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                  <text>~,-The I'IIIUy Sent• ..el, MJddleport-Porneroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Oct. 19, 1976

'

:Troopers begin workmen's
compensation probe.
.

' 11y J .R.

XDiMINs

certmed public accountants ooe of lhree Republlcana on witbout political frierids to . lnvestigatora-woulci rePort to
(l)LUMBUS (UP!) _ On to cmducta "fraud audit" of the seven-member board, protect."
.
cunmilllon offices today.
erdera from Gov. James A. · lhe multl-bUiton dollar fund. · heatedly opposed Mellhel's . That angered Meshel who
Johnston lild In his
Rbodea, 14 atate troopers
Ml8liel argued that the suggesllon, a'nd said an said It was a "barrel of crap" original preaentatlon the
'litere scheduled today· to commission Investigatory · "outside agency" ahould be to lhlnll that an elected ltate-Wtde probe ..OIIId follow
begin
•
state-wide staff should not be called in to aaslst commtsalm official - the Attorney 'the same lines of a O!yahop
·investliall~n Into tllegal au8Jnented because, he said, inyestlgators.
GeneraJ-would let ''politics County lnvestlgallon which
: worker's compensation he found It "dilfleull to
Rose
defended
the get in · the way . of his has resulted in some 100
clllma.
support a request that the objectivity of lhe highway C&lt;llstltllllooal dulles."
lndlctmen\11 for worli;er's
' The order came from commission Investigate patrol and said It was an
Meshel then moved that cunpensatlon fraud.
Rmdeslate Monday after he ltse~.''
"outside agency without a Johnston's $150,000 request
Johnaton uld a state-wide
.was Informed by Ohio
Rep. Ben Rose, R-Uma, political axe to grind and be put off until neJ:t week probe might turn up "hardwhen Johnaton collld better core" fraud approaching $3
Indu•trlal ' Commission
explain to' lhe board bow the m1lllon a year from worker's
chairman William W.
mooey will he opent by the comJli!IISIItioo clalma rued by
'Johnston that the state
accounting firm.
OOIHXistent companies on
Controlllng Board bad balked
Johnston
noted
that
no
behalf of non-existent
~I hla request fer $5311,!154 to
WASWNGTON UP!- Two . has been cheered 1o hear his
aqment his own three- Republican members of lhe chief advocatea say he Is now matter what the board did, claimants.
•:we don't have any
person investigatory ltaff. Senate Watergate committee In a "dead heat" wtlh Jimmy the 14 hl~hway pe : ·~I
evidence.
to suggest a
EarUer Mooday, the board support President Ford Carter; Ford threw darts at
C&lt;llsptracy within lhli
'vied 4-lcHI along party Unes agelnst charges he acted at Carter from his White House
of Worker's Ccmpensatloo,"
. to put Johnaton 's request at the Nlron Wbite Houae's podium and held political
said Johnaton. "But ., am
!be end of Its reglllar,lengthy behest In trying to prevent a strategy sessions in the .(Continued from pqe 1)
personally suspicious that
agenda.
Watergate Investigation
Room between off Union Ave. were .wllllng to there mllll be Inside people
: During a four-bour recess during the- 1972 campaign. Cabinet
preparations for the third and give lhe land to the village to
for ~ - Senate Democratic Sens. Howard H. Baker Jr., final debate with the make Osborne St. a two-way (involved). I dm't know what
caacdil, majority Democra\11 fhe vice chairman, and Democratic nominee In street to the parking lot ofthe I'm going to find ltatewide."
· 1«11 the board had put togetlltr
Lowell P. Welcker Jr., colonial WUitamsburg, Va., project.
1 llllbatllllte to Johnaton's
Council at the last meeting J •
•
reacted sharply to Watergate Friday.
)On for lhe lnvestlgiltloo, questions Monday at a White
He plaMed only one out of turned lhe matter over to lbedWn re8Jgll8
~vlng overall authority to
House news briefing caUed to
v1llage solicitor and the . (Contlnu~ fnm page 1) ·
•Attorney General William discuss lhe current cam- town appearance before the
de~te - a quick up and hack
buDding committee.
structure.
jllrown, a Democrat.
paign.
trip
to
New
York
Thuraday
Glalgo
Monday
night
told
Plans were made to
; Sen. Harry Meshel, DFormer Sen. Sam Ervin, evening to woo Catholic council that Prime Builders
i'Youngstown, WBB prepared to Watergate committee .votes at a dinner honoring have olfered to move a complete an appUcaUon for a
bus to replJlce "the present
joffer that alternative when chairman, said two days ago
AI
Smith,
the
1928
buDding
off
a
stonn
sewer,
mlnl-bua
wblch 1a nearly five
,Johnston told the board lhere was "no questloo" lhat Democratic presidential
correct
a
drainage.
problem
years
old.
The application
·Rhodes had· ordered the Ford blocked the House
candidate.
and
place
a
chalil
link
!ence
will
be
filed
wllh lhe Ohio
to assist the probe. "He dld it on a par·
1patrol
Ford
Monday
summoned
to
close
a
mine
opening In lhe Department of Trans,commission.
tlsan basis," Ervin told
, Johnston had asked the. station WSOC of Charlotte, some 19 GOP leaders, in· area. Council aiJ'eed to ac- . portatlon which has a bua
cludllg sa governors and cept lhe ground wilh the pr&lt;&gt;gram underway at the
patrol earlier Ibis year for N.C.
several
senators represen· above stlplllatlons;
present time. The RSVP
help but had been turned
ting
both
liberal
and
conGlasgo
told
council
there
program and budget for 1977
•down when the patrol said It
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. UP! servative wings of lhe party, will be 30 until and a com·
:could not make sufficient -Jimmy Carter, who tends
muntty building. The apart· were approved.
to disc\188 the status of his
The council dlaciiSSed ways
'rnanpqwer avaUable.
to use strong words like campaign and his for· ment complei will be similar Uiat might be used locally to
~ "The governor said •the
IOve and "disgrace" to thcoming travels. Sen. to those under construction raise money for lhe senior
wrong person asked for express
himself, Is using Howard Baker, R-T~ .• told on Mlllberry Ave.
then),'" Johnaon told the
Council In other business citizens program since
strong
language
now to reporters after Monday's
·board. "The governor simply
hired
Harry Richard Lyons, federal moneys are being
session
the
reduced from time to time
picked up the phcrie and now describe Americans who strategy
Intend to vote. He calls President was "generally Sr., Racine, a full time pollee and the local share filr
.I'll have lheni (lhe Highway don't
and Jerry Colmer, and
optlmiSjic" about his chances officer
Patrol) first thing In the them C&lt;lwards.
Charles
Hysell, · both of aspects of the program is
Carter's new theme - an and "lhe race is vlrtuaUy In a
becomlllg larger.
lftOI'Iling."
I
aU-out
assault
oil
lukewann
Pomeroy
as
part
time
of·
It was 'i'epoted thr
dead
heat."
l Johnston's suprlse
supporters
may
reflect
fleers.
the
center's outreach work
.announcement of Rhodes'
fear
that
a
low
turnout
Nov.
2
«dcr accompanied a ch8nge
~':r.o~dAnp:"C:!.!,~ has been 1n contact with 1l
'In his original . request, could cost him victory. AU
tilt vUiage which became elderly persons living in
along, polls have sbown lhat
,Qling duwn the amount ·•
effective Sunday and will be !s9lated areas and lhe bus
Carter's
support is ~~soft."
$150,000 to hire Ernst &amp; Ernst
·in
effect until Nov.l at 8 p.m. was driven 14,000 miles
Here In lhe nation's second
LONG
BOTIOM
Luther
for
children under 18 years or transpcirtlng 1,100 riders in
largest Jewish community,
· d, ...
•• , Rt. 1, Long age.
the past three monthl. It WBB
F
C
.
nen
Carter grabbed hold of a new
The mayor noted that there abo reported that a staff
iaaue to arouse voters - the Bottom, died Tuesday at
Veterans
Memorial
Hoapltal.
have
been !OlVera! acts of member, Mrs.
Leafy
suggestion by Army Gen:
George ,J3rown that . this . Employed wilh lhe Atlas vandalism and he com· Ch&amp;Bteen had atlended a four
country's" support of Israel Towing Co. In -Parkersburg mented: "I won't tolerate \he day advocacy seminar held
as a riverboat captain, he acts any longer;'' He alao by the Ohio Council on Aging
has become burdensome.
Carter says ·Brown should wBB a rri'ember. of the Sutton added that eXtra PQllcemen through lhe ~al Ald Society
be reprbnanded. "I think, United Methodist Church, lhe will be on duty untn after In Cincinnati and is now
qualified to advise senior
President Ford should show Pomeroy Masonic Lodge and Halloween.
lhe
Bashan
Fire
Jlept.
Also
meeting
wilh
council
cttlzerui on rights.
some leadership for a
He
is
survived
by
his
wife,
wBB
Paul
Hudson,
Wright
St.
change/' he said. ·
Ifetty Jane Capehart Friend; in regard to blacktop that was
three sons, Jeffrey Don, poured on each side (f his
WASHINGTON UPI Randall
Clayton and Brett driveway lhat he contended
Gearing up for a whirlwind
Elliott;
his mother, Mrs. was a very poor job. He
finish In the last 10 days of lhe
·campaign, Prl!llident Ford · Amy Friend, Canton: a sta~ that be wanted to (Contlnu~ lnm ..ge 9')
brother, Dwight, Melbern, remove the biBcktop and of state.
and his father, Holly, Apple place concrete to widen his
Proponents uy lhe seCtions
Grove, and one niece and two driveway. Council told him 11 are obaolete or covered adenephews.
• was all right with lhem If the quately In state law.
One sister preceded him in blacktop was removed,
Oppmenla have argued lhat
dealh.
.
.. Donitle Ward, who Ia em- the language restricting ltate
F~neral services wUI be I , ployed 1n lhe ·street depart- tx'lnting lllollld remain' In the
p.m. Thursday at lhe Ewing meilt, reported lhat lhey do Constitution.
Funeral Home wtlh the Rev. not have a way of keeping
State Issue 3 requires the
Ste~e Wilson officiating. blacktop from getting cold . results of statewide electiORI
Bunal will be In the Gilmore and lhat lhey need 8 tarp to to he declared at lhe next
Cemetery. Frienda may call hold lhe heat ln.
regular session of the
•
at the funeral home after
The meyor's report for the General Aa.sembly.
noon Wednesday. Muonic monlh of September in lhe
Currently the General
services will be 7:30 p.m. amount of $3,395.80 was Assembly certifies the reslllts
wide 1ecti
d·
of ...
Wednesday.
accepted.
·-te
e ORI an 18
Attending were Mayor empowered to lreak ties · in
Andrews, Ralph Werry, Lou contests for governor,
DANCE PLANNED
Davis • Dr· lieutenant governor, attorney
RACINE - There will he a ,Osborne, Harry
SAVES
dance at Southern High Harold Brown and Phil general, auditor, treaSID'er
councllme~. and secretary of state.
School Friday, Oct. 22, from Globokar,
YOU
Pollee
Chief
Jed
Issue 3 would require the
10 p.m. until12:30 a.m. Music Jane Walton, clerk,Webater,
PhyWs certificatiOn to take place
TIME
by "Clockwork". The dance HeMessy, treasurer, and the . aIter th e new' 1y-e1ec ted
• is being sponsored by lhe Rev. WUitam MJddlellwarth leglalature Is seate'd In
senior clasa. Admission Is wbo opened the meeting with January, eliminating the
$1.50.
possibility that lhe outgoing
When you pay bills by check you
prayer.
legiBiators
could
be
.
reconvened to break a lie.
can. send them safely through the
The reuoning Ia that an
lnc&lt;111ing
legislature, and not
mall, with just one stop at \he
''lame duck" lawmakers
1
should certify the ne.,;
corrier. mall box.

Politics: a summary

11

Luther Friend
died_Tuesday

1

.

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
·vACATION
WArat FOR

Issue I

OPENING DATE

..

THE INN PLACE
Wednesday Night
Special

WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
-AUTO TEI.LER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGSSTo7 P.M.

"THE
FRIENDLY BANK"

.lilbeM
~ational ·
e....""'i*IMIIAn

v·is.l t Our Salad Bar
Beef and Noodles ·
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Vegetable
·
Hot Rolls

· MIDDL!POIT

OHIO

Coffee, Tea or Milk

Member
. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporatilr-'-

DEPOSITS INSURED TO •40,000
I

.

·_

·'

~ .

1)

and Include n.w hlgbwiy c0111iruetlon, reloeallon, ;
NeUber Moritz or Dr. Nor- reccllllrllcdoo, wldenne. r.d.clallllllllfet)' ~man' Niesen, conunlllloner,
•
baa ltated ......., tlltlr ,oa~a
were for tilt 'GSI," Nlebm
edlpbaalud:
"I have been WIIWIR of
tilt finding, there baa been no

Raynes to Directol'l will •
•

take seat

beelectedto :
medical bo.rd.:

coQDIIellnc, no attempt to
bear my llde ol tilt !lory. My
maJor reaaona in not acNEW HAYEN - Tile Ill- •
ceptlng eltber offer lllbat by
.
nual meedns of 1be
accepllnghrouldbeloreedto . MASON, W.Va.- A far.. Area Medial q.,ler,
bequlet.IfeellherelaaiJ'eat mer mayor w~. .ppolntad to will be beld at 7;JO p.m. •
eonfualon within the · State replace councilman Btrnud Tbunday at the New Hmn :
Department of Mental White it the Muon Coonctl United Melbodlat Qplrcb. '
R'e tardation. Somebody meeting Monday -.dDg.
Purpoleofthemeedn.lllto t
should make . a thorough
Dayton Raynea, whO. bald elect llll!lllberl to be board of i ..
lnveatlgatlon. It Ia my hope the office of major lour dlrectorl, receive reporta on :
that others will ~ me In terma and a . .t on counc:ll the . recruitment
of •
apeaklng out against the one term, wu apolnled to fUl phyatclana, ltall!f ol the
director and commtssioner," tilt poiltton effective !m-' clinic and other baalnealt
Dr. Nl~ concluded.
mediately. Raynea realdea on wldch may came to the at- )
Thaa far, Governor James· Fifth St. wllh bta wtle, tentlon of the membenblp. ;.
Rbodea who appointed Dr. Lucllle, and aon, Walley.
Gary Fill, director of tilt ,
lilorttz.'tormerlyemployedln
Ill Olher.actiona, an I p.m. Weal Virginia Health;
New York State, baa not curfew wu eltab.lilb8cl to go Syatoma Apncy, will dllcaall;
entered lhe taaue.
into effect tbla -.dDc for poaalble grants lor the :
According to Dr. Nlehm pel'80na IIIICier 11. Miyor operatlon ol the cllnlc. ~ •
"It may take hla lnterventi~ Fred Taylor said, "Thit pubUc II invited.
•
to straighten out the · cui'lew 11.neceaaary to k"'''
·
departmeill."
·
pranksten wider control
Dr. Nlehm wBB notified a during the Halloween lleUOI\.
month ago that he wollld be The curfew will be In effect
fired. At that time, or. Moritz l1lltll Nov. I. Allren will blow
TWODD'WFINES
· said lhe move WBB made each evening.
....
because of labor relltlon
Trick or Treat will be held
SYRACUSE
Two
problema and partisan hereFrtday,Oct.2tfrom6:30 defendanll were fiiiiKl and
political activities. Those to 7:30 p.m. Alter trick or lhree olberll forlellld bonda
charges
have
been treat, which will be for -In S)'l'ICIIII! Miyor H111111111
vehemently denied.
chlldren 12 yeara and ~!"~fer, London'• court Monday
Concerning lhole cbargea there will be a party at lhe night. Filled were James D.
Dr. Nlehm said :
firehouse aponaored by lhe Paraona, I'Gmero:r, 'II and
'!! can show people wbo town mercbantund the town COlli, llltedlnc: Lawrence R. ,,
played lhe .partiaan politics. plannlntl council.
Wolfe, Racme, '16 and 1.'0111,!
They occurred 1n the Office of · Bagged leaves wUI be llltedlng. Forfeiting honda ·
lhe Director (Dr. Moritz) and picked up Oct. 28 and 2t.
were Mark . A. Sella, Linnot lhe superintendent of the
Council astea parents casler, f22.70, apeedlns;
GSI."
·
refrain
from
pattlnl' Vernon M. Otto, Racine,
dlapoaable dllpera In the f23.70, speeding; WUbert J. ·
sewer ayatem. Thla callll!l McClain, Racine, UOO, •
sewage problema wblch are driving wblle lnto~:icated,
eJ:penaive to lhe town.
'1110, drt'ring vehicle with
A apokeaman from the . nspended license. The
West Virginia Unem- arreatlne ofltcer wu Pollee
. ployment Olflce dllcuaaed a Chief MOton Varian.
Holzer MedJCII Center
veterans program wllh
(Diacbargea, Oct 18)
coUDCii, and Ed Perry wu
Mrs. James Chandler and named to bead the local
~
daughter, Carl Davia, Mrs. project. Mn. Evelyn Proffitt
AUTOS COUJDE
,'
Richard Dotslm and son, discussed a new library
The Me!P Qollllty Sheriff's ~
Marsha Elliott, Johli Gahm, proiJ'am.
Department lnveatlgated a
Nina Glasa, James Hull, Mrs.
Preaent were Mayor minor accldent Monday at I
Flnvd Kuhn and son, Wilbur Taylor, and council membera p,m. on county road 53 In •
Lt .n; Louise Morris, Kalherlne Smith, Lawrence , Cllester Townalllp. Rebecca ·
R .ard Norman, Pamela Rolllh, Charlotte Jenks and L. Mankin, 32, Rt. 3,
T' mton, Mrs. Carl Weaver
Perry.
Pomeroy, backing from
a.i daughter, Eileen
private drive, struck ibe rtgllt '
&gt;Odrum.
OFFICE CLOSING
rear
side of a vehicle dri'len ·:
iBirtba, Oct. IS)
The Athens Social Seclll'lty by Cynthia D. Andenon, 17,
Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Office, located at 221't!l
Henry, son, GalUpoUa; Mr. Columbaa Road, Athena, Ohio Rt. 2, Pomeroy. There were '
and Mrs. KeMeth .Edwarda, will be cloaed ali day Mon- no inJuries and no cltationl
son, Oak HIJI; Mr. aod Mrs. day' October 25th In oil- given. There wu moderate
property damage. ·
Ronnie Longworth; son,
of Veterana
Wellston.

on council'

Bend:
IDe.,:

Veterans MemoriaiHoapltal
Admitted· - Jerry Batea,
Long Bottom; Wilbur K.
&amp;urke, Chester; Denver
Hale, Wilkesville; Sally
Savage, Racine; Harry
Osborne, Jr., Pomeroy; Amy
Eynon, Syracaae; Barbara
Grueser, Shade; Robert
Freed, Middleport; David
Ross, Cheshire; Annette
Lambert, Pomeroy.
Dlacharged -Ruby Wattl,
Amos So~rell, Barbara
Smith, Robert Moodlapaugh,
William l '•ley, Trtna
Bllchtel.

·ELBERFELD$

Hanes
®

Thermals

COCHRAN DIES
James
R.
(Robert)
Cochran, 48, Rt. 2 Gallipolis,
longtime employe of lhe W.
Va.
National
Guard
Ordnance Co. 3664, who
retired wilhin tilt past year,
died today at 8 a.m. at Holzer
Medical Center. The bOdy Is
at Crow-Hussell Funeral
Home In Point Pleasant
. pending arrangements.

Plus tax

THE MEIGS INN

By CYN1111A MW.S
Ford's environmentally
WASHINGTON (UP!)
related policies.
EnvironmentaUats, who have
Ford has "ct&gt;nslst•ntiy SU{&gt;been saying favorable things ported industry attempts to
about Jimmy . Carter, weaken environmental
assailed President Ford's laws," they said, and the prorecord today oo more than 20 conservation billa which he
issues.ranglng from parks to has Signed were initiated by
clean · air as · one or ConiJ'ess and passed over
" unprecedented lnsen- ~ adminlatration opposition.
sttivity."
The conservationists listed
Acoalition o! 2;iO qonserva· more .lhan 00 areas in which
Uon!Sts called a news confer· ·· they faulted Ford's policies.
ence to issue a "critique" of
The;e included his two

Agricultural ronseroation
killed bv 64th Ford veto

WASHINGTON ( UP!) ~ President Ford today harided .
down his 64th veto--reJecting the 1976 Agricultural
Resources Conaervatlon bill to require the Soil
Conservation Service to awraise \he nation's land and
water resources. · ·
''The bUI would set lhe atage for lhe creatioo of a 18rge
(Contlnu~ on page 16)

•

at y

e
VOL XXVII NO. 130

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

consecutive vetoes of congressionally passed
legislation to force strip . teglslatloo ; his refusal to
miners to reclaim land, reduce
etpensive,
amendments to weaken the environmentally dameglng,
proposed clean air act lhla pork barrel water resource
year, and "his failure to trojects; ... and hla refusal to
troducnn energy pollry· that adequately staff or fund
is clean, safe and emphasizes national parks - a policy
oonserv~tloo ,"
reversed, again, In the Jast
The coalition abo criticized two monlhs."
Fo~d for ''his opposition to
Earlier this year', the
toxic substances control nonpartisan League of ·
legislatioo which he reversed Conservation Voters, a
recently
to
sign
(Contlnu~ on page 18)

entine

WEDNESDAY,OCTOBER 20, 1976

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS
Mra. G•n.et WUitamaon

Ford warns
Americans
By WE'! LEY G. PIPPERT · in their third nati onally

DR.FAVERMAN

Dr. Faverman
.,

WASHING;TON (UP!) President Ford warned Tues·
day that ~ Jimmy Carter
wins lhe White HoiiSe, a
"galaxy" of Democratic
social programs will sap the
nation's defense budget and
drive America to her knees at
the world bargaining !able.
Ford sharply attacked his•
Democratic opponent In a
Rose Garden speech to war
veterans Tuesday. Today, he
set a news conference for 2
p.m.' EDT In the East Room
and television network~ were
lnvilE!d to broadcast it live.
Ford and Carter will meet

televised
debate
at
.WUliamsburrg, Va ,, Friday
night and Ford will then
begin intensive, crosscountry campaigning in the
last 10 days before the
election.
"We must not slash billions
and billions of dollars from
the defenSI) budget In order to
pay for a galaxy of new social
programs," Ford told
AMVE'f leaders in the Rose
Garde1; Tuesday. He did not
mention Carter by name, but
obviously referred to the
Democrat's proposals to
cut more than $5 billion from
the defense budget.

Garnet WillUimson fared
well in a man's world ·
By Bob Hoentch
RUTLAND - "! could have
been dead along time ago but
I'm too bullheaded."
Speaking was .Mrs. Gamet
Williamson, 85-year-old
Rutland businesswoman, wh~
Tuesday afternoon announced her retirement.
Mrs. Williamson undoubt·
edly can only smile at lhe
women's lib movement. After
all, in her business enterprise
she has been faring well in a
man's world for many yea~.
She and her late husband,
CHARLE5 MARSHALL
Lorain, began a tractor sales
Charles Keith Marshall,
service business In
son of Mr. and Mrs. and
Rutland in 1936. She worked
Charles Marshall, beside her husband and after
Hemlock Grove, bas been his dealh In 1953 successfully
awarded tbe ,Emlly C. managed the firm .
Murphy Scholarship at
Mrs .. Williamson drove her
Ohio University for the · tractors
wiUfully
In
1976-77 academi c year. · demonstrating them over,the
Marshall, a graduate of
She learned about
Meigs Hlgb School, is years.
parts and talks Intelligently
majoring til mathematics.
with any man about the needs

acting dean of Ohio
University's College of
Osteopathic Medicine, will
address t~e Midaleport·
Pomeroy llotary Club Friday '
evening· atHeath United
Methodlat Church.
Rotarian Carl benison,
program chairman, said Dr.
Faverman will speak on a
topic of his choice which, In
all liklihood, will be the
p,rospects of OU's new
College of Osteopathic
Medicine which opened this
autumn.
The speaker came to
Athens from a four-year stint
as assistant to the dean and
associate professor of
Michigan State University
College of Osteopathic
.Medicine.
.
Prior to employment as an
administrator at the college
level bi.ginning in ·1966, Dr.
Faverman galped IntemaUonal recogilltion as a
professor of History and
Political Science at several

University. His specialty has
By NICHOLAS DDANll.OFF
WASHINGTON (UP!) been the Soviet Union and ihe BY MIKE FEINSll.BER
Carter blamed President
Mid East. . His Educational
PLAINS, Ga. (UP!) - Ford for a sluggish. recoverY .The , U.nited States and
TV document a r i e s, Jimmy Carter says the act- from a devastating recession. Panama are resWllinl! their
Upon arrival at Laguardia · Ia lks on a new Panama Canal
"Mesopotamia First Light", ministration is using Richard
"Who Are They? ," "Ar· : Nixon holdover appointees to Airport in New York, he said: ir '•ty despite charges by
.•aid Reagan the White
''President Ford· still says
chaeology and the Bible,'' carry out Herbert HQOver's
that we're In a pause (in the House · was negotiating the
and "Ralph, A Critique," economic policies.
were seen nationally In lhe
In the last two weeks of the recovery). He stiJI has the surrender of the historic
mid-sixties.
presidential campaign, the same basic cabinet members waterway.
Ambassador Ellsworth
Dr. Faverman has had Democratic nominee is who were there with his
Bunker
flew to Panama
extensive experience, too, as , hitting the economic issue predecessor. Nixon leaders
Tuesday
and
plaMed to meet
are still running the Defense
a fiscal expert. From 1968 hard.
with
Panamanian
negotiators
Department,
the
State
through 1971 he operated a
"We jUst can't stand four
legislative fiscal agency in more years of strang- Department, lhe Commerce on Contadora Island in the
which he was a iiscal con- ulation,' ' he is telling Department, the T r e a s u r y Gqlf of Panama today. The
Department. They're making last previous session of the
sultan!, the chief ol an . all who wiltltstepto him.
Educational Analysis Unit
Everywhere he went the basic decisions of this IB lks was held in May.
Secretary of State Henry
respqnsible lor budget and Tuesday with that message, administration. Until we
resource allocation analysis he found big, friendlY crowds. have a real change in the Kissinger .arranged with
for educational areas of He shook hands so often and WhiteHouse, we'll never tum Panamanian Foreign
colleges, universities, and . so hard that by the end of the this country around and get it Minister Aquilino Boyd
jqnior colleges, In capital . day his hands were bruised moving economically again." earlier this month at the
Earlier, In Winston-salem, United Nations to start up the
outlay program analysis, and and cut
N.C.,
at a rally where as talks again.
elementary and secondary
Carter is spending today
With the collapse of
many
people waited outside
education.
boning up for television
Dr. Faverman will he a debate No. 3 against the hall as were able to jam
guest for dinner st..1rting at 6 President Ford on Friday. their way inside, he said :
"In the last eight years,
p.m. His talk will begin about
Carter
seized
upon
8:30 p.m.
Tuesday's report from we've become a welfare state
Washington - showing that rather than a work state ...
i':'&gt;.'~'*~l:&gt;.!:::..'m'.&lt;.~:=~:~~::::::::::::.:~:;:;:;:;:;:;i:~;:;.&lt;:;;!8*.::::~';!::::,:::::::::.::&lt;::::::::,&gt;.....~ economic growth slowed we've
seen
working
By ROYAL BRIGIITBIIL
again In the third quarter of Americans betrayed."
DESI'REHAN, La. (UP!)
And,
finally,
at
a
$500-athe year - as "proof that the
A ferry boat carrying
economy is in a downturn." plate Democratic dinner in
commuters
to work colllded
informed sources in the M;anha\lan:
with
a
cargo
slJip today and
By United Presslntemalional
"The Republicans had
Carter camp say he may be
C
A
psized
in
the
Mississippi
MIAMI - A CRAN~ TODAY BEGAN unloading an urged by his economic eight years to solve the
estimated 82 tons of mariJ4ana selzl!d,aboard the Panamanian adviser's to propose a problems of this nation, but l:. ver, tossing passengers
freighter Don Emilio. The bales of marijuana - lhe largest substantial tax cut as a they failed. I don't doubtlhey into the waier and trapping
seizure in history - will be burned. The 275-foot ship, "quick stimulative" to the tried, They put forward the
.
.l.
registered in Panama, WBll towed into the Miam! Coast Guard economy. A few liberal economic policies in which .
base Tuesday by lhe cutter Sherman and placed under heavy economists have already they believe. They just didn't
guaro.
·
called for further fiscal work. They didn't work under
Johli Van Diver, regional director of the Drug stbnulus to keep lhe recovery Herbert Hoover, they didn't
Enforcelftent Administration, said: "We're gonna have one from petering out.
work under Richard Nixon
heck of a bonfire," he said. The estimate on the amount of
and
lhey are not working
"It's Just obvious the
inar:IJuana placed it at just above the largest tx'evious seizure recovery has flattened out,'' under Gerald Ford."
-80 tons confiscated last February at Dibuya, Colombia.
one Carter adviser said.
From Mlami Beach to HarWASHINGTON- JIMMY CARTER'S FORCES and the lem, · in . a long day's
. Ford Adminlal.ratioo have expressed sharply different views campaigning Tuesday,
Plans for lhe "School of
on lhe government's latest economic IJ'OWih report. Carter's
·Screams" under the direction
headquarters said tjte statistics released Tuesday 7'- showing
of Jim Sheets st)Onaored by
. the Grou National Product growing alan aMual rate of only 4
ATHENS UP! - Spiro the March of Dimes were
per cent in the third quarter- ''put to rest Mr.'Ford's claims
Agnew received a hero's aMounc~ today. The event
that a strong economic recovery Ia•under way."
.
welcome when he visited will be Oct. 31 In the old
· . President Ford, however, !3Bid the figures on overall
Two defendants were fined Greece as vice president In senior high building tn
. production ''mask.some promising news." Ford said arise in
final sales to consumers, Investors and governmenll indicates and lhree others foi'letted 1972, but now a member of ttie Pomeroy.
"a greater willingness to spend on the part of consumers and . bonds In lhe court of Mid- Greek opposition is asking . Costume prlzes will be
dleport Mayor Fred Hollman .. that he be barred from the given In three ca~gorles,
~essmen and ... growing confidence in the.durability of the
Tuesday night.
country BB an undesirable ugliest, prettiest and most
recovery.
original In the following age
Roger L. Shamblin, 24, alien.
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO STATE COuNCIL Of Middleport, forfeited his $300
Opposition deputy C' n· groups, pre-school, kinlllMPAC, political action arm of the United Mine Workers of bond posted on charges o! slantine Komiotakls . sub· dergarten through · grade
· AmeriCI!,has announced its support for state Issues 4, 5, 6 and driving while Intoxicated; rnitted a blll to parliament lhree, fourlh grade through
· 7 on lhe Nov. %ballot.
$150 posted for leaving .the Tuesday to declare Agnew, six, seventh grade lhrough 12
Ray Howard, state chairman from Perry County, said scene of an accident, and SSO the son of a Greek emigrant, and adulll.
Tuesday "lhe lime hBB come for the (leO(!Ie of Ohio to stand ~P resisting .arrest (total $500); persona non grata.
All w~o wear costilmes wlll
for consumers and safe, economical en~rgy sOurces United Harold Scarberry, i8, Mason,
Komlotakls asked that receive a free game ticket.
MJne Workers feel very strongly that a 'jres' vote on these !orfeited a . $25 bond · for Agnew be barred from The school wltl be open that
Issues represents the common sense 'approach to the very ruMillli a stop sign, and June Greece " because . hls Sunday from 5:30 to .10 p.m.
basic problems facing Ohioans across the state," Howard said. A. Qullen, 47, Addison, for· presence Is a provocation to where for $1 rooms will !;c
felted her $27 bond posted for public sentiment and an converted Into chamber of
OOLUMBUS - PRESIDENT FORD AND HIS WIFE speedillg.
insult to Greek pride."
horrors activities. ~~ 7 p.m.
Betty will be campaigning in Ohio this week and next. Ford is
Fined were Brownie
He uld Agnew had en- judging of costumil.g will be
planning on vlalts to Cincinnati and Cleveland and possibly Stewart, Middleport, $50 and couraged the former military held. There will be no charge
olher Ohio clUes Qct.. :Ill, according to Keith McNamara, co•ts,
destruction
of junta in Greece and was now to attend in costume. The
cbakman of lhe, President Ford Committee in Ohio.
property, and Barbara J. involved. with "colonialist only charge Is 'for the
For~ pJana to attend a noontime rally at Fountain Square Warder., 26, Middleport, $10 capita~sts trying to exploit chamber of hOrrors ac·. \&gt;•
(Continued on page 16)
and costs, speeding.
lhe toil of the Greek people." tivilitf.

Reagan's challenge to
President Ford In the
primaries, the admlnistraUon· has felt 'less Inhibited
about resuming the talks
dUring the presidential
campaign at home.
But Democratic nominee
Jimmy !!:arter bas sowlded
soine 'negative notes about
negotiating lhe transfer of the
Panama Canal Zone to Pana·
ma, or paesing control of the
50-mile
waterway
to
Panamanian authorities. ·
In his foreign policy debate
with Ford Oct. 6, Carter said,
"I would not relinquish
practical control of the
Panama Canal Zone any time
In the foreseeable future."
Bunker has acknowledg~
to the House Panama Canal
sUbcommltt.ee that the
administration intends to
tum over the Canal Zone and

.

SOCIETY TO MEET

. Melge ·County Pioneer and
Historical Society will be held
Sunday,Nov. 7 at 2:30p.m. at
the Meigs County Museum.
officials.
Film
on
historical
Issue 3 abo repeals a Williamsburg will be Shown.
· lecllon of the Constltllllon
permitting the governor to
declare election results
official If there Ia no aesslon
of the General AssemblY In
January. . ·
HAD SURGERY
The current Constitution,
Richard Freeman,
11 amended In 1972, requires Pomeroy, w!derwent open
lr• leglalature to meet ever, heart surgery at Univerllty
Jb,luary, 10 the language i. Hospital, Columbus. Ills
viewed as unnecessary.
room number is 803.

BriefsJ

head

Agnew welcorrie of

Air pockets seal in
body warmth and keep out
the cold. 75% cotton and '
25% polyester. shrinkresistant, and is easily
washed. Heat-resistant
e lastic waist band and the
ribbed cuffs keep that neat
fit. Sizes: S. M. t. XL .
Stay in Hanes and stay warm.

Two defendants now worn .out

fined by court

I
'~

•

HANES
. UNDERWEAR
Mens a,nd boys' dept.,
1st floor.

IN POMEROY

-

during other hours.
The alert, spry business
woman will observe her 811111
birthday on Friday. Birthday s are big occasions for
her, howev er, and arc
marked by 1nany "dlMers
out." Alrendy she has been a
guest at two, and thore. aro
three more Invito Uons on
hand.
No doubt Mrs. Williamson
Is going to miss sorvhig her
eommunlty, und by the SIJIRC
token, the community will
miss her.

Saile SeaSOD
•

b• l

lS 0 JeC

O{ CUrfeWS

Sanity through
the
Halloween season Is the Intended purpose of curfews In
Meigs County munici palities
according to Ca rl Hysell ,
evenlllally the Canal itself to t·ounty juvenile probation
Panama.
officer,
Sources report under
Hysell said in a statement
current formulations l&lt;?daY most communities in
Panama could get full C9Dtrol the county have curfew hours
of the zone three years after established whereby peraons
rallflcat.lon of a new trelity. under th.,ge of 18 must lie off
Full control of lhe canal the streets beforo and after a
would p811 to Panama over a certain hour. He continued:
a much longer period _ 25 to
"The purpose of a curfew Ia
50 years. .
to help pollee minimize acts
Conservatives challenge of vandnllsm Qr other
the wisdom of doing this delinquent ~ cts, during the
under any circumstances. hourslh which such acts upon
They
also
say
the others are at Its height. Most
adminlatratlon has no right to youths unlikely to be Involved
dispose of the zone or canal in such behavior are usually
without the specl!ic awroval off the sireet at a rensonoble
of CoRIJ'esS.
hour. Therefore, the curlew Is
The administration, on ·the .. primarily for youths who tend
other, considers II essential . to sta~ out late and are
for U.S. relations with susceptible lo the opportunity
Panama, .and with other to violate laws.
Latin American countries, to
"The curfew Is abo to
replace the "i.rllperlallstlc" protect mont youths from
treaty o! 11100.
·
being victims of crimes by
making
sure they are not
.
available to the criminal
element. . The curfew also
helps parents who are unable
to properly supervise their
·
minutes to rescue survivors. children.
"During
the
Halloween
Workers at the scene said the
bodies of three men and a season, some curfews have
women were pulled from the temporarily been set up t~ an
earlier hour and without a
river.
.
Sheriff's deputies in the doubt will be enforced In
New Orleans suburb of every Instance. Therefore,
Jefferson Parish statlooed cooperation of youths In'
boats In the river to pick up particular would make for a
survivors, bodies or debris safe, good Halloween season
floating downriver from the as well as the year around,"
Hysell said.
collision. ·
The river was cloaed to all
shipping in lhe area of the
collision.
The George Prince Is a 40car ferry which carries
commuters between the
small towns of Destrehan and
Luling . Many reslden\11 of the
area work In lhe numerous
Vernal G. illffe, Jr .,
refineries and chemical
speaker
of the Ohio Houae of
plants along the river.
Representatives, will be
gu"" speaker at a pubUc
potluck dinner to be ltaged by
Meigs County Democra\11 at
the D«nocratlc Headquar·
ters, E. Main St. at 5:30 p.m.
Friday.
Present In addition to the
·speaker of the bouse wl1l be
Rep. Ron James and other
dignitaries; Chester Wells,
party central committee
chalnnan uld.
lhe area ollhe old Portland · A· regular meeting of !helocks and dam which has Democrat Central Com·
been dismantled since mlttee will be held at 7:1!0
opening of the modern locks p.m. Th~nday •t the
and dam at Reedsville in lhe Pomeroy headquartets.
late 60s. Two dwellings
remain on lhe property, but
DEER KR.LED
are "pretty well stripped"
The.Meigs County Sheriff's
according to local sources.
'l'llese same sources had no Dept. uld a deer was killed
knowledge of what use the Tuesday at 9 p.m. on SR l:M,
state might hope to make of near Portland Park when II
the real estate. Much .of the 15 -ran into the path o! a car
acres Ia poor laying hind, it driven by Gary D. Black, Rt.
1, Portland.
,•
was learned. r
,)

Ferry, freight~llide

Sheets Will

The annual meeting of the

to get his tractor ruMing
again.
After a long career, Mrs.
Williamson Is wrapping It all
up on Nov. I . The tractor
parts sbc ha.s on hand will be
accepted by the Allis
Chalmers firm . Mqst people
would have the parts pac~ed
and . ready lor return ,
However, Mrs. Williamson js
waiting .until the last minute
in order ·to bontlnue to serve
aU of her customers until the
closing.
An exampl~ of true grit,
Mrs. Williamson has had
two or three heart
attacks, a stroke and
a battle with cancer.
However, after each encounter she returned to the
operation of her business.
Mrs. Williams Is extending
a "b.lg thanks" to ' the
customers she has served
from Ba.m. to~ p.m., six days
a week, and many times

Carter attacks
t~~~~s~.•!.~~:! Ford policies Panama talks reopened

· ~News . .· .in

and boys'

$295

Co_nservationists rake ·Ford record

Hospital News

Be sure to see all the .
other styles of men's

--.A t)tft0

MI~R~

(Qintlnuecl fiUD .... 1)

~•

News
••
in
Briefs
(011111• J4'l fNm ....

aureau ·

Pomeroy

11

Dr. Niehm

•

SCh00I

screams

olhers oo board.
Officials confirmed at least
four dead, but said dealh toll
would probablY rise.
"We doo't know how many
there were on board/' a Coast
Guard spokesman in New
Orleans said.
"There were peilple in the
water. Some were picked up
by boaters in the area. We
have a helicopter en route to
pick up divers," he said.
The collisioo between the
George Prince and the cargo
vessel occurred before dawn
about 30 mUes upriver from
New Orleans. It left the ferry
floating bottom up and
aimlessly adrl(,!' in the river
current.
Dozens of . small boats
arrived on lh~ scene wilhln

Speaker Riffe
coming here
for dinner

·Meigs dam ·s ite
•
gtven
to. state
, Fifteen acrl!ll surrounding
Lock and Dam No. 21 in
. Meigs County was one of
seven parcels of federal land
President Ford tranliferred
Tuesday to state and local
~cvcrnments, the United
Press reported today. .
Tlie
Meigs · County
property, ' valued at $23,000
was turned over to the state.
The total worth of the seven
tranaferred parcels was $2.1
million. · ·
The prof!,"rtY Is locatk in

,1

•

�2- The Daily SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Oct.~. 1976

.

they have as much willpower
as I have they wm be able to
quit too.
I am sending you The
Health Letter number U
Tobacco: Cigarettes, Cigars:
Pipes. You can share it with
your friends who need to be
motivated. Others who want
this Issue can send 50 cents
with a long, stamped, selladdressed envelope for it.
Just send your hitter to me In
care of this paper, P. 0. Box
, 1&gt;51, Radio City Station', New
York, NY 10019.
·
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
granddaughter wants to be a
high jWJ1per. A teacher told
her to 11ft weights to develop
her leg muscles. I think this

DR. LAMB

The doctor quit while still ahead
reason alone people wUI tum several years. Then I smoked
you off! Unfortunately 1 know a small amount interlillttentthis is true as I ·have heard ly for a few years but never a
man)'- people say so.
great amount again. In
DEAR READER - Don't reeent years I have not even
assume too much. , What resorted tQ the occasional
makes you think I have never puff on a special occasion.
smoked1 In fact 1 may have They make me ill now, as
put you In the shade. At' one smoking does most people,
time 1 smoked more than two and that has pretty well
pa cb a day. 1 quit the first elim inated my desire to
time In 1952 and stayed off lor smoke permanently.

