331 for on offer
- - DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL
WANTED (k•lpw~od Poles max· TWO Iorge meta l mob1 le home
SEPTIC rANKS INSTAll EO LOW
steps.
Also,
5 pc breakfast se1
1mum dia meter, 10 1nchefi on
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS BI LL
Phone 842·216-11 or 742·3096
largest end $8 00 per ton,
PUlliNS PHONE 992-2478 DAY
bundled slobs , $6.00 per ton TWO Iorge me ta l mobde home
OR NIGHT
Deliver to Oh1o Pollet Com·
steps Also, S ptece breoklo~t
set Phone 742-2164 or 742 WILL tnm or cut trees and sh rub·
pony, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, Oh •o.
bery Phone 9.49·2545 o r 7-12·
3096
Phone 992·2689
3167
Wa~-;d!~~Yo7"r'"e-;- -Si ,de-:n C 8. Rod10s , Cobra 135 SSB
truck camper , 8 or 10 fl . Must
Real1shc novv o m l:loth mobile MOBILE Home Repotr Elec ,
plu mb1ng and heotmg Phone
hove gas refngerator and
or bose. Phone 992·7066
992-SaSB
healer Quale pnce and loco· PIGS for sole and one Durock
liOn Replv to Box 15 , Long
malE! hog Phone992 31~ _ NEIGLER 8Luldmg Suppl1es for
Bottom, Ohto 45743
butldmg hous es , cobmets ,
t973 Yomoila TX750cc 6 300
plumbmg Phone 9.49·2508,
mtl es , recently (614) 698 2380,
Rocme, Oh1o
even mgs
GAS and 0 1l Heatmg Soles and
Serv1ce 24 ilour s Pilone 8-43·
IF YOU hove a serv1ce to offer, Arthur Wheat su 1table for seed,
Chorlvs Goegletn , Pomeroy .
2165or843 2341.
wo nt to buy or sell somelhmg,
Phone
992
7625
oe looking for work
. or
:.
_,__..
whatever
you'll get results Excellent 1968 Dodge Dorl, Also ,
foster wtth a Sentinel Wont Ad
gas rang e. Pho_n.~ 99} · 7~8 _
Call992·2156.
Complele set of Premere drum!&gt;, COUNTRY lormlond w1th seclud ·
ODDS ond Ends Sale October 16,
$250. Phone 985 4268
ed 'f!OOds, water ond good oc ·
17th , 1976 at Five Pomts, State
cess m Monroe County , W Vo
Shenandoah wood heater Phone
Rl. 7, 10:0011115, rom or shfne
$1 000 down coli (304) 772
985 3920
GARAGE Sale contmuing Oct 18,
_
31
~-o.ci_30~ ~:?_E2_7_
19 . More tte ms and ontlques 12 x 60 rpobile home w1th 2 ceres
TUPPERS
Plams new 3 bedroom
of
land
near
Me1gs
Mme
No
I
added
Ftr s l house post
homes , buih·ln kilcilens tiled
Phone 842·2746
Metilod1st Chu rc h In ChestP.r
bolhs , carpeted with attached
we'elo. old p1gs also robbns
-· Opo~o_i_!_c:~-- - - - - - Sil(Phone
garage,
1 acre lot $22,900
949·2115
Yard Sole, Tvesdoy Oct 19, 780
Phon". (61_4L667·6304 __ . ~- ~----South Third . 9.00 t1IIJ·OO Plen· Wesltnghouse spin dryer &amp;
HOUSE for sale 5 roo ms and
washer , $50 . Phone 992·5955
-~ ~f_b_o~!~~ Jl~~~~
both , all electric por tl olly
after6p m
carpeted , pot10 See Irene Cun ·
d11f , Fourlh Street, Syracuse ,
Oh1o
S111 room house, both end 'li m
3 AND 4 RM furn1shed and un ·
Mtddleport . Phone 992 3129 or
fu rnished opts Phone 992·
992 5434
5434 .

six.""
Jim : "West opened the king
of hearts and . instead of show·
lng any signs ol distress.
South took h11 slnsteton ace,
cashed the ace ol deamonds
and led a low spade toward
dummy. West hopped up with
his ace, dropping his partner's
jack Then he tried to cash the
queen ol hearts South ruffed,
dropped East's queen ol
spades and brought home hi s
ridiculous slam "
Oswald: "The humor here
is very British At hrst glance
West looks like an 1diot. Ac·
tually, the fault lay with East
He d•opped his deuce of
diamonds on that first dia·
mond lead! It was an 'expert,
or supposed expert . game
Had East played the three
spot, West would have read
him !or two diamonds and
seen wha! South was up to."

TO 190 A&gt;JO

You can 11¥1 hundrtlh
tVtn lhoUIInds of dolill'l
will! olumlnum or vlnrl
siding.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, lfl6
6:oo-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6:15-Farm Report 13.
6:30-Not For Women Only 13.
6:30-Teachers' Classroom 4; News 6: Sunrise
Semester 8; Cono!8rns and Comments 10.
6:45-Morn/ng Report'·
6:50--Good Mornl"ll, Wet! Vlrglnlo 13 ·
6:55-Good Morning, Trl Stall 13 .
7:oo-Todoy 3,4,15; Good Morning, Amorlce 6,13; CBS
• News 8; Chuck White Reports 10.
7:05-Bugs Bunny ond Friends 10.
7:3o.-Schoolles 101 Lassie 6; Coptaln Kongnroo 8, 10,
Sesame Street 33.
1:31&gt;-Big Volley 6.
9:oo-A.M . 3; Phil Donahue 4; Lucy Show 8; Mlko
Douglas 10; Phil Donahue 13; Phil Oonahue 15 .
9:30-Cross-Wits 31 One Lift tollvt 6; Good Oavl . 8.
10 .(!0-Sonford ond Son 3,4,15. Mogarlno 8.10; Mike
Douglas 13
10'15-Generol HoiPifal &amp;.
·
10 : 31)...Hollywood Squores 3,4, 15
11 · oo-WhHI ot Fortune 3, IS; WHkday 4: Edge ot
Nlghl6; Gambill, 10; Morning wtth D. J 13 .
11 :3o.-Stumpers 3.4,15; Hoppy Doyl6, 13; Love of Ule
8, 10 ; Sesame Slreet 20.
11 :55-Toke Kerr 8; Ms . Flx lt 10.
11 ·oo-News 3.6. 10.13,
12:oo-HQt Soot 3.6.8 1n • Hot Seat 13; Bob Brnun 4; 50
Grond Slom 15.
ll :3o.-Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13, Search
lor Tomorrow 8, lo.
'
12 ·55-NBC News3,15.
1:oo-Somersel3; Ryon 's Hope 6, 13, Cocenlrollon 8;
Young and lhe Rest Ieos 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1 :31&gt;-Days 'of our Lives 3,4, 15; Family Feud 6. 13; As
the World Turns 8, 10.
•
2 .oo-uo.ooo Pvramld 13; Dlnohto 6.
2:31&gt;-Docton 3,4,15; One life lo live 13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3·oo-Another World 3,4, 15; All tn The Fnmlly 8.10:
Consumer Survival Kit 20.
3:15-Generol Hospltol 13.
3: Jo.-Bewllched 6; Motch Game a, 1O; llllns, Yogo and
You 1b
4:00--Misler Cortoon 3; Marcus Welby, M.D. •:
Somersel15; Howdy Doody 6; Mickey Mouse Club
8; Sesome Slreet 20,33; Movie "Tho Oandty Bees"
10; Dlnahl 13 .
4.3()-My ThreeSono3; Emergency Onel 6; Partridge
Family 8; Fllnhlones 15.
5:oo-Big Valley 3; Merv Griffin 4; Brody Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers 20,33; Star Trek 15.
'11....
5· 3()-Nows 6; Family Affolr 8; Eleclr lc C9mpony
20,33; Adam-12 13.
6 ·oo-Newo 3,4,1,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20:
Consumer E•perlonce 33.
6:31&gt;-NBC News3,4, 15 ; ABC Nowt13; Andy Grlffllh 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgopodg, ~odge 20; lTV
Ullllzotlon 33.
7·oo-nuth or Congquenceo 3J On Loutlon 4;
Bowling For Dollars 6; Let's Go To The Races a;
News 10; To Tell The Truth 13; Fomlly Affair 15;
Cooking With o Contlnenlal Flavor ~0; American
Issues F oru111 33.
7:31&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3,4; ~t!'s ~eol With t1 6;
Motch Gome PM 8; MocNell·lehrer Report l0,33J
In The Know 10; Wild Kingdom 13J Nashvlllo on tho
Road 15.
8:00-.Joe Garoglola 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13; Tony
Orlando &amp; Dawn 8, 10; Puzzle Children 20,33

South gets ·laugh from slam

~~i~* !til&gt;!!
WHY'D I HAVE

FIIIIICIIII Rt~lllblt

FULLER Brush Products for sole
PhOne 992 3410.
ASSdRTEO lumber 2x4 s 2x8's,
2x6
. s Phone 247 2272. •
MODERN stereo, AM FM rod1o, 8
track tope comblnol 1o n
Bolonce $97 40 or terms Cell
9923965
WANTED ResponSible port~ to
assume net balance on thts
sp1net ptono wtth bench by
K1mball. Wa lnu t tn perleCI con
d1tmn , free deltverv tn your
urva Wr1te Liquidators , 272 E
Mo1n Street , Onll tco the Oh1o
4S601.

WIN AT BRIDGE

GOI&gt;Jt:&gt; FOR THEM!

FREE ESTIM TES
Blown 1nto Wills &amp; AHIU
SlDRM
WINIIOWS I DOORS
REPlACE ME/IT
WINDOWS
IIUMINUM
SIOING&lt;SOffiTT

WOULDtJ'T SURPRISe M&amp;
IF THE'Y WER!f IN CAHOOTS
WITH THAT &amp;.LOND&amp; WHO
RIPPE j) OFF MV CARl ~
Gl&lt;RR·-!

Blllwn
Insulation SeiYicts

1973 Go lo•1e 500, air , p.s., p.b ,, 1970 8utck Riviera, good cond1·
good !Ires ond good condllton
lion, new tires , $900 Phone
11650 Call992-297a
742·2796
RALLY Novo , ora nge wtlh black 1975 MONTE CARlO, outomottc,
top. 6 .cyl lnder, 3 speed, with 4
powvr steering, power brakes .
cragers, L50 t1re1 . No rust ,
otr condlf1omng, AM radto and
or1gmal pomt Perfect instde
stereo , rallv whvvls, wtll sell
and out, $1500 Phone 949
. reasonable Phone 992·7006
2860
19b9 Novo e•tro sharp, new
1966 Mus1ang $275 See ot 2HC,
paint bucket seats, 01r shocks .
Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy.
~~~&amp; !~!..~~9-2460

.

D&amp;D

&amp;

00Wr1100Uh

Tennille 6.1 ~ Phoda e.10; Adams Chronlt ln 20,J3.
8:30-s1le,ooo Quest ion I; Phyllis 1u.
9:1»-Mcvle " Shtr lock Holmes In New York " 3,4,15;
NF~ Foo1bllll6,13; Moudt 1,10J 4n Performa nce •(
Wolf Trap 20,33.
9:30-AII's Fair 8,10.
10:oo-he&lt;utlvt Sullt 8, 10.
, 10:55-Pol/!lcal Program 8, 10.
ll :oo-Nows 3,4,8,10,15.
11 :30-Johnny Corson3,4, 15; McMillon&amp; Wife I ; Mary
Hartman 10; Newt 20; ABC News 33.
11:oo-News6, 13; Movie "Wives&amp; Lovers" 10; Janokl
33.
12:30-'--CollOGt Footbll/1 '76 "6; tronsldo 13.
'
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4.
1:31&gt;-News 13.

MONDAY OCTOBER fl. 1974
S:oo-Big Vauoy 3; Morv Griffin ., Brady Bunch 8;
Mister ROllers 2Q,33; S1or Trek 15.
'
5:30-Ntw$61 Family Affaire: Elec. Co. 20,33; Adem 12 13.
6:oo-Ntw$ 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
E ctuc:atlon In Transltlon 33.
6:»-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge lodgt 20.
7:oo-Trulh or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth4 ; Bowling lor
Dollars 6: Buck Owons 8; News 10; To Toll 1ho
Truth 13; Fomlly Atfolr 15; Ohio's Wild Ploces 20;
Know Your Schools ·33.
7:30-That Good Ole Noshvltlo Music 3; Bobby VInton
4; Muppot Show 6; Gong Show 8; Price Is Right 10;
Candid Comera 13; Friends of Man 15.
8:00-lll11e HouM on the Prairie 3,4, 15; Capt. &amp;

GunER SERVICE

--

-----~

NOTICES
ATTN . · ll
ALL J10USEWIVES
Al l Yard Sales. Rummage ,
Porch and B&amp;Sement Porch
and Besemertt Sa les, etc .
must be paid in advance .
Get yours In eartv bv
stopping bv our office at
Tnt Da lly S~:~nHnel, I I 1
Court St or writ ing Box.
729, Pomerov , Ohio 45769
with your remittance

( 10) 18, ?5 ( II ) 1, lie

r

2 SIGNS
Of
QUALITY

For Wanr Ad Strvlct
S cents per word one
1nstrt lon
Minimum Ch arge St.OO
1-1 cents pl!!r word three
c on~ecut l vt ln!lerHons .
26 cent; r,er wotd six.
consecut lvt nsertlons .
25 Per cent Discount on
paid ads and ads pafd
within 10 davs
CARO OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
n .oo for 50 word
Eac~·

'D1t:llnK.oo.; v

p.,,. fur Sale

pwblle~tlon .

front mount pump
JAO Gallon bi)Otter t1nk

11- The Doily llentlnel, Mlddleoort-Pomeroy, o .. Monday, Oct. IS, lWo

F~r Fast Results Us.e The Sentinel Classifieds

WANT AOI

FOR SALE

Cl&amp;rk,

1R,Ifiij

·

A 006 SCHOOL?!!

•

\ An1werr Otftlll'!ftNf(

~ERE'S 'THAT

•lfR,.. ,.... I forMGI

ololl-THIIIU

ATTC.IEt'
OF MINE?! I'LL WltiN~
HIS FVZZ't' NECK!

•

�12 - The Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Oct. II, 1976

Ohio·covered by winter Press
Ohloana got a tule of early m!.'C'ning low of 24 broke

Winter weather Sunday nll!ht
ll!1d tbla morning u rec«d
low temperature• were
retuded acnil!s the state.