By La'fi'OD&lt;e E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB -:- I
know of your concern over
people who pe rsist In
si)loklng eigarettes. Now that
I. have· finally quit I really
understand this concern.
However, you never
smoked. How can you tell
someone. who has smoked
how to stop when you don't
know what it's like' For this

Yes, I know all about
quitting smoking, as ·Mark
Twain said, l have done it
many times. And J" quit cold
turkey for more than ~lx
years .the first time. Go tell
those friends of yours who
have iuned me Q'ut that they
had better tune me hack In
slnce · 1 am about as experienced on smoking as one
can get on a personal basis. U

.
would dev,elop llllllightly ann forearm. For high jU!Jiping to strengthen the calf
mUICles that would ruin her you need to develop the legs. musclea. llepeJied standing
loob. I aay ridlnC a bicycle Bicycling Ill a good way to do on the toes, one loot at a time,
uphill would strengthen the H. Modified knee bends are of will enable you to work each
legs without straining the some belp. The exercise is calf muscle. RUMJng and
arms. Whet do you say?
done by kneeling on one knee, cyc11ng will then complete the
DEAR READER - You with the other knee bent. picture for development of
train the muacles you are Then you raise up as from a leg muscles.
1· must disagr~ with you
going to use. You can develop normal knee bend. The adabout
the _unsightly arm
leg !llUBCie by lifting w~gbts vantage of the one knee
muscles.
Average welghta
In exercises that involve the position Is !hal It prevents
used
lor
the
arms wlll not
leg muscles In the llfts. Many "over-bending" of the knee
need
to
cause
big bulging ·
football players develop leg more than about 00 degrees.
muscll!a.
They
can
be used to
muscles using complex Obviously you alternate
firm
and
strengthen
well
machines that allow you to which knee you are kneeling
proportioned
mul!Cies.
Ia
· exercise the muscles against . on to · exercise both thlgllB,
· resistance. .
. ·one at a time.
· In how you do It that· makea
Obviolisly Hyou were going
Then you can do exercises the difference.
to play tennla you mlghl need
to develop the milscles in
Letters of oplalon are wtlcoll)ed. Tbey ohwld be 1
your shoulder, arm and
less than 300 wordlloo~ (or~ subjoctlo re_..e\1011 by 1
the editor) allll mut be algned with tbe olpee'• ad· I
dress. Names may be wtthbeld upon pablleaUon. I
However, oo requ01t, aam01 wlll ~ disclosed. Leiter. :
ahould be In good taste, addrt!!lslng llsu01, not per· 1
sonalltleo.
1
I
I

n au

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

I
l

I
I

I

Party label isn 't enough ·

Prescriptien Drug Store

•

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No. 62JC

ASCRIPTIN

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1

Invites county to move ahead
Dear Sir:
1 wish to take this opportunity to offer a few comments on
the most !rnportant olfke in our county, the Board of County
Comlillss1oners, The laws of Qhlo give it many broad powers .
· such as ;_ complete conll'ol of all our county owned property,
many miles of our county roads, all county planning for the
future, appropriation of our monies, supervision of a large
group of employees, and many, many more necessary
functions of government.
All of thi$ requires knowledge and leadership.
F~r . more than the past 10 years every CO\IIIIY
cormruss1oner has reached the office by appointment of the
Repub~can c_onll'olled committee membership.
ThiS cha!" was broken in the June Primary when the
fourth corrurussioner's appointment was soundly defeated by
RepubUcan voters.
·
.
In the coming election (Nov. 2) we have four candidates
lor the two offices on this very Important commission and ram
not acquainted with all of them.
I wish to suggest ~at a public meeting he arranged before
elertion by a non~artisa~- gr~up and these four ·candidates
appear I? state their qualifications, education, experience and
leadership to start out county forward.
We are not keeping pace with our neighboring counties. 1
feel nothing but the best should be the result of Meigs County
voters on November 2. - Evelyn Thomas, Middleport.

Record absentee voting
expected by October 30

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~~o~oo

Nelson's Reg. SOc

Nelson's Reg. 52.09

or Nasal Mist

DRISTAN

Relieves nasal congestion
Relieves bod_y aches and reduces
feaver.
Quiets cough.

Cough Medication
Reg. or Menthol
3 oz.

Dear ~ir :
_
As time approaches to choose those in charge of our
government that we the people of Meigs County adhere to, we
lind many reasons to doubt. We are not so sure that some of the
candidates elected to or running for office, are capable of
handllng the johs they are or will he entrusted with.
We are even more convinced by the state of the govern_mentatalllevelsofthe importance of choosing the man who Is .
quaUHed for office Instead of by party preference. Whether
a person is·Democratic or Republican, black or white, rich or
poor, seems to makelltUe difference when that individual can
provide intelligence and vigor to the issues that will help
guarantee our rights as provided for by the u.s. Constitution
and the Bill of Rights. Those rights insure our freedom, one of
which Is the right to vote.
We urge you to choose those who can give Meigs County a
new birth and save those who have worked honestly, honorably
arid respectably for you, the people.
·
In Meigs County we are labelled ''losers" because when
the rest of our state is going forward in education, In growth
and in search, Meigs County has stood still. We have nobody to
blame but ourselves. We were satisfied to sit back and let a few
set up a power block which is strangling Meigs County.
It Is now, only now, that our homes al)d schools and our
-children's rights are [&lt;,ing violated that lve are forced into
reacUng; but react we will.
· Before 1976 the city" taxation without representation" was
America's blood bullder; in 1976 in Mason County the people .
are tired, worn and worrie&lt;j so much that we again are crying
taxation without representation."
This is a tlmelo work, this is a time to act . And this is a
time lo pray that we haven't S3t on our seats so 10ng we have
forgotten how to walk.
This must be the year of government by the people lor the
people.
VOTE NOVEMBER 2ND, 1976
- Rita-Maurt, Box 59 Rt.l , Langsville, Ohio 45141 .

59~
Expires 10-24-76
· Good At Nelson's· Only

--------

'With the Saturday, Oct. 30,
noon deadline for applying
for absentee ballots less than
two weeks away. secretary of
State Ted W. Brown said
today a reeord absentee voter
turnout is in the offing.
•
Chief elections officer
Brown said preliminary
reports from metropolitan,
suburban, and rural county
boards of elections Indicate
absentee voter appUcations
are up In some cases 40
percent from four years ag0.
Ted Brown Is urging all
voters who wish to vote.absentee to contact their local
boards of elections for an
application as soon as
possible.
There are eight reasons for
which a person may vote
absentee, they are: absence
from the county on Election
Day, hospitalization on
Electloo Day, un!oreseeable
accident . or
medical
emergency , physical
disability or personal Illness,
in jail, either for a
misdemeanor or awaiting
trial, religious observances
on Election Day, being an
election official, being 62
years of age or older.
Secretary Brown said
recent revlllions In the law;
most notably ellminatloo of
the notarization and mec)lcal
certlllcallon requirements,
have made It more con·
venlent for elderly and
disabled people lo vote a~

sen tee.
Secretary Brown Is
predicting that 4 220 530
Ohioans will vote on Tuesday,
Nov. 2, 1976. This will be a
record voter turnout.
ROYAL BmTHDAY
TOKYO (UP!.) - Japanese
Crown Princess Michiko
celebrated her 42nd biflhday
Tuesday.
Mlchiko, Japan's first commoner princess and mother
of three, said her old
classmates preferred not to
:see the story of her birthday
m newspapers because their
ages also would become
public.

...

rHI DAM. 'I' SIHJINit
DIVOfiD TO JHt
fNtfltfSTOI
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,tHUJIJU. TANNIHfLl
...r. lll'.

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Sport Parade
•

By MILTON RICHMAI'i
UPI Sports Editor
.,
.
NEW YORK (UPI)- You know how hallplayers .are, one of
them will suddenly come up with the crazy idea he'd like to
w_ear a big zero on the -back of his ~niform , simply to be
different, and nght away .Omebody else on the same team
asks for doublezero so he can be a little more different. ·
That actually happened with the Cincinnati Reds.
Bobby Tolan, no longer with the club was the one who
wanted the zero.
.
'
As soon as he heard that, Danny Driessen didn't see why he
couldn'-t have double zero.
Somehow_, w~rd ol _the two requests reached Sparky Ander- ·
~n. th_
e Cincmnati manager, who killed the whole thing
lllllllediately, but not before he had a little heart-to-lleart talk
with Driessen. He asked Driessen, who was still a rookie, why he wanted to
change from hiS regular nwnher, which is 22.
Well, you know, he hM heard Tolan ask to have his number
swi~ed and he didn't see anything wrong with doing th~ same
thmg.
"You'd bet~er ~tick 11ith 22," Anderson told him. "Check up
on 11 and you ll fmd a lot of good baUplayei's wore tbat same
number. Besides, you haven 't been doing too badly with it,
have you'!" ·
·
Driessen, who hjt .301 his first season, ~d to adl)lit he wasn 't
doing badly at all with that 22 on his back- and that ended the.
whole thing right there.
The Incident merely serves to illustrate two points. Sparky
Anderson runs a tight ship and Danny Driessen has matured
considerably In three years.
T_he Reds are only a col!ple of heartbeats away now from
their second consecutive world championship. They lead the
Yankees in the World Series, three games to love, and the
windup has now become a foregone conclusion. As Tony Perez
S3ys, without really,poppingoff, "if we don't win it tonight, it'll
be the neil night, but !know we're gonna win." .
· Everybody ·else knows the sam.e thing.
It isn't only that the Reds have the power, the speed and the
defense , they also have the .necessary discipline that gQes
hand~n-lland with winning another championship.
Sparky Apderson maintains that discipline without being a
martinet or without hitting any of his players over the head
with it.
--Danny Driessen is a perfect case in point.
Like any other ball player, he ha tes sitUng on the bench
watching someone else play his position when in his heart he
honestly feels he can play as well or better . But if he takes a
look at the lineup Sparky Anderson makes out each day and
sees his name isn 't on it, he accepts it arid doesn't complain.
·In Danny Driessen's case, tha t's hard lor him to do. He has
proven he can play regularly and hit , yet he has been a platoon
player at first base and in the outfield for the Reds the past two
years. II you look at his'statistics this year they show he played
In 98games, but he was-a pinch hitter in 34 of them and started
In only 60.
"To show you the kind of person he is, he has been doing this
for. two years now and has never bad-mouthed me once," says
Sparky Anderson , who has a tremendous regard for his 25-year-old lelt-llanded hitter from Hilton Head, S.C.
' · For the first time ever, the designated hitter, employed
exclusively in the American League until now, is being used by
hoth teams in this World Series. Sparky Anderson hates the
concept of a designated hitter - "1 think the idea stinks" - but
when he had to use one In this Series, he chose Driessen. All
Driessen did Tuesday night was deliver a home run, double
and asingle In a 6-2victory which in all likelihood may turn out
to be the crusher as far as the Yankees are concerned .
Wl)en Danny Driessen first came up to the Reds, Sparky
Anderson called him "Mumbles" because of his manner of
speaking. Now the Reds refer to him as "Cobra" because of
the way he crouches up at the plate.
No matter what anyone calls him, Danny Driessen is an
exc"''tional ballplayer .. He has .ability and he has brains .
Rather than sit around doing nothing on the bench while
waiting to come up to hat as a designated hitter, he goes into
the clubhouse, watches the opposing pitcher on TV and studies
everything he can about him.
· After Tuesday night 's performance, someone. wanted to
know how Danny Driessen felt about heing a designated hitter.
"H every night was like tonight," he laughed, "I'd like it

Machine mauls NY,
eve rything except
· By FRED DOWN
Anderson refused to predict in
UPI Sports Writer
a sweep but made it clear he pitching. The Reds have run
NEW'fORK (UPI \ - The believes the R~s already riot on the bases, their top-toCincinnati Reds , called "an rate recognition as one of bottom hitting strengths keep
alllime credit to baseball" by baseball's all -time great . conUnual pressure oo New.
Manager Sparky Anderson, teams.
.
York pitehers and they have
wlll shootlor a fourth straight "We've got to win four out made ·Ute plays In the field
victory over the New y_,rk of seven - that's the ground whereas the Yankees
Yankees Wednesday night - rules,'' said 'Anderson. "I haven' t.
weather. permitUng - and would like to win this series
A victory tonight, or in any
th·e first lour-game World here to show everybody how of th e 'four remaining
Series sweep since 1966.
good w ~ are.... This tesm Is scheduled games, would give
Leading three games to an all-time credit lo haseball. the Reds the distinction of
none aflj!rTuesdily night's ·!;-2 This team is going to [&lt;, being ·. ttie first National
viclory at Yankee Stadiwn, remembered for years to League team to win two
the
defending
world rome."
straight World Series since
ch"!"plons are sending Gary • Asked to comment on the 192!-22 New York Giants.
Nolan to the mound against Yankee manager Billy The Reds also could become
Ed Figueroa in the fourth Martin's stall!ment that the tl).e first (earn to win four .
game. Nol;m led the Reds' diffetence between the teams consecutive games in a Series
staff with 15 victories while so far as been that "the Reds' since the 1966 Baltimore OriFigueroa- was the leading bloopers drop In and ours oles. There will be eight cases
Yankee winner with 19 don 't,' ~ the courUy Anderson of champagne in the Reds'
regular-season wins.
replied : "Baseball is a game clubhouse with attendants
The National Weather that Involves a lot of luck. having orders "to ice 'em uP
Service reported that there Froin the Yankees' point of. if things look good In the
was an 80 per cent chance of view, _t _g~ess we have he en eighth Inning."
rain
but
Baseball lucky."
_Tuesday night the Reds
Commissioner Bowiel&lt;:uhn
Actually, however ,luck has virtually laughed in the faces
will certainly wait until the been a very small factor in of the whole American
las t possible moment to the Series. The Yankees League when designate d
postpone the game. ·
simply appear out-matched hitter Qan Driessen had a

fine."

.

I

Big show could
close tonight
By CHRIS SCHERF
' UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) ~ II the
New York Yankees don't get
their act together tonight, (He
show closes .
Ed Figueroa carries the
burden to the mound for the
Yankees tonight, knowing his
next assignment will be five
months from npw, if New

York fails · to thwart a
Cineinnati Reds' sweep of the
World Series.
"! like to pitch in those
kinds -of games," Figueroa
said, after drawing the
starting assignment lor
Game No. 4 In 'the World
Series. "It makes. me
,concentrate more, bear down
more on every pit~h."
Figueroa started the final
game of the American
. League championship series
last Thursday and pitched
creditably, alth~ugh . the
Yankees needed a ninthInning · home run by Chris
Chambliss to win · the
pennant.
. His start hinges upon the
weather, · with Ute forerast
calling for an 80 per cent
ehance of rain today and
tonight.
Despite falling behind~ to
Cincinnati, the Yankees seem
to have exJ)ected the Reds to
have been even better than
•th~y have shown so far .
"So far, they haven't hit the
ball ·real good," Fig~eroa
aald.
But he admitted their speed
and.daring on the base paths
can he just as fatal.
"Sometimes when you con~ centrale ojn the runners too

homer, double and single and
dro ve In one run. Driessen Ill
batting .455 as the Reds' DH
- more than 250 points better
than the Yankees' designated
hitters.
11
1 haven't changed my
mind about the designated
hitter," said Anderson ~Iter
the game. "The designated
hitter has no place in
baseball. I am more opposed
to It than ever .... Driessen Is
one of the very hest young
hitters In baseball. HI played
him regularly he would hit
.300 with 2:i homers and 1110
nms balled in ."

Driessen triggered the
Reds ' three -run second
inning with a single and
stolen base, homered in the
fourth, doubled In the sixth
and was purposely walked In
th e eighth for a :\-for-3 night
at the plate. George Foster
drove ln two runs with a
double and a single and Pete
Rose and JOhnny Bench also
had two hits each In the Reds'
13-hit attack.
Foster foll6wed Driessen
with a double off the right :·

field wall' to put the Reds
ahead, 1-1!, In the second
inning. He went to third oo an
infield . hit by Bench and
scored as Cesar Geronimo hit
Into a lorceout. 'Dave
Concepcion 's single delivered
the third.run of the inning.
Driessen's homer In the
fourth made It 4-1! [&lt;,fore the
Yankees scored a run off Pat
Zachry in the bottom of tho
fourth on O~ris Chambliss '
single, a walk nnd ru1othcr
siugle by Oscar Gamble. Jim
Mason's homer cut the Reds'
lead to 4-2 In the seventh but
Cincinnati iced the game with
two runs In the elgllth with

-

DH still a jokP.-e-,Sparky
By BIU MADDEN
Reds must now rate almost
Ul'l Sports Writer
as high .
NEW YORK (UP!) - The . For, although they are
Cincinnati Reds are almost leading the New York
as stubborn as they are · Yankees three games to none
proud.
in the World Series, the Reds
No one has ever questioned refuse to predict a sweep.
their team pride, but when it And · although
their
comes to stubbornness, the designated hitter, Danny

Driessen, is outhitUng their
Yankees' DH counterparts by
over . 200 points, the Reds
refuse to alter their vehement
opposition
to
the
cpntroversial American
League rule ,
The best example of that
was Reds manager Sparky
Anderson.
, "I'm now convinced more
than eyer the rule is a joke,"
~----- - -------, .
WHA Standings
said Anderson Tuesday night
Bv United Pre ss International
after DH Driessen rapped out
East
w.l. t . pts. gf ga three hits, Including a home
5 I 0 10 31 21 run, to key the Reds' 6-2
I
I Quebec
3 '1 2
8 ,jj ]d
nna t i
IC
_1•
I Cinci
victory which gave them a ~
Bir minghm 2 ~ 1
rL'f.::lnnffigS I India na pols 2 3 0 54 2614 3025 edge
in games over the.
Minneso ta
2 .5 0
4 24 28
New En g lnd 0 3 1 1 8 19 Yankees. "It's just not right
to have one of your big
West
w . 1. t . pts . gl ga bombers In there Instead of
Winnipeg
4 '2 0
8 26 14
NHL Sfllndings
SanO iego
3 1 1
7 25 20 the pitcher. The pitcher is
Oy United Pr ess International
Houston
3 1 1
7 16 12 stlll a part of this game."
Campbell Conference
EdmontO{t
3 I 0
6 IS 12
Patrick. Division
There's no question
Phoenix
J 2 0
6 2S 23
w. I. t . pts. gt ga Calgary
0 s 0
0 8 21 Driessen has established
N Y Islan der s 5 o 1 11 16 9
Tuesday's Re sult s •
himself-along with people like
At l ant a
5 2 o 10 25 26 New En g 4 Houst on 4, o t
N Y,Rangers d 3 D
B 31 29 Winnip eg 6 Ind ianapolis 1
Johnny Bench, Pete Rose,
Phi la
2 3 1
5 17 23 Qu ebec 6 Bir mingham 5, ot
Joe
Morgan and Tony Perez
Smyth e Division
ncinnat i 4 Min neso t a 2
w . ·L t . pts . gf ga Ci
as one of the Reds' "big
Edm ont on 5 Ptioenix -4 ·
St. louiS
4 2 0
8 23 23
(Only ga ri1es .sched ule dl
bombers.'' After Tuesday
Chica go
4 3 o. B 22 16
Wednesday's Games
Co lorado
'J 4 0
4 18 2 1
night's
3-for-3 effort, he was
(No games sch eduled )
Minnesota
1 5 0
2 16 28
Thursday '$ Games
batting
.4&gt;5 for the series.
Va ncouver
1 5 0
2 ]d 30 Houston at Birmin gham
"It's
still
hard not playing
Wales Conference
lndpls at San Di ego
Ngrris Division
all
the
time.''
Driessen said.
Qu e be ~: at Calgar y .
· w . l.'t. pts . gf ga
(Onl y g a m es sch edule d)
"Between at-bats I go Into the
Montreal
· 6 2 0 12 41 · 16
t..:os Angeles 3 2 ·2
B 28 18
clubhouse to ll'y and stay
P i tt sbur gh
2 4 0
.J 20 31
warm (it was 45 degrees at
D etroit
1 3 1
3 16 18
game time). I drank a lot of
Wa shington 1 4 1 ,3 14 31
Adams Division
coffee and Sparky said : I
w . l. t. pts . gf ga
WILSON
AWARD
coulddowhateverlwantedin
Bos tOn
5 2 0 10 35 25
Cleve land " 2 2 2
6 20 17
PASADENA, Calif, (UP!) there as long as I didn't drin
Buffalo
2 3 0
4 13 14 31
Former Air Force any liquor . But there wasn't
Adams Oivision
w. l. t. pts . gf ga Secretary Harold Brown, who any there anyway. It was
Bos ton
5 2 0 10 35 25 gu1ded development of the ' probably all_In the pressbox.''
Clovela nd
222 6 20
As for the possibility of
2 1 2
6 20 land 3 Ch ic ag detectton system that made
nqclear
arms
.
control
lour-game
sweep, Anderson
St. Lo uis 6 Boslon 5
agreements
practical,
has
and
his
ll'oops
were still being
(On ly games sc hed uled )
Wednesday 's Games
w'!" the $10,0011 Joseph 0. cautious - even though the
Lo s A ng at N Y Rangers
Wilson . Award
for Yankees have played !Ike a
Atlanta at Minn eso ta
P i tt sburgh at Toronto
achi~vement in international ooaten, out-dassed team.

:

Pro

:

the big blow a double by Joe
Morgan.
Zachry went 6 2-3 Innings .
and received credit for the ·
victory with Will McEnaney
finishing up. Dock Ellis,
tagged·for lour runs in 3 1-3
Innings, was the losing
pitcher for the Yankees.
Martin, always a battler, Ill
hoping for a mira cle
comeback but ho also Is a
realist and, when asked
whether a postpooemcnt of
the fourth game would help
the Yankees, he replied ; "A
postponement would have
helped us at the sw t of the
series ."

AT THE INN

insisted a II along the Series
will go seven games: ''We
still have only three. They
(the Yankees ) could come
back. It's possible."
The Reds will send their top
1976 winner, Gary Nolan,
against the Yankees' Ed
~'igueroa toady In an effort to
complete a rare four-game
series -sweep-'One Red who ls
confident the series Is near a
quick end is Pete Rose.
' "I'm confident about the
fourth game.'' said Rose.
1
'Gary Nolan is one fine·.
pitcher - I think he 's among
the five best In the National
League. This is the showcase
of baseball, you know, the
Fall Classic. I know the
commissioner and the fans
don't want to see a sweepthey like those exciting
seven-game jol.&gt;;. But I go out
and try to win every game !().

"TIGRESS"
2GALS
FROM PARKERSBURG

TONIGHT
8:30 TIL 12:30

TH~

MEIGS INN
992-3629
POMEROY

1."

WHO IS AGAINST
HIGHER TAXES?

MERRIL TRIPLETT

a

Vanco uve r at Buffalo
Boston at Colorado
(On ly games schedul ed )
Thursday's Games
Ch ic ago at Philad elphia
Tor onto at M ont reat
Los Ang at WashinQto n
St. Louis at Cleveland
I Only games. s-cheduled)

affatrs.

.

''It's possible,'1 said Joe

Dr. Brown, .now pres1dent
of Caltech, w~U be presented
, the award~ pa1d by the Xerox
Corp., Fr1day In Rochester,
N.Y., by the Association for
. the United Nations.

Morgan, "that we could
sweep this thing without
having really played one solid
game. But let's face it, if we
do 1 won'.t be mad "
Added Anderson ·who has

•

much, it takes away from
YOW' pitches."

However , the preva-lent
theme in the Yankees'
dressing room after their
third straight loss to the
National League champions
was that the Reds simply had
heen the luckier of the two
teams.
"!don't thirik their speed is ·
hurting us that much, it's just
their hits are falling In," said
Chambliss.
" It seems every time we hit
a ball hard, it's right at
somebody," Manager Billy
Martin said.
Only Ken Holtzman, who
was.named to start a possible
fifth game by Martin In a
display of bravado, was
discounting luck as a major
factor.
"! think the biggest difference so far is we've played
lousy," said Holtzman, who
had been a member of the
·Oakland A's' three-time
world champions. "That's the
·only way you can describe
it.' '

MAC HONOREES .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPl) Freshman linebacker Frank
Lewandoski of Nor thern
Illinois . and junior quarterback Andy Vetter of Ohio
University have been named
delonsive and offensive Mld- Ame~ican Conference
Players of the Week.

MERRIL TRIPLETT
.believes

SNOW*ICE*MUD

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PLY WINTER

• Annual auditS' on ADC claims will uncover the money
wasted in fraudulent claims.
·• Outdated state agencies can be abolished through
a program review.
• r!SC;al estimates should be made on all legislation·
to show how much the law will cost the people.

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Plus $4.00 for Whitewall

992-2848

A

FOR S~TATE
.
REPRESENT A TIVJ
A TAX SAVER,
NOT A TA·X WASTER

�2- The Daily SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Oct.~. 1976

.

they have as much willpower
as I have they wm be able to
quit too.
I am sending you The
Health Letter number U
Tobacco: Cigarettes, Cigars:
Pipes. You can share it with
your friends who need to be
motivated. Others who want
this Issue can send 50 cents
with a long, stamped, selladdressed envelope for it.
Just send your hitter to me In
care of this paper, P. 0. Box
, 1&gt;51, Radio City Station', New
York, NY 10019.
·
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
granddaughter wants to be a
high jWJ1per. A teacher told
her to 11ft weights to develop
her leg muscles. I think this

DR. LAMB

The doctor quit while still ahead
reason alone people wUI tum several years. Then I smoked
you off! Unfortunately 1 know a small amount interlillttentthis is true as I ·have heard ly for a few years but never a
man)'- people say so.
great amount again. In
DEAR READER - Don't reeent years I have not even
assume too much. , What resorted tQ the occasional
makes you think I have never puff on a special occasion.
smoked1 In fact 1 may have They make me ill now, as
put you In the shade. At' one smoking does most people,
time 1 smoked more than two and that has pretty well
pa cb a day. 1 quit the first elim inated my desire to
time In 1952 and stayed off lor smoke permanently.

By La'fi'OD&lt;e E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB -:- I
know of your concern over
people who pe rsist In
si)loklng eigarettes. Now that
I. have· finally quit I really
understand this concern.
However, you never
smoked. How can you tell
someone. who has smoked
how to stop when you don't
know what it's like' For this

Yes, I know all about
quitting smoking, as ·Mark
Twain said, l have done it
many times. And J" quit cold
turkey for more than ~lx
years .the first time. Go tell
those friends of yours who
have iuned me Q'ut that they
had better tune me hack In
slnce · 1 am about as experienced on smoking as one
can get on a personal basis. U

.
would dev,elop llllllightly ann forearm. For high jU!Jiping to strengthen the calf
mUICles that would ruin her you need to develop the legs. musclea. llepeJied standing
loob. I aay ridlnC a bicycle Bicycling Ill a good way to do on the toes, one loot at a time,
uphill would strengthen the H. Modified knee bends are of will enable you to work each
legs without straining the some belp. The exercise is calf muscle. RUMJng and
arms. Whet do you say?
done by kneeling on one knee, cyc11ng will then complete the
DEAR READER - You with the other knee bent. picture for development of
train the muacles you are Then you raise up as from a leg muscles.
1· must disagr~ with you
going to use. You can develop normal knee bend. The adabout
the _unsightly arm
leg !llUBCie by lifting w~gbts vantage of the one knee
muscles.
Average welghta
In exercises that involve the position Is !hal It prevents
used
lor
the
arms wlll not
leg muscles In the llfts. Many "over-bending" of the knee
need
to
cause
big bulging ·
football players develop leg more than about 00 degrees.
muscll!a.
They
can
be used to
muscles using complex Obviously you alternate
firm
and
strengthen
well
machines that allow you to which knee you are kneeling
proportioned
mul!Cies.
Ia
· exercise the muscles against . on to · exercise both thlgllB,
· resistance. .
. ·one at a time.
· In how you do It that· makea
Obviolisly Hyou were going
Then you can do exercises the difference.
to play tennla you mlghl need
to develop the milscles in
Letters of oplalon are wtlcoll)ed. Tbey ohwld be 1
your shoulder, arm and
less than 300 wordlloo~ (or~ subjoctlo re_..e\1011 by 1
the editor) allll mut be algned with tbe olpee'• ad· I
dress. Names may be wtthbeld upon pablleaUon. I
However, oo requ01t, aam01 wlll ~ disclosed. Leiter. :
ahould be In good taste, addrt!!lslng llsu01, not per· 1
sonalltleo.
1
I
I

n au

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

I
l

I
I

I

Party label isn 't enough ·

Prescriptien Drug Store

•

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CASCADE

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JS oz.

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Quart Bottle
No. 62JC

ASCRIPTIN

ALADDIN WORTH ALL

AID

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No . 3740

100 ct.

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Ice Cube Proof ·
Nelson's Rei) - S1.06

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. $1.89

tielson's

Virtually

JOY

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Suspension
12 oz.

LIQUID
22 ·oz.

69¢
Nelson's Reg. 83c

Rust Proof
Dent Proof
Chip Proof

'

Nelson's Reg . $5.64

CRICKET
LIGHTER

l

Nelson's Reg. S3.95

$1.44

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69¢

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ANACIN
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24 ct.

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's Reg. esc

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Nelson's Reg. $2.99

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32 oz.

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Nelson's Reg. _7_7c

1

Invites county to move ahead
Dear Sir:
1 wish to take this opportunity to offer a few comments on
the most !rnportant olfke in our county, the Board of County
Comlillss1oners, The laws of Qhlo give it many broad powers .
· such as ;_ complete conll'ol of all our county owned property,
many miles of our county roads, all county planning for the
future, appropriation of our monies, supervision of a large
group of employees, and many, many more necessary
functions of government.
All of thi$ requires knowledge and leadership.
F~r . more than the past 10 years every CO\IIIIY
cormruss1oner has reached the office by appointment of the
Repub~can c_onll'olled committee membership.
ThiS cha!" was broken in the June Primary when the
fourth corrurussioner's appointment was soundly defeated by
RepubUcan voters.
·
.
In the coming election (Nov. 2) we have four candidates
lor the two offices on this very Important commission and ram
not acquainted with all of them.
I wish to suggest ~at a public meeting he arranged before
elertion by a non~artisa~- gr~up and these four ·candidates
appear I? state their qualifications, education, experience and
leadership to start out county forward.
We are not keeping pace with our neighboring counties. 1
feel nothing but the best should be the result of Meigs County
voters on November 2. - Evelyn Thomas, Middleport.

Record absentee voting
expected by October 30

Nelson's Reg . $1.36

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TONE SOAP

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or Nasal Mist

DRISTAN

Relieves nasal congestion
Relieves bod_y aches and reduces
feaver.
Quiets cough.

Cough Medication
Reg. or Menthol
3 oz.

Dear ~ir :
_
As time approaches to choose those in charge of our
government that we the people of Meigs County adhere to, we
lind many reasons to doubt. We are not so sure that some of the
candidates elected to or running for office, are capable of
handllng the johs they are or will he entrusted with.
We are even more convinced by the state of the govern_mentatalllevelsofthe importance of choosing the man who Is .
quaUHed for office Instead of by party preference. Whether
a person is·Democratic or Republican, black or white, rich or
poor, seems to makelltUe difference when that individual can
provide intelligence and vigor to the issues that will help
guarantee our rights as provided for by the u.s. Constitution
and the Bill of Rights. Those rights insure our freedom, one of
which Is the right to vote.
We urge you to choose those who can give Meigs County a
new birth and save those who have worked honestly, honorably
arid respectably for you, the people.
·
In Meigs County we are labelled ''losers" because when
the rest of our state is going forward in education, In growth
and in search, Meigs County has stood still. We have nobody to
blame but ourselves. We were satisfied to sit back and let a few
set up a power block which is strangling Meigs County.
It Is now, only now, that our homes al)d schools and our
-children's rights are [&lt;,ing violated that lve are forced into
reacUng; but react we will.
· Before 1976 the city" taxation without representation" was
America's blood bullder; in 1976 in Mason County the people .
are tired, worn and worrie&lt;j so much that we again are crying
taxation without representation."
This is a tlmelo work, this is a time to act . And this is a
time lo pray that we haven't S3t on our seats so 10ng we have
forgotten how to walk.
This must be the year of government by the people lor the
people.
VOTE NOVEMBER 2ND, 1976
- Rita-Maurt, Box 59 Rt.l , Langsville, Ohio 45141 .

59~
Expires 10-24-76
· Good At Nelson's· Only

--------

'With the Saturday, Oct. 30,
noon deadline for applying
for absentee ballots less than
two weeks away. secretary of
State Ted W. Brown said
today a reeord absentee voter
turnout is in the offing.
•
Chief elections officer
Brown said preliminary
reports from metropolitan,
suburban, and rural county
boards of elections Indicate
absentee voter appUcations
are up In some cases 40
percent from four years ag0.
Ted Brown Is urging all
voters who wish to vote.absentee to contact their local
boards of elections for an
application as soon as
possible.
There are eight reasons for
which a person may vote
absentee, they are: absence
from the county on Election
Day, hospitalization on
Electloo Day, un!oreseeable
accident . or
medical
emergency , physical
disability or personal Illness,
in jail, either for a
misdemeanor or awaiting
trial, religious observances
on Election Day, being an
election official, being 62
years of age or older.
Secretary Brown said
recent revlllions In the law;
most notably ellminatloo of
the notarization and mec)lcal
certlllcallon requirements,
have made It more con·
venlent for elderly and
disabled people lo vote a~

sen tee.
Secretary Brown Is
predicting that 4 220 530
Ohioans will vote on Tuesday,
Nov. 2, 1976. This will be a
record voter turnout.
ROYAL BmTHDAY
TOKYO (UP!.) - Japanese
Crown Princess Michiko
celebrated her 42nd biflhday
Tuesday.
Mlchiko, Japan's first commoner princess and mother
of three, said her old
classmates preferred not to
:see the story of her birthday
m newspapers because their
ages also would become
public.

...

rHI DAM. 'I' SIHJINit
DIVOfiD TO JHt
fNtfltfSTOI
MIIOJ.MAJON A.ftA
,tHUJIJU. TANNIHfLl
...r. lll'.

1

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Cit; ldltor
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Sport Parade
•

By MILTON RICHMAI'i
UPI Sports Editor
.,
.
NEW YORK (UPI)- You know how hallplayers .are, one of
them will suddenly come up with the crazy idea he'd like to
w_ear a big zero on the -back of his ~niform , simply to be
different, and nght away .Omebody else on the same team
asks for doublezero so he can be a little more different. ·
That actually happened with the Cincinnati Reds.
Bobby Tolan, no longer with the club was the one who
wanted the zero.
.
'
As soon as he heard that, Danny Driessen didn't see why he
couldn'-t have double zero.
Somehow_, w~rd ol _the two requests reached Sparky Ander- ·
~n. th_
e Cincmnati manager, who killed the whole thing
lllllllediately, but not before he had a little heart-to-lleart talk
with Driessen. He asked Driessen, who was still a rookie, why he wanted to
change from hiS regular nwnher, which is 22.
Well, you know, he hM heard Tolan ask to have his number
swi~ed and he didn't see anything wrong with doing th~ same
thmg.
"You'd bet~er ~tick 11ith 22," Anderson told him. "Check up
on 11 and you ll fmd a lot of good baUplayei's wore tbat same
number. Besides, you haven 't been doing too badly with it,
have you'!" ·
·
Driessen, who hjt .301 his first season, ~d to adl)lit he wasn 't
doing badly at all with that 22 on his back- and that ended the.
whole thing right there.
The Incident merely serves to illustrate two points. Sparky
Anderson runs a tight ship and Danny Driessen has matured
considerably In three years.
T_he Reds are only a col!ple of heartbeats away now from
their second consecutive world championship. They lead the
Yankees in the World Series, three games to love, and the
windup has now become a foregone conclusion. As Tony Perez
S3ys, without really,poppingoff, "if we don't win it tonight, it'll
be the neil night, but !know we're gonna win." .
· Everybody ·else knows the sam.e thing.
It isn't only that the Reds have the power, the speed and the
defense , they also have the .necessary discipline that gQes
hand~n-lland with winning another championship.
Sparky Apderson maintains that discipline without being a
martinet or without hitting any of his players over the head
with it.
--Danny Driessen is a perfect case in point.
Like any other ball player, he ha tes sitUng on the bench
watching someone else play his position when in his heart he
honestly feels he can play as well or better . But if he takes a
look at the lineup Sparky Anderson makes out each day and
sees his name isn 't on it, he accepts it arid doesn't complain.
·In Danny Driessen's case, tha t's hard lor him to do. He has
proven he can play regularly and hit , yet he has been a platoon
player at first base and in the outfield for the Reds the past two
years. II you look at his'statistics this year they show he played
In 98games, but he was-a pinch hitter in 34 of them and started
In only 60.
"To show you the kind of person he is, he has been doing this
for. two years now and has never bad-mouthed me once," says
Sparky Anderson , who has a tremendous regard for his 25-year-old lelt-llanded hitter from Hilton Head, S.C.
' · For the first time ever, the designated hitter, employed
exclusively in the American League until now, is being used by
hoth teams in this World Series. Sparky Anderson hates the
concept of a designated hitter - "1 think the idea stinks" - but
when he had to use one In this Series, he chose Driessen. All
Driessen did Tuesday night was deliver a home run, double
and asingle In a 6-2victory which in all likelihood may turn out
to be the crusher as far as the Yankees are concerned .
Wl)en Danny Driessen first came up to the Reds, Sparky
Anderson called him "Mumbles" because of his manner of
speaking. Now the Reds refer to him as "Cobra" because of
the way he crouches up at the plate.
No matter what anyone calls him, Danny Driessen is an
exc"''tional ballplayer .. He has .ability and he has brains .
Rather than sit around doing nothing on the bench while
waiting to come up to hat as a designated hitter, he goes into
the clubhouse, watches the opposing pitcher on TV and studies
everything he can about him.
· After Tuesday night 's performance, someone. wanted to
know how Danny Driessen felt about heing a designated hitter.
"H every night was like tonight," he laughed, "I'd like it

Machine mauls NY,
eve rything except
· By FRED DOWN
Anderson refused to predict in
UPI Sports Writer
a sweep but made it clear he pitching. The Reds have run
NEW'fORK (UPI \ - The believes the R~s already riot on the bases, their top-toCincinnati Reds , called "an rate recognition as one of bottom hitting strengths keep
alllime credit to baseball" by baseball's all -time great . conUnual pressure oo New.
Manager Sparky Anderson, teams.
.
York pitehers and they have
wlll shootlor a fourth straight "We've got to win four out made ·Ute plays In the field
victory over the New y_,rk of seven - that's the ground whereas the Yankees
Yankees Wednesday night - rules,'' said 'Anderson. "I haven' t.
weather. permitUng - and would like to win this series
A victory tonight, or in any
th·e first lour-game World here to show everybody how of th e 'four remaining
Series sweep since 1966.
good w ~ are.... This tesm Is scheduled games, would give
Leading three games to an all-time credit lo haseball. the Reds the distinction of
none aflj!rTuesdily night's ·!;-2 This team is going to [&lt;, being ·. ttie first National
viclory at Yankee Stadiwn, remembered for years to League team to win two
the
defending
world rome."
straight World Series since
ch"!"plons are sending Gary • Asked to comment on the 192!-22 New York Giants.
Nolan to the mound against Yankee manager Billy The Reds also could become
Ed Figueroa in the fourth Martin's stall!ment that the tl).e first (earn to win four .
game. Nol;m led the Reds' diffetence between the teams consecutive games in a Series
staff with 15 victories while so far as been that "the Reds' since the 1966 Baltimore OriFigueroa- was the leading bloopers drop In and ours oles. There will be eight cases
Yankee winner with 19 don 't,' ~ the courUy Anderson of champagne in the Reds'
regular-season wins.
replied : "Baseball is a game clubhouse with attendants
The National Weather that Involves a lot of luck. having orders "to ice 'em uP
Service reported that there Froin the Yankees' point of. if things look good In the
was an 80 per cent chance of view, _t _g~ess we have he en eighth Inning."
rain
but
Baseball lucky."
_Tuesday night the Reds
Commissioner Bowiel&lt;:uhn
Actually, however ,luck has virtually laughed in the faces
will certainly wait until the been a very small factor in of the whole American
las t possible moment to the Series. The Yankees League when designate d
postpone the game. ·
simply appear out-matched hitter Qan Driessen had a

fine."