The coldett reported opot In
the state wa• Toledo with an
early morning low of 17
degree.. '!be previous rec~rd
for the date was 25 degrees
set In 1948.
The north'!l'estern Ohio city
also broke the record for Oct.
17, with tbe temperatures
dropping -to 23 degree•
shorUy before mldnll!ht. The
previous record .was 26 In
19?0.
Columbus had a low of 25
degrees, breaking the record
of 'Jfl set In 1948 !llld Dayton·~

a 75-year-&lt;&gt;ld record ol 25.
Zm.esviUe, with a low ol 23
degrees, toppled the ri'OOrd of
26 set In 1948 and AkronCanton's low ol 27 broke tile
1948 record of 29 degrees.
A cloud cover ll!1d winds tJff
Lake Erie kept temperatures
somewhat wanner In the
northeastern counties .
Youngstown !llld Cleveland
had lows in the upper 31);, but
tlleJ:e. were .some lfglit snow
flurries In tile northeast~
section,
mainly
at
Youngstown.
Low temperatures wnlght
were expected to he In the
upper 2t6 and low 308.

.

HOSPITAL NEWS
VeteraJII Memorial Hospilal
SATIJRDAY ADMISSIONS
·- Dalton Grover, Pomeroy;
,Pearl Darst, Cheshlfe; Amos
SorreU, Middleport; Herman
McMurray, Rutiand.
SATIJRDAY'
DIS.
CHARGES
James
Barker, L8iTy Curtis, Edwin
Neutzllng, John Arnott,
Clarence Murray, Ernest
Triplett, Clara Phillips,
Emma Finch, John Fry, Dale
Jacobs.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS f'aye Schultz, Pomeroy;
Terry Reynolds, Long Bot·
tom; James Darst, Albany ;'
Donald Covert, Pomeroy;
MaUle Teaford, Portland;
Genevieve Harvey, Mlnersvllie; . Raleigh Sayre, New
Haven, Trlna Bachtel,
· P,omeroy; Ethel Carter, Long
Bottom; Alberta Spoun,
Racine.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Laura Scott, Mary Hackn~y.
Dalton Grover, Myrtle Durst.

•

(Births, Oct. l6)
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Marsh, daughtc~. Pomeroy ;
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Aie1hire, .
doughier, WeiiBton.
IBirths, Oct. 11)
•
Mr. and Mr s. Douglas
Wright, daughter, Wellston;
Mr. a n~ .' Mrs, J.awrence
Sevick, daughter, Coalton;
Mr. and Mrs. Terry
)lonecuttcr,. daughter, Point
Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Puckett, son, Oak Hill.

Storys Run

(Continued from page I l
democratic governmenta,
whether righUst &lt;r leftist,
suddenly or gradually," the
report said.
During Its WUllamBburg
meeting, the IAPA ·atso
elected Argentine journa1llt
Juan S. Valmaggla ol La
Nacloo newspaper u ita next
president. He succeeded
Raymond Dlx, president alld
publisher of the Dally
Record, Woo~ter, Ohio. _
Argentina Hilla, of lhe El
Mundo of San Jilan, Puer-to
Rib&gt;, was coosen as first vice
president and ahe will
succeed Valmaggla as
president next October.
German Ornes of the El
Carlbe of the Dominican
Republic, who for lhe lui five
years hos been chairman of
the Freedom of Information
Conunittee, was chosen as
second vice president after a
contested election;
Guido Feffi!llldez, o.f the La
Naclon newspaper ol San
Jose, Costa Rica, succeeded
Ol'nes as head of the Freedom
of Information Conunlttee.
According ID that CO!JlJIIittee's rep()rt, there Is freedom
of tbe press, even though
limited In ·some cases, In the
following cOuntries:
Costa Rica, Htvuiuras, El
Salvador, Bolivia, Colombia,
Venezuela, Mexico, the
United States, Canada,
Ecuador, the Dominican
Republic, Puerto Rico, U.S.
and British Virgins Islands,

BY GLENNA SHULER
Mrs . Malinda Bradbury Jama'ica, Barbados,
spent sever~! days with Mr. Bermuda, Bahamas, Dutch
and Mrs. ·Robert Wood and Antilles, Guyana, Saini
fomlly at Canal Winchester. Vincent, Grenada, Surinam,
She helped them make apple Helice, Saint Kitts, Saint
Lucia and Trinidad-Tobago.
butter.
There is no freedom of the
Mr. and Mrs. Squire
press, with tile· situation also
Ta~lor, Rt. 1 Baltlmo.re, Q. ,
visited a recent weekend with varying from case ID case, In
Mrs. Velma Sargent. They Brazil, Panama, Nicaragua,
also visited Mr. and Mrs. Peru, Uruguay, Paraguay,
Cuba,
Haiti,
PLEASANT VALLEY
Jerry Haner and the DaUas Chile,
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Taylor fa rni! y, Gallipolis Guatemala and Argentina.
Chloe HUI, Point Pleasant; R.D.
Mrs. Clarence Coleman, Denise, Ju and Stephen She received several cards
Ashton: lloger Wilson, Point Spires calleu on Mr. and Mrs. and lovely gifts. Her
Pleasant; Mrs·. Orville ElliH, Junior White a day recently. daughter, Mrs. Madeline
Point. Pleasant; · Jacob Bob G&lt;een of Gallipolis was Murphy, New Philadelphia,
Jacomer, Coltagevllie ; Tina also there.
O~io and son, Herbert
Dunlap, Clifton; Virginia
Mr~ . Robert Conkle spent a Sargent of Springfield, Mo.
Chaney,PolniPleasant; Mrs. day recently with Mr. and calledhertowishherahl!ppy
Charles Eshenaur, Point Mrs. Charles Pyles at birthday.
Pleasant;
Mrs. Gary GaDipolis Ferry, W. Va. They
Mr. and Mrs. De!Uly Spires
Thacker, Point Pleasant; are nicely settled In their and Stephen called on Muriel .
• JacqueUne Smith, Gallipolis mobile home.
Spires and Irma Bales,
Visiting Rev . and Mrs. Rhondo and George were
Ferry; Nathan Roush,
Hartford; Mrs . Lionel . Raymond Fife a day recently there.
Connelly, Gallipolis; Mrs. were Mr. and Mrs. Buddy
Mrs. Marie Spires and
Joe Dalley, Gallipolis; Mrs. Fife, Linda and Brenda, Stephen called on Mrs. Calvin
Timothy Double, doughier, 'fl!t·key Ryn, Mr. and Mrs. Caldwell recently. Johnny
Southside; , Mrs. John Roscoe E. Fife, Eno, Mrs. and Mrs. Frances Hayden
Pickens, Portland, 0 .; . Norma Keefer, Mrs. Marie and Mrs. Milline Jones and
Elizabeth Jeffers, Mason; Keefer, 'Leon, W. Va., Mr. Roduey were there.
Laura · Paugh,
Point and Mrs. Guy Priddy,
Mrs. Ruth lAmbert, Rt. 1
Pleasant; Larry Whillinglon, Rutland.
~ Pomeroy, spent a recent
Arbuckle; Mrs. Edna Potts,
Mr . and Mrs. Jimmie weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Henderson ; K e II Y Birchfield and Jeffry -of Robert Conkle.
· Bonecutter, Leon; M:s. Rutland ~pent a recent
Mrs. Velmo Sargent spent
Gertr~de Beaver, Pom\ - evening wtth Mr. a~d Mrs. a week recenlly with Mr. and
Pleasant; Theodore Stevens, Rober! Conkle and Cmdy.
Mrs. Sieve Taylor at
Point Ple~sant; and Mrs.
Mrs. Velma Sargent Baltimore coring for Mrs.
George . M c C u II o c h , celebrated her 7oth birthdoy Taylor and new haby son. He
Galll~lis.
Oct. 12. Her children sur- wlli answer to the name
prised her with a bll:lhday Steven Randall, Mr. and Mrs.
dinner. They were Mr. and Squire Taylor are the
Holler Medical Center
Mrs. Cecil Sargent and grandparents.
!Births, Oct.l5)
children,
~on , W. Va., Paul
Mlsa Cindy Conkle spent a
Mr. and Mrs. Jomes
and
Betty
Sargent,
Apple
recent
evening with Kim
Chandler, daughter,
Grove,
W.
Va.,
Bill
and
Oxyer.
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Galan
CaUing on Mr. and Mrs.
Blevins, daughter, Thurman; Jeannie McCormick ,
Gallipolis
R.D.,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Alex
a recent weekend
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Weaver, Ronald Sargent ond children. were Shuler
Mr.
and Mrs. Ross
daughter, Syracuse.
Shuler ahd children, Rt. I
LangsviUe, Pfc. David Shuler
aild daughter Virginia. David
has recently returned from
Germany where he served a
·tour of duty. He Is stationed
at Camp Campbell, Ky.

Uses No
More Electric

Than A
75 watt
light
Bulb!

-This "Energy Saving'·
refrigerator will save
you $258.00 over a 12
year period x I The
normal life of a
refrigerator) a1
compared

Competitive
Brands . .. of
'hat

site

d~slgned

..

A,,,,,

to

not

to

save

page
U. S. can benefit Mine(continued
No.
wu cloled
from &amp;viet science :U~~ for •
frwn
I)
2, allo locatad In
Meiga Courtly,

~

. -·

Amana's Energy Saving 1M Refrigerators have much
more urethane foam Insulation than has ever been
used In homo refrigerators before. Designed fo keep
!he heal out, tM cold In and the electric bills down . .
. .......... ...

_Basta on 3.48 KitoweH- whicn1s average cost you are

paying In Meigs County.

INGEtS FURNITURE
992-2635

..

(

(

•

·
by Ray Cromley
Gillman, had worked In the
• WASHINGTON _ (NEA) _John w. Kiser, m, wri"•• In mine over two years, Baker
_..,
said, but wu belDg tralried on
For• Polley, argues that detente with the Soviet Unioo need the maintenance job Friends
not be a ooe-way street, with all beneflll going tq tl!e Russians. said today wu hll fu.t 011 the
If detente turns out thai way, he seems to suggest, then it , trainee Job
may be our fault for being bOnd to opportunities stsring us in
E.llll
Gillman, u, ..Rt.
the fa&lt;;·
.
1, Langsville,
killed at
He s referring to the sclenUfle-leehnlcal drain - Whereby approzimately 4 ,a.m.
the Soviet \IJilon apparenUy Is on the way to mUking ~ Mon~n morning at the
country of hard-won breakthrough&amp;, bolstering the wobbly Mel No 1 mine
·
Russian economy by modernllling their outdated
A~ien.nce 'trantee at
manufacturing proceaaes and Improving the quality of their the mine he wu born AprU
mJUtary hardware. Yet giving the United States liiUe or 22 11152 b, Logan w va His
nothing In return. Kiser auggests that Soviet scientists have p~rent~ are Mrs · Hulda
made a reapectable number of sclenllflc breakthroughs of.
•
.. Ling•rte Department, 2ild Floor
their own which could be of inunelise value to tbla country~ He Brown, , Lariat Drive, Gal. 'II
argues and In tbla be ia In agreement with findings of the lipoll,t, and EatU Glllman,
NationAl Science Foundation, that the slow pace of Russia's Branchland, W. Va. 'He
industrial advance lies not in the Inability of Soviet scientists to ~rri~ ':::er,:~•
mal&lt;e great discoveries, but rather In the inability ol the Soviet a•-· wtth' a 10
lh void
system to incorporate those dlacoverles into uaable hardware,
_.,.
mon
advanced manufacturing techniques ll!1d into practical use In daughter, Mell.ua Dawn.
mJnlng without escesslvely long· delays.
Other aurvlvon are four
To take one example which I have sll!died in dep\11, Soviet sisters ll!1d .two brothers;
scientists have done exceedingly fine work In Computer Mrs. Charlotte Kizer,
technology, They are however well behind us in the develop- Columbus; Mra. Frank
nient of advanced c.;.pi.ters ~nd In the software needed to (Judy) Noble, In New Jersey;
{ormflt,~
make the
effective use o1 computers and computer Mra. Robert (Diane) MC:
systems.
\
·
Carley, Vinton Route 2•.
Kiser suggests that If we put
efforts to the task,
Gillman, Logan, W.
American science and industry mlghl be able w latch on to a Va., Clinton, R. 1 BldweU and
goodly number of these Soviet scientific discoveries, using Paul, Vinton Route I.
them w Improve our own industrial methods. we might, he
A 1971 graduate of North
hints, even be able ID put Soviet discoveries w practical use Gallla High School, he wu a
~re before the unwieldy Soviet system wu able to absorb and member of the United Mine
All sizes for juniols,
utilize them at home.
.
.
Workers Union ~I No.
He lists 17 eumples of "Soviet technology in use or in t890, District 6.
pelilies, women's and
developmentforcOilllllercialappllcatlonsbyU.S. companies"
Funer,al services wtU be .
- a particle accelerator by Energy Sciences, an evaporation Wednesday • 2 p.m. at the
exiJa large.
cooling process f&lt;r blast furnaces by Andco .magnetic impulse Morgan Center Wesleyan
welding f&lt;r nuclear fuel elements by Max'well LaboraiDries, Church. Burial wU1 . be · In
tila'nlum hlp prosthesis by u.. s. SUJ'glcal, underground ~oal Miller Cemetery. Friends
Brushed 1i!J011S, quilted
gaslflcatloo technology by Texas Utility Services, a method for may call at the McCoy-Moore
leaching aluminum f&lt;r alunit~ ore by Southwtre, and'others. Funeral Home, VInton, 2 to 4
styles, pjle
ThiB, says, Kiser, could he the tip of an iceberg. He says ll!1d 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday· His
tile Russians are ''World leaders" In the development of body will lie In stale at the
hydrofoil craft, that they ~re "far ahead ollhe Uni~d Slates" d!urc~ one .. hoUJ' prior to
In the development of hydraulic mining techniques, that parts services.
of the Soviet iron and oteel industry "are superior to ours,
An Excellent Selection Ready for You to
particularly In the design and operation of coke ovens and
.Buy.
blast furnaces," that Soviet technology is excellent In
superconductors BOd magneto-llydrodynamlcs, of great
importance In Increasing the efficiency of our power industry.
From my own reading of translations of Soviet sclenUflc
and technical magazinea over lhe years, it would seem too
opportunilie~ for American advantage are exceedingly great. .
Great, that is, If we can open the doors wide to an import of
SWteNo.2ZIX
these Soyiet breakthroughs. ·
·
CONSOLIDATEDREPORTOFCONDmQPI
The Soviets, it would seem, are willing. They applied for
roughly 500 patents In this eountry In 1974.