.

I

Big show could
close tonight
By CHRIS SCHERF
' UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) ~ II the
New York Yankees don't get
their act together tonight, (He
show closes .
Ed Figueroa carries the
burden to the mound for the
Yankees tonight, knowing his
next assignment will be five
months from npw, if New

York fails · to thwart a
Cineinnati Reds' sweep of the
World Series.
"! like to pitch in those
kinds -of games," Figueroa
said, after drawing the
starting assignment lor
Game No. 4 In 'the World
Series. "It makes. me
,concentrate more, bear down
more on every pit~h."
Figueroa started the final
game of the American
. League championship series
last Thursday and pitched
creditably, alth~ugh . the
Yankees needed a ninthInning · home run by Chris
Chambliss to win · the
pennant.
. His start hinges upon the
weather, · with Ute forerast
calling for an 80 per cent
ehance of rain today and
tonight.
Despite falling behind~ to
Cincinnati, the Yankees seem
to have exJ)ected the Reds to
have been even better than
•th~y have shown so far .
"So far, they haven't hit the
ball ·real good," Fig~eroa
aald.
But he admitted their speed
and.daring on the base paths
can he just as fatal.
"Sometimes when you con~ centrale ojn the runners too

homer, double and single and
dro ve In one run. Driessen Ill
batting .455 as the Reds' DH
- more than 250 points better
than the Yankees' designated
hitters.
11
1 haven't changed my
mind about the designated
hitter," said Anderson ~Iter
the game. "The designated
hitter has no place in
baseball. I am more opposed
to It than ever .... Driessen Is
one of the very hest young
hitters In baseball. HI played
him regularly he would hit
.300 with 2:i homers and 1110
nms balled in ."

Driessen triggered the
Reds ' three -run second
inning with a single and
stolen base, homered in the
fourth, doubled In the sixth
and was purposely walked In
th e eighth for a :\-for-3 night
at the plate. George Foster
drove ln two runs with a
double and a single and Pete
Rose and JOhnny Bench also
had two hits each In the Reds'
13-hit attack.
Foster foll6wed Driessen
with a double off the right :·

field wall' to put the Reds
ahead, 1-1!, In the second
inning. He went to third oo an
infield . hit by Bench and
scored as Cesar Geronimo hit
Into a lorceout. 'Dave
Concepcion 's single delivered
the third.run of the inning.
Driessen's homer In the
fourth made It 4-1! [&lt;,fore the
Yankees scored a run off Pat
Zachry in the bottom of tho
fourth on O~ris Chambliss '
single, a walk nnd ru1othcr
siugle by Oscar Gamble. Jim
Mason's homer cut the Reds'
lead to 4-2 In the seventh but
Cincinnati iced the game with
two runs In the elgllth with

-

DH still a jokP.-e-,Sparky
By BIU MADDEN
Reds must now rate almost
Ul'l Sports Writer
as high .
NEW YORK (UP!) - The . For, although they are
Cincinnati Reds are almost leading the New York
as stubborn as they are · Yankees three games to none
proud.
in the World Series, the Reds
No one has ever questioned refuse to predict a sweep.
their team pride, but when it And · although
their
comes to stubbornness, the designated hitter, Danny

Driessen, is outhitUng their
Yankees' DH counterparts by
over . 200 points, the Reds
refuse to alter their vehement
opposition
to
the
cpntroversial American
League rule ,
The best example of that
was Reds manager Sparky
Anderson.
, "I'm now convinced more
than eyer the rule is a joke,"
~----- - -------, .
WHA Standings
said Anderson Tuesday night
Bv United Pre ss International
after DH Driessen rapped out
East
w.l. t . pts. gf ga three hits, Including a home
5 I 0 10 31 21 run, to key the Reds' 6-2
I
I Quebec
3 '1 2
8 ,jj ]d
nna t i
IC
_1•
I Cinci
victory which gave them a ~
Bir minghm 2 ~ 1
rL'f.::lnnffigS I India na pols 2 3 0 54 2614 3025 edge
in games over the.
Minneso ta
2 .5 0
4 24 28
New En g lnd 0 3 1 1 8 19 Yankees. "It's just not right
to have one of your big
West
w . 1. t . pts . gl ga bombers In there Instead of
Winnipeg
4 '2 0
8 26 14
NHL Sfllndings
SanO iego
3 1 1
7 25 20 the pitcher. The pitcher is
Oy United Pr ess International
Houston
3 1 1
7 16 12 stlll a part of this game."
Campbell Conference
EdmontO{t
3 I 0
6 IS 12
Patrick. Division
There's no question
Phoenix
J 2 0
6 2S 23
w. I. t . pts. gt ga Calgary
0 s 0
0 8 21 Driessen has established
N Y Islan der s 5 o 1 11 16 9
Tuesday's Re sult s •
himself-along with people like
At l ant a
5 2 o 10 25 26 New En g 4 Houst on 4, o t
N Y,Rangers d 3 D
B 31 29 Winnip eg 6 Ind ianapolis 1
Johnny Bench, Pete Rose,
Phi la
2 3 1
5 17 23 Qu ebec 6 Bir mingham 5, ot
Joe
Morgan and Tony Perez
Smyth e Division
ncinnat i 4 Min neso t a 2
w . ·L t . pts . gf ga Ci
as one of the Reds' "big
Edm ont on 5 Ptioenix -4 ·
St. louiS
4 2 0
8 23 23
(Only ga ri1es .sched ule dl
bombers.'' After Tuesday
Chica go
4 3 o. B 22 16
Wednesday's Games
Co lorado
'J 4 0
4 18 2 1
night's
3-for-3 effort, he was
(No games sch eduled )
Minnesota
1 5 0
2 16 28
Thursday '$ Games
batting
.4&gt;5 for the series.
Va ncouver
1 5 0
2 ]d 30 Houston at Birmin gham
"It's
still
hard not playing
Wales Conference
lndpls at San Di ego
Ngrris Division
all
the
time.''
Driessen said.
Qu e be ~: at Calgar y .
· w . l.'t. pts . gf ga
(Onl y g a m es sch edule d)
"Between at-bats I go Into the
Montreal
· 6 2 0 12 41 · 16
t..:os Angeles 3 2 ·2
B 28 18
clubhouse to ll'y and stay
P i tt sbur gh
2 4 0
.J 20 31
warm (it was 45 degrees at
D etroit
1 3 1
3 16 18
game time). I drank a lot of
Wa shington 1 4 1 ,3 14 31
Adams Division
coffee and Sparky said : I
w . l. t. pts . gf ga
WILSON
AWARD
coulddowhateverlwantedin
Bos tOn
5 2 0 10 35 25
Cleve land " 2 2 2
6 20 17
PASADENA, Calif, (UP!) there as long as I didn't drin
Buffalo
2 3 0
4 13 14 31
Former Air Force any liquor . But there wasn't
Adams Oivision
w. l. t. pts . gf ga Secretary Harold Brown, who any there anyway. It was
Bos ton
5 2 0 10 35 25 gu1ded development of the ' probably all_In the pressbox.''
Clovela nd
222 6 20
As for the possibility of
2 1 2
6 20 land 3 Ch ic ag detectton system that made
nqclear
arms
.
control
lour-game
sweep, Anderson
St. Lo uis 6 Boslon 5
agreements
practical,
has
and
his
ll'oops
were still being
(On ly games sc hed uled )
Wednesday 's Games
w'!" the $10,0011 Joseph 0. cautious - even though the
Lo s A ng at N Y Rangers
Wilson . Award
for Yankees have played !Ike a
Atlanta at Minn eso ta
P i tt sburgh at Toronto
achi~vement in international ooaten, out-dassed team.

:

Pro

:

the big blow a double by Joe
Morgan.
Zachry went 6 2-3 Innings .
and received credit for the ·
victory with Will McEnaney
finishing up. Dock Ellis,
tagged·for lour runs in 3 1-3
Innings, was the losing
pitcher for the Yankees.
Martin, always a battler, Ill
hoping for a mira cle
comeback but ho also Is a
realist and, when asked
whether a postpooemcnt of
the fourth game would help
the Yankees, he replied ; "A
postponement would have
helped us at the sw t of the
series ."

AT THE INN

insisted a II along the Series
will go seven games: ''We
still have only three. They
(the Yankees ) could come
back. It's possible."
The Reds will send their top
1976 winner, Gary Nolan,
against the Yankees' Ed
~'igueroa toady In an effort to
complete a rare four-game
series -sweep-'One Red who ls
confident the series Is near a
quick end is Pete Rose.
' "I'm confident about the
fourth game.'' said Rose.
1
'Gary Nolan is one fine·.
pitcher - I think he 's among
the five best In the National
League. This is the showcase
of baseball, you know, the
Fall Classic. I know the
commissioner and the fans
don't want to see a sweepthey like those exciting
seven-game jol.&gt;;. But I go out
and try to win every game !().

"TIGRESS"
2GALS
FROM PARKERSBURG

TONIGHT
8:30 TIL 12:30

TH~

MEIGS INN
992-3629
POMEROY

1."

WHO IS AGAINST
HIGHER TAXES?

MERRIL TRIPLETT

a

Vanco uve r at Buffalo
Boston at Colorado
(On ly games schedul ed )
Thursday's Games
Ch ic ago at Philad elphia
Tor onto at M ont reat
Los Ang at WashinQto n
St. Louis at Cleveland
I Only games. s-cheduled)

affatrs.

.

''It's possible,'1 said Joe

Dr. Brown, .now pres1dent
of Caltech, w~U be presented
, the award~ pa1d by the Xerox
Corp., Fr1day In Rochester,
N.Y., by the Association for
. the United Nations.

Morgan, "that we could
sweep this thing without
having really played one solid
game. But let's face it, if we
do 1 won'.t be mad "
Added Anderson ·who has

•

much, it takes away from
YOW' pitches."

However , the preva-lent
theme in the Yankees'
dressing room after their
third straight loss to the
National League champions
was that the Reds simply had
heen the luckier of the two
teams.
"!don't thirik their speed is ·
hurting us that much, it's just
their hits are falling In," said
Chambliss.
" It seems every time we hit
a ball hard, it's right at
somebody," Manager Billy
Martin said.
Only Ken Holtzman, who
was.named to start a possible
fifth game by Martin In a
display of bravado, was
discounting luck as a major
factor.
"! think the biggest difference so far is we've played
lousy," said Holtzman, who
had been a member of the
·Oakland A's' three-time
world champions. "That's the
·only way you can describe
it.' '

MAC HONOREES .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPl) Freshman linebacker Frank
Lewandoski of Nor thern
Illinois . and junior quarterback Andy Vetter of Ohio
University have been named
delonsive and offensive Mld- Ame~ican Conference
Players of the Week.

MERRIL TRIPLETT
.believes

SNOW*ICE*MUD

We need to get more for our tax dollars, not spend
more tax dollars. Here are some ways to get the job

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done···

PLY WINTER

• Annual auditS' on ADC claims will uncover the money
wasted in fraudulent claims.
·• Outdated state agencies can be abolished through
a program review.
• r!SC;al estimates should be made on all legislation·
to show how much the law will cost the people.

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Plus $4.00 for Whitewall

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A

FOR S~TATE
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REPRESENT A TIVJ
A TAX SAVER,
NOT A TA·X WASTER

�'

t- TheDaUv.Sentlnel. Middiei!Qrt·PomeroV. 0 .. Wednesdav. Oct. 20.1976 ·,

.· Encroachment rule

Three non -league tilts
highlight SVAC·slate
In one of the top Class A
games of the week Friday
night, SVAC leading Kyger
Cro:ek, the area's top offensive club. will . attempt to stay unbeaten
·against the area 's top
defensive
team,
the
Alexander Spartans.
Kyger Creek goes into
Friday's non-league affair
with a ~ record while the
Spartans of Coach Dave
Sni~s are 5-{).1. Alexander's
only blemish was a lie with
Glouster.
Going into Friday's game,
Coach Jim Sprague Bobcats
have scored 241. J19ints in six
games, a 40.2. average.
Alexander'S offense has
scored 141 J19lnts, a 23.5 point
average. However, the
Spartan defense has per·
mitted just 25 J19lnts In six
outings, a 4.2 average.
Kyger Creek's defense
which has recorded two
shutouts in the last three
games, has permitted just 41
P9ints, a 6.8 average.
.
Last Friday night, Kyger
Creek and Alexander each
recorded ~ victories. The
Bobcats defeated SVAC foe
Southern while Alexander
won over Vinton County.
The Spartans' Paul Moore,
junior fullback, scored four
touchqowns against the
Vikings. He moved across the
goalline on runs of 32, 30,
three and two yards.

Other Spartan runners are
In that victory, a clutch 114- strea~ . Southern got off to a
sophomore Bob Wessels, , yard pass reception by Bruce fast start defeating Federal
halfback Tim Wooten and Riffle and a fln41 swtalned Hocking, Hannan Trace· and
. quarterback l)yron -Gr~n. drive In 'the last quarter · Waier!ord, but since then
'Kyger Creek also has a proved to be .the difference have found It a bit rough. The
formidable running · and for the Eagles. Mark Lawson, Tornados have been beaten
pl)sslng attack led by senior senior halfback, scored two of by Wahama, North Gallla
and Kyger Creek.
quarterback Steve Baird. Eastern's touchdowns:
During the streak, the
Baird's favorite targets are
Coach John Blake's North
senior flanker Btian Lucas Gallla Pirates wiU attempt to Tornados have been able to
and tight end Roger bounce back from last week's score just one touchdown in
Spaulding.
22-14 upset to the Ironton St. those three games.
The running attack is paced Joe Flyers.
The hard-running attack of
by junior speedster Marcus
North Gallia went into the Steve Boso; Steve Hendrlcka,
Geiger who has collected 940 game ninth ranked In the Kelly· Winebrenner and AI
yards rushing thus far this Class AReglonalll computer Hill which clicked In the
season. Other Bobcat threats ratings. The Plrates failed to earlier part of the season has
are the quick wingback Todd play their usual brand of hall. been throttled .
Taylor and bruising fullback That resulted In a block punt
Coach Greg . Bailie's
Ralph Baylor.
,
for a TD and an electrifying Vikings are 1-5 . .Last Friday
Baylor collected 105 yards 100 yard pass Interception ' night, Benny Jones and Jim
rushing last week against return for another score.
Brnaham , scored SV touch·
Southern. Taylor is a game
Mike Casey, speed junior .downs. Steve Hunt, another
breaker by rushing, receiving running back, continued his Vll!ing , rUBbed for 112 yards
or on the specialty squads. fine offensive work with 105 in nine attempts.
Alexander has won the last yards rushing while getting a
Saturday night, Coach Bob
two g&amp;mes In the see-saw Pirate TD. Rex Justice had Ashley's Improved South·
series.
the other six-pointer.
western Highlanders seek
In other league games,
Coach Larry Cremeens' their fourth win this year
Waterford visits Eastern, Haonan Trace Wildcats have against the Jackson B team.
· Synunes Valley travels to been plagued by injuries.
The Highlanders lost a
Southern and Haonan Trace. Saturday night,. several rugged 28-20 game Friday to
goes to North Gallia.
· Wildcat starters were sub-ar Eastern. Kip Lewis, 190
Saturday night, South- intheir3Uiosstothelronton pound senior tailback, con~
western hosts the Jackson reserves.
tinues to be the . big .Southreserves.
Haonan Trace has an Q-5-1 western offensive 'gun. He
Eastern will go after its record this fall.
·
scored two TD's against the
fourth win this season against
Symmes Valley, a 12-0 Eagles while rushing for 100
the Waterford Wildcats. The · victor over Hannan , W. Va. yards.
Sophomore quarterback
Eagles broke a three-game will seek its second straight
losing string Friday night · victory against Southern.
Gene layton threw another
with a 28-20 win over league
The Tornados will attempt ,TD pass to junior end Larry
opponent Southwestern.
to snap a three-game losing Carter.

.UCLA choice over California,
Duke .will surprise ·Maryland
By Major Amos B. Hoople
Peerless Predictor
·
Egad, friends, no matter
where one looks from East to
West, North to South, there
are headline match ups on the
college, front this Saturday.
Here is how they line up
starting in t)le east and
working ac1·oss the country.
At Annapolis, the Navy sta l·
warts entertain the rugged
Pitt
Panthers;
at
Philadelphia, Penn will host
Yale 'in an important Ivy
League contest, and at
Morgantown, the hometown
West Virginia Mountaineers
will joust )Vith the back-&lt;&gt;n·
the-track Penn State Nittany
Lions.
At College Park, the Maryland Terps and the Duke Blue
Devils will meet in an
Atlantic Co ast Conference
shootout. Meanwhile, the
Kentucky Wildcats and
Georgia Bulldogs will chew
' each otber up in Lexington.
Moving out to the center of
the country and starting
west, we have Ohio State

tackling Pursue and Michiga n taking on Indiana
in a pair of Big
Ter_1 encounters. And in
· the Big 8, there's a pair of
tough ones on tap as
Missouri's Tigers journey to
Lincoln to meet the Nebraska
Cornhuskers, and long-time
rivals
Oklahoma
and
Oklahoma State ,get together
for the 71st time on the
Sooners'. field in Norman.
In the Far West, in a very,
very' important Pacific Eight
showdown, and one that will
go a long way toward
determining the conference
Rose Bowl representative,
UCLA and Ca lifornia will get
together on the latter's field.
In a pair of interesting
independent contests, Texas
Tech and Arizona will meet in
Lubbock, a nd the Notre
Dame Irisll will go to
Columbia to meet the South
Carolina Gamecocks in their
first-ever football . meeting.
Here is how out scouts rate
these contests. Navy is no
match for Pittsburgh despite

•100 REWARD
For The Arrest and Conviction
of the ~arty or Parties
Responsible For Tearing Down
the ProHit For SheriH Posters
County Wide.

OSBY A. MARTIN
MMt

the latter's quarterbacK
problems. Make it Pitt 35,
Navy 10. We look for Yale to
prevail 17-14, and for Penn
State to take West Virginia
21-18.
The Maryland lads are in
for a surprise as the Duke
Blue Devils squeeze out .. a
!list-minute 22-17 victory. The
Duke club has been· getting
better each week. And In
another mild surprise, the
Kentucky Wildcats will
outlast Georgia to win , 28-25.
In the Big Ten contests,
Ohio State will take Purdue
24-14, and Michigan will roll
over Indiana, 42·13. Didn't we
- kaff-kaff-kaff - tell you
early In the year Michigan
was the No. I team in the
nation! The NebraskaMissouri game is almost too
close to call, but after running all pertlnentlnformation
through the Hoople computers we give the nod to
Nebraska, 28·21. The same is
true of the Oklahoma SoonerOklahoma State engagement
with our projections favoring
Oklahoma to triumph 3().20.
The UCLA-California donnybrook will be a classic
showdown between the UCLA
infantry tactics, good for
approximately 380 yards per
game, and the California
aerial attack, good for about
250 yards each Saturday. We
look for the Bruins to grind it
out for a 28-18 triumph.
In the other contests
mentioned above, watch lor
Texas Tech's Red Raisers to
win, 24-14, and Notre Dame to
down the South Carolina club,
28-21.

forecast:
SATURDAY, OCT. 23
Air Foree 25, Citadel 6
Alabama 23; Louisville 7
ArlzooaSt.l5. New Mexico 10
Boston College 28, Army U
Auburn 21, Florida St. 20
Brigham Young 35, Utah St. 6
Hro)VD 21, Holy' Cross 17
l)CLA 26, Calif. 18
Colorado. U, Iowa St. 7
Colo. St. 27, UTEP 0
Rutgers 33, Columbia 21
•Dartmouih 18, Cornell 7
Delaware 13, VMI 12
Duke 22, Maryland 17
Richmond 15, Furman 12
Tulane 2t, Ga. Tech 21
Houston 30, Arkansas 28
Dlinols 26, Mich. St. 20
Michigan 42, Indiana 13
Kansas 15, Kansas St. 13
Kentucky 28, Georgia 25
Colgate 22, Lafayette 12
Memphis St. 35, Wichita St. 17
Miami (Fla.1 40, TCU 18
Bowling . Green 30, Miami
(0.1 28
Minnesota 21 1 Iowa 18
Pittsburgh 35, Navy 10
Nebraska 28, Missouri 21
North Carolina 24, E.
Carolina 22
No. Carolina St. 21, Clemson
15
Cent. Mich 28, No. Mlch 12
Wisconsin 21, Northwestern 6
Wm. &amp; Mary 16, Ohio u. 14
Ohio State 24, Purdue· 14
Oklahoma 30, Oklahoma St.
20

Yale 17, Penn 11
Harvard 24, Princeton 17
San Diego SU6, Fallerton St.
13
· San Jooe St. 36, Fresno Si. 28
Notre Dame 28, So. Carolina
21
So. Cal. 38, Oregon St. 14
So.

LEAN BEEF

99~

Frosh lose to Athens
Meigs Freshmen lost a
heartbreaker football game
last week to the host Athens
freshme n 6-0. Meigs had
trouble 'holding onto the ball
all night, but fine defense by
the local boys held the mighty
Bulldogs to just those six
points comtng in the first half
on a short yardage run. The
extra point pi!SS play was
Intercepted by Van Willford.
· Meigs had a total of 67
yardS in that first half, and
one highlight was an intercepted pass by Dan

JORDAN SPEECH
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Rep .
Barbara Jordan, IJ..Texas,
will speak at Ohio State
University and the University
of Dayton today.
Rep. Jordan, a member of
the
House . · Judiciary
Committee and .one of the
keynote speakers at the 1976
Democratic National
convention, will speak at a
rally for Jlnuny Carter at
Ohio State and at a fundraising
dinner
for
Democratic U.S. Senate
candidate Howard Metzenba um in Dayton.

Thomas who ran it back 14 ·
yards.
The second lull! saw the
Meigs Countiirns again have
trouble holding onto the ball.
Athens also had trouble with
the slippery pigskin as they
fumbled twice and lost one·in
the secomi1lall, and they lost
their only fumbl e in the first
half.
A key defensive play by
Meigs in the second half
robbed Athens of another
scoring opportunity.' On the
Meigs five yard line, Willford
intercepted another aerial
,and raced ·au the way to ihe
Athens 30 before finally being
hauled down. On the ·very
next play Meigs coughed the
ball up and Athens recovered
to stop that drive.
Meigs plays at Middleport
tonight against the Jl9Werful
Gallipolis Blue Imps as a
preview to Friday's match up
of the varsities.

tHUNTIN[BOWSfl [aOQTSfl

tCARTR[DGESfl

tRIFf;ESfl

fl

tSH415fl IKNI!£5

tGU~S~ I$CO~Sfl
PICKENS HARDWARE CO.
Mason, W. Va .
Mon .-Thurs. &amp; Sat . a-5 :30
Frida 8-8 ·

'

Ability...

Syracuse 27, Temple 6
Florida 22, Tenn. 20
Texas 42, SMU 7 .
Texas A&amp;M 28, Ric• 12
Texas Tech 2t, Auzona 14
Miss. 35, Vanderbilt U
VIllanova 36, Youngstown 21
Va., Tech 24, J&lt;ent St. 21
Wake Forest 35, VIrginia 8
WashinR!on 33. OreRon 24
Stanford 28, Wash. St. 10
Penn St. 21, West Va. 18
Wyoming 18, Utah 15

James
Roush
C·ounty Commissioner·
Paid b~ Candidate

throat."

decision,'' Pont said. uHe's

Indiana 's Lee Corso, which
plays . Michigan and Ohio

showing the multiple T or
winged T, guards pulling, the

HOUSTON (UP!) - Tbe
Houston Oilers began
preparations for thei r
important game against the
Cincinnati Bengals without
hospitalized quarterback Dan
Pastorini and ahnost without
coach "Bwn n Phillips.
. · l'hillipa stepped down from
hi$ !(l.foot high observation
tower Tuesday afternoon ju.st
as a gust of wind blew the
metal structure over.
''When the damn thing
fell,'' Phillips said, "I hadn't
walked 10 steps from it. I
came down to• tell Mike
Reinfeldt something. I would
have shouted, but the wind
was biowing so hard I didn't
think he'd hear me."·
Phillips was relieved, also ,
when he received word lroni
Methodist HOSpital that Pastorlni had suffered only
minor cuts and a slight
coocusslon when be wrecked
· his camper early Tuesday.
"He's all right. They'll
keep him overnight for
obaervation, but he'll be out
tomorrow (Wednesday).
He'll practice II he feels like
it," Phillipa said.
1 Police said Pastorini's
vehicle,
which
was
demolished, hit a median at a
curve an&lt;tcareened lntD some
trees. Pastorinl had been
drinking, J19llce ·said, but no
breath tests were taken and
.no charges Wed.
Phillips said Pastorlni
faced no disciplinary action.
"The only thing I'm

Interested In is his health, not
his habits ," the coach said.
"I did remind him that it
was awfully Inconsiderate of
him to do this jilst to get out of
practice ..;. and leave me to
answer the phone: It hasn't
stopped ringing.':
Tuesday's practice would
have been thin enough even
with Pastorini. The Oilers'
official inJury list filed with
the NFL office named 12
players, 10 of them
''questionable" or ''doubtful''
for Sunday's gsme between
the AFC Central Division
leaders.
Of primary concern was
the health of outside
linebacker Ted Washington,
who sprained a knee last
Sunday and watched San
Diego run over his backups.
11
1f Teddy can't start,"
l'hiliips said, "he probably
won't play at all. But we
expect him to be all right. The
same goes for (offensive
tackle) Greg (Sampson) .
We're confident they will

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S4.94

PUMPKIN PIE MIX

49~

Sun.

If you are in the market for a
modular. home, a house type
doublewide or if you just want to
look at one, you are always welcome
at Kingsbury. We feature homes by
Skyline Corp. and Fuqua Homes of
Ohio. ~ Let us handle your entire .
housing problems,. site preparation,
septic tank, basement,· etc. You just
pink up the keys when the house is
ready for occupancy.

•

Thursday thru Sunday

them), and 15" mud &amp; snow
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Hours: Mon ., Tues., Thurs .. Sat.; 9-7: JO

WedneS\IIY·Friday 9:00-, :00, s...day Closed .
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991-7034
Ohio
Ash 992-332!, R09er Davis, 992-7671

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MEIGS JOHN
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TZ, MGR.
992-2101

8 TRACK TAPES

19

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•

"QUALITY ALWAYS'

'12 95 Per tire plus .80 F.E.T.

Addlllonal charge ot 52.50 If
carcass it not recappable

DIPT.

10 to 5

Prices Effective

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

JEWElRY

Mon.-Sat.
UBBY'S

30 oz. can

STEREO LP'S

· Open
9 til 7

12 oz. .

but there's no.tire shortage
at Meigs Tire Center

CHOOSE FROM THE SEASON'S MOST
POPULAR HITS!

Phillips told reserve Inside
linebacker Tim Rossovich to
learn the ·outside resP&lt;msibilitles If Washington does not
. respond to treaiment.
Houston listed as injured
tight ends Mack Alston and
John Sawyer, runnilig back
Fred Willis, and defensemen
·Tody Smith, Bubba Smith,
Duane Benson, Mike Weger,
C.L.
Whittington and
Washington. .

and modular homes.

39 ~

are

Nut : haue 5

There was a rubber strike,

STEREOLP'S
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·come around."

ICE CREAM

1 lb. quarters

amoWlts of fuels .

Oilers ·prepare
to play B~ngals

. MARGARINE

69~

Electricity (CSLCE) believes
the higher cost of gas and
electricity ftr business and
industrial · users would
merely he passed back to
consumers.
CSLCE also maintains that
minimum users are often the
affluent who
away llli
vacation in .winter and who
would get lifeline rates at the
expense of others.
The ~me group objects to
writing such restrictive ianguage In the Constitution, and
complains there are already
government agencies
assigned to ldenUfy and help
the disadvantaged without
placing such a burden on the
gas and e.lectrlc compailles.
California is implementlhg
lifeline utility rates, while
Michigan and Georgia have
alternative programs for customers using minimal

°

LEMONS

STEW MEAT

· LB.

Richard W. Vaughan of Middleport, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Richard Vaughan, Is a member ,of the 1976 Spartan football team at Case Western Reserve University in
Cleveland.
·
·
· Bill, a senior, plays wide receiver for the Spar!ans,.who
are members of the President's Athletic Conference. Now
majoring in Metallurgical Engineering at Case Reserve,
he attended Meigs High School where he earned two
letters each in basketball and basebalL
In addition to football, Bill's activities at the
University Include captain of the 1976 and 1977 baseball
teams, ali-PAC second team shortstop in 1976, and led the
league in hits (211 and average (.467).

Come in and see our double wide

STALK

LIVER PUDDING

gridiron wide receiver

·
M
uc
s
near
_,
.
even
with
ichiaan
B k

Broughton's Dairyland

·'

FRENCH CITY

Vaughan ·is Spartans'

•

PARKAY

DOZ.

ROUND STEAK

RICHARD VAl)GHAN

penalty marched off against
By GENE CADDES
the defensive team which
UPI Spor!l Writer
encroached,
and the play
o:JLUMBUS (UP!) - The
rerun
becsuse
there Is no
new "encroachment'' rule
being used this season in Ohio option.
In last Friday night's Cam,high school football is
bridge-Canton
Tlmken
confusing coaches, players,
contest,
Cambridge
scored
In
fans and eYen BQme officials.
the
closing
Seconds
to
tie
the'
Th~ new Mile, which has
; ahnost eliminated the old game 1~19 then· marie the
offside penalty (the only Ume conversion for an .apparent
offside Cll1) be called is on a 20-19 lead. But, Tlrnken was
. kickoff), restricts a player called for encroachment. The
from either the offensive or conversion had to be retried
defensive team, except the and was missed, resulting In
center, from encroaching a 1~19 tie.
"The reason the rule wna
upoo the neutral . zone--lln
put
in was to stop the
area II !+inches wide or
defensive
team
from
equal to the length of a
Intimidating
the
offense
and
football.
If, after the center has trying to·time the snap," said
made hi$ final 'adjusiment of Fred Dafler, assistant
the ball, a player is In the commissioner of the Ohio
School
Athletic
neutral zone, encroaclunent High
Association
and
a
rules
is called and play Is
expert.
immediately stopped, ·
"The important thing for
That is part of the
the
official is to stop tbe
problem- getting play
play,"
said Dafler. "If you
stopped.
don't
get
the play stopped,
Encroaclnnent is what is
called a "dead hall foul," you look bad."
Dafler; who also officiates
thus no play can be run after
it is called and the offended games, admits it can't
team gets no option of taking always be accomplished . .
"Here's what makes it
or refusing the penalty.
tough
on officials/' he said.
In one game wilnessed by
"
Let's
say the defensive
this reporter, a teqm scored
player
is
trying to time the
on a long pass play and had
snap
and
misses it by a
already lined up for the
conversion attempt. After se- fraction of a second. The
veral minutes, the play was official doesn't bave time to
called back, a five-yard stop the play."

EDrJ'OR'S NOTE: 1biJ Is orcaalaatlon repreaentiDI . minimal amounts of gas and amount, as determined by cusromer of Columbu,s &amp;
lbe-.loflldilpatebesby rtaldeiiUaluWity cualom.e n. electricity at a cut rate to Ohioans for Utility Reform Southern Ohio Electric Co.
UPl Stateboae ileporton 'lbe J!I'IPOUl Is opposed by help out the poor and elderly. 1OUR ), is the . minimum used 552 kilowatt hours a
~!J:urd ud J . R. Cltlze• lor Safe, Lower Coot
Trouble is, according to amount needed for an month in 1975, according to
IWilllll,. oa tile t0D1t1t1 ud
Electricity) a atatewlde opjl9nents, the proposal will acceptable standard of living. OUR. U they dropped this to
luaea before 0~ volen Coalition of labor, uUiity and hann the very people it is
With Issue 4, a gas '(00, they could save about
N,!!:...~·..!oday • article boalneu groupt.
trying to help.
company would be-allowed to $4.63 a month. Savings would
e.,....._ ""'te blue l, oae of
Issue 4 would set a ceiling charge no more than its vanish at between 800 and 900.
f nu r · cOD It ltull o nal '
By LEE LEONARD
. on rates for "lifeline" average.· rate for all kilowatt hours.
ame!Jdmeals plaeed 1111. the
UP! Stlteh-e Reporter
amount~ of gas and residential consumers for the
~lectric and gas companies
beliRfat by OblolDI for UtiU!y
. COLl)MBUS (UP! )'- Sl!IIA&gt; electricity used by residential · first 30,000 cubic feet each would not be allowed to raise
e nm, I
llltewide Issue4isdeslgnedtoprovlde consumers. The "lifeline" month between Oct. 15 and lifellneratestooffsetrevenue
April 15. For the next 20,000 losses , nor would they be able
cubic feet, the charge could toaddonfuelcostsurcharges
~
go no higher than 50 per cent without prior -approval of the
ByEDSAINSBURY
State in the next two weeks , slot back, two wide receivers. above the average rate .
Public Utilities Commission
UPISporta Writer
said "1\'s abnost impossible " It's the same offense we ran
OUR rejl9rts, for example, through the normal beal'ing
CJnCAGO (UP!)_ There 's to stop Michigan's running. when 1 was playing at Miami that Columbus customers of process.
little to c~ between No.1 "We've always had a (of Ohio), but it jl9ses an Columbia Gas of Ohio used an
Revenue losses would have
ranked Michigan and No,; 8 Pro b I em de fens in g instnnt problem for your average of 20,975 cubic feet to be made up by other users,
rated Ohio State, Wisconsin's Michlgsn ," he said. "We scout team .
&lt;n gas per month during the
such as industrial and
coach John Jardine, beaten never have stopped them.
"You play six option teams six coldest months of 1974.
commercial customers.
by both the Wolvertnes and They've got speed, deception , with exactly the same
The organization reports
Although OUR believes the
Buckeyes, said Tuesday,
and they're well coached." offensive formations and then savings at that rate ol lifeline rates would save
"We were bette( against
But he saw some hope for you have to get ready for C9flsumption would be at money for minimal users and
Ohio State than against .an Indiana win since "they Wisconsin,
and
it's least $6.88 a monU1, or 20 per encourage conse(Vation,
Michigan," he said. "We had don't have any Idea what completely new. It's ·not a ~nt. Naturally, residents in Citizens for Safe, Lower Cost
no fumbles or penalties and we're going to do and we can problem for the Interior· men, northern counties would use
we were able to move the ball tell exactly what they're but for · the exterior more gas and would not save
on the ground. We improved a going to do. We might be able positions- the cornerbacks, as much.
great deal and were more to do some things they the
linebackers,
the
The same "lifeline" rates
consisrent against Ohio State. haven't seen liefore. We'll safeties- it is.
would apply to the first 400
we caught Michigan by certainly
have
some
"There's no way we can kilowatt ~ours of electricity
surprise because we gave gimmicks for the game."
show our team all the per month . For existing all- ·
them a totally difierent
Corso declared that the Wisconsinformationssowe 'll electric homes , it would be
picture on offense.
depth of Michigan and Ohio work on what they've done the lii'st 2,000 kilowatt hours
"! would rank Ohio State State set them apl!rt from the the most and hope we don't in winter and the first 400
and Michigan almost dead rllllt of the Big Ten.
see too many curve halls. It's between April15 and Oct. 15. ·
even on defense . Michigan is
"They've got a lot ol good an exciting offense, a Future all-electric hOmes
maybe a little Qllicker . and players," be said; "and if spectator offense."
would not be rewarded with
Ohio · State mayile a litUe they lose someone, they
lifeline rates, penalizing their
· o 11
Ohi0 might fall from 80 per cent
use .
8tr
Ol)ger.
n
ense,
effl'cl
.
ency
a·t
that
.
pos1'tion
to
Th e average . CoIum bus
·
Stat tiUis
· im t' It
· es
exper en mg.
70 pe.r cent. If we lose
uses a lot of I, some veer.
Their young quarterback someone, we might go from
when he gets it down is going 110 per cent to 45 per cent."
to give them another
Northwestern's Johnny
dimension.
Pont praised Jardine for
" Michigan's offense is making the decision to
ahead of Ohio state, but 1 change his offense this year,
think Ohio state's passing has pointing out that he had new
got to improve. Unless you personnel on the offensive
can throw with more line as well as in the
coosisrency, I don't think you backfield.
can run it down
, Michigan's
"It was a very sound

CALIFORNIA

Buys

USDA CHOICE

Issue 4 designed to help poor and elderly

·may b~ in trouble

'

.

..

5- The Daily Sentinel; MiddleJ!9rt·Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Oct. 20,1976

Pomerov

�'

t- TheDaUv.Sentlnel. Middiei!Qrt·PomeroV. 0 .. Wednesdav. Oct. 20.1976 ·,

.· Encroachment rule

Three non -league tilts
highlight SVAC·slate
In one of the top Class A
games of the week Friday
night, SVAC leading Kyger
Cro:ek, the area's top offensive club. will . attempt to stay unbeaten
·against the area 's top
defensive
team,
the
Alexander Spartans.
Kyger Creek goes into
Friday's non-league affair
with a ~ record while the
Spartans of Coach Dave
Sni~s are 5-{).1. Alexander's
only blemish was a lie with
Glouster.
Going into Friday's game,
Coach Jim Sprague Bobcats
have scored 241. J19ints in six
games, a 40.2. average.
Alexander'S offense has
scored 141 J19lnts, a 23.5 point
average. However, the
Spartan defense has per·
mitted just 25 J19lnts In six
outings, a 4.2 average.
Kyger Creek's defense
which has recorded two
shutouts in the last three
games, has permitted just 41
P9ints, a 6.8 average.
.
Last Friday night, Kyger
Creek and Alexander each
recorded ~ victories. The
Bobcats defeated SVAC foe
Southern while Alexander
won over Vinton County.
The Spartans' Paul Moore,
junior fullback, scored four
touchqowns against the
Vikings. He moved across the
goalline on runs of 32, 30,
three and two yards.

Other Spartan runners are
In that victory, a clutch 114- strea~ . Southern got off to a
sophomore Bob Wessels, , yard pass reception by Bruce fast start defeating Federal
halfback Tim Wooten and Riffle and a fln41 swtalned Hocking, Hannan Trace· and
. quarterback l)yron -Gr~n. drive In 'the last quarter · Waier!ord, but since then
'Kyger Creek also has a proved to be .the difference have found It a bit rough. The
formidable running · and for the Eagles. Mark Lawson, Tornados have been beaten
pl)sslng attack led by senior senior halfback, scored two of by Wahama, North Gallla
and Kyger Creek.
quarterback Steve Baird. Eastern's touchdowns:
During the streak, the
Baird's favorite targets are
Coach John Blake's North
senior flanker Btian Lucas Gallla Pirates wiU attempt to Tornados have been able to
and tight end Roger bounce back from last week's score just one touchdown in
Spaulding.
22-14 upset to the Ironton St. those three games.
The running attack is paced Joe Flyers.
The hard-running attack of
by junior speedster Marcus
North Gallia went into the Steve Boso; Steve Hendrlcka,
Geiger who has collected 940 game ninth ranked In the Kelly· Winebrenner and AI
yards rushing thus far this Class AReglonalll computer Hill which clicked In the
season. Other Bobcat threats ratings. The Plrates failed to earlier part of the season has
are the quick wingback Todd play their usual brand of hall. been throttled .
Taylor and bruising fullback That resulted In a block punt
Coach Greg . Bailie's
Ralph Baylor.
,
for a TD and an electrifying Vikings are 1-5 . .Last Friday
Baylor collected 105 yards 100 yard pass Interception ' night, Benny Jones and Jim
rushing last week against return for another score.
Brnaham , scored SV touch·
Southern. Taylor is a game
Mike Casey, speed junior .downs. Steve Hunt, another
breaker by rushing, receiving running back, continued his Vll!ing , rUBbed for 112 yards
or on the specialty squads. fine offensive work with 105 in nine attempts.
Alexander has won the last yards rushing while getting a
Saturday night, Coach Bob
two g&amp;mes In the see-saw Pirate TD. Rex Justice had Ashley's Improved South·
series.
the other six-pointer.
western Highlanders seek
In other league games,
Coach Larry Cremeens' their fourth win this year
Waterford visits Eastern, Haonan Trace Wildcats have against the Jackson B team.
· Synunes Valley travels to been plagued by injuries.
The Highlanders lost a
Southern and Haonan Trace. Saturday night,. several rugged 28-20 game Friday to
goes to North Gallia.
· Wildcat starters were sub-ar Eastern. Kip Lewis, 190
Saturday night, South- intheir3Uiosstothelronton pound senior tailback, con~
western hosts the Jackson reserves.
tinues to be the . big .Southreserves.
Haonan Trace has an Q-5-1 western offensive 'gun. He
Eastern will go after its record this fall.
·
scored two TD's against the
fourth win this season against
Symmes Valley, a 12-0 Eagles while rushing for 100
the Waterford Wildcats. The · victor over Hannan , W. Va. yards.
Sophomore quarterback
Eagles broke a three-game will seek its second straight
losing string Friday night · victory against Southern.
Gene layton threw another
with a 28-20 win over league
The Tornados will attempt ,TD pass to junior end Larry
opponent Southwestern.
to snap a three-game losing Carter.

.UCLA choice over California,
Duke .will surprise ·Maryland
By Major Amos B. Hoople
Peerless Predictor
·
Egad, friends, no matter
where one looks from East to
West, North to South, there
are headline match ups on the
college, front this Saturday.
Here is how they line up
starting in t)le east and
working ac1·oss the country.
At Annapolis, the Navy sta l·
warts entertain the rugged
Pitt
Panthers;
at
Philadelphia, Penn will host
Yale 'in an important Ivy
League contest, and at
Morgantown, the hometown
West Virginia Mountaineers
will joust )Vith the back-&lt;&gt;n·
the-track Penn State Nittany
Lions.
At College Park, the Maryland Terps and the Duke Blue
Devils will meet in an
Atlantic Co ast Conference
shootout. Meanwhile, the
Kentucky Wildcats and
Georgia Bulldogs will chew
' each otber up in Lexington.
Moving out to the center of
the country and starting
west, we have Ohio State

tackling Pursue and Michiga n taking on Indiana
in a pair of Big
Ter_1 encounters. And in
· the Big 8, there's a pair of
tough ones on tap as
Missouri's Tigers journey to
Lincoln to meet the Nebraska
Cornhuskers, and long-time
rivals
Oklahoma
and
Oklahoma State ,get together
for the 71st time on the
Sooners'. field in Norman.
In the Far West, in a very,
very' important Pacific Eight
showdown, and one that will
go a long way toward
determining the conference
Rose Bowl representative,
UCLA and Ca lifornia will get
together on the latter's field.
In a pair of interesting
independent contests, Texas
Tech and Arizona will meet in
Lubbock, a nd the Notre
Dame Irisll will go to
Columbia to meet the South
Carolina Gamecocks in their
first-ever football . meeting.
Here is how out scouts rate
these contests. Navy is no
match for Pittsburgh despite

•100 REWARD
For The Arrest and Conviction
of the ~arty or Parties
Responsible For Tearing Down
the ProHit For SheriH Posters
County Wide.

OSBY A. MARTIN
MMt

the latter's quarterbacK
problems. Make it Pitt 35,
Navy 10. We look for Yale to
prevail 17-14, and for Penn
State to take West Virginia
21-18.
The Maryland lads are in
for a surprise as the Duke
Blue Devils squeeze out .. a
!list-minute 22-17 victory. The
Duke club has been· getting
better each week. And In
another mild surprise, the
Kentucky Wildcats will
outlast Georgia to win , 28-25.
In the Big Ten contests,
Ohio State will take Purdue
24-14, and Michigan will roll
over Indiana, 42·13. Didn't we
- kaff-kaff-kaff - tell you
early In the year Michigan
was the No. I team in the
nation! The NebraskaMissouri game is almost too
close to call, but after running all pertlnentlnformation
through the Hoople computers we give the nod to
Nebraska, 28·21. The same is
true of the Oklahoma SoonerOklahoma State engagement
with our projections favoring
Oklahoma to triumph 3().20.
The UCLA-California donnybrook will be a classic
showdown between the UCLA
infantry tactics, good for
approximately 380 yards per
game, and the California
aerial attack, good for about
250 yards each Saturday. We
look for the Bruins to grind it
out for a 28-18 triumph.
In the other contests
mentioned above, watch lor
Texas Tech's Red Raisers to
win, 24-14, and Notre Dame to
down the South Carolina club,
28-21.

forecast:
SATURDAY, OCT. 23
Air Foree 25, Citadel 6
Alabama 23; Louisville 7
ArlzooaSt.l5. New Mexico 10
Boston College 28, Army U
Auburn 21, Florida St. 20
Brigham Young 35, Utah St. 6
Hro)VD 21, Holy' Cross 17
l)CLA 26, Calif. 18
Colorado. U, Iowa St. 7
Colo. St. 27, UTEP 0
Rutgers 33, Columbia 21
•Dartmouih 18, Cornell 7
Delaware 13, VMI 12
Duke 22, Maryland 17
Richmond 15, Furman 12
Tulane 2t, Ga. Tech 21
Houston 30, Arkansas 28
Dlinols 26, Mich. St. 20
Michigan 42, Indiana 13
Kansas 15, Kansas St. 13
Kentucky 28, Georgia 25
Colgate 22, Lafayette 12
Memphis St. 35, Wichita St. 17
Miami (Fla.1 40, TCU 18
Bowling . Green 30, Miami
(0.1 28
Minnesota 21 1 Iowa 18
Pittsburgh 35, Navy 10
Nebraska 28, Missouri 21
North Carolina 24, E.
Carolina 22
No. Carolina St. 21, Clemson
15
Cent. Mich 28, No. Mlch 12
Wisconsin 21, Northwestern 6
Wm. &amp; Mary 16, Ohio u. 14
Ohio State 24, Purdue· 14
Oklahoma 30, Oklahoma St.
20

Yale 17, Penn 11
Harvard 24, Princeton 17
San Diego SU6, Fallerton St.
13
· San Jooe St. 36, Fresno Si. 28
Notre Dame 28, So. Carolina
21
So. Cal. 38, Oregon St. 14
So.

LEAN BEEF

99~

Frosh lose to Athens
Meigs Freshmen lost a
heartbreaker football game
last week to the host Athens
freshme n 6-0. Meigs had
trouble 'holding onto the ball
all night, but fine defense by
the local boys held the mighty
Bulldogs to just those six
points comtng in the first half
on a short yardage run. The
extra point pi!SS play was
Intercepted by Van Willford.
· Meigs had a total of 67
yardS in that first half, and
one highlight was an intercepted pass by Dan

JORDAN SPEECH
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Rep .
Barbara Jordan, IJ..Texas,
will speak at Ohio State
University and the University
of Dayton today.
Rep. Jordan, a member of
the
House . · Judiciary
Committee and .one of the
keynote speakers at the 1976
Democratic National
convention, will speak at a
rally for Jlnuny Carter at
Ohio State and at a fundraising
dinner
for
Democratic U.S. Senate
candidate Howard Metzenba um in Dayton.

Thomas who ran it back 14 ·
yards.
The second lull! saw the
Meigs Countiirns again have
trouble holding onto the ball.
Athens also had trouble with
the slippery pigskin as they
fumbled twice and lost one·in
the secomi1lall, and they lost
their only fumbl e in the first
half.
A key defensive play by
Meigs in the second half
robbed Athens of another
scoring opportunity.' On the
Meigs five yard line, Willford
intercepted another aerial
,and raced ·au the way to ihe
Athens 30 before finally being
hauled down. On the ·very
next play Meigs coughed the
ball up and Athens recovered
to stop that drive.
Meigs plays at Middleport
tonight against the Jl9Werful
Gallipolis Blue Imps as a
preview to Friday's match up
of the varsities.

tHUNTIN[BOWSfl [aOQTSfl

tCARTR[DGESfl

tRIFf;ESfl

fl

tSH415fl IKNI!£5

tGU~S~ I$CO~Sfl
PICKENS HARDWARE CO.
Mason, W. Va .
Mon .-Thurs. &amp; Sat . a-5 :30
Frida 8-8 ·

'

Ability...

Syracuse 27, Temple 6
Florida 22, Tenn. 20
Texas 42, SMU 7 .
Texas A&amp;M 28, Ric• 12
Texas Tech 2t, Auzona 14
Miss. 35, Vanderbilt U
VIllanova 36, Youngstown 21
Va., Tech 24, J&lt;ent St. 21
Wake Forest 35, VIrginia 8
WashinR!on 33. OreRon 24
Stanford 28, Wash. St. 10
Penn St. 21, West Va. 18
Wyoming 18, Utah 15

James
Roush
C·ounty Commissioner·
Paid b~ Candidate

throat."

decision,'' Pont said. uHe's

Indiana 's Lee Corso, which
plays . Michigan and Ohio

showing the multiple T or
winged T, guards pulling, the

HOUSTON (UP!) - Tbe
Houston Oilers began
preparations for thei r
important game against the
Cincinnati Bengals without
hospitalized quarterback Dan
Pastorini and ahnost without
coach "Bwn n Phillips.
. · l'hillipa stepped down from
hi$ !(l.foot high observation
tower Tuesday afternoon ju.st
as a gust of wind blew the
metal structure over.
''When the damn thing
fell,'' Phillips said, "I hadn't
walked 10 steps from it. I
came down to• tell Mike
Reinfeldt something. I would
have shouted, but the wind
was biowing so hard I didn't
think he'd hear me."·
Phillips was relieved, also ,
when he received word lroni
Methodist HOSpital that Pastorlni had suffered only
minor cuts and a slight
coocusslon when be wrecked
· his camper early Tuesday.
"He's all right. They'll
keep him overnight for
obaervation, but he'll be out
tomorrow (Wednesday).
He'll practice II he feels like
it," Phillipa said.
1 Police said Pastorini's
vehicle,
which
was
demolished, hit a median at a
curve an&lt;tcareened lntD some
trees. Pastorinl had been
drinking, J19llce ·said, but no
breath tests were taken and
.no charges Wed.
Phillips said Pastorlni
faced no disciplinary action.
"The only thing I'm

Interested In is his health, not
his habits ," the coach said.
"I did remind him that it
was awfully Inconsiderate of
him to do this jilst to get out of
practice ..;. and leave me to
answer the phone: It hasn't
stopped ringing.':
Tuesday's practice would
have been thin enough even
with Pastorini. The Oilers'
official inJury list filed with
the NFL office named 12
players, 10 of them
''questionable" or ''doubtful''
for Sunday's gsme between
the AFC Central Division
leaders.
Of primary concern was
the health of outside
linebacker Ted Washington,
who sprained a knee last
Sunday and watched San
Diego run over his backups.
11
1f Teddy can't start,"
l'hiliips said, "he probably
won't play at all. But we
expect him to be all right. The
same goes for (offensive
tackle) Greg (Sampson) .
We're confident they will

CELERY '
. 29~

~rted Flawrs

89 ~

.ih gal.

CHARM IN

.BATHROOM TISSUE
4-roll pkg.

6ll ~

ROYAL CROWN
COLA

•

,8 16 oz. bottles '1 09and depolif
plus tax

K

bottle

19
HECK'S REG.

S4.94

PUMPKIN PIE MIX

49~

Sun.

If you are in the market for a
modular. home, a house type
doublewide or if you just want to
look at one, you are always welcome
at Kingsbury. We feature homes by
Skyline Corp. and Fuqua Homes of
Ohio. ~ Let us handle your entire .
housing problems,. site preparation,
septic tank, basement,· etc. You just
pink up the keys when the house is
ready for occupancy.

•

Thursday thru Sunday

them), and 15" mud &amp; snow
recaps available

,

ONLY

Hours: Mon ., Tues., Thurs .. Sat.; 9-7: JO

WedneS\IIY·Friday 9:00-, :00, s...day Closed .
Pl&gt;nnon•v
991-7034
Ohio
Ash 992-332!, R09er Davis, 992-7671

"

.'

1

FREE
Mqunting!

MEIGS JOHN
TIREFUL·CENTER,
.
I
NC.
TZ, MGR.
992-2101

8 TRACK TAPES

19

$

HECK'.S ~EG~

$5.83

•

"QUALITY ALWAYS'

'12 95 Per tire plus .80 F.E.T.

Addlllonal charge ot 52.50 If
carcass it not recappable

DIPT.

10 to 5

Prices Effective

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

JEWElRY

Mon.-Sat.
UBBY'S

30 oz. can

STEREO LP'S

· Open
9 til 7

12 oz. .

but there's no.tire shortage
at Meigs Tire Center

CHOOSE FROM THE SEASON'S MOST
POPULAR HITS!

Phillips told reserve Inside
linebacker Tim Rossovich to
learn the ·outside resP&lt;msibilitles If Washington does not
. respond to treaiment.
Houston listed as injured
tight ends Mack Alston and
John Sawyer, runnilig back
Fred Willis, and defensemen
·Tody Smith, Bubba Smith,
Duane Benson, Mike Weger,
C.L.
Whittington and
Washington. .

and modular homes.

39 ~

are

Nut : haue 5

There was a rubber strike,

STEREOLP'S
&amp;8TRACK TAPE

·come around."

ICE CREAM

1 lb. quarters

amoWlts of fuels .

Oilers ·prepare
to play B~ngals

. MARGARINE

69~

Electricity (CSLCE) believes
the higher cost of gas and
electricity ftr business and
industrial · users would
merely he passed back to
consumers.
CSLCE also maintains that
minimum users are often the
affluent who
away llli
vacation in .winter and who
would get lifeline rates at the
expense of others.
The ~me group objects to
writing such restrictive ianguage In the Constitution, and
complains there are already
government agencies
assigned to ldenUfy and help
the disadvantaged without
placing such a burden on the
gas and e.lectrlc compailles.
California is implementlhg
lifeline utility rates, while
Michigan and Georgia have
alternative programs for customers using minimal

°

LEMONS

STEW MEAT

· LB.

Richard W. Vaughan of Middleport, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Richard Vaughan, Is a member ,of the 1976 Spartan football team at Case Western Reserve University in
Cleveland.
·
·
· Bill, a senior, plays wide receiver for the Spar!ans,.who
are members of the President's Athletic Conference. Now
majoring in Metallurgical Engineering at Case Reserve,
he attended Meigs High School where he earned two
letters each in basketball and basebalL
In addition to football, Bill's activities at the
University Include captain of the 1976 and 1977 baseball
teams, ali-PAC second team shortstop in 1976, and led the
league in hits (211 and average (.467).

Come in and see our double wide

STALK

LIVER PUDDING

gridiron wide receiver

·
M
uc
s
near
_,
.
even
with
ichiaan
B k

Broughton's Dairyland

·'

FRENCH CITY

Vaughan ·is Spartans'

•

PARKAY

DOZ.

ROUND STEAK

RICHARD VAl)GHAN

penalty marched off against
By GENE CADDES
the defensive team which
UPI Spor!l Writer
encroached,
and the play
o:JLUMBUS (UP!) - The
rerun
becsuse
there Is no
new "encroachment'' rule
being used this season in Ohio option.
In last Friday night's Cam,high school football is
bridge-Canton
Tlmken
confusing coaches, players,
contest,
Cambridge
scored
In
fans and eYen BQme officials.
the
closing
Seconds
to
tie
the'
Th~ new Mile, which has
; ahnost eliminated the old game 1~19 then· marie the
offside penalty (the only Ume conversion for an .apparent
offside Cll1) be called is on a 20-19 lead. But, Tlrnken was
. kickoff), restricts a player called for encroachment. The
from either the offensive or conversion had to be retried
defensive team, except the and was missed, resulting In
center, from encroaching a 1~19 tie.
"The reason the rule wna
upoo the neutral . zone--lln
put
in was to stop the
area II !+inches wide or
defensive
team
from
equal to the length of a
Intimidating
the
offense
and
football.
If, after the center has trying to·time the snap," said
made hi$ final 'adjusiment of Fred Dafler, assistant
the ball, a player is In the commissioner of the Ohio
School
Athletic
neutral zone, encroaclunent High
Association
and
a
rules
is called and play Is
expert.
immediately stopped, ·
"The important thing for
That is part of the
the
official is to stop tbe
problem- getting play
play,"
said Dafler. "If you
stopped.
don't
get
the play stopped,
Encroaclnnent is what is
called a "dead hall foul," you look bad."
Dafler; who also officiates
thus no play can be run after
it is called and the offended games, admits it can't
team gets no option of taking always be accomplished . .
"Here's what makes it
or refusing the penalty.
tough
on officials/' he said.
In one game wilnessed by
"
Let's
say the defensive
this reporter, a teqm scored
player
is
trying to time the
on a long pass play and had
snap
and
misses it by a
already lined up for the
conversion attempt. After se- fraction of a second. The
veral minutes, the play was official doesn't bave time to
called back, a five-yard stop the play."

EDrJ'OR'S NOTE: 1biJ Is orcaalaatlon repreaentiDI . minimal amounts of gas and amount, as determined by cusromer of Columbu,s &amp;
lbe-.loflldilpatebesby rtaldeiiUaluWity cualom.e n. electricity at a cut rate to Ohioans for Utility Reform Southern Ohio Electric Co.
UPl Stateboae ileporton 'lbe J!I'IPOUl Is opposed by help out the poor and elderly. 1OUR ), is the . minimum used 552 kilowatt hours a
~!J:urd ud J . R. Cltlze• lor Safe, Lower Coot
Trouble is, according to amount needed for an month in 1975, according to
IWilllll,. oa tile t0D1t1t1 ud
Electricity) a atatewlde opjl9nents, the proposal will acceptable standard of living. OUR. U they dropped this to
luaea before 0~ volen Coalition of labor, uUiity and hann the very people it is
With Issue 4, a gas '(00, they could save about
N,!!:...~·..!oday • article boalneu groupt.
trying to help.
company would be-allowed to $4.63 a month. Savings would
e.,....._ ""'te blue l, oae of
Issue 4 would set a ceiling charge no more than its vanish at between 800 and 900.
f nu r · cOD It ltull o nal '
By LEE LEONARD
. on rates for "lifeline" average.· rate for all kilowatt hours.
ame!Jdmeals plaeed 1111. the
UP! Stlteh-e Reporter
amount~ of gas and residential consumers for the
~lectric and gas companies
beliRfat by OblolDI for UtiU!y
. COLl)MBUS (UP! )'- Sl!IIA&gt; electricity used by residential · first 30,000 cubic feet each would not be allowed to raise
e nm, I
llltewide Issue4isdeslgnedtoprovlde consumers. The "lifeline" month between Oct. 15 and lifellneratestooffsetrevenue
April 15. For the next 20,000 losses , nor would they be able
cubic feet, the charge could toaddonfuelcostsurcharges
~
go no higher than 50 per cent without prior -approval of the
ByEDSAINSBURY
State in the next two weeks , slot back, two wide receivers. above the average rate .
Public Utilities Commission
UPISporta Writer
said "1\'s abnost impossible " It's the same offense we ran
OUR rejl9rts, for example, through the normal beal'ing
CJnCAGO (UP!)_ There 's to stop Michigan's running. when 1 was playing at Miami that Columbus customers of process.
little to c~ between No.1 "We've always had a (of Ohio), but it jl9ses an Columbia Gas of Ohio used an
Revenue losses would have
ranked Michigan and No,; 8 Pro b I em de fens in g instnnt problem for your average of 20,975 cubic feet to be made up by other users,
rated Ohio State, Wisconsin's Michlgsn ," he said. "We scout team .
&lt;n gas per month during the
such as industrial and
coach John Jardine, beaten never have stopped them.
"You play six option teams six coldest months of 1974.
commercial customers.
by both the Wolvertnes and They've got speed, deception , with exactly the same
The organization reports
Although OUR believes the
Buckeyes, said Tuesday,
and they're well coached." offensive formations and then savings at that rate ol lifeline rates would save
"We were bette( against
But he saw some hope for you have to get ready for C9flsumption would be at money for minimal users and
Ohio State than against .an Indiana win since "they Wisconsin,
and
it's least $6.88 a monU1, or 20 per encourage conse(Vation,
Michigan," he said. "We had don't have any Idea what completely new. It's ·not a ~nt. Naturally, residents in Citizens for Safe, Lower Cost
no fumbles or penalties and we're going to do and we can problem for the Interior· men, northern counties would use
we were able to move the ball tell exactly what they're but for · the exterior more gas and would not save
on the ground. We improved a going to do. We might be able positions- the cornerbacks, as much.
great deal and were more to do some things they the
linebackers,
the
The same "lifeline" rates
consisrent against Ohio State. haven't seen liefore. We'll safeties- it is.
would apply to the first 400
we caught Michigan by certainly
have
some
"There's no way we can kilowatt ~ours of electricity
surprise because we gave gimmicks for the game."
show our team all the per month . For existing all- ·
them a totally difierent
Corso declared that the Wisconsinformationssowe 'll electric homes , it would be
picture on offense.
depth of Michigan and Ohio work on what they've done the lii'st 2,000 kilowatt hours
"! would rank Ohio State State set them apl!rt from the the most and hope we don't in winter and the first 400
and Michigan almost dead rllllt of the Big Ten.
see too many curve halls. It's between April15 and Oct. 15. ·
even on defense . Michigan is
"They've got a lot ol good an exciting offense, a Future all-electric hOmes
maybe a little Qllicker . and players," be said; "and if spectator offense."
would not be rewarded with
Ohio · State mayile a litUe they lose someone, they
lifeline rates, penalizing their
· o 11
Ohi0 might fall from 80 per cent
use .
8tr
Ol)ger.
n
ense,
effl'cl
.
ency
a·t
that
.
pos1'tion
to
Th e average . CoIum bus
·
Stat tiUis
· im t' It
· es
exper en mg.
70 pe.r cent. If we lose
uses a lot of I, some veer.
Their young quarterback someone, we might go from
when he gets it down is going 110 per cent to 45 per cent."
to give them another
Northwestern's Johnny
dimension.
Pont praised Jardine for
" Michigan's offense is making the decision to
ahead of Ohio state, but 1 change his offense this year,
think Ohio state's passing has pointing out that he had new
got to improve. Unless you personnel on the offensive
can throw with more line as well as in the
coosisrency, I don't think you backfield.
can run it down
, Michigan's
"It was a very sound

CALIFORNIA

Buys

USDA CHOICE

Issue 4 designed to help poor and elderly

·may b~ in trouble

'

.

..

5- The Daily Sentinel; MiddleJ!9rt·Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Oct. 20,1976

Pomerov

�' 6- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,0 ., Wednesday, Oct. 20, 1976

FIFA ninth Energy·related
. diStnct
. ' . COLUMBUS (UPI) - The trlclty, the major
ill
Ohio Supreme Court denied a organization opposing the
at judging

' request Tu~y to remove
from the Nov. 2 ballot four of
seven proposed amendmenla
to the Ohio Constitution,
Including three-energy
related Issues strongly
opposed by a laboNtilitybusiness coalition.
The court also chastized
plaintiffs in lhe case, former
Democratic Chairman
Eugene P. O'Grady, John M.
Mountain and James A.
Garry, lor their tardiness In
filing the sqlt.
O'Grady, Mountain and
Garry, all officials of Citizens
for Safe, Lower Cost Eler-

four iasuea, filed suit Sept. '!/,
arBUbl8 lhat Secretary of
State Ted Brown had illegally
authorized placement of the
issues on lhe Nov. 2 ballot.
Further , argued the
plaintiffs, the General
Assembly had failed to
appolnl persons to prepare
argull)ents, . as required,
asalnat the issues.
Arguments for and against
proposed amendments to the
Ohio Constltutioo musl, by
law, appear In legal
advertising In major
newspapers throughout the

issues stay on b8not
state.
"It 1.! lhe conclusion of this
court lhat lhe placing of the
Issues in question on the
ballot and tabulating the
vole! cast · thereon do not
· constitute the exercise of
quasi-judicial power by the
Secretary of State," wrote
· the court.
The high court observed
that the suit was not flied
. ·until Sepj, '!1, even t!Jough
Brown Informed legislative
leaders Sept. 9, he could no
longer delay the advertising.
"It is fitting w obaerve,"
said the unanimous oplnioo,
"lhat the delay ...could In
Itself, be suftlclent cause to
.

.

Pet raccoon
rips up face

deny relief even if relators
were otherwise entitled to it."
The court cited a 19M case,
which stated that in electloo
· cases "time Is such an
important lac!l&gt;r" aJid "ex·
treme diligence and the
.promptest of action Is requlred ."
The court's decisloo on the
four Issues was the second
victory for Ohi08JIS for utility
Reform, the consumer group
which circulated Initiative
petitions to get the
amendments on the ballot.
Earlier this year, the court
dismissed a case filed by the
state's utility companies
challenging procedures used
by the consumer group to
gather the required 307,ooo
signatures.
If adopted by voters, the
four Issues would:

1- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday

-Oet minimum ralei f!H"
lhe first 400 ldlowatta of
electricity .and the first 30,!MMl
cubic feet of natural gas used
by residential
utlllty
customers,
-establish .a non-profit
consumer agency to fight
utility rate Increases,
- require Ohio General Assembly approval of lhe con.
structlon or expa~lon of .
nuclear-powered electric
generating facilities and
require that the facilities
have complete llablllty
insurance,
-atandardlze the number
of signatures needed to place
proposed constitutional
amendments on the ballot w
25o,ooo and eliminate a
requirement that the
signatures he collected from
at least 44 counties.

SENIOR
CITIZENS!

•• .SENIOR CITIZENS

DUTTON'S DRUG STORE
MIOOU:PORT, 0.

"

I

of infant boy
'

.

~

'

.

~0~ ge\1~0

.-1'\fe. \0 ,1
,~

''"..

etta'· ·

••
\..JI
an?-b\9'l ~f\0'1·

Four Eastern
FFAboys
in judghig test
EAST MEIGS - Brian
Windon, Keith Wolfe, Cllfford
Longenette and Rocky Van
Meter, representing Eastern
High School's Future Far•
mers of America, .took 13th
place in a district soil judging
contest recently In New
Lexington . Tw.enty-four
teams took ilarl.
At the recent meeting of the
chapter, Jim Carnahan was
guest speaker using .as his
topic different careers In
' agriculture. The . F.F.A: Is
selling citrus fruit agairt this
year. It musl be ordered by
Nov. I and will be delivered
between Dec. I and Dec. 15
and payment can be made at
delivery time. Orders may be
phoned to Clifford Wayne
Longenette at 667-3890.

'

Women's legislatio~ .--....-~-----------....---------discussed at .meet ·
Reports on leglslatlon of
Mrs. Welsh told of the
special Interest to women . establishment of Rape Crisis
hlghllghted the Monday night Centers In some areas noting
meeting of: the Middleport that this is a telephone
Business and Professional emergency service and of
Women's Club held at the f!Chools which are ~nsorlng
Columbia Gas Co. office. .
self defense courses lor•
Mrs. Edith .Forrest, women.
legislative chairman , ln- . Abortion and the numerous
troduced the four speakers legislative proposals on
who discussed credit to reslrlctions were discussed
women, social security by Mrs. Marian Taylor. In
coverage for homemakers, her history on legalizing
rape laws and proposed abortion, Mrs. Taylor
changes, and abortion.
tef~rred to the Supreme
Talking on credit to women Court decision, and to the role
and the Equal Credit Op- which Women's Lib has
: portunlty Act and Ita Intent to played In legislation. She
• guarantee credit to women reported that no federal ·
was Mrs. Mary Martin. She funds, Medicaid included,
spoke of women's limited ~ can be uaed for abortions . .
access to credit, the
Many bills are now under
p~eference to giving credit to· consideration, aceordlng to
smgle men over single Mrs. Taylor, to provide fundwomen, and the problem of a ing for programs which
married . woman securing would give alternatives to
credit In her own name.
abortion, some · of these inShe noted that In 1972 a eluding teenage health care
study on credit to women was centers, family planning
undertsken and that In 1974 programs ahd the Right to
two bljls \'!ere passed by ., We Amendment.
,
Congress which makes It
To conclude the program,
unlawful to dlscrimlna.te Mrs. Forrest urged the
against any applicant for members to exercise their
credit on the basis of sex. She right to vote on Nov. 2.
said that lhe Equal Credit
Mrs. Alwilda Werner
Opportunity Act alao calls lor presided at the meeting and
a written reason f?r denial of • introduced two guests, Ancredit upon request.
nabelle Davidson and Donna
Terri MUler discussed the . Davidson . . It was reported
Homemakers Service Act that three members of the
currently . under
con· club completed the cardio
slderation which would pulmonary resuscitation
qualify homemakers for course. They ate Mrs. Etoile
social security benefits. She WilBon, Mrs. Suzy Carpenter
said homemakers would oo and Mrs. Wanda Eblin.
considered seif-employed In
It was noied that several
the home and that. the members attended the
average wage being paid In Autumn FroUc 17 held at
the lahur market for com- BurrOakonSunday,Sept.26:
parable jobs performed by a Those attending were Mrs.
homemaker would be the Cerpenter, Miss Houdsshelt,
basis for social security Miss Erna Jesse, Miss Miller,
contributors. Miss Miller said Mrs. Dortha Salser, Mrs.
that the Act0 1f passed, would Matjorle Walburn , Mrs.
qualify homemakers for Welsh, Mrs. Werner and Mrs.
monthly social security WilBon.
payment. .
The Christmas stocking
Giving an update on the project for the two retirement
crime rste with specifics on · homes, Hlllrise and West·
rape was Mrs. Catherine more, was discussed and
· Welsh. She quoted from an each member contributed $1
FBI report which listed 56,090 for the stocking. ..,
rapes In 1975, an Increase of
The traveling prize was
46 per cent over 1970. Mrs. won by Mrs. Janet Korn.
Welsh listed reasons why Refreshments were served.
women'- are . hesitant to Gifts were presented to Mrs.
report' rapes ·Including the Werner, "Woman of the ,
lack of separate faclliiles in Year," and Mrs. Salser, ·
hospitals ior their treatment, "Woman of the Week"
the liospltal fees, the Intimate selected by popular vote of
' questioning and insensitivity the membership.
of officials.

'

''

773-5534

MATERIALS CO.

2325 JaSON AVENUE, PT. PWSMT, W. VA.

Mason, W. Va.

I

•

,.

'

298 Second
•

IOMERDt OHJO

NO SALES

hices EffeCfiie' Thru
Oct. 23, 1976

ro DEALERS

·•
OUANTilY kiGHTS RESERVED

'

QUALITY PLUS

$
19
BACON ••••••••••••
LB.

ARMOUR 12 OZ.

WIENERS •••..•..•.
'

GO TO GAME
Mr. and Mrs. William
Lehew and sons, Billy and
Ted, Pomeroy, were In
Columbus Saturday where
they attended Capital
University's homecoming
game between Capital and
Heidelberg College. The
Lehews' son, John, plays on
the Capl~ University footba~ squad.

7

'

LB.

9 VARIETIES QUALITY' PLUS ..

LUNCHEON MEATS... ·
,..

USDA BGf iESS

,.

.

· LB.

CHUCK ROAST ••••••••
USDACHOICE

...

1

Ground Beef ..~~

'

.

.

.

Polish dull fridge
with kitchen wax

DEAR POLLY - I am
answering the reader who
wanted to know how to treat
feathers to. be used for
making pillows. I was the
oldesl of nine children. We
bad little money, so we ate
lots of wild ducks and geese.
Mom used the feathers to
mak'e pillows and feather
beds. She did nothing to them.
Only goose and duck feathers
were ever used, since Mom
.thought the feathers from
other birds were too S(iff. The
birds were dry picked from
the necks down and any dirty

1503 EASTERN AVENUE, GALUPOUS, CillO.l·

Mon.·Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday• 10 am·lO pm

Polly's Pointers

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - My
refrigerator stands right next
to the •ove. I always try to
remember to wipe it off when
I wash dishes, but sometimes
I forget. One day, I really had
. wuse some elbow grease and
scouring powder. It dulled the
enamel Now any grease
sticks like glue. I am afraid to
use more scouring powder for
fear aU the enamel will come
off. My refl'lgerawr Is 15
years old and I do not want to
paint II. I wonder If there is
any other solution to keep the
·grease from adhering. MRS. W. 0.
DEAR MRS. W. 0.- Alter
you gel tbe refrigerator
grease free by usiDg a nonabr&amp;~lve bousebold cleaner,
apply eltber kllcben or
automobUe wa&lt;. Thil should
alford some protection from
grease splattero. - POLLY.

*

Store HolliS:

ARM ROAST••••-........

By Polly Cramer

It Is encouraging that the
U. S. economy is continuing
to recover. Industrial
production has gained
steadily. Private housing
starts bave risen II percent to
a 1.542 million unit annual
rate which Is 22 percent
·above lut year. Auto sales
bave cllmbed nearly 8 percent In rnld.S.ptember and
have risen 211 percent compared with last year at this
time. Overall Industrial
output Is up8.6 percent over a
year earlier.
All of this Increased
economic activity has put
more and more people to
work In the private sector.
: And this Ia mosl desirable as
far as our economic health
and productivity Is con·
cerned. Total employment
grew by nearly miiiiOQ joba
In July and August to ·teach
nearly an 88 million employment peak. The key
figures eased slightly below
that peat to 87.8 million job
holders in September
resulting In 3.7 million job
gain since the March 197$
low. NQn.farm employment
i'ose by about 210,000 joba to a
peak figure of 79.6 million
: payroll joba, a gain of about
, 3.2 million payroll. jobs since
! the June 1975 low. Job gains
• occurred In almost 111'o-thirda
; of 172 reporting Industries.
:. The unemployment situation
; bnproved In September as
, the overall unemployment

Oct. 20, 1976

3

.....

LBS. OR .MORE

or bloody feathers were
discarded. The stiff wing and
tail feathers were never used.
SUch feathers can be washed
hut do not dry in a dryer or
the bright sunlight, since you
do not want to draw the
natural oils from the
feathers. Ours !listed for
years and I do not remember
ever throwing any of them
away. I think manufacturers
now use chicken feathers thai
are chopped and curled. Mom
turned her nose up at chicken
.feathers saying they were too
heavy. - .GRACE.

CENTER CUT RIB

$.129,

LB.

PORK CHOPS ••••••••••
EXTRA CRISP·JONATHAN

Rev. Borden
to be installed

APPLES ••••••• ~~~.~•••

Installation services for the
Rev. Nyle Borden as pastor of
lhe Forest · Run Baptist
Church will be held at 2 p.m.
Sunday at the church.
The Rev. Eddie Buffington,
former pastor, will give the
Installation sermon. There
wiD be a short program by
the program committee with '
Effie A!friend as cbalrman. A
luncheon will be served by
the entertainment committee
following the Service, and
new members will be
welcomed lnto the church
fellowship.
Olflcers and committees of
the church are Mrs. Euelelia
Smith, church clerk and
treasurer; Miss Donna
Bunch, assistant church
clerk; Martin Johnson,
chairman of the bOard of
trustees and Johnnie James,
trustee;
Mrs. Smith,
p•esldent of the Missionary
society with Mrs. John .
Qualls, vice president; Mrs.
Cornelius Bunch, Sunday
School superintendent;
'Martin · Johnson, senior
teacher, and Mrs. Ruth
Buffington, chairman, Mrs.
Bunch, Mrs. Charles Lewis
and Mrs. Dewey Bland,
entertainment committee.

••

....

'·•

·~.

RED OR GOLDEN DEUCIOUS

APPLES •• ;•••• !.~~~· .
..
IMPERIAl:· , . ~ . .
~

',!" ~

'

A.PORK LOIN ••• ~ ••
or
BrowsiJo41's (
MACARONI &amp;CHEESE

1

'

··•

'·

,.

MARGA~INE .....~.: ..,

COLJ f"I D N

Dark

KRAFT

~~ 5/$1
. .

lloX

O!th

Coupon

Limit I Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer

10-23-76

1

Ugh!

LB.4/$1 ~ith
.

., Coupon

. Umil 1 Per Customer
Good
at Powell's
Offer

10-23-76

GLAD.

TRASH BAGS
10 CT.

69'

With
Coupon

Limill Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
10-23-76

MAXWELL
HOUSE
.
&gt;

COFFEE
3 LBS.