&amp;;

wu

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
WOMEN'S LONG ROBES

Welllnown brantk

sud! a Glacier, .

most

our

and PhHMaid.

Sha:roo

and flaJ!net

•'

BY U TIE CROW
!hey will aerve 22 student&amp; at clause added to the contract
Meigs County's mentally a total cost of U3,H2 which . that the commissioners
retarded children will attend does not Include trans· would pay the transportation
tlie Guiding HaDd School In portaiJon or aclmlnistrttlon. and another clause added
·GaUia County ot Cheablre it. If there are leas , !han 22 . !hat they would also pay for
wu decided Monday af· students the coot would an administrator. The
lernoon.
l't!IMinthe same; oowever,lf commissioners agreed to
·
Me&lt;!tlng with the 9~- number of students both additions.
mission was Loren · Phel
Should be more than 22 It
Webster also stated that he
administrator of the Gul
would cost more.
wants to read and study the
Hand School, who presented a· Phelpo also stipulated how contract before presenting 11.
contract to the com- lhe money will be paid. Meigs lo the Meigs Cqunty Board of
missioners which liad the . can either pay fl,!OO down. Mental Health and Retarapproval of the GaUia CountY and f1,242.75 a month or the daUon.
Commissioners and the lump sum of $23,942 by Nov.
Webster, aoked about
Gallla County Board of 15.
transportation, stated that al
Mental Health and RetarHoward Frank, county lhls point he did not know If
dation.
auditor, and clerk of 'ihe bus drivers are avaUable. He
Phelpo explained points In board, said the conunlssion also aatd the next problem
the contract Including o~e would, pay the $~,400 down will be hiring an a.d·
that established a i!ate for and go with· .the monthly mlnlstrator.
service
(the ending date will payments of fl,242.75.
Webster obServed that he
WOMEN RECOGNIZED- Oblervance of National' Business Women's Week, Oct. 17be
June
10) ; dale of
Probate Judge Manning would get the members of the
23, by !he Middleport Business and Professional Women's Club was highlighted Monday ,
agreement; ages of the Webster, chalnnan of the MR Board to meet as soon as
night with the selection of a ''Woman of the year" and a ''Woman of the week." Selected by
children which the contract Meigs COunty Mental Health possible. He was asked bow
vote of tbe membership were Mrs. Alwilda Werner, club president, the "woman of the
serves
(ages sl% thmugh 21); and Retardation Board, soon the students could start
year," left, and Mrs. llortha Salser, "woman of the week."-'fhe ere pre5ented gifts.
. the contract also .stales that stated that he wanted a to school and Webater noted

at y

e

•
'

SAN ~CISCO (UPI)BUCI!AI'IAN, Mich. (UPI)
American Soccer League . - World champion Roger
owners awarded three new Decoster of Belgium, riding a
franchises Suriday subje&lt;:t 'to Suzuki, maintained his
completion of financial · Trans-AMA points lead by
arrongements.
combinq fifth and third
Officials declined to place moto finishes for the
identify the cities but said two • overall victory Sunday In the
were oo the West Coast 'and fourth of 10 MoiDcross races.
the other on the East Coast.
Second place In the event
An atu1ouncement, they said, · held at the Red Bud Track
would be made In New York !llld Trail was Tony Stefano of
City In 10 days.
Morrisville, Pa., aboard a
In other action at the end of Suzuki. Tommy Croft of San
a three-day meeting, Nick Diego, Calif., riding a_Honda,
Sclavounos was r...,lected took third.
president of the league.

VOL. XXVII NO. 129

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

1liE BIG SECRET
LOS ANGEI,ES (UPI)
Former CIA Director
WUUam Colby told a UCLA
REYNOLDS AD.S
audience tbla weekend, "We
lOS ANGELES (UPI) AcfDr Burt Reynolds, 40, need some secrets and we
spent the weekend at Cedars- need some secret solli'ceB ID
Sinal Medical Center under get intelligence ID protect our
observation after dem')Ct'acy."
uwe do have some secrets.
COOlplalnlng of chest palna
One of lhe foundations of our
Saturdoy night.
democracy Is a' secret. It's
called the baUot box." ·
LOS ANGELES (UPI) Police, who stopP.Od three
youths riding bicYcles and
wearing oversized .baseliall
jerseys, uncovered more than
$1,200 worth of basebaU unlfonns and equipment stolen
from the Los Angeles
Dodgers' clubhouse.
Authorities said five youths
aged 13 to 16 &amp;Jllll!renUy
broke into the clubhouse with
a crowbar last Monday and
used a van to cart the gouda
away.

·MEIGS lHEATRE .
CLOSED FOR

·Vl'l.AnON
WATCH FOR.

OPENING DATE

()tber assets

. ' .. '

o' • •

0

••••• 0

••

•••••••• •

••••••••••••

••••••• 0

•

==[~:~~~.~~~~~~.~·~.

'I'()'I'AL IJABILI'l'IF,S

...

0

••••••••• I •

•••

'

••

~

·.·. ·..· .· :·.·:.·.·: .
•• '

•••

0

•

~

••••••• •

EQUITY CAPITAL

THE INN PLACE
Tuesday Nrght
Special

Corrunon stock:
a. No. shares authorized 12,000
b. No. shares outstanding · 12,000 .........••...• \ (par value)
300,000.00
Surplus.. ..• •......... •......... •.. •• .. : ...... . .• •••......• , , •500,000.00
undivided profits .. . ........................... . ........... . .. ,
110
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL . .. . ........ . ......... . ... . ... ....... US.W.O
TOTAL UABILITIES.AND EQUITY CAPITAL.... .. • .
17 e M.OOt
MEMORANDA
.
Average for 15or30 cal~ daya ending with caUdote: ,
a. Cuh and due from blink&amp; •••• , .. . ............... . ..... . ....... 1,1185,000.00
b. Federal lunda sold andaecurlties purehued under
_,· agteeJilent to reseU • , ••••• :·••.•••.••.••••• ••• , ••• •• •.••• 't • ••• 277,000.00
c. Total loans ......•...•. .. .. , ................... ·....... , ... , 8,462,000.Go
e. Totaldepositl.••.•• ••••••.••••••• , .••... ~ •. •• ..•••••.. •..• 171010,000.00
SUPI'LEMENTALMEMORANDA
.
Pledged assets andsecuritlealoMded (book value):
U.S. Govenunenl obllptloos, direct ll!1d guaranteed,
pledged to secure deposits andotherUabllltlel ................. .

•n

.'ll!fAL .... ' ~ ·•........................ ·,....·...

0

••••••

0

•

•

••

I ••

I, Roger, W. Hyaell, CUIJiw, of the a~ bank do berebJ cleclu'e
that tbla report of cmdlllonla true to the bal.!lf.lllY~llld belief.
Raser W. ~ CUiuer ·
· We, the Wlderslgned dlredon, au.t the cw teeb e11 olllil nport of CWidltloo and declare that It baa beeu 8llllllned by 111 and to lbe bell ol OlD'
knoWledgell!1d belief is true and correct.