$.100 OFF

With Coupon

Limit 1 Per•Customer
GOod Only at Powell's
Offer

10.23-76

�' 6- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,0 ., Wednesday, Oct. 20, 1976

FIFA ninth Energy·related
. diStnct
. ' . COLUMBUS (UPI) - The trlclty, the major
ill
Ohio Supreme Court denied a organization opposing the
at judging

' request Tu~y to remove
from the Nov. 2 ballot four of
seven proposed amendmenla
to the Ohio Constitution,
Including three-energy
related Issues strongly
opposed by a laboNtilitybusiness coalition.
The court also chastized
plaintiffs in lhe case, former
Democratic Chairman
Eugene P. O'Grady, John M.
Mountain and James A.
Garry, lor their tardiness In
filing the sqlt.
O'Grady, Mountain and
Garry, all officials of Citizens
for Safe, Lower Cost Eler-

four iasuea, filed suit Sept. '!/,
arBUbl8 lhat Secretary of
State Ted Brown had illegally
authorized placement of the
issues on lhe Nov. 2 ballot.
Further , argued the
plaintiffs, the General
Assembly had failed to
appolnl persons to prepare
argull)ents, . as required,
asalnat the issues.
Arguments for and against
proposed amendments to the
Ohio Constltutioo musl, by
law, appear In legal
advertising In major
newspapers throughout the

issues stay on b8not
state.
"It 1.! lhe conclusion of this
court lhat lhe placing of the
Issues in question on the
ballot and tabulating the
vole! cast · thereon do not
· constitute the exercise of
quasi-judicial power by the
Secretary of State," wrote
· the court.
The high court observed
that the suit was not flied
. ·until Sepj, '!1, even t!Jough
Brown Informed legislative
leaders Sept. 9, he could no
longer delay the advertising.
"It is fitting w obaerve,"
said the unanimous oplnioo,
"lhat the delay ...could In
Itself, be suftlclent cause to
.

.

Pet raccoon
rips up face

deny relief even if relators
were otherwise entitled to it."
The court cited a 19M case,
which stated that in electloo
· cases "time Is such an
important lac!l&gt;r" aJid "ex·
treme diligence and the
.promptest of action Is requlred ."
The court's decisloo on the
four Issues was the second
victory for Ohi08JIS for utility
Reform, the consumer group
which circulated Initiative
petitions to get the
amendments on the ballot.
Earlier this year, the court
dismissed a case filed by the
state's utility companies
challenging procedures used
by the consumer group to
gather the required 307,ooo
signatures.
If adopted by voters, the
four Issues would:

1- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday

-Oet minimum ralei f!H"
lhe first 400 ldlowatta of
electricity .and the first 30,!MMl
cubic feet of natural gas used
by residential
utlllty
customers,
-establish .a non-profit
consumer agency to fight
utility rate Increases,
- require Ohio General Assembly approval of lhe con.
structlon or expa~lon of .
nuclear-powered electric
generating facilities and
require that the facilities
have complete llablllty
insurance,
-atandardlze the number
of signatures needed to place
proposed constitutional
amendments on the ballot w
25o,ooo and eliminate a
requirement that the
signatures he collected from
at least 44 counties.

SENIOR
CITIZENS!

•• .SENIOR CITIZENS

DUTTON'S DRUG STORE
MIOOU:PORT, 0.

"

I

of infant boy
'

.

~

'

.

~0~ ge\1~0

.-1'\fe. \0 ,1
,~

''"..

etta'· ·

••
\..JI
an?-b\9'l ~f\0'1·

Four Eastern
FFAboys
in judghig test
EAST MEIGS - Brian
Windon, Keith Wolfe, Cllfford
Longenette and Rocky Van
Meter, representing Eastern
High School's Future Far•
mers of America, .took 13th
place in a district soil judging
contest recently In New
Lexington . Tw.enty-four
teams took ilarl.
At the recent meeting of the
chapter, Jim Carnahan was
guest speaker using .as his
topic different careers In
' agriculture. The . F.F.A: Is
selling citrus fruit agairt this
year. It musl be ordered by
Nov. I and will be delivered
between Dec. I and Dec. 15
and payment can be made at
delivery time. Orders may be
phoned to Clifford Wayne
Longenette at 667-3890.

'

Women's legislatio~ .--....-~-----------....---------discussed at .meet ·
Reports on leglslatlon of
Mrs. Welsh told of the
special Interest to women . establishment of Rape Crisis
hlghllghted the Monday night Centers In some areas noting
meeting of: the Middleport that this is a telephone
Business and Professional emergency service and of
Women's Club held at the f!Chools which are ~nsorlng
Columbia Gas Co. office. .
self defense courses lor•
Mrs. Edith .Forrest, women.
legislative chairman , ln- . Abortion and the numerous
troduced the four speakers legislative proposals on
who discussed credit to reslrlctions were discussed
women, social security by Mrs. Marian Taylor. In
coverage for homemakers, her history on legalizing
rape laws and proposed abortion, Mrs. Taylor
changes, and abortion.
tef~rred to the Supreme
Talking on credit to women Court decision, and to the role
and the Equal Credit Op- which Women's Lib has
: portunlty Act and Ita Intent to played In legislation. She
• guarantee credit to women reported that no federal ·
was Mrs. Mary Martin. She funds, Medicaid included,
spoke of women's limited ~ can be uaed for abortions . .
access to credit, the
Many bills are now under
p~eference to giving credit to· consideration, aceordlng to
smgle men over single Mrs. Taylor, to provide fundwomen, and the problem of a ing for programs which
married . woman securing would give alternatives to
credit In her own name.
abortion, some · of these inShe noted that In 1972 a eluding teenage health care
study on credit to women was centers, family planning
undertsken and that In 1974 programs ahd the Right to
two bljls \'!ere passed by ., We Amendment.
,
Congress which makes It
To conclude the program,
unlawful to dlscrimlna.te Mrs. Forrest urged the
against any applicant for members to exercise their
credit on the basis of sex. She right to vote on Nov. 2.
said that lhe Equal Credit
Mrs. Alwilda Werner
Opportunity Act alao calls lor presided at the meeting and
a written reason f?r denial of • introduced two guests, Ancredit upon request.
nabelle Davidson and Donna
Terri MUler discussed the . Davidson . . It was reported
Homemakers Service Act that three members of the
currently . under
con· club completed the cardio
slderation which would pulmonary resuscitation
qualify homemakers for course. They ate Mrs. Etoile
social security benefits. She WilBon, Mrs. Suzy Carpenter
said homemakers would oo and Mrs. Wanda Eblin.
considered seif-employed In
It was noied that several
the home and that. the members attended the
average wage being paid In Autumn FroUc 17 held at
the lahur market for com- BurrOakonSunday,Sept.26:
parable jobs performed by a Those attending were Mrs.
homemaker would be the Cerpenter, Miss Houdsshelt,
basis for social security Miss Erna Jesse, Miss Miller,
contributors. Miss Miller said Mrs. Dortha Salser, Mrs.
that the Act0 1f passed, would Matjorle Walburn , Mrs.
qualify homemakers for Welsh, Mrs. Werner and Mrs.
monthly social security WilBon.
payment. .
The Christmas stocking
Giving an update on the project for the two retirement
crime rste with specifics on · homes, Hlllrise and West·
rape was Mrs. Catherine more, was discussed and
· Welsh. She quoted from an each member contributed $1
FBI report which listed 56,090 for the stocking. ..,
rapes In 1975, an Increase of
The traveling prize was
46 per cent over 1970. Mrs. won by Mrs. Janet Korn.
Welsh listed reasons why Refreshments were served.
women'- are . hesitant to Gifts were presented to Mrs.
report' rapes ·Including the Werner, "Woman of the ,
lack of separate faclliiles in Year," and Mrs. Salser, ·
hospitals ior their treatment, "Woman of the Week"
the liospltal fees, the Intimate selected by popular vote of
' questioning and insensitivity the membership.
of officials.

'

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773-5534

MATERIALS CO.

2325 JaSON AVENUE, PT. PWSMT, W. VA.

Mason, W. Va.

I

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'

298 Second
•

IOMERDt OHJO

NO SALES

hices EffeCfiie' Thru
Oct. 23, 1976

ro DEALERS

·•
OUANTilY kiGHTS RESERVED

'

QUALITY PLUS

$
19
BACON ••••••••••••
LB.

ARMOUR 12 OZ.

WIENERS •••..•..•.
'

GO TO GAME
Mr. and Mrs. William
Lehew and sons, Billy and
Ted, Pomeroy, were In
Columbus Saturday where
they attended Capital
University's homecoming
game between Capital and
Heidelberg College. The
Lehews' son, John, plays on
the Capl~ University footba~ squad.

7

'

LB.

9 VARIETIES QUALITY' PLUS ..

LUNCHEON MEATS... ·
,..

USDA BGf iESS

,.

.

· LB.

CHUCK ROAST ••••••••
USDACHOICE

...

1

Ground Beef ..~~

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Polish dull fridge
with kitchen wax

DEAR POLLY - I am
answering the reader who
wanted to know how to treat
feathers to. be used for
making pillows. I was the
oldesl of nine children. We
bad little money, so we ate
lots of wild ducks and geese.
Mom used the feathers to
mak'e pillows and feather
beds. She did nothing to them.
Only goose and duck feathers
were ever used, since Mom
.thought the feathers from
other birds were too S(iff. The
birds were dry picked from
the necks down and any dirty

1503 EASTERN AVENUE, GALUPOUS, CillO.l·

Mon.·Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday• 10 am·lO pm

Polly's Pointers

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - My
refrigerator stands right next
to the •ove. I always try to
remember to wipe it off when
I wash dishes, but sometimes
I forget. One day, I really had
. wuse some elbow grease and
scouring powder. It dulled the
enamel Now any grease
sticks like glue. I am afraid to
use more scouring powder for
fear aU the enamel will come
off. My refl'lgerawr Is 15
years old and I do not want to
paint II. I wonder If there is
any other solution to keep the
·grease from adhering. MRS. W. 0.
DEAR MRS. W. 0.- Alter
you gel tbe refrigerator
grease free by usiDg a nonabr&amp;~lve bousebold cleaner,
apply eltber kllcben or
automobUe wa&lt;. Thil should
alford some protection from
grease splattero. - POLLY.

*

Store HolliS:

ARM ROAST••••-........

By Polly Cramer

It Is encouraging that the
U. S. economy is continuing
to recover. Industrial
production has gained
steadily. Private housing
starts bave risen II percent to
a 1.542 million unit annual
rate which Is 22 percent
·above lut year. Auto sales
bave cllmbed nearly 8 percent In rnld.S.ptember and
have risen 211 percent compared with last year at this
time. Overall Industrial
output Is up8.6 percent over a
year earlier.
All of this Increased
economic activity has put
more and more people to
work In the private sector.
: And this Ia mosl desirable as
far as our economic health
and productivity Is con·
cerned. Total employment
grew by nearly miiiiOQ joba
In July and August to ·teach
nearly an 88 million employment peak. The key
figures eased slightly below
that peat to 87.8 million job
holders in September
resulting In 3.7 million job
gain since the March 197$
low. NQn.farm employment
i'ose by about 210,000 joba to a
peak figure of 79.6 million
: payroll joba, a gain of about
, 3.2 million payroll. jobs since
! the June 1975 low. Job gains
• occurred In almost 111'o-thirda
; of 172 reporting Industries.
:. The unemployment situation
; bnproved In September as
, the overall unemployment

Oct. 20, 1976

3

.....

LBS. OR .MORE

or bloody feathers were
discarded. The stiff wing and
tail feathers were never used.
SUch feathers can be washed
hut do not dry in a dryer or
the bright sunlight, since you
do not want to draw the
natural oils from the
feathers. Ours !listed for
years and I do not remember
ever throwing any of them
away. I think manufacturers
now use chicken feathers thai
are chopped and curled. Mom
turned her nose up at chicken
.feathers saying they were too
heavy. - .GRACE.

CENTER CUT RIB

$.129,

LB.

PORK CHOPS ••••••••••
EXTRA CRISP·JONATHAN

Rev. Borden
to be installed

APPLES ••••••• ~~~.~•••

Installation services for the
Rev. Nyle Borden as pastor of
lhe Forest · Run Baptist
Church will be held at 2 p.m.
Sunday at the church.
The Rev. Eddie Buffington,
former pastor, will give the
Installation sermon. There
wiD be a short program by
the program committee with '
Effie A!friend as cbalrman. A
luncheon will be served by
the entertainment committee
following the Service, and
new members will be
welcomed lnto the church
fellowship.
Olflcers and committees of
the church are Mrs. Euelelia
Smith, church clerk and
treasurer; Miss Donna
Bunch, assistant church
clerk; Martin Johnson,
chairman of the bOard of
trustees and Johnnie James,
trustee;
Mrs. Smith,
p•esldent of the Missionary
society with Mrs. John .
Qualls, vice president; Mrs.
Cornelius Bunch, Sunday
School superintendent;
'Martin · Johnson, senior
teacher, and Mrs. Ruth
Buffington, chairman, Mrs.
Bunch, Mrs. Charles Lewis
and Mrs. Dewey Bland,
entertainment committee.

••

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'·•

·~.

RED OR GOLDEN DEUCIOUS

APPLES •• ;•••• !.~~~· .
..
IMPERIAl:· , . ~ . .
~

',!" ~

'

A.PORK LOIN ••• ~ ••
or
BrowsiJo41's (
MACARONI &amp;CHEESE

1

'

··•

'·

,.

MARGA~INE .....~.: ..,

COLJ f"I D N

Dark

KRAFT

~~ 5/$1
. .

lloX

O!th

Coupon

Limit I Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer

10-23-76

1

Ugh!

LB.4/$1 ~ith
.

., Coupon

. Umil 1 Per Customer
Good
at Powell's
Offer

10-23-76

GLAD.

TRASH BAGS
10 CT.

69'

With
Coupon

Limill Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
10-23-76

MAXWELL
HOUSE
.
&gt;

COFFEE
3 LBS.

$.100 OFF

With Coupon

Limit 1 Per•Customer
GOod Only at Powell's
Offer

10.23-76

�'

'

JMrs. Smith_

1- The o.J1y SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wedoesdilv. Oct. 20, 1976

· ·w,~::.~~~

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1

. ~/'~,.,,
.• ••• •.w. -~,.....·;,:,·-WIII~~~flli¥I~!"'IIMI. .
ea
W.i:.f'n:&lt;M~.o;;.g'~(.O

·~ .Fun With Food
~

Us •••
DEAR

1

lfE\.EN:

By Helen Bouel

Male Martyn Get Ruzberry

hnjo~ the !etten from "Jock at 43" and "NoM~ Mr.
Nice Guy" both of w'- wives took off with other men.
"Jock" pictured hlmlelf as a realy martyr; the good and
faithful husband. But maybe he was ·simply ·good and DULL.
CGu1d be hla wife cho11 an affair u an eacal'll !rom boredom.
"Mr. Nl&lt;e Guy"_lmplles males are ~perior ..He wouldn't
call a 01111 "flaky" II be rsn off with another woman, but
women are ''flaky" lor nerUng 110me Initiative.
Both say they now take wbat Is offered !rom "liberated"
(there!cre IIUpld and easy?) women. Maybe they've learned
In the proce11 how NOT to be 81od4jy husbands and drive their
matea t.tty. Hope so I
. Theae men seem to believe that playing the faithful breadwinner Is the key to keeping a bullt-ln housekeeper, cook, bed
partner, elc. But a good marriage also muat Include loving
consideration, e~cltement, attention, companionship,

romance ...

If a 01111 irovid~:B these, bei'U probably get a !althfill,
ardent wl!e. lf not,! don"t waste tears over poor Jock and Mr.
Nice Guy - KNOWS WHAT IT'S ALL ABOUT

DEAR KWIAA:

.

One woman's klutz Is another woman's klllg. Why Jock
and Mr. Nice Guy 1081 their crOIVllB we'll never really kilow,
but It Isn't fair to Cll!ldeUUI th"!Ji as "superior bores" juat
because their wives took off with other men. .
It can happen to good LOVING mates, too - if that special
temptation hils during a Iullin mnrrled life. - H.

+++

Mrs. Zuelella Smith bas
returned from the Ohio
.Baptlst General Convention
at the Bethany Baptist
Church, Columbus, where lhe
gave her final report on
activities as supervllior of 'the
Ohio Baptist Hattie Jacbon
Guild of the Providence
District.
.'
Mrs. Smith served as
supervlaor of the Girls' Guild
for the 38 churches In the
District for 27 years. Her
report was given at the
Friday evening session of the
Convention.
Mrs. Smith introduced the
new supervisor, Mrs. Barbara Smith Scott of Tried·
stone Baptist Church,
Gallipolis. At the request of
Mrs. Scott, Mrs. Smith will
serve BB general advllior in
the work. She was elected
supervisor emeritus of the
Glfls' Guild for the
Providence Dlstlrct. Mrs.
Dorothy Lewis, president ·of
the Providence Association
Women's Auxiliary, expressed regret at the
resignation of Mrs. Smith

CHESTER - The Chester every half boqr.
baUoon IIJld dartl; Corene
Game c:halrmen are Unda Ambrose, duck pond; Belly
PTA will atage a jitney
supper and fuU carnival at Edwards, Linda Bent1,
From Evelyn E, Hollon, Rt. 1, Minersville comes two the Chester Elementary Charlotte Grant and Norman Newell, Karel Werry and
Becky Mankin, flab pood;
recipes callinj! for honey instead ol sugar.
Baum, games; Pat Wllaon, Jo Cella Salley and Mr. and
School Saturday night.
One Is for a pupkin pie and since there are pumpkins
Serving for the jitney Ann McLaughlin, Connie
aplenty just now, you might llke to uae !reah cooked instead of supper will be held from 5 to 7 Karachnlk and IJnda Hudlon, Mrs. Robert E;lberfeld, ahoot
canned, but for !his recipe either will be just fine. Also Mrs. p.m. with the menu to lnelude country store; Diane lbe hoot target cme; Mr.
and Mrs. Nick ~. pound a
Hollon suggests for the lover of* real spicy pie that additional
steak or ham, green beans, Celedonia and Jo Ann nan.
spices be added.
potatoes, sia'l'!', rolls, dessert, Newsome, d1ab throw; EUeen
Maida Long, pumpkin lace
•
beverages and hot dogs, at Bahr, Kay Fick, Jean Blake, ~w;N~yCrow,balloon
PUMPKIN PIE
. Pat Thomas and Zelma Call, 1 ladY; Chloris Gall\, poeket
To 2eggs, well beaten, add o/, cup honey, lo/, C1!P pptln, $1.50 a plate.
.
Mrs. Sharon LoUks · and sweet shop.
ladY; cathy .Davl~, JudY
1&gt; teaspoon salt,lleaspoon cinnamon, 1&gt; teaspoon ginger and
Betty Gaul and Gaye Ann Elcblnger; Pat Scbaekel and
Glenna
Riebel
are
co·
1y, cups whole milk or I cup evaporated milk with ,. cup skim
cbalrmen for the carnlval to · Clay, Jewelry engraving; Jo
Ann • Scarbrough,
milk.
Susan Oliver, cane throw; silhouettes; Max Eichinger
bOgln
at
7:30p.m.
There
will
M1s well and then JlOW" Into a 91&gt; or 10 inch unbaked pie
Mr. and Mrs. Roger stewart, and Ed Schaekel, the jail
ahell . liake at 400 degrees untlllt tests done or about ooe hour. be_a 10 cent admission charge
and drawings lor door pri•es
house; Esther Mays, Elaanor
Lawson, Ray Spencer,
The other recipe Is for oatmeal bread. You mb: it one day
Barbara Pooler and Becky
and bake it the nell.
··"'-·I
Pullins, Chesler pennants;
OATMEAL BREAD
Barb.a ra Tripp, books,
2 packages dry yeast, I&gt; cup lukewann water, \1, cup
puxzles
and record room, and
butter of margarine, II&gt; cups hot milk, 1..:1 cup honey, II&gt;
The WUUng Workers Class homemade candy, bam salad
Mr.
and
Mrs. Kirk Chevalier;
teaspoon salt, 5 to 51&gt; cups sifted aU-purpose Dour, and I cup of the Long Bottoin United sandwiches, potato chips,
cartOons.
quick oats, uncooked ,
Methodist Church met cake and beverages were
Ticket sales will be handled
Dissolve yeast in lultewann water. Heat milk. In large recently at the home of MJ:. · served. by the hostess to 1\b'.
bo!"l combine the hot .mUk, butter, honey and salt. Cool until · and Mrs. Harlls Frank.
and Mrs. Randy Koehler, by Mr. and Mra. Howard
lukewann.
· Eloise Connolly ' gave Mildred Blasell, Margie and Parker, Miss Carolyn Smith
· Add 2 cups flour, the oals and the yeast, and beat until prayer to open the meeting Bonrde Welsh, Mr. and Mrs. and Miss Melanie Be,gle,
smooth. Thenaddaddltiooalflourtomakethesoftilough. Turn and George Pickens led the · Ted Carson, Mr. &amp;Mrs. Joe with prize tickets to he aold
out on floured board or pastry cloth, knead unW smooth and devoi!01111 uaing the parabl~ of Connolly, Dorothy Pense, Mr. by !lob Davli, Glenda Hunt
satiny. Cover the dough and let rest 25 minutes. Pinch down, the good s8maritan in Luke and Mrs. Okey Connolly, Mr. and Betty Rouah.
Duane Wolfe, John Riebel,.
divide In hall and ahape into two loaves.
10:25-37. During the. business and Mrs. Ronnie Cowdery,
Sr.
and Jim Louks will bave
Place in greased 81&gt; x 41&gt; pans. Bruah the tops with oil. meeting It was voted to send Mr. and Mrs. Tom Spencer
the
hallway end bullding
Cover with wax paper, Refrigerate overnight. Remove !rom . money to Arthur Hair, Tulsa, and Jared, George Pickens,
refrigerator and let stand at room temperature 15 to 20 Okla., a Cherokee, which the the Rev. Mr. Thomas, and control duty, and pO&amp;ters
bave been made by the fifth
minutes. Prick any bubbles and then bake at 400degrees for 30 class financially adopted Harlls Frank.
grade.
to 35mlnutes. If glass pans are uaed reduce the temperature 25 eight years ago for Christmas
degrees.
·
project. The meeting closed
with the Rev. Richard
T,homas and Delores Frank
doing a reading and a song,
"The Gospel According to Ole
John.''
SYRACUSE
The . Carol Adllms.
During the social hour
tuberculosis renewal levy
Cider, donuts and coffee:
· was epdorsed by the Susan Winebrenner, JeanSyracuse PTO at a recent nette . Duffy, Gloria Michael.
!~Jeetlng at the Syracuse
Sandwiches: Jonetla ·
Grade Srhool.
Davia, Nancy Hubbard, •Mae
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Mrs. Jane Brown, tuber· Grueser, Mary J. Annes,
Nease,
Aspen, Colo. are
culoais nurse, met with the Judy Flagg, and Wanda
announcing
the birth of a
PTO to discuss the levy. Teaford.
daughter,
Kristen
Michele,
Brownie
Troop
1120
Soft drinks:
Donna
Oct.
3.
presented a Halloween skit, Nease, Donna Aleshire,
Maternal grandparents are
and the room count was won Dorlene Jeffers, Voland
Mr.
and Mrs. Willard Winter,
by the third grade.
Satterfield.
Bellefontaine,
and paternal
Final plans were made (or
Cotton candy: Mildred
Mr. and
grandparents
are
the fall carnival to be held on Pierce, Janice Lawson,
Mrs.
Wllllam
N~ase, Aspen.
. at 7 p.m. Charlotte Nease. ·
Fr Ida ~ Oct . 29
The simplic ity and refined lines o1 this dress casual pump,
Anyone who can help with the · · cake walk: Susie Grueser. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Phillips
makes it a versatile wardrobe addit ion. Handsome stitchand
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Uswin
decorating is asked to be at cane Toss: Pat Philson, Jud"
Ing over th e toe line adds an elegant touch to the si lkee
Nease,MinersviUe are great·
the school on that date •at I Gibbs."
brushed pigskin . And Hush Puppies • Gasuafs are born
Mr.
and
Mrs.
·
·andparents.
p.m.
comfortable ... just for you.
Basketball throw:
ease have a son Richard
Committees appointed Adams, Ernie Sisson.
!atthew.
were:
R. c, toss: Pete Mlcl.
Door tickets: the teachers. Bob Davis, Larry Ehersba•
NEW YORK (UP!) Dart throw: Bill Neas
Game tickets: Terri
Somebody
wanted to know
Paul K!oes and Greg Roush.
Micbael, Jeannie Allen.
whether
the
New York
Bear bag toss: Mike Fry,
Fish pond : first grade
Middle of Upper Block
Yankees
were
Barry McCoy.
homeroom mothers.
. Pomeroy, o.
Penny drop: Susan Blaker, "disappointing" Pete Rose .
Country kitchen and
Open All Day Thursday
'Heck, no, " said the
desserts: Mary Chancey, Sandy Cobb, Jean Kloes.
Friday Night Til8
C!Qwn -ioss:.Ann Hemsley, Cincinnati Reds third
Dorothy Amberger, MarUyn
'Saturday 9 TiiS
Deener, Louise Frank, Pat Wanda Stafford and Darlene basem~n. "!wish they'd play
· the same way for one more
Houdashelt, Nancy Pat· •Ritchie.
.
Pendulum: John Philson, game.u
terso~. Janice Deem and
Bill Cogar.
Spook house: Janet
Pickens, Karen Connolly,
Irene Dill,
Prize table: Jo Ellen
Rouah, Susie Murphy, Mary
Adkins and Joyce Sisson.
Membership: Sarah Rouah,
Judy Roush.
Refreshments were served
A Halloween party and by the sixth grade mothers.
family dinner was held at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
LEGAL NOTICE
McGuire and daughters,
Recka and Raglna, Pomeroy,
The Public Utilitie$ Commisoz: . . package
.
sion ol Ohio has set tor
R.D. on Sunday.
public hearing Case No .
Games were played and
76-534-EL·FAC, to review the
prizes aYfarded lo the winoperation of the fuel adjustners. Attending were Mr. and
ment clause and the fuel proMrs. Harry Roush, Miner·
curement practic~s and polisville; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
cies of the Ohio Power ComManuel, Tim and Sid, Racine,
pany, on Oclober 25, 1976, at
Route 2; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
tO:OO A.M. a1 the offices of
Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
the ·commission, 180 East
Broad Street, Columbus ,
Bailey, Long Bottom ; Dawn
Ohio.
Rouah, New Haven, W. Va.;
Alt interested persons will
Mr. and Mrs. Howard
be gi~en an opportunity !o be
Searles, Pomeroy, Route 4;
DAIRY
PRODUCE
heard. Further information
Mr. and Mrs. Terry McGuire,
be Obtained by contact·
Terry, Jr., Dexter; Mrs. ~ may
5 lb. Florida Wh~e ·
ing the Commi~sio~ .
Lynn Arms and Jeannie,
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
Pomeroy, and the host
COM'-'ISSION OF OHIO
bag
family.
By Randall G. Applegate.

;;v Charlene Hoeflirh

Class meets recently

DEAR HELEN:
My trother and I grew up·with a father wbo loved other
wcmen, while we and my mother rode In the back of the bus.
Father uaed me as an excuse to get out of the house, i . _ ; o , · 1 l"i'Y
thinking that II I were aloog, Mother wouldn't suspect. I ·'
.I
babysat his sweetie's two kids, and whlle they were out, I
.
became Involved with her overpowering husband . Afterwards,
I was ashamed, gul!ty and frightened, but there was no one to
turn to - my mother by that .time was deep tranqulUzers and
booze.
,
1was marked .. the fainlly black aheep, though I'll never
understand why 1 was entirely blamed for something my
WEDNESDAy
father started.
•
·
SOUTHERN
JUNIOR
Things got so bad, I ran away into a tem'ble marr1age Athletic
Boosters,
7:30 atHigh
the
whlch 1endured for five years. Only good I got from this was a
h
lovely daughter,
•
sc oo1·
With all Father's inaults and hounding, he still asked me to
ROSE GARDEN Club
leave my husband and come home. Tbat year, 1 watched my.l Wednesday, 8 p.m. at the
mother die ·of cancer.
home of Mrs. JamesStout.
Father bad picked out a replacement six months before
:J;HURSDAY
Morn's death. She wBB barely_cold before my younger brother
DAUGHTERS 0 F
and 1 were ordered to leave the house . Very soon, we received. AMERICA, District 13, anan invitation to Father's big wedding. We went to please him, nual friendship night,
but I can't accept "her" as my daughter's grandmother. .
Thursday, Chester Grade
Father showers money on his new wife and her children, School auditorium. Potluck
·but II biB ownklds asked for help, we're "kicking a hole in Ills dinner at 6.:31l with meetlilg ~
mooeybucket." I asked for a loan so I could study' as an X-ray follow. Mrs. Do;&lt;&gt;thy R1tch1e
technician. He implied I wasn't '!IJUlrt enough.
is the district deputy.
I've been out of a job for months and I desperately need to Everyone to take own table
learn a trade so I can support myself and daughter. Father service . .
demands love andrespectfromme; but he won't give an ounce
GRACE EPISCOPAL
of c&lt;IIS!derallm. Must I crawl, or ???- DffiT UNDER THE .Church Women will meet at.
RUG
12:30 p.m. Thursday at the
DEAR DUTR:
home of Mrs. Haro!rt Deeth.
Seema to me you've alreadY crawled enough! Contact the Two members of the
welfare department lor' help, and enroll at a free community Diocesan Women's Board of ·
college where you'll receive tralnlng as an X-ray technician. Directors will report on the
Thlll next year won1 he easy, but you can do it alone - II Triennial Convention held in
you rillll guts and determination with an "I'll ahow him" Minneapolis recently.
stu~rnness. - H.
MAGNOUA CLUB, 7:30
Thursday at the ho~e ol Mrs.
Bertha canady, Lincoln Hill.
FRIDAY
DANCE AT Southern High
School Friday from 10 p.m.
COAL GROVE - The and nine and up ITlembers for unW 12:30 a.m. Admission
eighth annual majorette large teams.) Two baton $1.60. Music by Clockwork.
festival, . sponsored by Xi competitions wlll also be Sponsored by senior class.
Alpha UpsUon of Beta Slgrna available . Miss Majorette
FREE CLOTHING DAY
Phi, will be held Saturday, and Little Miss Majorette will Friday sponsored by GaUla·
Nov. 13, at Coal Grove High be selected from the senior Meigs · Community Action
Sctiool, Coal Grove.
and junior high majorette Agency at old high school
Registration will be at 9: 3(). groups.
building in Cheshire from 9
a.m. with competition
Groups are to register by a.m. to 2 p.m.
startins at 10:30 a.m.
PRE-GAME Spaghetti
Oct. 34l. Solo registration will
This festival Is held for solo be held now until' 10:30 a.m. supper, 4 to 7 p.m., Friday at
twirlers, strutters, ·twirl the day of the 'festival.
Senior Citizens Center,
teams and senior and junior
Cafeteria' facllltles will be Pomeroy. Please make
high majorette. groups. available throughout the day. reservations In advance so
Majorette sroups will per· For Information and or proP.,r preparations can be
!onn at I· p.m. Age divisions registration call Mrs. Andrea .made by calling 992-7884 or
for solo competition are : pee Hopkins, chainnan, 614-532- 992-1886: Adults, $2; children,
wee, 0-8; juvenile, 7-11 ; 0700 evenings, or write 102 $1.
junior, 12-14; senior, 15 and Valley VIew Drive, Coal
SATURDAY
up: Twirl teams will be small Grove, Ohio, 45638, or call the
TRI COUNTY CB Club will
and large junior and senior following numbers: 614-532- bave Halloween party, 6:30
groupa. (Four to eight 1840 or 614-532-1907 ..
p.m. Saturday at motorcycle
members for smaU teams
club on Route 33 and CR 19.
Games, prizes . Potluck.
dinner. Bring own table
service.
FISH F)W by Middleport
Fire .Department beginning
at 11 a .m. Saturday at
department headquarters;
flab ·sandwiches and dinners
Secretary
available.
MODERN WOODMEN of ~~a3~a3~a3~am~~~
America and Hemlock
Grange will sponsor a
Halloween party at B p.m.
Saturday at the grange ball.
There will be prizes for the
DIAMOND best costumed and there will Autnu&amp;; SELECTION
be a !lllh pond, a countty
·'
FINGER store, games. Meml!ers are · OF PINWALE
take cookies for refresh· CORDUROY
TWINKLERS toments.
·
only
REV CHARLES Norris from '1.98
'2.49
95 speaking
at Cannel United
each Methodist Church, 7:30 each ·
evening through Saturday
POLYESTER GABARDINE
and at Sutton United
1
·Methodist Church, Thuraday
45"
3.98 60"-14.49
through Saturday. Publlc
invited.
BIG BEND Citizens .Band
•
'·
Radio Club Halloween party
'
60" POLYESTER INTERLOCK
in the Children's Home
PRINTS 13.98 14.49
building, 7 p.m. Saturday
night, for members. Short
business meeting,
NOTIONS, MACHINES
WANTS TO GO. '
ALL YOU NEED TO SEW
LONOON (UP!) - Ex~
Beatie Paul McCartney bopes
THIS FAll
the Soviet Unioo's decision to
release his la'test album wiU
result in a concert tour.
"I would really like to go to
Russia ," McCartney said.
Simplicity Patterns
·
"They are basically just llke
115 W. Sec~&gt;nd
PQmeruy
.
the West . ll 's only 'their

Soc aI

Calendar

Majorette festival set

PT~ to stage jitney supper .

.

... . ...
~

B.

A. RECTANGULAR DISH PAN
C. UTILITY &amp; LAUNDRY BASKET

NEW

FAll FABRICS

to

$19

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to

T~ea~fs~~~t~Sew~hOP.~-· .

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"

politics which makes them
seQ\. •ray and drab."
,

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'

59~

B·. 3 QT. SAUCE PAN

SJOO

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C. 7 CUP PERC.

D. lOOT. DISHPAN

D. l2QT.PAILWITHSPOUT

E. CAKE &amp; UTILITY PAN

E. BATH &amp;·SHOWER CADDY

F. ROASTING PAN

F. ROUND LAUNDRY BASKET

FAB DETERGENT

G. SALAD BOWL SET

88(

D.

.

.

.~

J1.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.
.

~

A~
' ~ E.

84 inch

f

•

'

CHOICE

DEPT.

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·

'

.

~··

D.

$166

: , ~ HOUSEWARE

·

~)..::-1 ~11 "0 ·.- .. ~--IT-51"-YTVrr----;_,;

HECK'S REG. To $1.99

..

G. 3-PC. SAUCE PAN SET

REG. '1.53 . , 09

CHOICE

-'

HECK'S Ri'G. TO
$2.93

TR-AVERSE
RODS
$499 . $744

NtH/SEWARE DEPT.
E.

, 'I

I
. .

§G.

156 inch

12 OZ. PLASTIC

TUMBLERS

10(

7 oz. cozv

REF.ILL
CUPS

Each

59~

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. 7'1

17' Each

IHH/SEWARE
DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT. .

HECK'S
REG.
$9.99

89~

30 count California

CELERY.........~~~~. 29

~

~

FROZEN

14 oz.

A. 4 QT. SAUCE POT

6BARS

HICII'SIEG.
25'1Ait

B. ICE CUBE TRAYS

BE...~;.r,. w·IE··NERS.~.~~.~·.~~....................
HAM SALAD.~~.~.~~~.~~.....................~~:. 99~
CALLIE HAMS.~~.~~~.~.~~.'-~ . .~ ........... ~~:. 79~
SAGE Ll NKS.!r.;a;.~~.~~~;. . . '.~: . $ 08
quarters

ALUMINUM
COOKWARE

Jergens, Zest, 11111J,
Coast and Irish Spring
Choice

PLASTICS

Halloween
party held

GRAPEFRUIT

BATH SOAP

HOUSEHOLD

1

Margarine

#.~

B.

Hartley 's Shoes

1 lb. Blue Bonnet

__
'

$2()00

New arrival

·~ ·

~~ ~ ... ·- ,:, ':do

Brown Pigskin
Rust Pigskin

TB kvy endorsed .

...,....

.. .

MRS. PAUL'S FISH STICKS. ..........~!.~~..~1

\)

flfACIO I~Ofi"TION
III'IU ITOtiiM:H

HIA~TIURN •

49

)&amp;

SCHICK
SUPER II

10 oL Maxwell House
Instant Coffee ...................... : '2·"· limit one
.
.
32 OL Miracle Whip
Kraft Salad· Dreulng. .......................... . 89~ lar
14 OL Brook's
Tangy Hot Ketchup .......................... 2 for 59•
22 OL Borden's Cremora ........................ ~1A9
14% OL Jeno's Cheese Pizza ......:............ 59•
Ga'llon of Rich N' Ready Orange Drink 89~
24 OL Crisco 011 .... ~ .................................. ~ ... 89•
10 OL Nestle'•
Chocolate Monell ...................~1.ot package

NAIL
POLISH

. 46(

HECK'S REG.
'
69'
COSMITIC II/IT.

t

PEEL-OFF

MASKS

STIAWBEnY

.'$_108

I
\..

9's

36C0UNT

ALKA~SELTZER

~ 139

HICk'S
•

HECK'S REG.
$2.09 '
CosMmC DEIT.

Ill\ IIS IN II FOil IICO

RIG.
$1.24

86(

cos.r~t•r.

.

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J

..... _

SELSEN
BLUE
4oL

$111

. u ...
$

GRECIAN
FORMULA

$1''

Lady Grecian
Formula

$199 ·
COSIIITIC•r.

GERITOL
TABLETS
100'ewlth
14Free

$

58

HICK'S RIG. $5.99

COSMI1IC, ,

�'

'

JMrs. Smith_

1- The o.J1y SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wedoesdilv. Oct. 20, 1976

· ·w,~::.~~~

.

1

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W.i:.f'n:&lt;M~.o;;.g'~(.O

·~ .Fun With Food
~

Us •••
DEAR

1

lfE\.EN:

By Helen Bouel

Male Martyn Get Ruzberry

hnjo~ the !etten from "Jock at 43" and "NoM~ Mr.
Nice Guy" both of w'- wives took off with other men.
"Jock" pictured hlmlelf as a realy martyr; the good and
faithful husband. But maybe he was ·simply ·good and DULL.
CGu1d be hla wife cho11 an affair u an eacal'll !rom boredom.
"Mr. Nl&lt;e Guy"_lmplles males are ~perior ..He wouldn't
call a 01111 "flaky" II be rsn off with another woman, but
women are ''flaky" lor nerUng 110me Initiative.
Both say they now take wbat Is offered !rom "liberated"
(there!cre IIUpld and easy?) women. Maybe they've learned
In the proce11 how NOT to be 81od4jy husbands and drive their
matea t.tty. Hope so I
. Theae men seem to believe that playing the faithful breadwinner Is the key to keeping a bullt-ln housekeeper, cook, bed
partner, elc. But a good marriage also muat Include loving
consideration, e~cltement, attention, companionship,

romance ...

If a 01111 irovid~:B these, bei'U probably get a !althfill,
ardent wl!e. lf not,! don"t waste tears over poor Jock and Mr.
Nice Guy - KNOWS WHAT IT'S ALL ABOUT

DEAR KWIAA:

.

One woman's klutz Is another woman's klllg. Why Jock
and Mr. Nice Guy 1081 their crOIVllB we'll never really kilow,
but It Isn't fair to Cll!ldeUUI th"!Ji as "superior bores" juat
because their wives took off with other men. .
It can happen to good LOVING mates, too - if that special
temptation hils during a Iullin mnrrled life. - H.

+++

Mrs. Zuelella Smith bas
returned from the Ohio
.Baptlst General Convention
at the Bethany Baptist
Church, Columbus, where lhe
gave her final report on
activities as supervllior of 'the
Ohio Baptist Hattie Jacbon
Guild of the Providence
District.
.'
Mrs. Smith served as
supervlaor of the Girls' Guild
for the 38 churches In the
District for 27 years. Her
report was given at the
Friday evening session of the
Convention.
Mrs. Smith introduced the
new supervisor, Mrs. Barbara Smith Scott of Tried·
stone Baptist Church,
Gallipolis. At the request of
Mrs. Scott, Mrs. Smith will
serve BB general advllior in
the work. She was elected
supervisor emeritus of the
Glfls' Guild for the
Providence Dlstlrct. Mrs.
Dorothy Lewis, president ·of
the Providence Association
Women's Auxiliary, expressed regret at the
resignation of Mrs. Smith

CHESTER - The Chester every half boqr.
baUoon IIJld dartl; Corene
Game c:halrmen are Unda Ambrose, duck pond; Belly
PTA will atage a jitney
supper and fuU carnival at Edwards, Linda Bent1,
From Evelyn E, Hollon, Rt. 1, Minersville comes two the Chester Elementary Charlotte Grant and Norman Newell, Karel Werry and
Becky Mankin, flab pood;
recipes callinj! for honey instead ol sugar.
Baum, games; Pat Wllaon, Jo Cella Salley and Mr. and
School Saturday night.
One Is for a pupkin pie and since there are pumpkins
Serving for the jitney Ann McLaughlin, Connie
aplenty just now, you might llke to uae !reah cooked instead of supper will be held from 5 to 7 Karachnlk and IJnda Hudlon, Mrs. Robert E;lberfeld, ahoot
canned, but for !his recipe either will be just fine. Also Mrs. p.m. with the menu to lnelude country store; Diane lbe hoot target cme; Mr.
and Mrs. Nick ~. pound a
Hollon suggests for the lover of* real spicy pie that additional
steak or ham, green beans, Celedonia and Jo Ann nan.
spices be added.
potatoes, sia'l'!', rolls, dessert, Newsome, d1ab throw; EUeen
Maida Long, pumpkin lace
•
beverages and hot dogs, at Bahr, Kay Fick, Jean Blake, ~w;N~yCrow,balloon
PUMPKIN PIE
. Pat Thomas and Zelma Call, 1 ladY; Chloris Gall\, poeket
To 2eggs, well beaten, add o/, cup honey, lo/, C1!P pptln, $1.50 a plate.
.
Mrs. Sharon LoUks · and sweet shop.
ladY; cathy .Davl~, JudY
1&gt; teaspoon salt,lleaspoon cinnamon, 1&gt; teaspoon ginger and
Betty Gaul and Gaye Ann Elcblnger; Pat Scbaekel and
Glenna
Riebel
are
co·
1y, cups whole milk or I cup evaporated milk with ,. cup skim
cbalrmen for the carnlval to · Clay, Jewelry engraving; Jo
Ann • Scarbrough,
milk.
Susan Oliver, cane throw; silhouettes; Max Eichinger
bOgln
at
7:30p.m.
There
will
M1s well and then JlOW" Into a 91&gt; or 10 inch unbaked pie
Mr. and Mrs. Roger stewart, and Ed Schaekel, the jail
ahell . liake at 400 degrees untlllt tests done or about ooe hour. be_a 10 cent admission charge
and drawings lor door pri•es
house; Esther Mays, Elaanor
Lawson, Ray Spencer,
The other recipe Is for oatmeal bread. You mb: it one day
Barbara Pooler and Becky
and bake it the nell.
··"'-·I
Pullins, Chesler pennants;
OATMEAL BREAD
Barb.a ra Tripp, books,
2 packages dry yeast, I&gt; cup lukewann water, \1, cup
puxzles
and record room, and
butter of margarine, II&gt; cups hot milk, 1..:1 cup honey, II&gt;
The WUUng Workers Class homemade candy, bam salad
Mr.
and
Mrs. Kirk Chevalier;
teaspoon salt, 5 to 51&gt; cups sifted aU-purpose Dour, and I cup of the Long Bottoin United sandwiches, potato chips,
cartOons.
quick oats, uncooked ,
Methodist Church met cake and beverages were
Ticket sales will be handled
Dissolve yeast in lultewann water. Heat milk. In large recently at the home of MJ:. · served. by the hostess to 1\b'.
bo!"l combine the hot .mUk, butter, honey and salt. Cool until · and Mrs. Harlls Frank.
and Mrs. Randy Koehler, by Mr. and Mra. Howard
lukewann.
· Eloise Connolly ' gave Mildred Blasell, Margie and Parker, Miss Carolyn Smith
· Add 2 cups flour, the oals and the yeast, and beat until prayer to open the meeting Bonrde Welsh, Mr. and Mrs. and Miss Melanie Be,gle,
smooth. Thenaddaddltiooalflourtomakethesoftilough. Turn and George Pickens led the · Ted Carson, Mr. &amp;Mrs. Joe with prize tickets to he aold
out on floured board or pastry cloth, knead unW smooth and devoi!01111 uaing the parabl~ of Connolly, Dorothy Pense, Mr. by !lob Davli, Glenda Hunt
satiny. Cover the dough and let rest 25 minutes. Pinch down, the good s8maritan in Luke and Mrs. Okey Connolly, Mr. and Betty Rouah.
Duane Wolfe, John Riebel,.
divide In hall and ahape into two loaves.
10:25-37. During the. business and Mrs. Ronnie Cowdery,
Sr.
and Jim Louks will bave
Place in greased 81&gt; x 41&gt; pans. Bruah the tops with oil. meeting It was voted to send Mr. and Mrs. Tom Spencer
the
hallway end bullding
Cover with wax paper, Refrigerate overnight. Remove !rom . money to Arthur Hair, Tulsa, and Jared, George Pickens,
refrigerator and let stand at room temperature 15 to 20 Okla., a Cherokee, which the the Rev. Mr. Thomas, and control duty, and pO&amp;ters
bave been made by the fifth
minutes. Prick any bubbles and then bake at 400degrees for 30 class financially adopted Harlls Frank.
grade.
to 35mlnutes. If glass pans are uaed reduce the temperature 25 eight years ago for Christmas
degrees.
·
project. The meeting closed
with the Rev. Richard
T,homas and Delores Frank
doing a reading and a song,
"The Gospel According to Ole
John.''
SYRACUSE
The . Carol Adllms.
During the social hour
tuberculosis renewal levy
Cider, donuts and coffee:
· was epdorsed by the Susan Winebrenner, JeanSyracuse PTO at a recent nette . Duffy, Gloria Michael.
!~Jeetlng at the Syracuse
Sandwiches: Jonetla ·
Grade Srhool.
Davia, Nancy Hubbard, •Mae
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Mrs. Jane Brown, tuber· Grueser, Mary J. Annes,
Nease,
Aspen, Colo. are
culoais nurse, met with the Judy Flagg, and Wanda
announcing
the birth of a
PTO to discuss the levy. Teaford.
daughter,
Kristen
Michele,
Brownie
Troop
1120
Soft drinks:
Donna
Oct.
3.
presented a Halloween skit, Nease, Donna Aleshire,
Maternal grandparents are
and the room count was won Dorlene Jeffers, Voland
Mr.
and Mrs. Willard Winter,
by the third grade.
Satterfield.
Bellefontaine,
and paternal
Final plans were made (or
Cotton candy: Mildred
Mr. and
grandparents
are
the fall carnival to be held on Pierce, Janice Lawson,
Mrs.
Wllllam
N~ase, Aspen.
. at 7 p.m. Charlotte Nease. ·
Fr Ida ~ Oct . 29
The simplic ity and refined lines o1 this dress casual pump,
Anyone who can help with the · · cake walk: Susie Grueser. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Phillips
makes it a versatile wardrobe addit ion. Handsome stitchand
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Uswin
decorating is asked to be at cane Toss: Pat Philson, Jud"
Ing over th e toe line adds an elegant touch to the si lkee
Nease,MinersviUe are great·
the school on that date •at I Gibbs."
brushed pigskin . And Hush Puppies • Gasuafs are born
Mr.
and
Mrs.
·
·andparents.
p.m.
comfortable ... just for you.
Basketball throw:
ease have a son Richard
Committees appointed Adams, Ernie Sisson.
!atthew.
were:
R. c, toss: Pete Mlcl.
Door tickets: the teachers. Bob Davis, Larry Ehersba•
NEW YORK (UP!) Dart throw: Bill Neas
Game tickets: Terri
Somebody
wanted to know
Paul K!oes and Greg Roush.
Micbael, Jeannie Allen.
whether
the
New York
Bear bag toss: Mike Fry,
Fish pond : first grade
Middle of Upper Block
Yankees
were
Barry McCoy.
homeroom mothers.
. Pomeroy, o.
Penny drop: Susan Blaker, "disappointing" Pete Rose .
Country kitchen and
Open All Day Thursday
'Heck, no, " said the
desserts: Mary Chancey, Sandy Cobb, Jean Kloes.
Friday Night Til8
C!Qwn -ioss:.Ann Hemsley, Cincinnati Reds third
Dorothy Amberger, MarUyn
'Saturday 9 TiiS
Deener, Louise Frank, Pat Wanda Stafford and Darlene basem~n. "!wish they'd play
· the same way for one more
Houdashelt, Nancy Pat· •Ritchie.
.
Pendulum: John Philson, game.u
terso~. Janice Deem and
Bill Cogar.
Spook house: Janet
Pickens, Karen Connolly,
Irene Dill,
Prize table: Jo Ellen
Rouah, Susie Murphy, Mary
Adkins and Joyce Sisson.
Membership: Sarah Rouah,
Judy Roush.
Refreshments were served
A Halloween party and by the sixth grade mothers.
family dinner was held at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
LEGAL NOTICE
McGuire and daughters,
Recka and Raglna, Pomeroy,
The Public Utilitie$ Commisoz: . . package
.
sion ol Ohio has set tor
R.D. on Sunday.
public hearing Case No .
Games were played and
76-534-EL·FAC, to review the
prizes aYfarded lo the winoperation of the fuel adjustners. Attending were Mr. and
ment clause and the fuel proMrs. Harry Roush, Miner·
curement practic~s and polisville; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
cies of the Ohio Power ComManuel, Tim and Sid, Racine,
pany, on Oclober 25, 1976, at
Route 2; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
tO:OO A.M. a1 the offices of
Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
the ·commission, 180 East
Broad Street, Columbus ,
Bailey, Long Bottom ; Dawn
Ohio.
Rouah, New Haven, W. Va.;
Alt interested persons will
Mr. and Mrs. Howard
be gi~en an opportunity !o be
Searles, Pomeroy, Route 4;
DAIRY
PRODUCE
heard. Further information
Mr. and Mrs. Terry McGuire,
be Obtained by contact·
Terry, Jr., Dexter; Mrs. ~ may
5 lb. Florida Wh~e ·
ing the Commi~sio~ .
Lynn Arms and Jeannie,
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
Pomeroy, and the host
COM'-'ISSION OF OHIO
bag
family.
By Randall G. Applegate.

;;v Charlene Hoeflirh

Class meets recently

DEAR HELEN:
My trother and I grew up·with a father wbo loved other
wcmen, while we and my mother rode In the back of the bus.
Father uaed me as an excuse to get out of the house, i . _ ; o , · 1 l"i'Y
thinking that II I were aloog, Mother wouldn't suspect. I ·'
.I
babysat his sweetie's two kids, and whlle they were out, I
.
became Involved with her overpowering husband . Afterwards,
I was ashamed, gul!ty and frightened, but there was no one to
turn to - my mother by that .time was deep tranqulUzers and
booze.
,
1was marked .. the fainlly black aheep, though I'll never
understand why 1 was entirely blamed for something my
WEDNESDAy
father started.
•
·
SOUTHERN
JUNIOR
Things got so bad, I ran away into a tem'ble marr1age Athletic
Boosters,
7:30 atHigh
the
whlch 1endured for five years. Only good I got from this was a
h
lovely daughter,
•
sc oo1·
With all Father's inaults and hounding, he still asked me to
ROSE GARDEN Club
leave my husband and come home. Tbat year, 1 watched my.l Wednesday, 8 p.m. at the
mother die ·of cancer.
home of Mrs. JamesStout.
Father bad picked out a replacement six months before
:J;HURSDAY
Morn's death. She wBB barely_cold before my younger brother
DAUGHTERS 0 F
and 1 were ordered to leave the house . Very soon, we received. AMERICA, District 13, anan invitation to Father's big wedding. We went to please him, nual friendship night,
but I can't accept "her" as my daughter's grandmother. .
Thursday, Chester Grade
Father showers money on his new wife and her children, School auditorium. Potluck
·but II biB ownklds asked for help, we're "kicking a hole in Ills dinner at 6.:31l with meetlilg ~
mooeybucket." I asked for a loan so I could study' as an X-ray follow. Mrs. Do;&lt;&gt;thy R1tch1e
technician. He implied I wasn't '!IJUlrt enough.
is the district deputy.
I've been out of a job for months and I desperately need to Everyone to take own table
learn a trade so I can support myself and daughter. Father service . .
demands love andrespectfromme; but he won't give an ounce
GRACE EPISCOPAL
of c&lt;IIS!derallm. Must I crawl, or ???- DffiT UNDER THE .Church Women will meet at.
RUG
12:30 p.m. Thursday at the
DEAR DUTR:
home of Mrs. Haro!rt Deeth.
Seema to me you've alreadY crawled enough! Contact the Two members of the
welfare department lor' help, and enroll at a free community Diocesan Women's Board of ·
college where you'll receive tralnlng as an X-ray technician. Directors will report on the
Thlll next year won1 he easy, but you can do it alone - II Triennial Convention held in
you rillll guts and determination with an "I'll ahow him" Minneapolis recently.
stu~rnness. - H.
MAGNOUA CLUB, 7:30
Thursday at the ho~e ol Mrs.
Bertha canady, Lincoln Hill.
FRIDAY
DANCE AT Southern High
School Friday from 10 p.m.
COAL GROVE - The and nine and up ITlembers for unW 12:30 a.m. Admission
eighth annual majorette large teams.) Two baton $1.60. Music by Clockwork.
festival, . sponsored by Xi competitions wlll also be Sponsored by senior class.
Alpha UpsUon of Beta Slgrna available . Miss Majorette
FREE CLOTHING DAY
Phi, will be held Saturday, and Little Miss Majorette will Friday sponsored by GaUla·
Nov. 13, at Coal Grove High be selected from the senior Meigs · Community Action
Sctiool, Coal Grove.
and junior high majorette Agency at old high school
Registration will be at 9: 3(). groups.
building in Cheshire from 9
a.m. with competition
Groups are to register by a.m. to 2 p.m.
startins at 10:30 a.m.
PRE-GAME Spaghetti
Oct. 34l. Solo registration will
This festival Is held for solo be held now until' 10:30 a.m. supper, 4 to 7 p.m., Friday at
twirlers, strutters, ·twirl the day of the 'festival.
Senior Citizens Center,
teams and senior and junior
Cafeteria' facllltles will be Pomeroy. Please make
high majorette. groups. available throughout the day. reservations In advance so
Majorette sroups will per· For Information and or proP.,r preparations can be
!onn at I· p.m. Age divisions registration call Mrs. Andrea .made by calling 992-7884 or
for solo competition are : pee Hopkins, chainnan, 614-532- 992-1886: Adults, $2; children,
wee, 0-8; juvenile, 7-11 ; 0700 evenings, or write 102 $1.
junior, 12-14; senior, 15 and Valley VIew Drive, Coal
SATURDAY
up: Twirl teams will be small Grove, Ohio, 45638, or call the
TRI COUNTY CB Club will
and large junior and senior following numbers: 614-532- bave Halloween party, 6:30
groupa. (Four to eight 1840 or 614-532-1907 ..
p.m. Saturday at motorcycle
members for smaU teams
club on Route 33 and CR 19.
Games, prizes . Potluck.
dinner. Bring own table
service.
FISH F)W by Middleport
Fire .Department beginning
at 11 a .m. Saturday at
department headquarters;
flab ·sandwiches and dinners
Secretary
available.
MODERN WOODMEN of ~~a3~a3~a3~am~~~
America and Hemlock
Grange will sponsor a
Halloween party at B p.m.
Saturday at the grange ball.
There will be prizes for the
DIAMOND best costumed and there will Autnu&amp;; SELECTION
be a !lllh pond, a countty
·'
FINGER store, games. Meml!ers are · OF PINWALE
take cookies for refresh· CORDUROY
TWINKLERS toments.
·
only
REV CHARLES Norris from '1.98
'2.49
95 speaking
at Cannel United
each Methodist Church, 7:30 each ·
evening through Saturday
POLYESTER GABARDINE
and at Sutton United
1
·Methodist Church, Thuraday
45"
3.98 60"-14.49
through Saturday. Publlc
invited.
BIG BEND Citizens .Band
•
'·
Radio Club Halloween party
'
60" POLYESTER INTERLOCK
in the Children's Home
PRINTS 13.98 14.49
building, 7 p.m. Saturday
night, for members. Short
business meeting,
NOTIONS, MACHINES
WANTS TO GO. '
ALL YOU NEED TO SEW
LONOON (UP!) - Ex~
Beatie Paul McCartney bopes
THIS FAll
the Soviet Unioo's decision to
release his la'test album wiU
result in a concert tour.
"I would really like to go to
Russia ," McCartney said.
Simplicity Patterns
·
"They are basically just llke
115 W. Sec~&gt;nd
PQmeruy
.
the West . ll 's only 'their

Soc aI

Calendar

Majorette festival set

PT~ to stage jitney supper .

.

... . ...
~

B.

A. RECTANGULAR DISH PAN
C. UTILITY &amp; LAUNDRY BASKET

NEW

FAll FABRICS

to

$19

..

•
••

to

T~ea~fs~~~t~Sew~hOP.~-· .

i

~:

~-::::~::=-~~~~~~~~~~~J
"

politics which makes them
seQ\. •ray and drab."
,

.

fr

las:a:a:s:~:i!a"~""

~=:a~

•

'

59~

B·. 3 QT. SAUCE PAN

SJOO

. NIJIISiWAII/111'1.

C. 7 CUP PERC.

D. lOOT. DISHPAN

D. l2QT.PAILWITHSPOUT

E. CAKE &amp; UTILITY PAN

E. BATH &amp;·SHOWER CADDY

F. ROASTING PAN

F. ROUND LAUNDRY BASKET

FAB DETERGENT

G. SALAD BOWL SET

88(

D.

.

.

.~

J1.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.
.

~

A~
' ~ E.

84 inch

f

•

'

CHOICE

DEPT.

,, .I

li. .. --y
·

'

.

~··

D.

$166

: , ~ HOUSEWARE

·

~)..::-1 ~11 "0 ·.- .. ~--IT-51"-YTVrr----;_,;

HECK'S REG. To $1.99

..

G. 3-PC. SAUCE PAN SET

REG. '1.53 . , 09

CHOICE

-'

HECK'S Ri'G. TO
$2.93

TR-AVERSE
RODS
$499 . $744

NtH/SEWARE DEPT.
E.

, 'I

I
. .

§G.

156 inch

12 OZ. PLASTIC

TUMBLERS

10(

7 oz. cozv

REF.ILL
CUPS

Each

59~

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. 7'1

17' Each

IHH/SEWARE
DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT. .

HECK'S
REG.
$9.99

89~

30 count California

CELERY.........~~~~. 29

~

~

FROZEN

14 oz.

A. 4 QT. SAUCE POT

6BARS

HICII'SIEG.
25'1Ait

B. ICE CUBE TRAYS

BE...~;.r,. w·IE··NERS.~.~~.~·.~~....................
HAM SALAD.~~.~.~~~.~~.....................~~:. 99~
CALLIE HAMS.~~.~~~.~.~~.'-~ . .~ ........... ~~:. 79~
SAGE Ll NKS.!r.;a;.~~.~~~;. . . '.~: . $ 08
quarters

ALUMINUM
COOKWARE

Jergens, Zest, 11111J,
Coast and Irish Spring
Choice

PLASTICS

Halloween
party held

GRAPEFRUIT

BATH SOAP

HOUSEHOLD

1

Margarine

#.~

B.

Hartley 's Shoes

1 lb. Blue Bonnet

__
'

$2()00

New arrival

·~ ·

~~ ~ ... ·- ,:, ':do

Brown Pigskin
Rust Pigskin

TB kvy endorsed .

...,....

.. .

MRS. PAUL'S FISH STICKS. ..........~!.~~..~1

\)

flfACIO I~Ofi"TION
III'IU ITOtiiM:H

HIA~TIURN •

49

)&amp;

SCHICK
SUPER II

10 oL Maxwell House
Instant Coffee ...................... : '2·"· limit one
.
.
32 OL Miracle Whip
Kraft Salad· Dreulng. .......................... . 89~ lar
14 OL Brook's
Tangy Hot Ketchup .......................... 2 for 59•
22 OL Borden's Cremora ........................ ~1A9
14% OL Jeno's Cheese Pizza ......:............ 59•
Ga'llon of Rich N' Ready Orange Drink 89~
24 OL Crisco 011 .... ~ .................................. ~ ... 89•
10 OL Nestle'•
Chocolate Monell ...................~1.ot package

NAIL
POLISH

. 46(

HECK'S REG.
'
69'
COSMITIC II/IT.

t

PEEL-OFF

MASKS

STIAWBEnY

.'$_108

I
\..

9's

36C0UNT

ALKA~SELTZER

~ 139

HICk'S
•

HECK'S REG.
$2.09 '
CosMmC DEIT.

Ill\ IIS IN II FOil IICO

RIG.
$1.24

86(

cos.r~t•r.

.

\

'. • c.. - ....

J

..... _

SELSEN
BLUE
4oL

$111

. u ...
$

GRECIAN
FORMULA

$1''

Lady Grecian
Formula

$199 ·
COSIIITIC•r.

GERITOL
TABLETS
100'ewlth
14Free

$

58

HICK'S RIG. $5.99

COSMI1IC, ,

�•

l

PLENTY ·
OF FREE
PARKING

OF FREE

.
.
&lt;

. ..

5000 TO 8000 BTU

$14
4
66 .
...._....
$36.99 O~~a:a~~,,~h~~~~A~.,; $10977

,... CA~"~-~~~.~~:~~. ~~~~.~.~~::
'
.,
.

HECK'S
REG.

.

HE..C ,

"mb, ,,,.,.d "'''' '"''·
.

COLEMAN .

PROPANE STOVE

lhe Colema n del u~l'l propane (amp stove opera te! Irom di!pasoble
boule~ or reli ll(lb l~ b u l~ tonk. Feo tvnH inciUdfl nickel plated stove top
and 11bbed ca~e I "Om.
10

.

·. GUN CASE

•466
HECK'S REG.• TO 18.99
•

CORN COB OR MASTER SLATE ·

TURKEE CALL

.

·l

HECK'S
REG.

1111/fS GUN
sroc,.;s H!GH
LUSlRE FINISH

88(

0~

'

$1.29

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

16 4 OZ.
COLEMAN

NYLON

.

PROPANE
FUEL
'
.
H:~::s
$2.05

CHOOSEFROM63" .
OR 72" LACES.

•

ALADDIN

GIANT HAND,
WARMER

fiJNTING COAT'\

$1188'

$4''

HECK'S REG. $17.88

$6.39

SHRTS/JErT.

RED HEAD
HUNTSKILL

HUNTING
PANTS
.

H::::s .S 99
$12.88

•

12 OZ. ALADDIN

HAND WARMER
FLUID
HICK'S
RIG.

$1.13

77#

I

I

I

'

t \~'.\

.·

\.

I

•,

'

200fo

HECK'S
REG.

$37.99
· ClOTHING
DEPT.

'!

Chaos~ fro m s ty li~h prinh and wl id~ t lang or shorl
, . ~lceves. Foi l d r eHe~ and *in wts tha t ·o re oil eo1y core,
· ·~ody logo Of'lywhere. Youn in jun ior, mi~1e1 or 1-oqll
111e1

4''

$

HECK'S
REG.
$5.99
ctDTHII" DEPT.

ClOTHING
DEPT.

$5.99
ClOTHING DEPT. •

GAUCHO
PANT SKIRTS

4 on~

!oo •ope• lc r roll vp ll&lt;&gt;•~· (o.; h optn1lollr hlr

....,1!1 .,.,..,

""~'tw.

HECK'S
REG.

$24.99

*""" ·~'" tluu blt bc&gt;g .

$1888

BASKETBALL

•

k... ...

\ $599
\

HICK'$
REG.

.

TO

HICK 'S
REG.

$1788

$6.11

1 1·'\ ClDTHIIIC
$7 .81 •·--......~.--1
"&lt; .. ~ ..

BOYS'

i

+--------

l,~.. . . ;:b,_._.,,_.

SWEATERS

Ca rdigans a nd p u ltow11 r~ . Choose from ll·ned :
with elephant ju(quard pri nt , placket with India n
moti_l or foo tbOII ca rdig an: JOOo/o wirgin acrylic.
Machine woi ho bt~, luntble d ry. 5iU!I 41o 7.

or fon')" pri~t'• it! rhne HlO%
~life / double I nil
lo1 ·
le&gt;din hi")" Ill~ comtorl&lt;tblt
puK"'"'""'''- Strn@ lo 1R

I"'""

HECK'S
REG.

J

'

•

. :\ ClOTHING
. I\ DEPT.

AUTO BODY
REPAIR KIT

•2''

KENDALL
SUPERBORGT·l
MOTOR OIL

$299

HECK'S
REG;

$7.99

ClOTHIM
DEPT.

...--~··

WIITE OR BlACK KII:HT

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S
REG.
$4.88

,v;...-···· r. 1 · $12.88

$39.99
90RTSDE1T.

PORTABLE
LAMP

WARMUP JACKET

He'll loye c ...:.or ~r~·u p jocket icr th ot snopp y
weolhe( c heod. Two pocket ~ ty le with mop
down coll a r ... eta,tic wois j band. Kasha lined.
Choose from navy or burg undy in ~ i tes ·ato 1B.

Chor:&gt;ie from ei•+-t• 10~d &lt;olon

HECK'S REG.

6VOLT

HECK 'S REG.
$4.59

$6.49

ClDTHIM
DEPT.

. ClDTNIM
DE1T.

ClOTNIIIC DEPT.

J

'1
l

'
&lt;i:? ·

I '.

.

.-;:::,

PRESTONE ·

' PRESTONE
QUICK &amp;CLEAN
CAR WASH

Limlt6 Qts.

'~

,1;

TUFF STUFF

. PRESTONE

SILIC(IE SPRAY

HECK'S REG. $5.99

PORTS DEPT.

TWIImruu
YUKON

JON.E TWIN PAC

I,

HAND WARMER

$466
HECK'SREG.

\

\

\ .,

GRAND-W-LURE

s133

H:~::s
$ .1 3.3.
$1.99
'·

PRES TONE
VltVL HARDTOP
CLEANER

POITSDE1T.

99c

GUN PASTE
RE~.

$1.59

99c

'

HECK'S
REG. ·

$1.88
AUTOMOTIVE

DI1T.

120Z.

:TIRE,
.II•
'

. ).." •

;

.'

'

101. .0~

.wro

:

HECK'S
REG.

$2.49

. '8.48

AIITOMOTifl" ' "

CARBURETOR
CHOKE
SPlAY CLUIER

'

PRES TONE
VINYL
HARDTOP WAX

•

SJM

$JOO

'

.

:s·1·oo

----....·-

REG.
59'

HECK'S REG.

BRAKE FLUID

•ACME

HICK'S
REG.
$1.79

HECK'S

$,499

AIITOMOrtVE

BLUE

HICK'S
HECK'S RIG.

· MATS

AIITOMOTifEIJI/IT.

.

BUCK LURE

HUNTING SOX

1

62' Qt.

$3.99

FROIIT IJIIIIER

HECK'S
REG.
$1.39 .

HECK'S
REG.

• HECK'S
REG. ·

.

Dfi'T.

SI'OITS IIEI'T.

$2.19

.

$2788

"'"'"~ and

VOlT

$6.44

The la tes t style lad. , .gaucho pon t ~kirto !
Choo1e !rom colcuttos, corduroy\ oi-de nint lh
the newe~ t !till look. 5i~es 6 to 16.

TREE STAND

603

.

BAKER .

. · BOYS'

LADIES'
PANTS

:

TO

GIRLS' SKIRTS

Fo r the ia)hiorl conuiov~ Y""11Q miH •. , 1kirh In
denim! or polyeih:B\. All ur11 eCJIY cCHfl r oil me
1tyled lor loll. Sire1 7 to 14.

•u••

'

• •1\

$448

HECK'S
REG.

'

~~~ •Hlll 1"Jdl~ '"'''"~" •••
king ''"ll'n ''""I' go"''"'" .ohol
•o lo,. ~ ""' w.U I, ,,..o;~,1no '-""'

,

'

· POLYESTERVESTS

.

Pocl~ •*&lt;ltht ~'j,.or. llo ud U&gt;&lt;,..•l. ~e i"l01uci II&lt;K&gt; poont1

I

j

LADIES'

lateSt in f o~hiof1, ladies 1l~e-~ele~s, buttOfl lront
polyester vest. So lid colors; come~ in mes 8· 18.

,

$13.99 .
ClOTHINC
DEPT. ·

LADIES'
BRUSHED
SLEEP •
GOWNS

LADIES'
FALL DRESSES
AND SKIRT SETS

..., .- ,i,..

HECK'SREG.

$14.99 ,•· .
,.
ClOTHIM ·~ ' ,, ~~
DE1T. . \ . "'~/

ClOTHINCDEPT.

I

,

,. ri'

HECK'S REG. (

HECK'S REG. PRICE

$6.99
ClDTHING DEPT.

long sleeve, 100"/o nylon . Cowlneckorcardigon
lityle. Smoll 1 medium Or Iorge.

SLEEPING BAG

OFF,

. \l··~;f((
'·I \.·..!J"ir~.'.("•(..

HUNTING HAT

COLEMAN
3 LB.'WASHABLE

"

SHIT;JIJI/IT.

I

. _l'·

•.

HECK'S
REG • .

\

TRAPPER'S

..

· HECK'S REG.

SHRTSDErT.

7

-

$11.88
90RTSDE1T.

REDHEAD
HUNTSKILL

i

I ,,

~ ··"'"r: ·J\' , ~~ ·

JEANS

·.Ct.t

~988

IITIRE STOU

'

PRE-WASHED

I

olmos tonylo)hion mood .

s1''

HECK'S REG.

90RTS DEPT.

(!

i~/'7

r

5 PACK POWERLETS

$799

$ 177

.s29as

MEN'S

Cnw nKk nyle n•en ' ~ ocryltc ~weQlpr~. Con•
pletely w~h oble . Choo1e tram r11d ot nmy wtth
white stnp111. Si u!s S,M, l ,&gt;:L.

Our t!lllire stock ! Save on

wools , wool b lend1 , corduroy1,
PVC vi nyl~. 1Uburbon1, western
,styles ... ond more! Styles lor

HECK'S REG.

PROFESSIOIAL

BOOT LACES ..

,; I

., I ' . .

$5.99

HECK'S REG.

$1.88
. 90RTS DEPT.

uroJ hull

HECK'S,REG.

$119

!~

iJ j

90RTS DEPT.

,

.

$466

FRABILL
12 LOOP NYLON .

~··

M.u~•

$2.03
901TS DEPT.

AS D£SIREO

"..

""' ,.

'

'666

·BASKETBALL NET

SATIN STAIN

FI~S it

'

~f-

... '

SPORTS DE1.T.
'

DRESS SHIRT

filM,

·~

SCOPE
GUN CASE

"egtilt•&lt;&gt;h• od

MEN'S
SWEATERS

MEN'S
. OUTERWEAR

FRUIT OF THE LOOM

-/ ~-· , ..r .

$38.59
SHITSif'T.

$1588

.

99

$ 19.99

UJffi,III(Piot:
'11J'l .,...

.LINSEED OIL

.

HECK'S
REG.

TO '6.99
SPORTS DEPT.
. HI-SPEED

.

Double mantle works from 16.4 oz. Or
14.1 oz . bonle or .bulk tonk with Cole· '
man odoptor. Adjustable light oul·
put.

HECK'S REG.

26

5

t.h~ tUI~

•

!

MEN'S

(hun,., lr&lt;111\')illh ~T' dclub~ ~ltoui!O:I
I
po~t coc t1gr 1e11 ln.rn:fd pam &lt;&lt;HIT&gt; lor

' \:

. :~

1.,

HECK'S REG.

. ..e'··r
·
. . . . ..,...

COLEMAN

PROPANE LANTERN

$4661

I

K S REG. '139.88

.

· t l'
' \.
·l .J;t

.

.

can blodt wol "\J' stock with /luted · ~

f..:_ •

BB PISTOL

H~~~:.~E;.
MARLIN

$41.99
SI'OITS DE1T.

'

r

LADIES'.
-\ PANT COATS

HECK'S
REG.
$1.87

,,

NYLON-N-FOAM
.
'

. SEAT COVERS
HECK'S REG.

$4.99

HICK'S

HICK'S

RIG.

REG.
$1.77

$1.89

HECK'S
RIG.

$1.88

. $344 .

i1Mn•r.

j

,

I

\

.

1

�•

l

PLENTY ·
OF FREE
PARKING

OF FREE

.
.
&lt;

. ..

5000 TO 8000 BTU

$14
4
66 .
...._....
$36.99 O~~a:a~~,,~h~~~~A~.,; $10977

,... CA~"~-~~~.~~:~~. ~~~~.~.~~::
'
.,
.

HECK'S
REG.

.

HE..C ,

"mb, ,,,.,.d "'''' '"''·
.

COLEMAN .

PROPANE STOVE

lhe Colema n del u~l'l propane (amp stove opera te! Irom di!pasoble
boule~ or reli ll(lb l~ b u l~ tonk. Feo tvnH inciUdfl nickel plated stove top
and 11bbed ca~e I "Om.
10

.

·. GUN CASE

•466
HECK'S REG.• TO 18.99
•

CORN COB OR MASTER SLATE ·

TURKEE CALL

.

·l

HECK'S
REG.

1111/fS GUN
sroc,.;s H!GH
LUSlRE FINISH

88(

0~

'

$1.29

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

16 4 OZ.
COLEMAN

NYLON

.

PROPANE
FUEL
'
.
H:~::s
$2.05

CHOOSEFROM63" .
OR 72" LACES.

•

ALADDIN

GIANT HAND,
WARMER

fiJNTING COAT'\

$1188'

$4''

HECK'S REG. $17.88

$6.39

SHRTS/JErT.

RED HEAD
HUNTSKILL

HUNTING
PANTS
.

H::::s .S 99
$12.88

•

12 OZ. ALADDIN

HAND WARMER
FLUID
HICK'S
RIG.

$1.13

77#

I

I

I

'

t \~'.\

.·

\.

I

•,

'

200fo

HECK'S
REG.

$37.99
· ClOTHING
DEPT.

'!

Chaos~ fro m s ty li~h prinh and wl id~ t lang or shorl
, . ~lceves. Foi l d r eHe~ and *in wts tha t ·o re oil eo1y core,
· ·~ody logo Of'lywhere. Youn in jun ior, mi~1e1 or 1-oqll
111e1

4''

$

HECK'S
REG.
$5.99
ctDTHII" DEPT.

ClOTHING
DEPT.

$5.99
ClOTHING DEPT. •

GAUCHO
PANT SKIRTS

4 on~

!oo •ope• lc r roll vp ll&lt;&gt;•~· (o.; h optn1lollr hlr

....,1!1 .,.,..,

""~'tw.

HECK'S
REG.

$24.99

*""" ·~'" tluu blt bc&gt;g .

$1888

BASKETBALL

•

k... ...

\ $599
\

HICK'$
REG.

.

TO

HICK 'S
REG.

$1788

$6.11

1 1·'\ ClDTHIIIC
$7 .81 •·--......~.--1
"&lt; .. ~ ..

BOYS'

i

+--------

l,~.. . . ;:b,_._.,,_.

SWEATERS

Ca rdigans a nd p u ltow11 r~ . Choose from ll·ned :
with elephant ju(quard pri nt , placket with India n
moti_l or foo tbOII ca rdig an: JOOo/o wirgin acrylic.
Machine woi ho bt~, luntble d ry. 5iU!I 41o 7.

or fon')" pri~t'• it! rhne HlO%
~life / double I nil
lo1 ·
le&gt;din hi")" Ill~ comtorl&lt;tblt
puK"'"'""'''- Strn@ lo 1R

I"'""

HECK'S
REG.

J

'

•

. :\ ClOTHING
. I\ DEPT.

AUTO BODY
REPAIR KIT

•2''

KENDALL
SUPERBORGT·l
MOTOR OIL

$299

HECK'S
REG;

$7.99

ClOTHIM
DEPT.

...--~··

WIITE OR BlACK KII:HT

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S
REG.
$4.88

,v;...-···· r. 1 · $12.88

$39.99
90RTSDE1T.

PORTABLE
LAMP

WARMUP JACKET

He'll loye c ...:.or ~r~·u p jocket icr th ot snopp y
weolhe( c heod. Two pocket ~ ty le with mop
down coll a r ... eta,tic wois j band. Kasha lined.
Choose from navy or burg undy in ~ i tes ·ato 1B.

Chor:&gt;ie from ei•+-t• 10~d &lt;olon

HECK'S REG.

6VOLT

HECK 'S REG.
$4.59

$6.49

ClDTHIM
DEPT.

. ClDTNIM
DE1T.

ClOTNIIIC DEPT.

J

'1
l

'
&lt;i:? ·

I '.

.

.-;:::,

PRESTONE ·

' PRESTONE
QUICK &amp;CLEAN
CAR WASH

Limlt6 Qts.

'~

,1;

TUFF STUFF

. PRESTONE

SILIC(IE SPRAY

HECK'S REG. $5.99

PORTS DEPT.

TWIImruu
YUKON

JON.E TWIN PAC

I,

HAND WARMER

$466
HECK'SREG.

\

\

\ .,

GRAND-W-LURE

s133

H:~::s
$ .1 3.3.
$1.99
'·

PRES TONE
VltVL HARDTOP
CLEANER

POITSDE1T.

99c

GUN PASTE
RE~.

$1.59

99c

'

HECK'S
REG. ·

$1.88
AUTOMOTIVE

DI1T.

120Z.

:TIRE,
.II•
'

. ).." •

;

.'

'

101. .0~

.wro

:

HECK'S
REG.

$2.49

. '8.48

AIITOMOTifl" ' "

CARBURETOR
CHOKE
SPlAY CLUIER

'

PRES TONE
VINYL
HARDTOP WAX

•

SJM

$JOO

'

.

:s·1·oo

----....·-

REG.
59'

HECK'S REG.

BRAKE FLUID

•ACME

HICK'S
REG.
$1.79

HECK'S

$,499

AIITOMOrtVE

BLUE

HICK'S
HECK'S RIG.

· MATS

AIITOMOTifEIJI/IT.

.

BUCK LURE

HUNTING SOX

1

62' Qt.

$3.99

FROIIT IJIIIIER

HECK'S
REG.
$1.39 .

HECK'S
REG.

• HECK'S
REG. ·

.

Dfi'T.

SI'OITS IIEI'T.

$2.19

.

$2788

"'"'"~ and

VOlT

$6.44

The la tes t style lad. , .gaucho pon t ~kirto !
Choo1e !rom colcuttos, corduroy\ oi-de nint lh
the newe~ t !till look. 5i~es 6 to 16.

TREE STAND

603

.

BAKER .

. · BOYS'

LADIES'
PANTS

:

TO

GIRLS' SKIRTS

Fo r the ia)hiorl conuiov~ Y""11Q miH •. , 1kirh In
denim! or polyeih:B\. All ur11 eCJIY cCHfl r oil me
1tyled lor loll. Sire1 7 to 14.

•u••

'

• •1\

$448

HECK'S
REG.

'

~~~ •Hlll 1"Jdl~ '"'''"~" •••
king ''"ll'n ''""I' go"''"'" .ohol
•o lo,. ~ ""' w.U I, ,,..o;~,1no '-""'

,

'

· POLYESTERVESTS

.

Pocl~ •*&lt;ltht ~'j,.or. llo ud U&gt;&lt;,..•l. ~e i"l01uci II&lt;K&gt; poont1

I

j

LADIES'

lateSt in f o~hiof1, ladies 1l~e-~ele~s, buttOfl lront
polyester vest. So lid colors; come~ in mes 8· 18.

,

$13.99 .
ClOTHINC
DEPT. ·

LADIES'
BRUSHED
SLEEP •
GOWNS

LADIES'
FALL DRESSES
AND SKIRT SETS

..., .- ,i,..

HECK'SREG.