·

V,isit Our Salad Bar ·
Ham

Sweet Potatoes
Vegetables
Hot Rolls
Coffee.' Tea or Milk

•

TOTAL ASSETS ... ... .......................... . ..... .. ... .
ilABlLl'l'l&amp;'l
Demand deposits of Individuals,
partnerships and corporations .............. , .. , . , ........... 3,870,000.00
Time and savings depoaits of IPdivlduals,
partnershlpa, and corpor'atfons ........ , . ..• .' , .. . ........... 12,0'13,000.00
Deposits of United States Government........... . ..... . ... ........ 0,000.00
Deposits of States ll!1d political subdivisions .. ..... , . ........ ·..• , . , 431,0011.00
Deposits of commercial banks ........ . ..... . ... . ............ .. ... 3,000.00
Certified and officers' checks •... •. . ........... , . ..... . ..... .'.... 72,000.00
Total Deposits In Domestic Offices .•....... , .. , .•. . . .
a. Total demand deposits ........................... .
b. Total time and savings deposits .. •.. .............. . ~~~R.W

t'red R. Cirsey,

Plus tax

THE MEIGS INN

.rr.

Fred W. Crow, Jr.- Dlrec:lonl
E. Robert Schellhaae

Stale of Ohio County of Meigs, sa:
·
·
' Sworn to and subscribed beforemethll 13th dayof0ctober,19'11.
J~ Crilp, Notary l'\lbiiC
My CGmmlsslon Expires July 17, Wit

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Dr.Niehm will appeal Ouster at GSI

ol Pomeroy, Obl8 aDd Forelp aDd DomesUc Subsldl8rlel, allbe dale ol

Cash andduefrombanks . . . , .................... , .... ·......... 1,312,000.00·
U.S. Treasury securities . . ..... .. ... . ... : ........ , , .• .. . •..•.. 4,754,000.00
Obligations of u.s:Govenunenl
.
.agencies and corporatioos .•............•. . ... .. ..... , ........ 135,000.00
Obligations of States and poUtlcal subdivisions ...•.. . .•• , , , , , . • , , 2,301,000.00
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock .•..... . ..•.. , . •. ......• 24,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under
agreements to reseU IIi domestic offices......................... 300,000.00
a.Loans, Total (escludingunearnedlncome) .. , ... . . . .8,507,000.00
b. Less: Reserve for possible loan losses ...••...• , , , •• , , , , 811,000.00
c, Loans, net. ..•............•...•....•.......•......•......•. 8,419,000.00
Bimk premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing~ pl'l!mlae8 .......... . .. . .......... 432,000.00
Real estate owned other than bank premises . .. .................... '"•'""''w

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1976

'

Savings Company

ASSEIS

enttne
&gt;

The Farmers Bank &amp;

baolness September 38; l978, .a slate !•••toe IIIIUIIIIIoll o......_. llld
operallug 1llldel' lbe bonking laWI ollllll State aDd a member ol lbe Federal
Reserve System. PubliBhed In aecorduce with a caU made by ll!e State Blmll·
log Aulhorltfea and by the Federal Reserve Baakollllll DlllrleL

•

•

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

~

8l3-·

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

WUISVILLE, Ky. (UP!)
Jay Springsteen, 19, of
Flint, Mich., tbe youngest
... uonal champion on the
motorcycle circUit, won the
$18,000 Race of Cbsmpioos
Sunday at Loulsvllie Downs
with an easy :n.tap victory.
Springsteen, riding a
Harley-Davidson, averaged
66.71 mUes per hour for ihe
25.067 mlles. •
Last year's national champion, Gary Scott, 24, Springfield, Ohio, who finished
second In this year's
sta,Dding$, was secood and
last year's Race of
Champions winner Mike
Kldd", 22, Fort Worth, Tex.,
finished third .

Meigs' retai-ded will attend
Gallia .Guiding Hand.School

I .angsville Lila ]. Pierce died on Sunday

similar
are

electricity.

~' '!: ~

GETZVILLE, N,Y. (UPJ)
- James E. Peele, 69,
considered the father of
athletics at the State
University of New York at
Buffalo, died at his home of
· an apparent heart . attack
SundBy.
.
Peele wos stricken. as he
worked In the garden at his
home. He was pronounced
dead on arrival at Millard
J'jUmore Hospital. ·
Peele served as the univer·
slty's athletic director f&lt;r 34
years and was a physical
education instructor at the
• school when he died.

RAY CROMLEY

GALIJPOJJS STATE INSTITUTE Supt. Dr. Bernard F. Nlehm, right, today wid
Gallfpolis Tribune Assistant City Editor Dale Rothgeb he plans to appeal his firing by Dr.
Timothy Moritz, and Dr. NOfij!jjj Niesen, Ohio Department of Mental Health and Mental
Retardation.

Delta Queen's
life extenOOd
by President

By Dale Rothgeb
Dr. Bernard F. Nlehm, GSI
superintendent, officially
fired Monday by Director
Timothy Moritz and Dr.
Normon Niesen, Commissioner for the Ohio
Department of Mental Health
and Mental Hygiene, said
today he plana to appeal his
firing.
Dr. Nlehm'a attorney,
Donald Calhoun of Columbus,
will file 110 appeal In stale or
federal courts. . · ) .
Dr.. Nlehm was haniled a
letter revoking his posttjoo·as
superintendent Monday
liftet'Jioon following 0
meeting with Dr. Timothy
Moritz, Oirector of the Ohio
Departme~~t . of Mental Health
and Mentall!etardatlon, and
Dr. Nieseh.
The letter stated his em·
ploymenl was revoked as of
Oct. 18. The letter, however,
gave Dr. Niehm an option to
be reaSsigned and re-assume
· his old classlficailon as coordinator of menial retardation planning for the Stale
of Ohio, a job he held under
Martin Janis, but which no
longer exists.

Dr. Nlehm, holder ofa PHD
from Ohio State University,
became Ohio's firs! non·
medical degree .auperin·
'tendent of a mental l.nstltutiori In Aug. 1970. He was
appointed ·under the the old
Rhodes Administration by
Martin Janis.
Dr; Nlehm said he mel Oct.·
13 in Columbus wilh Dr.
Moritz. AI that lime he was
. given two optiona, either to
serve as District II manager
ior the Mentally Retarded, a
hlghly responsible ~ltion
Involving community
resources and, Institutional
facilities for the development
·of "' rvices for the mentally
n . ded, or a job 1111 chjef
platu1er for the Department
of Mental Health and
Relardotion.
It too would have involved
working throughout the stale
with
Institutions
and

districts.
, Both jobs would have
meant a $10,000 to $12,000
annual pay cut. Nlehm
charged the job offers were
"a bribe" made to prevent
him from further criticizing
the administration.

· Or. Nlehfu Indicated this
morning he could not accept
the optiona because they did
not resolve the problems
started at the G~la year ago.
"The cloud over my
professional etatus resulting
from the director's in·
decisiveness In coming to a
conclusloo about my status IB
still !here. The stale's first
lnveatlgatlon was three
months long, which should
have been sufficient for the
director lo make a ·deeislon
on whether I was able to run
this Institution," Dr. Niehm
said.
·
He conUnued: "lJIItead for
a better part of a year, I have
not' known If I have had the
director's support and my
·employees ~ave not known If
he supported me either. This
makes It dlHicult to operate.
"In Ueu of a decWon, the
director (Dr. Moritz) hu·
continued his horrassmenl to
embsrrua me by aendlng
consultants abnosl dally.
"At' no time .has lhe
direetor given me the results
· of the Investigation or called
me In to dlscus8 the findings.
- (Continued on J1141e 12)

,c

thalli could be lhls week, but
he could not be sure at tbla
time.
·
II wu not known Monday
the eXIcl coli of tranoporllltlon. It was brought out
!hat an admlnlalrator would
cOst over $1.,000 a yea•, but
this wu an eatlmale.•
Webster staled thai he felt
the Meigs County Board of
Mental Health and Retardation would approve the
contract as presented with
the additional clauses added.
The contract was approved
Monday. It wu not signed but
It will be signed within a few
days, It was Indicated.
The total cOst of sending the
students to Gama County is
$35,000. Holl'eve~. this Is
reduced by money received
from state and loco! tuition: If
state and local tuition were
not received lhe Meigs
County would have to pay the
f35,000 rather thsn the $23,942

plus transportation and
admlnlslratlon.
On Oct. 18, Barry Cohen, pi
the Ohio J,egal Rig)lta Se!:·
.. vl ~ e, notified the com- .
missioners
by · letter
thai If mentally retarded
children In the county were
not In school by Oct. 22, a ault
would be flied against the
commisaioners.
Earlier it wsa reported that
the commissioners would
only have to educate those
students from age alx through
18. lbey were advised on Oct.
1, by D•. Timothy Moritz, of
the State Mental Health
'Divi!lon that lhe nge Is llix
thcough 21.
Attending · were Henry
Wells, Warden Ours and
Bernard Gilkey, commlaslonero, Judse Webster,
Phelps, Frank, Rev. Wilbur
Perrin, Charles Knight,
assistant prosecuting attorney and Judy Koch.

Growth rate
slowdown
By ANDREW NlBLEY
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The nation's economic
growth .rate · slowed for the
second 1:0nsecuUve quarter
between July and September
as the "real'' GrOll!! Natiooal
Product expanded by 4 per
cent, the government said
today.
In lia preliminary report,
lhe Conlffienoe Department
said the total dollar value of
the natioo's output of goods
and services grew at the
slowest annual rate since lhe
fourth quarter of lut year
when the economy expanded
by only 3.3 per cent.
The modest third quarter
figure of . 4 per cent was '
substantlaUy less than the
administration had hoped.
The GNP grew at rates of 4.5
per centJn the second quarter
llld 9.2 per cmt rate in the
first quarter.
Deaplt• the disappointing
growth In the GNP, too ·
deporlment had some good
news on the inflation front.
The · coat of living, .as
measW'ed by GNP lnlllcators,
decUned from 5.2 per cent In

.

I

lhe second quarter to 4.4 per
cettt In too third.
Althoqh the .4 per cent
growtll rate was far lOllS than
lhe 5 per ciml atlmlnlstration
economists had predicted
earh ~r
this year, lt
nevertheless represented the
sixth consecutive quarter tM
GNP has expanded,
The lost Urne the ureal"
GNP 4otal output stripped
of lnfiation-&lt;iecllned was In
the first quarter oi 1975 when ·
the nation was ln the midst of
(ecession.
The
Commerce
Department reported that the
real GNP was $1.272 trillion
lot the third quarter. All
major components lncreaaed
with the exceptloo of export
sale•
and
Inventory
lqvestment.
Commerce officials said
lodiy'1 "'PPff II bued on
'preliminary
data,
particularly for 81lporta and
Inventories, and thatJ)te GNP
wUI ultbnately be revised,
They did not Indicate whether
It would bo reviled UP. or
down.

Pomeroy will
go dark unless
Lizon resigns as director
levy
approved
of senior citizens program

By United Press lnteruailonal
WASHINGTON - SECRETARY OF STATE Henry
~er baa made explicit what was formerly only implied.
WASHINGTON (UI;'l)- A
The result 18 what u. s. diplomats describe as a significant bUI extending until Nov. 1,
development In \.!. S. policy .toward China.
·.
1983, lhe existing exemption
In a liltie-notlced statement at a Harvard news conference
of
the steamboat Della Queen
last Friday, Kissinger said publicly for the first time: "We
·
from
safety law~ applicable
believe that lhe territorial integrity and sovereignty of China is
to
ships
was signed into law
very Important to the w&lt;rld equilibrium, and we would
Monday
by President Ford.
coosldel' It a·grave matter If this were threatened by an outside
·
T
he
President
said th~
power ... it would not be laken lightly If there were a massive
legislation
"wiU
preserve
a
Doug Lizon, director of the were named u the council's
aasauit 011 China." Although Kissinger did not mention the
splendid
reminder
·of
Retired
Senior Citizens representatives to the
Soviet Unioo, thai Is obviously the principal threat to China's
America's
past."
Volunteer
Program at the Buckeye Hllh·Hocklng
terrlt~ ll!1d no other country Is In a position to stage a
"
Its
preservation
as
a
Meigs
County
Senior Citizens Valley ·Regional Develop"massive asaault" oo China.
symbol of Americana Is Center, has resigned.
ment senior activities board.
Llzon has accepted em- Mrs. Lula Hampton waa
HONG KONG - MAJOR MIUTAHY COMMANDS In important to the ~pie of this
llllna'a regional areaa·have thrown their.support behind new Nation to whom our national ployment at the mental nan ted allernate.
It was announced thai
Communist party leader Hua Kuo-fen~ and the purge of heritage means so much," he health center In Athens. Mrs.
Alice Wamsley was named swine flu vaccine wlli he
radical elements headed by Mao Tse-tung's widow. One said In a statement.
The Pelts Queen, a historic acting director of the given at the senior citizens
military raUy came the closest yet to officially idel!tlfylng
paddlewheel
riverboo~ was
program which places senior center on Nov. 17-18. Hours
Cllang chlng - Madame Mao - as a target of the current
built
In
1928
and
has
been
ciUzena in various activities will be announced' ·later.
political struggle.
operating
on
the
Ohio
ond
at schools, hospltaiB, etc. by Some 400 senior citlzena have
Apolitical cmunissar In the Canton Garrison Conurumd IIi
Mississippi
Rivers
since
then.
the
Meigs County Council' on registered to take the shots.·
South OUna denounced those who claimed to be a "student" of
It
entered
the
National
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas, the
Aging.
lhe late party chalrml!n, who died Sept. 9. Chiang Ching has
Register
of
historic
vesseiB
In
·
Meeting
recenlly,
the
councU's
executive director,
ldenU!led. herself many limes In the past 10 years as a
council also elected officers reported that the grant has
"student" of' her husband, implying that this rl!nder~d her 1910.
'!be exemption IB needed so · who are Lillian Moore, been approved lor the mental
more capable of Interpreting his works and thoughts.
that
the Delta Queen can preaidenl; the R"". WOllam health project of constructing
The commlsaar, Ma Tsu-llal, said those who claimed to be
operate
on overnight cruises Mlddleswart, vice preaident; a multi-purpose bullding In
tbe "student of the great leader" and a "genuine Marxist"
after
Nov.
1, 1918.
Pauline Roush, secretary, Pomeroy, Mrs. Thomas
were only "vlcioua careerlsts." Without naming them directly,
Ma aald Madame·Mao and her radical cohorts twisted the
and Gertrude Mitchell, thanked Pomeroy Mayor
UNIT CALLED
Clarence Andrews and the
meaning of Mao's directives to ','cutrate the soul of their
lre88urer.