$14.99 ,•· .
,.
ClOTHIM ·~ ' ,, ~~
DE1T. . \ . "'~/

ClOTHINCDEPT.

I

,

,. ri'

HECK'S REG. (

HECK'S REG. PRICE

$6.99
ClDTHING DEPT.

long sleeve, 100"/o nylon . Cowlneckorcardigon
lityle. Smoll 1 medium Or Iorge.

SLEEPING BAG

OFF,

. \l··~;f((
'·I \.·..!J"ir~.'.("•(..

HUNTING HAT

COLEMAN
3 LB.'WASHABLE

"

SHIT;JIJI/IT.

I

. _l'·

•.

HECK'S
REG • .

\

TRAPPER'S

..

· HECK'S REG.

SHRTSDErT.

7

-

$11.88
90RTSDE1T.

REDHEAD
HUNTSKILL

i

I ,,

~ ··"'"r: ·J\' , ~~ ·

JEANS

·.Ct.t

~988

IITIRE STOU

'

PRE-WASHED

I

olmos tonylo)hion mood .

s1''

HECK'S REG.

90RTS DEPT.

(!

i~/'7

r

5 PACK POWERLETS

$799

$ 177

.s29as

MEN'S

Cnw nKk nyle n•en ' ~ ocryltc ~weQlpr~. Con•
pletely w~h oble . Choo1e tram r11d ot nmy wtth
white stnp111. Si u!s S,M, l ,&gt;:L.

Our t!lllire stock ! Save on

wools , wool b lend1 , corduroy1,
PVC vi nyl~. 1Uburbon1, western
,styles ... ond more! Styles lor

HECK'S REG.

PROFESSIOIAL

BOOT LACES ..

,; I

., I ' . .

$5.99

HECK'S REG.

$1.88
. 90RTS DEPT.

uroJ hull

HECK'S,REG.

$119

!~

iJ j

90RTS DEPT.

,

.

$466

FRABILL
12 LOOP NYLON .

~··

M.u~•

$2.03
901TS DEPT.

AS D£SIREO

"..

""' ,.

'

'666

·BASKETBALL NET

SATIN STAIN

FI~S it

'

~f-

... '

SPORTS DE1.T.
'

DRESS SHIRT

filM,

·~

SCOPE
GUN CASE

"egtilt•&lt;&gt;h• od

MEN'S
SWEATERS

MEN'S
. OUTERWEAR

FRUIT OF THE LOOM

-/ ~-· , ..r .

$38.59
SHITSif'T.

$1588

.

99

$ 19.99

UJffi,III(Piot:
'11J'l .,...

.LINSEED OIL

.

HECK'S
REG.

TO '6.99
SPORTS DEPT.
. HI-SPEED

.

Double mantle works from 16.4 oz. Or
14.1 oz . bonle or .bulk tonk with Cole· '
man odoptor. Adjustable light oul·
put.

HECK'S REG.

26

5

t.h~ tUI~

•

!

MEN'S

(hun,., lr&lt;111\')illh ~T' dclub~ ~ltoui!O:I
I
po~t coc t1gr 1e11 ln.rn:fd pam &lt;&lt;HIT&gt; lor

' \:

. :~

1.,

HECK'S REG.

. ..e'··r
·
. . . . ..,...

COLEMAN

PROPANE LANTERN

$4661

I

K S REG. '139.88

.

· t l'
' \.
·l .J;t

.

.

can blodt wol "\J' stock with /luted · ~

f..:_ •

BB PISTOL

H~~~:.~E;.
MARLIN

$41.99
SI'OITS DE1T.

'

r

LADIES'.
-\ PANT COATS

HECK'S
REG.
$1.87

,,

NYLON-N-FOAM
.
'

. SEAT COVERS
HECK'S REG.

$4.99

HICK'S

HICK'S

RIG.

REG.
$1.77

$1.89

HECK'S
RIG.

$1.88

. $344 .

i1Mn•r.

j

,

I

\

.

1

�•
&gt;'

..

••,•• •

,J •

.13- Tbe Dally SenUnel, Middleport·Pomeroy. 0., Wednesday, (kt. 20,1976,
1976

•

IIIJIIItALIU._IC ·

G.E.

COLORFUL WCITE

·AM CLOCK RADIO

JEWaRY BOXES

b ce llent Choice ior budgel· wotchen or tor anyone

•

whu wart I&gt; or1 o!lr(I(IIVII, dependable clod. radio whl1
good !.Ou11d .

$369

••
r 1 s,

' .' .
•

Heck's Reg. •4,99

HECK'S REG.
$16.96

IIWII.IYDIIT

..

·-.

""'-- ...

DRIP-0-LATOR
! Ju ~· t 7 f11111\ilt ~ for u full pot!
Never bods ; &gt;P , , · ~ nf!.. er brner.
Worn1rng plate holds toftee ol
perfect servrng lempc ro tute.
wo1he r proof ~o le ry gloo,, w&lt;&gt;to;,,.l

HAMBURGER COOKER

ond Mogicub6

POCKET RA,DIO

e

e
e

$99

$19 99

99

HECK'S REG. $149.96

HECK'S REG .
$24.96

JEWEI.IY DEPT.

IIWEI.IY DEPT.

JIWEliY DEPT.

IEMIIIIGTO!I

LADlE$
SHAVER
i&lt;o.y• ·• loq1 ",.,,,

, ~&lt;! •&lt;

··r&lt;lu ,,. "'-" • 1twi" :~ , .lr&gt;&lt; &lt; · ob~·
'~"-

N~ ..

HAMILTON BEACH

HAND
MIXER

A O,.,u uhl "I !OIIIct.l 1hnpl"d 1h"" l•ulu" ~ll

t·r~~~!l '

I

5-S peed Hon:l Mi~e r feo lures . . . . . . .. .
detochob lc tOi'd; open handle ·

,. ,, ,

tllr"'" " 11

~ tylir19

(tl.dn l oo - .,. ' •&lt;o.••·-j •&gt;lfl I

pla ted

lqr bolonte; dtrome ·
beater

bea t er~ ; po~i t ive

eiec ror bunon. In while, ovocodo or gold

'

e

podded fleodb(ln d t mOflPI&lt; 118, 3J9t.

$J99

•s.~9

HECK'S REG.
~

Jewelry Dept.

SUNSn
66-MINUTE

CASSmE
TAPE

.,;u,

11111.

•11.96

JEWII.IY DII'T.

I.E. CA.S $mE
RECORDER

•~~

..~ tnd-ol·-·1-off.
F~t knriord rtwilld control ..

~~ -~$999
·~
...
.

.

TRIPOD

e&lt;;lf!Gbilitr.

Heck's Reg.
•27.96

1M! Coil

I ....

lfWS.I'f sg(,

HECK'S REG. $15.96

-BIYIIIT.

JEWII.IY DEPT.

LA'DIES' CLUTCH OR .

WALKIE TALKIES

FRENCH PURSES

Pro~ides enjoyment f~r the whole
family. The se acc ura te, cry sta l c;on-

S

JEWEI.RY DEPT.

68(

cord. !o~W", flip-~ ct.~cMl,..

..,.iflg i"Wion ~

HECK'S
REG.

$12 99
.IIWIIIY DIP!.

VENT
WIRE CUSHION

NAIDWAIE
DEI'T.

fl'l127

STAPLE GUN

ULKING
nCOMPOUND

ss•• t·1
c
HECK'S
RIG.

.. .

spa
ltECK'S REG.

., ••.

,,.'

.. '-'~ .:~ ..

77(

He,ck's Reg. '1.99

HECK'S REG.
$1.19

Automotive Dept. ,

AIITOMOTIVE

MECHANIC LEAF RAKE
s·12a
CREEPER
l

. ·5··

Heck's Reg. •8.99

$2.28

NAIIJWAif DIIT.

!~ •~ij

STARTING
FLUID
SPRAY

99'

htclc'o Reg. S16.99

..._,

HECK'S REG.
$14.96
JEWELRY DEPT.

JEWII.IY DEPT.

14 J-.6l
.

$999

HECK'S REG.
$5.99

HECK'S REG.
$19.88

SUNFLOWER SEED

ARROW

HICK'S RIG.

3 on~

$1499

low, low prictl u~ dloi11Cti0t1
lhavi~~g hlad for - dra6!• " - '·
bclvtM ..,.Unt_.., 10 hoW, ._.

'$13.81

$1199

HICIC'S 110,
$2.39

JEWEIIY DEPT.

Do what your instincts or
hunches dictate today, especially In areas relating to
romance . They won't le_ad
you astray,

TAURUS IAP&lt;II 20·Mar 201

$179

.

HECK'S REG.
$13.96

OOM, foil, COI!Ifortoble 1ho"" ot o

&lt;-

FOISX70
CAMERA

vulmenl for work or ploy .

"LADY au•"
IHAYIR

HECK ' SREG.

Sele&lt;t·A·Color control for lighter light or da rker dark
10011. Wide toast well&gt; fo r tomt or po1try pro dud ~
End panel wnlroh. Polished chrome w/ blad·trim.
·

trolled tron !&gt;l:e iver ~ c.e u good in-

LA_I' .....LCO

'lt.l1 ,...., co;lfl•u. boMrp oprrol•&lt;l•o~• ·
ron b•w•h il at"'td ol h .. ..,..., oro&lt; &gt;tr ,
wn..ro ••g~lar cOmplu~ ,,,. "''"' I91T1 I""'
pin, OCM ol&gt;d bie"" \lo&lt;irl, The l"o&lt;lkO (O,.
pluion Pl..; 1tt'lp1 l~tm "r ap 1'ht r~1 .'
plrroioft "-'•~o• or.oft ftp~n b&lt;O.do h "''h 1ha1
&lt;olulu II&gt; i1orC&gt;19~Iy tlr.,~.- ""e'1 !Oftle~r
o..d ClfY&gt;tf o4 llo• loc e whor• 0~1 "'i" uol lo&lt;l
o..d &lt;Oil,. ~" •Q~fly bit""'""'·

ARIES !March 21·Aprll 111

FLASH
· BAR

llcr4cw}' ofoi11N cantrol. ot.ccldtttlol
trll'll!re pf~ - Aulornatit
lit- control (.lllQ. l-~ pow.-

HECK'S
REG.
'1.49

COMPLEXIOI PLUS
5111 MACHIIE

For Thutldar. Oct. 21, 1978

C.B. LOCK MOUNT

Cu&gt;hroned eorplldt
Fr~guenty
response 20 18 ,000 Hl .
15· h .
corlcd cor d. e Volumr: Con trol\ 011d

Heck's .Reg.

44'

e

&lt;,! Ia!&gt; \O • or ,

"•"~&lt;~ '"'""''!! l )llt'tn , Q•&gt;e h,uU
... ' ~. ,.,.,,,,1 ·~· ,, " "' ""' ' "~ , •••• ' ""!~'

·HEADe PHONESe

$499

• •

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'I~ " ot &lt;pt&lt; l fe-tl •len...-r• ~ ul&gt;d
llonn\1 ~u re • ] pmtl&lt;m ' "' ~'h
f1o9~Lo.,.Joll • Stuodf -lhru

ll,t• ' """

STEREO

SX-70 FILM

\

'~ '1."'11· ·~

jock5; PA spt!oKer/e&gt;' ternal
speaker
Dynamic p l_
ug·ii11!Jlcrophof1e
23 channel-oil crysta ls supplied
illuminated channel selector
Volume
Adjusta control/on·off power switc_h
ble squelch co ntrol..

union's attorney, Davld
Clayman of Columbll.!l
Clayman wem to O'Neill
last week alter Judge Harold
DeHoff refused to delay t~
start of the trial in his court.
The chief jll.!ltice . explained
that he called DeHoff an~
asked hhn to postpone the
trial.
After hearing from O'Neill,
DeHoff reversed his ·de&lt;:islon
and postponed the case from

iis scheduled start this past
Mooday to Nov. 3, the day
after Ule ele&lt;:tion. DeHoff has
told people he did !t because
ll1e, chief justice requested

~avor .

A survey of the legal
community found attorneys
who thought the chief
justice's action was ntotally
improper" and "highly
unu.s ual,'' the newspapers
said.

The reason, they sald, Is
that a trial judge, like
DeHoff, normally has the sole
authority to grant or deny
postponements in his own
courtroom.
Because the oor's ethics
committee has star ted
examinir!g 'the incident, a
cloak of secrecy has fallen on
the entire case and Palmer
has . refused 111 discuss the
case in detail.

l·lb.
VIC Pit.
With Coupon
Void Ahtr Sot, Oct. 23, lP76

Df

Rhodes' people reWriting

..

Svbitct to Appllcoblt Stat• I LoCal
.
'
.'•••
'

'--

'

r.••''

Ctnrfttt im- nt I...., II, 1... 1 N1 l'rlctt
s ..a,, Oct. 11 tinllltirtiJI, act. n . "''

r~nru ,.. HPt te N•lt ...mlea. MINl
SOLD TO DULEH.

Pinto Beans

critical independent study
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - The organization, "but we were state.
administration of Gov. James disappointed in their study."
~~ A
brief amount of
A. Rhodes has suppressed He sa id the problems research has un covered
and is now rewriting - a identlfied by Fantus must special advertisements and
.$10,000 independent study have involved "the Gilligan bro.chures by the state which
which is highly critical of the years.
had little hnpacl and left no
state's efforts to attract new
"The report l~cks statistics r.etainable ideas when
industry, it w!IS reported and data, particularly the originally seen," the Fantus
today.
part where they criticize the , report says.
Scripps-Howard
state development
'' H specific promotional ef~
Newspepers said the study, department,"said Baldridge. forts have been undertaken
conducted . by the Fantus
He said the report was not they are not well received by
Corp. of New Jersey, ooe of being suppressed, by simply our clients in terms of
the
nation's
leaaing. · rewritten to more accurately directing our search efforts
industriallocatioo consulting reflect Ohio's industrial towards Ohio.
firms, reported the state development problem,s.
"Further, our staff has no
Development Department
At first, Ule development direct knowledge of any such
does not rate favorably when department said the report is campaign," the reporl says.
compared to other stales · no( available. After several
The Fantus report · also
competing for new industry. more attempts to obtain a ~ays:
The ,report also cites a copy,
a
department
- The state does little lo
problem of "negative com- . spokesman said it exists, but resolve problems of existing
menis" and of confidentiality only as a draft and was not industry which could lead to
of past business projects finished. Finally, Baldridge relocating or expanding elseinvolving
the
Ohio called Development Director where.
Development Team, a group James A. Due:k who is on an
-Coo p eration and
of 26 businessmen which mduslry hunt m the Far East communication between the
works closely with the and Duerk authorized him to state Development
Development Department to release it to ScrippsHoward Department and local
promote Ohio as a good Newspapers.
development groups is not as
industrial · location, the
The results of this study good as well organized states
newspapers said.
were to be used · by the also competing for industry.
Administration officials Governor's Development
-{)hio does not respond to .
say the report is being Advisory Coun1cil to help ' new business prospects with
rewritten because it was not deSign a master plan for the "prompt accurate informaaccurate and ·didn't reflect Rhodes Administration to tion," (The Fantus Corp. says
the real probletnB facing follow in attracting new it usually by.passes the state
0 hio's
i n d u s t r i a 1 mdustry to the slate and development department and
development efforts, Scripps- ~ ncou ra ging ex isti ng goes dire ctly to local
Howard reported.
md~slry to expand.
industrial groups in behalf of
Paul Baldridge, deputy
The 25 businessmen and a client interested in locating
development director said labor leaders on the advisory in an Ohio city.)
the Fantus Corp., whi~h was council requested the study
- The state development
hired by the state to conduct be made.
department "lacks detailed
the study, is a reputabie
The Fantus report was f~rst familiarity of specific geo·
presented to the Ohio Depart- graphic regions (within the
ment of Economic and Com- state) and does not project an
.
munity · Development last image of expertise which can
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
July. Duerk, advised of the be relied on in malchin
Sealed proposals will be
itical comments, ordered individual communities to
received bY the Board of
Edu catio n of I he · So uther n his staff to rewrite the report,
company requirements."
Local School District a t th e which
would put his
A draft copy of the Rhode.s
Southern Local High School d
I'
office at Racine, Ohio, unt il
epartment in a better Jght, Administration's version of
twelve. ~'clock (12 :00) ~oo n. Scripps-Ho,ward said,
,
the
Fantus
report
prevatllng
loc al
f.tm e,
The revised version will be acknowledges th at some
THUR SD'AY, NOVEMBER 4
.
1976, and open ed immediately .presented to the advlSOry problems may exist, but
thereafter, tor . the furnishing councilaUtsNov. 29meeting. presents them in positive
of all maten als and per .
. .
forming all labor tor th e
The or1gmal report says terms .
erection ot : •
that Duerk's department has
ADDITIONS
TO
. · eff ti'
t' 1
souTHERNLOCAL
an m ec ve promotona
HICH SCHOOL
campaign to attract industry
RACINE , OHIO
to Ohi0 · It sa Qh'to has .an
Plans and speci fica tion may .
be obtained lrom lhe Ar · 1111age of a hlgh operatmg
chitects, Ees1ey , Lee, Va rgo &amp; cost
state" and the CARTER PICKED
Cassady, 326 Front Str eet, d
f ·1
·
h
Marietta, Ohio. 45750, tor a
epartment at s to g1ve t e
CHICAGO I UP! ) - Colum·
,deposit o~ S25 which _w ill be impression • that Ohio is nist Jack Anderson likes
refu~ded 1f the doc uments art'! . anxious to attract business
re turned unmarked anQ in
,
.
· President Ford better than
good cond i tion witrtln ten days·
The report also says the Jinuny Carter' but he says
after Did due dati'! . Shoutd nO strength of Ohio's industrial he'll still vole for the Georgia
pr opo sa l De sub m itted and the d
I
·
drawings not returned five
eve opment efforts lS Democrat.
days belore the bid dUe date , basically
with
loca-l
Anderson dicussed the two
th.e fu ll amo~nt of the deposit chambers of conlmerce and
presidential candidates on
wtll be torfe1ted.
.
. separate bids will be local mdustrial development the nationally televised Phil
rec etved on ' ·
groups 1 and not WI'th the Donohue show Tuesday.
I. GENERAL CONTRACT
II . PLUMBING CONTRACT
il l. HEATING &amp; VEN ·
TILATING CONTRACT
IV . ELECTRICAL CON ·
TRACT

.

· Umlt 2 With Coupon &amp; $7.50 or Moro Purclur•

Gavt. Grodecl

.

c

Choice~'!?

People's Choice

Center Blade
Chuck Steak

With Coupon
Limit 1 Witb Coupon &amp; $7.50 or Moro Purchnt
Void Afttr Sot., &lt;:)d. 23, 1976
Sllbj~ to Applicable $taft' Lotol Ycu.t•

Holly fann1 U.S.D.l . IO!pe&lt;tod

Mixed .
u.."4
Fryer Parts ...••
P~go.PIItlll

l·l ..lb. Awg.
Mar.el of

·lb.

Dan

lnspo&lt;tod Grade A

USDA

Virginia

With Coupon

'

Limit I With Coupon &amp; $7.50 or Moro PurchoJt

~:~:!~~ F~~~h...... '~· 59c ___. ________________ _
Void Afttr Sot., Oct, 13, 1916

Subjtc.t to Appl!cob1• Stat• &amp; Local Yax••

Df

Regular or Chub
Any Size. Pkg ,

5·7·1b. Average

Smoked
Picnics

Ground
Beef

c
.
r

POLAROID

'

e No""""~ '"'
hot 1rx&gt;" e Olch~

'e ·External

JEWEI.IY DEPT.

JEWEI.IY DEPT.

..r•.,.u~,...--

'''""''&lt;I e

IIOonol1QOwo~l

HECK'S REG. $11.99

CALCULATOR

e

b""'l '"""''

ou t'
'' f" oloo&lt;&gt;&lt;l" J.,,.,,
•• h.gfrolt i~ bow l o•toroght,
N., r ,ng,..On~,~, Pill' .r ~ll · ~ Cr&lt;&gt;t i.·Por
e Hond~ lot to ....ly oo b&lt;JUtt ..,,_
on(l e Cook• 8 10 ~o v" lor on er&gt;&lt;r·
'Jf
3
lo"' -''"'P ,QOI:ing,
"&lt;~on

sa••.

8.01CiiT
SLIDE RULE

q~u•l ' '"'"''~'""

HECK'S REG.
$4.99

HECK'S REG .
$29.96

.•t•a~~lU1

) ',

elemen t len5 lor clearer ~harper poclu re\ and really Itt~
in yc;.ur podet. The ovtfi tt nc;lvdel torneru , w rr1l ~ lr ap

$2''·

$23''

SLOW
ER

-:..~

COLuMBUS (UP!) .:.. The
State Bar Asaoclatim hu
begun looking into possible
violations of the · code of
judlclal · ethics by Ohio
Supnme Court Ollef Justice
C. William O'NelU, it was
reported today.
Scr!ppa-Howard
Newspapers said Thomas
Palmer, . Columbus,
chairman of the bllr's ethics
committee·, · made the ·
revelation Tuesday alter
learning O'NelU intervened to
delay a lower court trial of a
$700,1100 libel sult against the
Ohio AFLCIO, lhe state's
largest union, and the United
Steelworkers Union.
"The committee will look
into the matter in its usual
course of business," Palmer
said. "Any Dlatler dealing
with the ethics of a judge is
strictly confldenl!al .and we
are not permitted to
comment on it by !he rules of
the Supreme Court."
Pahner said he intended to
discuss the case Wlth the
legal counsel for . the · 40member elhics committee,
Columbus attorney John
Welch. The couunittee of
attorneys from around the
state meets Nov. 12, and the
matter could be brought up
then.
It is the respoosibility of.the
ethics committee to decide if
the judicial code of ethic has
been violated by Judge or
another attorney. lithe corn.
ll)ittee finds a violation, it can
' recommend the bar 's
executive committee file a.
complaint . with the 17member Supreme Court
Board of Grievances and
Discipline.
The board investigates the
case and makes a recoriunendation to the Supreme Court,
which takes the fmal action.
Violatims of the code can
result in a private reprimand
by the SUpreme CoUrt, a
... ~bile reprimand, suspension
or removal from the bench.
O'Neill admitted
to
ScrippsHoward Newspapers
that he intervened in the
Stark County Common Pleas
Court·suit at the request of his
long-time friend and the

a

The pocket &lt;am eta th tJ t ht11 on ~ 1 9 . 5 oplt &lt;ol gloH 3

REG. 119.96$1599 JEWlliYDEPT.

NORELCO 8-CUP

CB RADIO ·

POCKET CAMERA

Cookli homburger1, mif'IUte steaks, hot dogs,
grill sondwiches, pies, toosts muffin s,
bagel1.

IIWILRY DEPT.

23 CHANNEL

RIVAL

ARGUS

"Linu MAC"

a.JIOI

""· ·- coMriM, Gild
'
outomotlr. progrorn ~·"II ·
Tile "loudmOI.tll'ln hot lh....,......,
p - ,opo~~~ity 10 }'01,1 tafllolt•
il oiQRg kl "" tila&lt;h, Ofl piclli«,
bxn, cor or co...,.- , , , ptUOically

'---~ 1!11.
·- .;

••

HECK'S REG. •29.96

~~l~r.cl"'*~wiltl2

Hedl"i J!tg. $53 .96

JIWEI.IY DEPT.

~1999

.
!.

PORIA.LI 8 TRACK
IAPI PLAYIR

-·

I.~ •

SOUND DESIGN
STEREO SPEAKERS
SET

..,..
Sliced Bacon

O'Neill's ethics under probe
PLENTY
OF FREE
PARKING

..•' .

.•

.

HECK'S

REG.

)

$1.99

&gt;:;j.
&lt;.~_·,

You have learned something
through expenence that you
ca n now put to good use to
bring in a healthy prolit.

GEMINI (May 21-Junt 201
Serious matters should now
be discussed with a partner.
Your thou ghts are sound and
well-reasoned .

CANCER (June 21·Julr 221
Before spending money on
something lor the home to-

day, use you/ imagll)atlon .
Per.haps Inventiveness can

Save yOu money.
LEO tJuly 23·A,ug. 221

association today wfth one of
1hB op posite sfix WhO Will
assist you in some form of
self-development.

Little industry .
lured by taxes

Al l proposals mu st co nta in
th e name of every person
Follow an inspiration ~9day I~
interested therein, be sub ·
Open
iour heart and
mi lted on farms furnished by
your purse to s'omeone
the Architects and be ac .
· need~ . Kind words won't be
compMied by a satisfactory
Surety Bond or a Cer,tified
·enough.
Check on a ba nk doing
'LIBRA ISopt. 23·0ct. 231
business in the Slate of Ohio,
COLUMBUS (UPI)
in the amount of S percent of
Any discussion ol weighty
tot~l
value
ot
the
bid
in
·
Three
university professors
the
maners with a friend today ' •
eluding all add alternates. Bid told
an Ohio House
should be handled e.s tactful·
security w i ll be returned
jy as possible. Don't emwilhin ten days after con.._tract commit tee Tuesday tax
·barrass him.
·
tor th.e work has -'been incentives play a minor part
executed . Failure of . any in attractin
' g new 111
• dustry to
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 221
bidder to enter into and
Operate th rough others to·
e.::ecute a contrac t for the a state or in prompting
day, .particularly In career or
work covered by the P,roposal e-'~,·ng m
' dustry to e•pand
he has submitted , Within ten
.a.~:&gt;1.
A
•
' financial areas. Be prepared
1
days following notice of award
' Taxes rank pretty far
to prod them a bit.
of such work to him, shall down the line," said Dr. John
Cause the bid sec urity to
SAGITTARIUS INov, 23·
become torfelted by the bidder J . Treacy , professor of
Dec. 211 Glve a pal a bOosI
to the Owner as liQuidated economics at Wright State
today be telling him of a re·
dama ges and not as . a U ·
·1
"T
penal.ty because of sUch
mverss y.
axes are
cent problem you solved.
failure on the part of the important only when coupled
Your words will inspire him.'
bidd~~·ch bidde·r --s-haii.. be with th"e quality of
CAPRICORN (11oc. 22·Jon.
pr
e pare~ . in the event he is the govenunent services provi·
18, Your ambitions will be
accepted bi dder , to furnish ded.
aided today through the good
performance and payment
Th
·
Offices of others. Remember
bonds, in a form sa tisfactory
"
e most 1mportant
· .-to shal-e your gains with your
to the Own er, in the amount of consideration (for industrial

c-.....

helpmates .

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20· Ftb. 1tl
Avoid judging anothlH
prernaturely today; The
motives of one yoU're closely
associated with are pU"rer
than you think.

PISCESIFob. 20·Mirch 201

Business conditions appear
very promising for ~9u today,
especially if you're dealing
with a per son of proven

reliability.

,A Your

~Birthday '
Oct. 21, 1171
Friends you've made In the
past could be the Instruments
for· creating unusual and
benefici al happenings this
'year . One could ln.volve
business, the other travel.
INF.WSPAPER ENTt;RI'HISt ASSN I

percent of the contracr expansion) is skilled labqr
gua ranteeing
the
1uccessful completion of lhe and the a,vailability of a work
work bid ·upon and payment of. force," said Treacy.
all
obligation s
arising
rheretrom.
Treacy was joined as a
Proposals may be mailed or witness before the House
ere livered . 11 mailed , send via w
d M · eo--•
reoiMered mail in time for bid
ays an
eans uumttee
opening . Bidders shatl by assistant Wright State
designate on the en~o~elope that
·
f
D
it is a seated b!d, indica le the e~onomlcs pro essor
r.
project being bid , the divis ion Robert Premus and Ohio
upon whlch·he Is bidding, the State University geography
100

price,

name and address of bidder and addressed to:
Southern Loce~l Board ot

professor Dr. Henry L.

Hunker.
Education
·
,
The committee has before
Southern Local High School
Rac ine , Ohio &lt;5771
illbree bill'l designed by the
·The owner reserves the Rhodes Administration to
r ig ht to accept any bid , to . r
wa ive any or all infor mal ities spur industrial expansion and
in bids and -or reject any or all to create jobs in Ohio._'
bids al ~is discretion.
Rep . George Tablack, !)..
No bid may be wi1hdrawn
for a· per iod of &lt;5 days. ·
Campbell,
said
the
h ord~r t ot the South ern committee would vote on the
Local Board of Educat ion.
Ra cine, Oh io .
.
three bills next week.
Mrs . Jane Wagner,
Hunker 's . testimony
Clerk paralleled that of Treacy and
( 10) 7, 13 , 20, 21, 41 (.
'· Premus.

Grade "A"
large Eggs
PercsiCo a . •

lax."

" It isn't the overall (tal)
rate, but it's the way we levy
taxes. These bills are putting
a Band-Aid on a rather severe
wound," he added. "You 1re
really not addressing the
issues.''
Tablack maintained that
industrial tax incentives
would eliminaw any increase
in individual county property
tax values. That would result
in stagnalioo of public school
revenues, which are based oo
property taxes.

..

5-lb.

4·01.
Box

I 03f4·0I;

Kroprlmh

• • ••• ••

• •• • ••

••

.

Cold Power
Detergent

$

Pint Retumable Btls.

All three agreed tangible
· proprty taxes deter industrial
expansion and should be
eliminated with concurrent
increases in sales and
personal ipcome taxes.
Hunker said "taxes rarely
play a major factor in the
location or relocation of busi·
ness. If this is the way the
slate perceives oo solve its
employment problem, it is
•adly mistaken," said
Hunker.
The three bills .would
exempt the purchase of. new
equipment from the tangible
personal property tax and
grant limited lax abawment
for modernizing plants and
expanding to inriercity areas.
"We don 't have a high per
capita lax rate compared to
Ohio's per. capital income ,"
said Treacy, "but we do have
a heavy reliance on property

25 • Off Label

Tomato
Soup

,rs

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Stpt. 221

•

Automotive Dept.,

You

(;oi.Jid have a fo r tunate

Campbell's

~:·.69c

BPi~·~~~
.

~h
I

$ 88

lolly

Del Monte
Tuna • • • •

26Y•·• · $109
2 !..:-~~

•

·C.ns

Del Monte
Catsup . • • . • .

Ills.

llch

• •

95c

Fl;rliia

or P
Grapefruit

Sweet Corn

·Fresh Crisp Western Iceberg

HEAD LETTUCE............~.. 9~ .
'

Kroger Welcomes
Your Federal ·
Foeti Stamps

�•
&gt;'

..

••,•• •

,J •

.13- Tbe Dally SenUnel, Middleport·Pomeroy. 0., Wednesday, (kt. 20,1976,
1976

•

IIIJIIItALIU._IC ·

G.E.

COLORFUL WCITE

·AM CLOCK RADIO

JEWaRY BOXES

b ce llent Choice ior budgel· wotchen or tor anyone

•

whu wart I&gt; or1 o!lr(I(IIVII, dependable clod. radio whl1
good !.Ou11d .

$369

••
r 1 s,

' .' .
•

Heck's Reg. •4,99

HECK'S REG.
$16.96

IIWII.IYDIIT

..

·-.

""'-- ...

DRIP-0-LATOR
! Ju ~· t 7 f11111\ilt ~ for u full pot!
Never bods ; &gt;P , , · ~ nf!.. er brner.
Worn1rng plate holds toftee ol
perfect servrng lempc ro tute.
wo1he r proof ~o le ry gloo,, w&lt;&gt;to;,,.l

HAMBURGER COOKER

ond Mogicub6

POCKET RA,DIO

e

e
e

$99

$19 99

99

HECK'S REG. $149.96

HECK'S REG .
$24.96

JEWEI.IY DEPT.

IIWEI.IY DEPT.

JIWEliY DEPT.

IEMIIIIGTO!I

LADlE$
SHAVER
i&lt;o.y• ·• loq1 ",.,,,

, ~&lt;! •&lt;

··r&lt;lu ,,. "'-" • 1twi" :~ , .lr&gt;&lt; &lt; · ob~·
'~"-

N~ ..

HAMILTON BEACH

HAND
MIXER

A O,.,u uhl "I !OIIIct.l 1hnpl"d 1h"" l•ulu" ~ll

t·r~~~!l '

I

5-S peed Hon:l Mi~e r feo lures . . . . . . .. .
detochob lc tOi'd; open handle ·

,. ,, ,

tllr"'" " 11

~ tylir19

(tl.dn l oo - .,. ' •&lt;o.••·-j •&gt;lfl I

pla ted

lqr bolonte; dtrome ·
beater

bea t er~ ; po~i t ive

eiec ror bunon. In while, ovocodo or gold

'

e

podded fleodb(ln d t mOflPI&lt; 118, 3J9t.

$J99

•s.~9

HECK'S REG.
~

Jewelry Dept.

SUNSn
66-MINUTE

CASSmE
TAPE

.,;u,

11111.

•11.96

JEWII.IY DII'T.

I.E. CA.S $mE
RECORDER

•~~

..~ tnd-ol·-·1-off.
F~t knriord rtwilld control ..

~~ -~$999
·~
...
.

.

TRIPOD

e&lt;;lf!Gbilitr.

Heck's Reg.
•27.96

1M! Coil

I ....

lfWS.I'f sg(,

HECK'S REG. $15.96

-BIYIIIT.

JEWII.IY DEPT.

LA'DIES' CLUTCH OR .

WALKIE TALKIES

FRENCH PURSES

Pro~ides enjoyment f~r the whole
family. The se acc ura te, cry sta l c;on-

S

JEWEI.RY DEPT.

68(

cord. !o~W", flip-~ ct.~cMl,..

..,.iflg i"Wion ~

HECK'S
REG.

$12 99
.IIWIIIY DIP!.

VENT
WIRE CUSHION

NAIDWAIE
DEI'T.

fl'l127

STAPLE GUN

ULKING
nCOMPOUND

ss•• t·1
c
HECK'S
RIG.

.. .

spa
ltECK'S REG.

., ••.

,,.'

.. '-'~ .:~ ..

77(

He,ck's Reg. '1.99

HECK'S REG.
$1.19

Automotive Dept. ,

AIITOMOTIVE

MECHANIC LEAF RAKE
s·12a
CREEPER
l

. ·5··

Heck's Reg. •8.99

$2.28

NAIIJWAif DIIT.

!~ •~ij

STARTING
FLUID
SPRAY

99'

htclc'o Reg. S16.99

..._,

HECK'S REG.
$14.96
JEWELRY DEPT.

JEWII.IY DEPT.

14 J-.6l
.

$999

HECK'S REG.
$5.99

HECK'S REG.
$19.88

SUNFLOWER SEED

ARROW

HICK'S RIG.

3 on~

$1499

low, low prictl u~ dloi11Cti0t1
lhavi~~g hlad for - dra6!• " - '·
bclvtM ..,.Unt_.., 10 hoW, ._.

'$13.81

$1199

HICIC'S 110,
$2.39

JEWEIIY DEPT.

Do what your instincts or
hunches dictate today, especially In areas relating to
romance . They won't le_ad
you astray,

TAURUS IAP&lt;II 20·Mar 201

$179

.

HECK'S REG.
$13.96

OOM, foil, COI!Ifortoble 1ho"" ot o

&lt;-

FOISX70
CAMERA

vulmenl for work or ploy .

"LADY au•"
IHAYIR

HECK ' SREG.

Sele&lt;t·A·Color control for lighter light or da rker dark
10011. Wide toast well&gt; fo r tomt or po1try pro dud ~
End panel wnlroh. Polished chrome w/ blad·trim.
·

trolled tron !&gt;l:e iver ~ c.e u good in-

LA_I' .....LCO

'lt.l1 ,...., co;lfl•u. boMrp oprrol•&lt;l•o~• ·
ron b•w•h il at"'td ol h .. ..,..., oro&lt; &gt;tr ,
wn..ro ••g~lar cOmplu~ ,,,. "''"' I91T1 I""'
pin, OCM ol&gt;d bie"" \lo&lt;irl, The l"o&lt;lkO (O,.
pluion Pl..; 1tt'lp1 l~tm "r ap 1'ht r~1 .'
plrroioft "-'•~o• or.oft ftp~n b&lt;O.do h "''h 1ha1
&lt;olulu II&gt; i1orC&gt;19~Iy tlr.,~.- ""e'1 !Oftle~r
o..d ClfY&gt;tf o4 llo• loc e whor• 0~1 "'i" uol lo&lt;l
o..d &lt;Oil,. ~" •Q~fly bit""'""'·

ARIES !March 21·Aprll 111

FLASH
· BAR

llcr4cw}' ofoi11N cantrol. ot.ccldtttlol
trll'll!re pf~ - Aulornatit
lit- control (.lllQ. l-~ pow.-

HECK'S
REG.
'1.49

COMPLEXIOI PLUS
5111 MACHIIE

For Thutldar. Oct. 21, 1978

C.B. LOCK MOUNT

Cu&gt;hroned eorplldt
Fr~guenty
response 20 18 ,000 Hl .
15· h .
corlcd cor d. e Volumr: Con trol\ 011d

Heck's .Reg.

44'

e

&lt;,! Ia!&gt; \O • or ,

"•"~&lt;~ '"'""''!! l )llt'tn , Q•&gt;e h,uU
... ' ~. ,.,.,,,,1 ·~· ,, " "' ""' ' "~ , •••• ' ""!~'

·HEADe PHONESe

$499

• •

e

'I~ " ot &lt;pt&lt; l fe-tl •len...-r• ~ ul&gt;d
llonn\1 ~u re • ] pmtl&lt;m ' "' ~'h
f1o9~Lo.,.Joll • Stuodf -lhru

ll,t• ' """

STEREO

SX-70 FILM

\

'~ '1."'11· ·~

jock5; PA spt!oKer/e&gt;' ternal
speaker
Dynamic p l_
ug·ii11!Jlcrophof1e
23 channel-oil crysta ls supplied
illuminated channel selector
Volume
Adjusta control/on·off power switc_h
ble squelch co ntrol..

union's attorney, Davld
Clayman of Columbll.!l
Clayman wem to O'Neill
last week alter Judge Harold
DeHoff refused to delay t~
start of the trial in his court.
The chief jll.!ltice . explained
that he called DeHoff an~
asked hhn to postpone the
trial.
After hearing from O'Neill,
DeHoff reversed his ·de&lt;:islon
and postponed the case from

iis scheduled start this past
Mooday to Nov. 3, the day
after Ule ele&lt;:tion. DeHoff has
told people he did !t because
ll1e, chief justice requested

~avor .

A survey of the legal
community found attorneys
who thought the chief
justice's action was ntotally
improper" and "highly
unu.s ual,'' the newspapers
said.

The reason, they sald, Is
that a trial judge, like
DeHoff, normally has the sole
authority to grant or deny
postponements in his own
courtroom.
Because the oor's ethics
committee has star ted
examinir!g 'the incident, a
cloak of secrecy has fallen on
the entire case and Palmer
has . refused 111 discuss the
case in detail.

l·lb.
VIC Pit.
With Coupon
Void Ahtr Sot, Oct. 23, lP76

Df

Rhodes' people reWriting

..

Svbitct to Appllcoblt Stat• I LoCal
.
'
.'•••
'

'--

'

r.••''

Ctnrfttt im- nt I...., II, 1... 1 N1 l'rlctt
s ..a,, Oct. 11 tinllltirtiJI, act. n . "''

r~nru ,.. HPt te N•lt ...mlea. MINl
SOLD TO DULEH.