'!be
Pomeroy Emergency
County
Com-.
essence.''
Mrs. Moore, Clarence Meigs
DETROIT_:_ THE UNITED AUTO WORKERS would like Squad was ~oUed to the office Struble and C. E. Blakealee · missioners; Henry Wells,
General Motors and Chrtlysler tO match the auto Industry of Or. R. E. Boice at 1:40p.m.
pattern contract established In a 28-day strike against the Ford Monday for Mrs. Linda JeU,
Motor Co. without even the threat of another walkout. But as Pomeroy, who was W.. She
negotiations at GM fesum~ Monday and talks 'with Chrysler wu taken to Holzer Medical
.
'
dralll!ed on, UAW Vice Presldent Douglas A. Fraser admitted Center. At 4:21 p.m., the fire
agreements with either atiw firm are unUkely without strike department went to the
MuHen Insurance Co. office
deadlines. .
.
"I'd like to settle vilthout a strike deadllne, but that may . where. a lille lixture caught
not be reaiiBtlc," Fraser said.. "~aybe It takes the pressure of fire. At 9:40 a.m., .Pauline
MARIE1'TA - Since the
a deadUne to get the IIIllllentum needed ID arrtve at a Bing, Pomeroy was liken to. river touches the We of capturing on film the f.Ilood of
seUiement." The union, which represents 3911,000 workers at Holzer Medical Center by the everyone In southea'st~rn the river and the boats thai
GM and 118,000 production and while coUar workers at Cllrys- squad and at 9:45a.m. a fire Ohio, the display of "Con· travel it.
The display is located In the
lar, probably won't pick either company or set a sirlke dead- . call to the Charles ~Iris t'e m p or a r y RIver
Campus
Martius Museum at
resldence on Route 7 was Photographs" .ot the Campus
Une untU Ford production is back ot Its pre&lt;~trlke level.
the
corner
of Washington a.nd
received then cancelled.
Martlus Museum h11re . Second Streets. The museum,
OOi.vMBUS - OIDO TRANSPORTATJbN chief Richo~
promises to Intrigue area named after the fortification
D. Jaclt:Bon said today 36 highway construction projects
residents.
built 'to protect the city, Is
Jl'evleualy deferred f&lt;r lack of funds, will be let ID contract this
Cloudy lnoight and WedOver
GO
dramatic open 10 a.m. to I p.m.,
flacal year. The projecla, tolaling-f36 mJIUon, are being picked nesday'wilh rain likely. Lows photographs of steamboats
up again, he said, because of Increased revenuea from fuel tonight In the uppet&gt; 30s. and tugboats malte up the Monday through Saturday,
and HI p.m. Sunday. Ad·
consumption In Ohio.
Turning cooler Wednesday, display which wtU continue mission Is fl. for adulta.
The OJ)OT received a $8 mJUion wlndlaU from Increased highs In tl\e lower 50s. through October 31.
Children 12 and under are
fuel availability lind use this year. The projects, most of them Probability of precipitation Is
Photographers Allen Hess admitted free when ac·
state and federaUy financed, are scattered through 35 counties ,20 per cent today and 60 per and Chris Eaton traveled up
companied by parenla.
(Continued on page IZ)
cent tonight and Wednesday. and down the Obio River

PhotQgraphs display
river's mood on film

· Weather

Warden Ou111 a.nd Bernard
GOkey, for their help ind
cooperaUon In the project.
1be building planned for
Mulberry Heights will
become a . county-owned
(Continued on Jlllle 12)

·Killer hanged
in Nassau for
God murders
NASSAU, Bahamas (UPI)
- Mlchalah Shobek, a
Milwaukee drifter, was
hanged today for the slaying
of three American lourlsls he
said he killed on orders from
God.
The execution .was announced by · Addington
Darville, chief of the
Bahamas Criminal In·
vestigatlon department.
DaryvWe told nell'llllen at a
roadbloclt outside a cemetery
three mUes from the prison:
"Yes, he has been esecuted
the hearse II coming."
· Shobek was the first
American sentenced to die In
the Bahamu In 15 years.
There were no Immediate
details on the bonging which
took place at Fox Hili prison
on the outaklrts ot Nuaau.
Road blocka were aet up
around the prison and also at
the cemetery where newsmen gathered, hopeful of
catclilng a glimpse of the
hearae.
, Shobek, 22, spurned
comfort from a prison
chaplain and spent his final
oours In a ceU only a few feet
from the gallows.

~~
.

"'

Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
R. C. GlasRO . of Prime
Andrews warned council BuUdeta of ColUmblll offerad
Monday night the additional council five feet of land on
ooe mJU levy to be voted on Osborne Street:. Council at the
Nov. 21or street Ughtlng mull laat iiieetlng wa• told liy
pass or the village will Glugo that Prime BuDders
be' without three fourths of Its who plan to buDd an apart·
present street lights.
men! complex on Osborne St.,
The one mlli will be listed
(Conllnuad on page 12) · .
under "current expense" on
the ballot but the money
. received ($6,000 a year) wW Trammg
·• •
~or
be and can only be used for
I'
street Ughtlng.
nte Mayor a1so reported
that leaves will be picked up
In the vUlage Oct. 211, 211, 27 ,
and 28. Reeldents mull have . 18
the leaves In bags or boxes
placed al the curb.
Training of newly apThe mayor allo reported pointed precinct workers for
thai the vWage II eligible to the November election hu
apply for a grant through been 1111111 the Meigs County
HUD for atreet repair, a Board of Elecllona.
playground and recreation
The new · workers may
field, sewa~ifnd demolition. attend a Hiilon at I p.m. on
There wUl: be two public Thuroday or at I p.m. Friday
meetings on
application at the Maaonlc Temple
for citizen "Input." The buDding In Pomeroy. One
meetings are scheduled Oct. ltlllion II all !halls noqulred
28and Nov. 10, at 7::10 p.m. at for the new workers, and all '
the city hall,
thole required to attend have
Ron· Burgeaa of ·Auble, been sent notice~ by the
Mitchell, Burgess Aaso~ .• , board ol elecllons. Howenr,
ClnclnnaU told council aU the. other precinct workers
nece •ry papers are ready ,wlahlng to.do ao may atiAlnd
to submit to EDA thmugh the either seulon althouih atPublic Work&amp; Act for a grant tendanee lor tbe ' li'DI'kera In
to renovate the Pomeroy prevloua elecllona, who
Senior High Building sold lo received lralnillg earlier, II
the viUage lor $t by the Meigs - not required.
Local School Dlalrlct.
,
To date, 400 parsons have :
Also meeting wllh councU cast ablentee and disabled
wu Prof. Dr. Pedro L. Koe- ballotaf&lt;rtbeupcomlngNov.
Krompecher and 1011, Luzlo, 2 electloo. Deadline for I1ICh
architects of Athena, In- voiiD81112 DOOII on Saturday,
tereated In working for the Oct.llll. The board cl electiool
village. Mayor Anderton olflce II OJlllll frOm 0 to 12
Informed them that an ar- ooon and from 1 10 4 p.m.,
chltect had beeit engaged but Monday. tbrough Saturday,
would keep them IIi mind for for the convenience of abo
any future developmenll.
sentee and disabled vaten.

poll workers .
ced
announ .

the

\Jo

•

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