Pinto Beans

critical independent study
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - The organization, "but we were state.
administration of Gov. James disappointed in their study."
~~ A
brief amount of
A. Rhodes has suppressed He sa id the problems research has un covered
and is now rewriting - a identlfied by Fantus must special advertisements and
.$10,000 independent study have involved "the Gilligan bro.chures by the state which
which is highly critical of the years.
had little hnpacl and left no
state's efforts to attract new
"The report l~cks statistics r.etainable ideas when
industry, it w!IS reported and data, particularly the originally seen," the Fantus
today.
part where they criticize the , report says.
Scripps-Howard
state development
'' H specific promotional ef~
Newspepers said the study, department,"said Baldridge. forts have been undertaken
conducted . by the Fantus
He said the report was not they are not well received by
Corp. of New Jersey, ooe of being suppressed, by simply our clients in terms of
the
nation's
leaaing. · rewritten to more accurately directing our search efforts
industriallocatioo consulting reflect Ohio's industrial towards Ohio.
firms, reported the state development problem,s.
"Further, our staff has no
Development Department
At first, Ule development direct knowledge of any such
does not rate favorably when department said the report is campaign," the reporl says.
compared to other stales · no( available. After several
The Fantus report · also
competing for new industry. more attempts to obtain a ~ays:
The ,report also cites a copy,
a
department
- The state does little lo
problem of "negative com- . spokesman said it exists, but resolve problems of existing
menis" and of confidentiality only as a draft and was not industry which could lead to
of past business projects finished. Finally, Baldridge relocating or expanding elseinvolving
the
Ohio called Development Director where.
Development Team, a group James A. Due:k who is on an
-Coo p eration and
of 26 businessmen which mduslry hunt m the Far East communication between the
works closely with the and Duerk authorized him to state Development
Development Department to release it to ScrippsHoward Department and local
promote Ohio as a good Newspapers.
development groups is not as
industrial · location, the
The results of this study good as well organized states
newspapers said.
were to be used · by the also competing for industry.
Administration officials Governor's Development
-{)hio does not respond to .
say the report is being Advisory Coun1cil to help ' new business prospects with
rewritten because it was not deSign a master plan for the "prompt accurate informaaccurate and ·didn't reflect Rhodes Administration to tion," (The Fantus Corp. says
the real probletnB facing follow in attracting new it usually by.passes the state
0 hio's
i n d u s t r i a 1 mdustry to the slate and development department and
development efforts, Scripps- ~ ncou ra ging ex isti ng goes dire ctly to local
Howard reported.
md~slry to expand.
industrial groups in behalf of
Paul Baldridge, deputy
The 25 businessmen and a client interested in locating
development director said labor leaders on the advisory in an Ohio city.)
the Fantus Corp., whi~h was council requested the study
- The state development
hired by the state to conduct be made.
department "lacks detailed
the study, is a reputabie
The Fantus report was f~rst familiarity of specific geo·
presented to the Ohio Depart- graphic regions (within the
ment of Economic and Com- state) and does not project an
.
munity · Development last image of expertise which can
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
July. Duerk, advised of the be relied on in malchin
Sealed proposals will be
itical comments, ordered individual communities to
received bY the Board of
Edu catio n of I he · So uther n his staff to rewrite the report,
company requirements."
Local School District a t th e which
would put his
A draft copy of the Rhode.s
Southern Local High School d
I'
office at Racine, Ohio, unt il
epartment in a better Jght, Administration's version of
twelve. ~'clock (12 :00) ~oo n. Scripps-Ho,ward said,
,
the
Fantus
report
prevatllng
loc al
f.tm e,
The revised version will be acknowledges th at some
THUR SD'AY, NOVEMBER 4
.
1976, and open ed immediately .presented to the advlSOry problems may exist, but
thereafter, tor . the furnishing councilaUtsNov. 29meeting. presents them in positive
of all maten als and per .
. .
forming all labor tor th e
The or1gmal report says terms .
erection ot : •
that Duerk's department has
ADDITIONS
TO
. · eff ti'
t' 1
souTHERNLOCAL
an m ec ve promotona
HICH SCHOOL
campaign to attract industry
RACINE , OHIO
to Ohi0 · It sa Qh'to has .an
Plans and speci fica tion may .
be obtained lrom lhe Ar · 1111age of a hlgh operatmg
chitects, Ees1ey , Lee, Va rgo &amp; cost
state" and the CARTER PICKED
Cassady, 326 Front Str eet, d
f ·1
·
h
Marietta, Ohio. 45750, tor a
epartment at s to g1ve t e
CHICAGO I UP! ) - Colum·
,deposit o~ S25 which _w ill be impression • that Ohio is nist Jack Anderson likes
refu~ded 1f the doc uments art'! . anxious to attract business
re turned unmarked anQ in
,
.
· President Ford better than
good cond i tion witrtln ten days·
The report also says the Jinuny Carter' but he says
after Did due dati'! . Shoutd nO strength of Ohio's industrial he'll still vole for the Georgia
pr opo sa l De sub m itted and the d
I
·
drawings not returned five
eve opment efforts lS Democrat.
days belore the bid dUe date , basically
with
loca-l
Anderson dicussed the two
th.e fu ll amo~nt of the deposit chambers of conlmerce and
presidential candidates on
wtll be torfe1ted.
.
. separate bids will be local mdustrial development the nationally televised Phil
rec etved on ' ·
groups 1 and not WI'th the Donohue show Tuesday.
I. GENERAL CONTRACT
II . PLUMBING CONTRACT
il l. HEATING &amp; VEN ·
TILATING CONTRACT
IV . ELECTRICAL CON ·
TRACT

.

· Umlt 2 With Coupon &amp; $7.50 or Moro Purclur•

Gavt. Grodecl

.

c

Choice~'!?

People's Choice

Center Blade
Chuck Steak

With Coupon
Limit 1 Witb Coupon &amp; $7.50 or Moro Purchnt
Void Afttr Sot., &lt;:)d. 23, 1976
Sllbj~ to Applicable $taft' Lotol Ycu.t•

Holly fann1 U.S.D.l . IO!pe&lt;tod

Mixed .
u.."4
Fryer Parts ...••
P~go.PIItlll

l·l ..lb. Awg.
Mar.el of

·lb.

Dan

lnspo&lt;tod Grade A

USDA

Virginia

With Coupon

'

Limit I With Coupon &amp; $7.50 or Moro PurchoJt

~:~:!~~ F~~~h...... '~· 59c ___. ________________ _
Void Afttr Sot., Oct, 13, 1916

Subjtc.t to Appl!cob1• Stat• &amp; Local Yax••

Df

Regular or Chub
Any Size. Pkg ,

5·7·1b. Average

Smoked
Picnics

Ground
Beef

c
.
r

POLAROID

'

e No""""~ '"'
hot 1rx&gt;" e Olch~

'e ·External

JEWEI.IY DEPT.

JEWEI.IY DEPT.

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SLOW
ER

-:..~

COLuMBUS (UP!) .:.. The
State Bar Asaoclatim hu
begun looking into possible
violations of the · code of
judlclal · ethics by Ohio
Supnme Court Ollef Justice
C. William O'NelU, it was
reported today.
Scr!ppa-Howard
Newspapers said Thomas
Palmer, . Columbus,
chairman of the bllr's ethics
committee·, · made the ·
revelation Tuesday alter
learning O'NelU intervened to
delay a lower court trial of a
$700,1100 libel sult against the
Ohio AFLCIO, lhe state's
largest union, and the United
Steelworkers Union.
"The committee will look
into the matter in its usual
course of business," Palmer
said. "Any Dlatler dealing
with the ethics of a judge is
strictly confldenl!al .and we
are not permitted to
comment on it by !he rules of
the Supreme Court."
Pahner said he intended to
discuss the case Wlth the
legal counsel for . the · 40member elhics committee,
Columbus attorney John
Welch. The couunittee of
attorneys from around the
state meets Nov. 12, and the
matter could be brought up
then.
It is the respoosibility of.the
ethics committee to decide if
the judicial code of ethic has
been violated by Judge or
another attorney. lithe corn.
ll)ittee finds a violation, it can
' recommend the bar 's
executive committee file a.
complaint . with the 17member Supreme Court
Board of Grievances and
Discipline.
The board investigates the
case and makes a recoriunendation to the Supreme Court,
which takes the fmal action.
Violatims of the code can
result in a private reprimand
by the SUpreme CoUrt, a
... ~bile reprimand, suspension
or removal from the bench.
O'Neill admitted
to
ScrippsHoward Newspapers
that he intervened in the
Stark County Common Pleas
Court·suit at the request of his
long-time friend and the

a

The pocket &lt;am eta th tJ t ht11 on ~ 1 9 . 5 oplt &lt;ol gloH 3

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O'Neill's ethics under probe
PLENTY
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You have learned something
through expenence that you
ca n now put to good use to
bring in a healthy prolit.

GEMINI (May 21-Junt 201
Serious matters should now
be discussed with a partner.
Your thou ghts are sound and
well-reasoned .

CANCER (June 21·Julr 221
Before spending money on
something lor the home to-

day, use you/ imagll)atlon .
Per.haps Inventiveness can

Save yOu money.
LEO tJuly 23·A,ug. 221

association today wfth one of
1hB op posite sfix WhO Will
assist you in some form of
self-development.

Little industry .
lured by taxes

Al l proposals mu st co nta in
th e name of every person
Follow an inspiration ~9day I~
interested therein, be sub ·
Open
iour heart and
mi lted on farms furnished by
your purse to s'omeone
the Architects and be ac .
· need~ . Kind words won't be
compMied by a satisfactory
Surety Bond or a Cer,tified
·enough.
Check on a ba nk doing
'LIBRA ISopt. 23·0ct. 231
business in the Slate of Ohio,
COLUMBUS (UPI)
in the amount of S percent of
Any discussion ol weighty
tot~l
value
ot
the
bid
in
·
Three
university professors
the
maners with a friend today ' •
eluding all add alternates. Bid told
an Ohio House
should be handled e.s tactful·
security w i ll be returned
jy as possible. Don't emwilhin ten days after con.._tract commit tee Tuesday tax
·barrass him.
·
tor th.e work has -'been incentives play a minor part
executed . Failure of . any in attractin
' g new 111
• dustry to
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 221
bidder to enter into and
Operate th rough others to·
e.::ecute a contrac t for the a state or in prompting
day, .particularly In career or
work covered by the P,roposal e-'~,·ng m
' dustry to e•pand
he has submitted , Within ten
.a.~:&gt;1.
A
•
' financial areas. Be prepared
1
days following notice of award
' Taxes rank pretty far
to prod them a bit.
of such work to him, shall down the line," said Dr. John
Cause the bid sec urity to
SAGITTARIUS INov, 23·
become torfelted by the bidder J . Treacy , professor of
Dec. 211 Glve a pal a bOosI
to the Owner as liQuidated economics at Wright State
today be telling him of a re·
dama ges and not as . a U ·
·1
"T
penal.ty because of sUch
mverss y.
axes are
cent problem you solved.
failure on the part of the important only when coupled
Your words will inspire him.'
bidd~~·ch bidde·r --s-haii.. be with th"e quality of
CAPRICORN (11oc. 22·Jon.
pr
e pare~ . in the event he is the govenunent services provi·
18, Your ambitions will be
accepted bi dder , to furnish ded.
aided today through the good
performance and payment
Th
·
Offices of others. Remember
bonds, in a form sa tisfactory
"
e most 1mportant
· .-to shal-e your gains with your
to the Own er, in the amount of consideration (for industrial

c-.....

helpmates .

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20· Ftb. 1tl
Avoid judging anothlH
prernaturely today; The
motives of one yoU're closely
associated with are pU"rer
than you think.

PISCESIFob. 20·Mirch 201

Business conditions appear
very promising for ~9u today,
especially if you're dealing
with a per son of proven

reliability.

,A Your

~Birthday '
Oct. 21, 1171
Friends you've made In the
past could be the Instruments
for· creating unusual and
benefici al happenings this
'year . One could ln.volve
business, the other travel.
INF.WSPAPER ENTt;RI'HISt ASSN I

percent of the contracr expansion) is skilled labqr
gua ranteeing
the
1uccessful completion of lhe and the a,vailability of a work
work bid ·upon and payment of. force," said Treacy.
all
obligation s
arising
rheretrom.
Treacy was joined as a
Proposals may be mailed or witness before the House
ere livered . 11 mailed , send via w
d M · eo--•
reoiMered mail in time for bid
ays an
eans uumttee
opening . Bidders shatl by assistant Wright State
designate on the en~o~elope that
·
f
D
it is a seated b!d, indica le the e~onomlcs pro essor
r.
project being bid , the divis ion Robert Premus and Ohio
upon whlch·he Is bidding, the State University geography
100

price,

name and address of bidder and addressed to:
Southern Loce~l Board ot

professor Dr. Henry L.

Hunker.
Education
·
,
The committee has before
Southern Local High School
Rac ine , Ohio &lt;5771
illbree bill'l designed by the
·The owner reserves the Rhodes Administration to
r ig ht to accept any bid , to . r
wa ive any or all infor mal ities spur industrial expansion and
in bids and -or reject any or all to create jobs in Ohio._'
bids al ~is discretion.
Rep . George Tablack, !)..
No bid may be wi1hdrawn
for a· per iod of &lt;5 days. ·
Campbell,
said
the
h ord~r t ot the South ern committee would vote on the
Local Board of Educat ion.
Ra cine, Oh io .
.
three bills next week.
Mrs . Jane Wagner,
Hunker 's . testimony
Clerk paralleled that of Treacy and
( 10) 7, 13 , 20, 21, 41 (.
'· Premus.

Grade "A"
large Eggs
PercsiCo a . •

lax."

" It isn't the overall (tal)
rate, but it's the way we levy
taxes. These bills are putting
a Band-Aid on a rather severe
wound," he added. "You 1re
really not addressing the
issues.''
Tablack maintained that
industrial tax incentives
would eliminaw any increase
in individual county property
tax values. That would result
in stagnalioo of public school
revenues, which are based oo
property taxes.

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$

Pint Retumable Btls.

All three agreed tangible
· proprty taxes deter industrial
expansion and should be
eliminated with concurrent
increases in sales and
personal ipcome taxes.
Hunker said "taxes rarely
play a major factor in the
location or relocation of busi·
ness. If this is the way the
slate perceives oo solve its
employment problem, it is
•adly mistaken," said
Hunker.
The three bills .would
exempt the purchase of. new
equipment from the tangible
personal property tax and
grant limited lax abawment
for modernizing plants and
expanding to inriercity areas.
"We don 't have a high per
capita lax rate compared to
Ohio's per. capital income ,"
said Treacy, "but we do have
a heavy reliance on property

25 • Off Label

Tomato
Soup

,rs

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Stpt. 221

•

Automotive Dept.,

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Campbell's

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Del Monte
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Del Monte
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HEAD LETTUCE............~.. 9~ .
'

Kroger Welcomes
Your Federal ·
Foeti Stamps

�Natural gas cost hike
shaved 25% in new rule

Regulations are
died Tuesday·

(Continued from page I)

In Cincinnati before going to Cleveland for afternoon and
..,enlng appearances, McNamara said. Additional stop6 on
James Robert Cochran, 48,
Oct. Z1 may be made and subsequent visits before the Nov. 2 Rt. 2, Gallipolis, lonnerly of

elocUoo are )1081ible, McNamara said.

MIDDLETOWN, OHIO - ALTilOUGH EARNINGS and
·ales were down during the third quarter, Armco Steel Corp.
:111d Tuesday the drop only reflects a "sununer pause" in the
...uon 's gradual ecmomlc recovery .
·, Armco said Improved earnings from the company~s steel
:tperaUoos helped balance a lower level of business In Its
·dlverstited manufacturing and financing businesses, and as a
·l'llult, sales and income for t11e third quarter were a bout the
·:aame as the pr~g three mQOihs. Earnings for the third
;fiiUirter of 19'18 were $30,112,000 on sales of $817,323,000. That
.compares wlth earnings of $30,601,000 during the second
;quarter .of 19'18 when sales were $821,376,000. Earnings in the
;lhlrd quarter of 19'1~ were $30,M4,000 on sales of $783,574,000.

Agricultural
(Continued from page I)
and costly bureaucr~cy to •cooperate' with state and local
govemmenl!l and private landowers In an attempt IQ
ensure land use In compliance wlth the master plan,"
Ford said in a one-page memorandum of disapproval.
"Too often federal 'cooperation'- when accompanied
by vast amounts of federal dollars and a large
~xtreaucracy- becomes federal 'direction,"' Ford said.
He said his 1977 budget proposal would provide more
than $4110 milllon for the SCS to do the very thing to which
the bill was d]rected.
'
·

.Conservation
(Continued from page I)
·teo ding · ·'polltical·activi~L
organtz•tton
In
the
'environmental field, rated
:llle. Democratic presidential
·CIIndldate as "outstanding"
.'llllcl Ford as "hopeless." ·
It rated Democratic vice

·MEIGS tHEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
WATCH FOR

OPENING DATE

Point Pleasant, and of
Middleport, dJed Tuesday at 8
a.m. in the Holzer Medical
Cenfer.
A retired sergeant first
class of the 3664th Maintenance Co. of the West
Virginia Army NJtional
Guard, he was a· member of
the First Church .Christ In
Middleport and the Masonic
Lodge of Middleport. He was
a veteran of World War II and
a graduate of Point Pleasant
High School.
He was born Nov. 5, 1927 in
Mason County to the. late
Charles Cochran and Mabel
A. Johnson Cochran Crowder.
Survivors Include his wile,
Charlene Williams Cochran;
a daughter, Mrs. Linda Noe,
Pudacah, Ky.; two sons,
James R., Jr. and Patrick,
both of Gallipolis; three
sisters, Mrs. Ruth Lewls and
Mrs, Richard Woodyard, both
of Point Pleasant and Mrs.
Pauline Bing, Pomeroy.
Funeral service$ will be
1:30 p.m. Thursday at the
Crow·Husaeu· Funeral Home
in Point Pleasant with the
Rev. Tally Hanna officiating,
Burial will be in the Kirkland
Memorial Gardens. Friends
may caU at the fuqeral home
after 2 p.m. Wednesday .
Military graveside services
will be conducted by the West
Virginia Army National
Guard.

presidential candidate
Waller Mondale's Senate
voting record on selected
issues as 78 out of a possible
1110 and that of his GOP
co un terpart, Sen . Robert
Dole, as 38.
Carter has an active cam·
paign group aimed at
Ct¥~servatlonlsts, .· includJng •
a Conservationists for
Carter·Mondale group with a
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
staff of 13 at his Atlanta
Friday through Sunday,
headquarters.
cold Friday wltb a chance
of snow Hurries northeast
sections. Fair Saturday ·
and Sunday it wUl be
warmer with a chance of
Now Vou Know
raiD. Highs wW be In the
The first American shot in · 40s Friday, rlsiDg to the 50a
World War I was fired at 6:05 or lower 60s Sunday. Lows
a.m. Oct. 23, 1917, by Battery will be In the upper 20s
C of the 6th -'leld Artillery. Friday morniDg and ID the
311s early Sunday.

1HE INN PLACE

- Florence Hudson

Thursday Night

dies Tuesday

Special

Visit Our Salad Bar
Franks and Sauerkraut
Macaroni and Cheese
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or Milk

Plus tax.

THE MEIGS INN

·Florence L. Hudaon, 32,
Letart, died Tuesday in
Pleasant Valley HospitaL
She was born lh Letart on
May 26, 1924.
'
Survivors includ.e h·er
mother, Iva M. Hoffman
Hudson, Letart; father, Basil
F. Hudaon, DeLand, Fla.;
five sisters, Mrs. Alice
Rayburn, Columbus; Mrs.
Naomi Yeager. Letart; Mrs.
Rebecca Grimm and Mrs.
June Litchfield, New Haven;
and Mrs. L&lt;lulse Durst, Point
Pleasant; one brother, Edwin
F. Hudson, Eleanor; and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
conducted Thursday at 2 p.m.
at the Foglesong Funeral
Home with . Rev. William
Weaver officiating. Burial
will follow in the Graham
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home alter 2 p.m.
today.

l

hurting coal fields
CHARLESTON, W, .Va.
West VIrginia sulfur
regulations are preventing
!lie mining and consuming of
some two million tons of the
state's northern coal each
year, according to one coal
executive.
Don Harrold, preaicle!tt of .
West Virginia Coals Inc., said
~co.vered, unsold coal lying
wtthm sight of the Harrison ·
!"'wer Plant near Shinnston
LS an example of the problem.
He said coal near the ·
Monongahela Power Co,
plant was minep by L.L. &amp; B
Coal Co., but cannot he sold
ber•use of its sulfur content,
(UPI) -

He lll!lintainecl lhsl the
sulfur regulations have
resulted in 150 lost jobe
among companies dlrecUy
involved in West VIrginia
Coal's operation. He said
other companies have been
similarly affected.
Har~old's organization
ownii'B su~nttal amoont of
·.coal in about lOWest VIrginia
counties, and is a sales agent
for coal ml!llng on its own and
other propj!rties.
"I'm not propollulion,"
Harrold said. " I simply
believe our regulations are
more
stringent
than
necess&amp;r)'."

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ING.ELS F,URNITURE
106 N: 2nd Ave., Middleport ·

~I

. . ·I.,

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.. ·• I

.

By Ray cromley
. FIE.LD DIRECI'OR - Teresa Carr, center, is serving as field director of the Eastern
WASIUNGTON - In the flurry of charges and
High SchoOl marching band this fail. With her are majorettes, Belinda Deeter, left, and
countercharges over what President Ford Sl!id about Eastern
Paula Hysell, right.
•
Europe during the second televised debate with Jimmy Carter
w..-e losing sight of the point.
'
Certainly, Soviet troops move at will in Poland,
S AtbeDI UvestockSale1, Inc. ~ TAKENTOHOSPITAL
The Pomeroy Emergency
Sahlrday, OtL 11,1971
Czechoslovakia, Rumania, Hungary and East Gennany.
OSpl
W
Feeder Steers (~ lbs.) Squad answered a call to
Certainly, when the Soviet Union wants a man jailed, he is
Pagetown at 6:12 a.m.
jailed. Certainly,lhe Soviet Union can Issue· oppressive laws VeterauMemorlalHospital 20-35;
Wednesday
· for Louise
Fee~er Heifers (400·700
and hammer at church going. And clobber free public speech,
Admitted - Eleanor Faulk,
lbs.)
17.5(1.29,
Burbridge,
a
medical
patient,
But are the Poles, the Rumanians,. the Czechs, t.he Middleport; Nondls .Fields;
Slaughter
Bulls
(Over
1,000
who
was
taken
to
Veterans
Hungarians and East Germans dominated by this?
New Haven; BlrdJe Conger,
Memorial Hospital.
Most certainly In their hearta they are not, None of these Albany; Alice Lezatte, lbs.) 24.5(1.30.25.
Feeder
Bulls
(~
lhs.)
great peoples acknowledged tho right of Moscow to rule them. Vinton; Mary Hindy, Mid·
TWO ASSISTED
They may give outward obedience. Inside, it is clear they are dleport; Frona Riffle, Reeda· 20-32 '75'
Slaughter
Cows:
Ututty
20Two
calls answered
their own men and women, They are not subservient.
ville;
Helen
Jeffers,
25.25.
Tueaday by the Middleport
That is a most Important point.
Syracuse.
Canner-Cutter 16.5(1.20.
Emergency Squad were at
Leonid BreUlllev knows this, as Nildta Krushchev knew it
Discharged Walter
Veals (Choice-Prime) 11:53 a.m., to 820 Locust St.
In his time. And the Russian military. The inside reports this Humphrey, Misty Tackett,
f&lt;ir Flora Batley, who was
country receives from the Soviet Union make it clear that · Debby Barnette, Anna 36.50-47.50.
Slaughter Lambs 4H1.50. taken to Holzer Medical
loloscow places little trust in the rellabiUty of Polish, Hartenbach , Rosa Brady,
Hogs (No. I) 34-34.40.
Cenler, .aild at 12:33 p.m., to
Hungarian, Czech and East German troops in time of war. The Phyllis Young.
Sows (29.35..W.70,
507 Mill St. for Ellen Richards
Kremlin likeWISe places tittle trust in the political reliability of
Pigs (By the head) !J-25.
who was taken to VeterBilS
the bureaucracies, the businessmen, the ~nners, students or
professionalS, of these remarkable nations. There is strong
Memorial
Hospital.
PLEASANT VALLEY
distrust too among the knowledgeable in the Soviet Union as tii
DISCHARGES - · Mrs.
DIVORCE WON
the reliability even of the native East European Col'(llllunist . John Baker, GaUipolis; Mrs.
ch~.
'
.
Coming Satnrday
Mary
C.. Crulkshanks has
Charles Hodge, Hartford;
David Book of Chillicothe
The Russians find it necejSiry to make every effort to Mrs. Kenneth 'Roush, New ·-been granted a divorce from
bolster those few men on which it has a stranglehold. Then. not Hiven; Mrs. David Wood· Ralph G. Crulkshanka. The 'Will be at the Meigs County
even trusting these few syncophants, the Russians take yard, daughter, Pomeroy; marriage of Robert Burson MUIIeum at 10 a.m. Saturday
repealed secret checks 111 their reliabiHty.
John
Albright,
West and Jeanne Burson was to show slides on ·ar·
in other w&lt;rds, the Soviet Union has learned there are Columbia; Brian Love, Point dissolved, Cases dismissed cltltectural styles wlth the .
timits it cannot cross wlthout backfires it is unwilling to face. Pleasant; Mrs. Harry Mayes, were Diane Bachtel versus emphasis on Southeastern
Despite strong Soviet pressures against religion at one time or Point Pleasant; C.
Ronald Bachtel; Doris Ellen Ohio structures. Brook iB the
Stone,
another, religions observances attract wlde followings - ' Point Pleasant; Mrs. Melvin Halfhill versus WOmer E. preservation officer of the ·
openly In some instances, privately In others. Despite a heavy Freeman, Chesh!re; Dorsil Halfhill; Dolores A. Provence South Central Ohio !'teller·
Soviet clampdown on economic associations wllh Western McCoy, Mason; Emmons versus Jack Lee Provence. vation Society.
. lands, the Rumanians have built those associations, slowly to Selby, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
he sure, but persistently. Though the Soviet Union has time Carl Tennant, New Haven;
again clamped down ·harshly oo those who listen to free world Mrs. William Cantrell, Point
broadcasts, il)dicatioos are that the listening audience Is great.
Though free speech is banned, these courageous people find Pleasant; Betty Angel,
Mason, and Tina Warden,
ways to. communicate. The Berlin Wall is a monument to , Henderson.
·
Soviet failure.
.
Both men were saying during the debate that we in the
United States hear them - though both said it poorly,
especially Mr. Ford.
Both seemed at a loss as lo what action to take. That
question was never answered.
Perhaps it cannot be answered by us.
CARNIVAL PLANNED\
For the problem we face is how this natiOn cail wor'k
fl. Halloween carnival
toward the rright of self determination worldwide without sponsored by the Rio Grande
becoming the world's policeman, a role we find it most difficult Elementary PTO wlll be held
to play.
Saturday. The cafeteria will
Eltllmple: We were not successful in preserving the right open at 5:30 p.m. The menu
of the South Vietnamese to determine their own destiny,
Neverthele,ss II may be that over the longer run, the spirit includes chill, hot dogs,
of the South Vielnamese.and their ~r determlnatioo to be sausage sandwicheS, potato· ·.
pop, coffee, milk, pie
free wUl - sometime In the future, - enable them to free chips,
and
cake.
A costume parade
themselves from the hard-(isted rule oi Hanoi.
will
be
held
at 6:30p.m. and
So it may he In E;astern Europe.
games will begin at 7..

H

VOL XXVII NO. 131

Ford advertising.cited

BLUE DEVIL HEAD OOACH Buddy Moore In his GI

Trim.

'

Be sure to saw all of ;,or cash
register slips and white payment
on account receipts. They are
valuable to you for premiums.
about Elberfelds Premiums.

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Foot~orks
.,
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Money 9rder
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THE $4FE, CONVENIENT,
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INEXPENSIVE WAY TO SEND MONEY

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POMEROY, OHIO

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•

His usuaily well•groomed most unsuspected ways.
GALUPOUS- Head Blue Ironton last Friday, Is
Coach Moore's boys played
Devil Coach Willard (Buddy) wearlrig . strange protective noggin, elegant with hirsute
smart,
hardnosed football to
adornment
in
the
latest
style,
Moore whose football team head covering this week of
whip
Ironton
1/l-14 .
is
instead
a
reasonable
upoet Class AA No. 1 ranked subnormal temperatures.
Saturday morning Moore
·facsimile of a pool parlor's
and his staff were at Henry
cue bsll.
~:~~-.::::::::.::;~8~:.;s?.~:~:=:::::~8~:::~::::s.-:!::~:::.~.:....~!!~~-:::~:oo~~·
Moore1 who played his Kiesling '.s Barber Shop
football on the sandlots of keeping their promise. Each
·Middleport and later under left with a crewcut.
In support of the coaching
head Coach Bob Ashley at old
' Middleport High School, staff, the boosters' club oJ&gt;.
By United Press International··
WASIUNGTON . - FEDERAL TRADE Conunissioner promised - along with his tained blue and wHite
Ellzabeth Dole, wlfe of the GOP vice presidential candidate, assistants Bill Wamslay and . toboggans for the coaching
has violated the nonpartisan · n~ture of her post by Jon Rothgeb - to accept a staff, a protection it will need
campe.lgnign for the Republicans, the chairman of the House "GI Trim" .II the Blue Devils to avoid pneumonia the last
suhoonunlttee which oversees regulatory agencies charged defeated Ironton last Friday.. four games of the season.
The three shaved heada are
Plainly, they saw little
tbday. Rep. John Moss, !).(:ali!., head of the House Commerce
bringing
smiles, laughs, and
oversight subcommittee, !JIBde his charge In a statement danger ui tht: Uiws!er·SO!ffi t.l)
a
good
feeling
of esprit de
accompanying a report on federal commissions which cites an hit them. After all, Ironton
"overwhelming need" to separate the independent regulatory was working on a string of 34 corps among players, and
SEOAL victories over a students. However, Mrs.
commlasloiiB from partisan poliUcs.
Moss said that, as an example, the campaign activities of period of 5~ yeats. And the .Willard (Karen) Moore, and
Mrs. Dole, wlfe of Sen. Robert Dole, "are completely contrary 'Blue Devils had dropped a 7-1 Mrs. Bill (Linda) Wamsley
to the nonpart!Ban, quasljudlcial nature of the pos!Uon she contest to Athens the week have certain reservations
about it all. As for assistant
occupies." He said he hii'd previousiyhwrltten Calvin Colller, before I
FTC chairman, that '1oUowlng Mrs. Dole's participation In
But fate has a way of coach Rothgeb, who I&amp; one of
this fall's campaign, it 'Will be utterly impossible in my opinion, confounding events in the the most eligible bachelors In
Meigs and Gallia Counties,
for the businesses and industries subject to the jurisdiction of
Uttle
change has heen oJ&gt;.
the Federal Trade Commission, for the Congress, or for the
MENU
NOTED
served
in his living style.
publlc generally to accept, as independent and nonpartisan,
LETART
FALlS
The
Moore
lind his staff, decked
Commiasioner Dole's opinions upon her return to status as
menu of the election diy in toboggans, are expected to .
sitting Commissioner."
dinner at the Letart Falls be very much In evidence
Community
Hall Nov. 2 will Frhlay evening at Marauder
DESTREHAN, LA. - A LARGE FLOATING crane today
offer
turkey,
meat loaf, ham, • Stadium. That's when the
lifted the wreckage of a coinmutcr ,ferryboat from the
green
beans,
noodles, highly favored Blue Devils
Mlsslaslppi River where 78 persoiiS may have died In a
potatoes,
slaw,
pie,
rolls
and · meet the Meigs Marauders In
collislon wlth an oil tanker. Authorities said 22 bodies were
coffee.
Proceeds
will
be
lor the Marauders' annual
recovered and at least ~ persons were missing. Only 18
the
upkeep
of
the
hall.
homecoming game.
persons were known to have survived.
The· George Prince, carrying oil and chemical workers ·
acroas the Mlasiaslppi, was ralllllled broadside before dawn
Wednelday by the 1184-loot Norwegian tanker Prosta. The 120foot ferry capsized and sank wlthln 15 minutes, hurling
passengers and cars into 90 feel of water. "It's my feeling that
the death toD Ia going to go over 1110,'' St: Charles Parish sheriff
John 0. St. Ament said. '"It's a very, very tragic thing."

l!News • • •zn Brzefi ·

Ask any_ of the Sales People

Ii

.

Moore, staff wearing GI trims Ford judges character
of candidate Carter

ELBERFELDS IN .POMEROY

i

Heconstderatton ot . the
FPC's new natiOnal celllng
rates came aftet interest
groupa w.ent to court to
Cllllend the rates were too
high and not justified by

"'' costi.
'nu!l view was shared by

Commissioner Doli SmiUt,
who dlaenled In the ,July 'l1
announcement.·
Wednelday, ~oner
James G. Wall called the
"clarificatlnn" a reduCUoo to
consumers of half a biUion
dollars.
(lui Chairman Richard
Dunham corrected him,
"What we are trying to do Is
clarify what o~r intent was ."
Smith uld It reminded him
of "that old Dagwood llory
where Blondle come&amp; home
and says, 'Honey, lj\llluved
you $500 by .bu,rinl all Uteeo
things oo ule. "' Dellplte the
•
million reductloo , be
said, the new rates are ~~LUI
$1 .4 blllioo above the Old.

Bellow makes
it U.S. sweep

c:

DEBATE PANEL
WASIUNGTON (UP!)
· ABC News anchorwoman .
Rarbara Walters has been Sh~wers likely tonight,
chosen as the ·moderator for lows m the upper 30s. Chance
Friday night's final debate of showers or snow Thursday,
between President Focd and highs In the upper 40s.
Jimmy Carter
• Probability of prectpltaUon
The Leagu~ of Women near 1110 per cent today, 70
· Voters which announced the per cent late tonight •nd 40
seleciion Tuesday, also per cent Thursday.
reported tbe questioners for
the debate will he Jac~
Nelson, Washington bureau
AGENCY TO MEET
chief of the Loa Angeles
The Gallia-Meigs · Com·
Times, Robert C. Maynard, munity Action Agency will
editorial
writer
and hnld its free clothing day for
columnist for the Washington low Income persons on
Poet, and Joseph Kraft, syn. Friday, Oct. 22, from 9 a.m.
dicated columnist.
to,2 p.m. at its clothing bank
The debate will take place located In the old high school
at the College of WiUiam &amp; buDding in Cheshire.
Mary in Williamsburg, Va,

at y ~entine

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT,

'tal Ne

would take $580 million off
income gas producers expect

•

e

aren't subservient

.New price ceiling by FPC
for redrilled Wells also

FPC's Wednesday action Ia a
"token l'fi'Dgnltion that the
commission made a grievous
error In its original
calculatloos and Its dect.loo
to triple natural gas prices."
Flug said the FPC
cootlnues to Ignore ..umates
from some utUIUes that the
higher rates will cost a
hom~wner S40 more a year;
llQt the. fl5 projeeled by the
commlaslon,
. Ute FPC is reconsidering
the whole rate structure and
Is apected to wind up Its
deliberatl&lt;llls before the end
of the month. The July 27
announcement set 52 cents
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1976
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS for gas dedicated to
OHIO
Interstate sales from wells
started
befor~ Jan, I, 19'13;
•
$1.01 for dedlcatloos In 1973
and 1974, and $1.42 lor new
Interstate dedications after
Jan . 1, 1975.
Before that, 52 centS had
been the national ceiling for
By MIKE FEINSILBER
·. Carter and also a cover a ·the late Rep. Wright Patman, . Albert Shweilzer, Arnold . Interstate Bllles.,
Newsweek Magazine showlng !).Tex.
Toynbee and Gov. Edmund
PLAINS, Ga . (UP!) Jimmy Carter said today a firm~ooklng Gerald Ford .
"You know that's up to Mr. Brown Jr. of California "and
President
Ford
was
"I think it's a highly Fordtoanswer," Carter said . dozens of other people"- who .
conducting a
"highly misleading
sort
of "He's never denied- ! don't had
previously
been
misleading" advertising advertising campaign to believe he's ever denied- inte~ieweci by Playboy.
He was questioned further
campaign which Insinuates Insinuate that I'm a special that he tried to stop the
that Carter has "low morals case and h;lve low morals Watergate Investigation by· .about the Ford campaign's
simply because I granted an simply because I granted an. the Patman committee ...
advertising technique,
interview with Playboy interview with Playboy
"The only way to resolve II , especially a new Ford
magazine."
magazine ," Carter said.
I tliink, is for Mr , Ford to commercial receiving heavy
Carter said Ford knows
"But Mr. Ford made the answer the question frankly nationwide play which windS
STOCKHOLM. SWEDEN
Playboy has interviewed deCision to do it and I or let the tapes be made up quoting people from'
UPIAmerican author Saul
many pr-ominent people ~ personally don't believe that available. But I'm not Atiantaassaylngtheydldnot
Bellow
today won the 19'18
pushing lor it, 1 think ihe know what Carter .achieved
Including his own treasury it will help him any ."·
Nobel
Prize
for Literature:
On another matter, Carter question Is not one that as governor of Georgia.
secretary, William Simon.
giving
the
United
states an
"Well," Carter said with a
Standing In front of his discussed the controversy . cannot be answered between
grin, "The primary resulta In unprecedented sweep of this
peanut warehouse in blue over \"hether Ford, when he now and the election."
jeans and a light sweater, was House Republican
Responding to the question Atlanta · and throug~ollt year's series of Nobel
Carter commented to leader, acted 011 President about the Ford ads showing Georgia showed that my awarda. ·
The Swedish Academy said
reporters on
a new Richard Nixon 's initiative the Playboy magazine cover support In this stale is not
several unanimous . I only got 84 per the 61-year-old Chicago·
Republican advertising when he tried to stop a Carter listed
campaign. It reproduces the preliminary investigation prominent people- Waller cent of the vote in Georgia (In based author was cited "for
cover of the issue of Playboy intQ the Watergate matter by cronkile William Buckley the presiqential primary) ... the human understandinK
House
Banking
'
·
'
which
carried
the the
Committee,
then
headed
by
cmtroversiallntrerview with
Reed and,Buck Hall; Jayne Hutchison, dau~hter of Mr.
and Mrs. Milo Hutchison; Sandy Garnes, daug~ter of Mr.
and Mrs. BW Games, and Jackie King, daughter of Mr,
and Mrs. Jack King. Paula's escort wiU be Bobby Powers,
Crystal's 'Will be Terry Farrar, Jayne's is crenson Pratt,
Sandy'sis Paul Reed, and Jackie's is Tim Sciles.

MEIGS
HIGH
HOMECOMING . QUEEN
CANDIDATES - One of lheae five aenlor girls at Meigs
High School 'Will be crowned homecoming queen Friday
night during pr"'i!ame activities attbe Metsa.&lt;Jallipolis
football game. She 'Will be choaen by vote of the student
body. Front to back are Paula Eichinger, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Eichtnget':·Geystal Hall; daughter of Betty

~as~~ern ·Europeans

!

,,

,,( I ''"

RAY CROMLEY

Weather

$2995 Roll Cart

l
·.;

By WIUJAM E. CLAYTON eristing well, known as
recomflleted ·gas, would not
WASHINGTON (UP!) qualify
for the higher price.
Nat ural gas Is soon going to
.
Producers
had erroneously
cost consumers moce - but
interpreted
the rates as
perhaps not as much as
allowing
them
tl)e higher
originally erpected.
.
And gas producers could · rates on recomp)eted wells,
come up $Sal millioo short of the commission said.
The clarification would
· what they anticipated from
new price ceilings set by the make the new rates the FPc
Federal Power Commlssloo. announced July 27 total $1 .462
The FPC voted tentatively liulion in additional revenue
to producers, rather than the
Wednesd~y to clarify Its
$2.042
billion producers had
Intent regarding rates for
eslima
ted
- a 25· per cent
wells redrUied after rates had
reduction
of some $580
risen.
Its new wording . would million.
James F. Flug, director of _
specify that gas taken from a
different level of an En~rgy Action, said lhe

SAN FRANCJYCO - GOVERNMENT AUDITORS
charged the mammoth University of California system with
misusing milllons of dollars in federal money in administering
mere than $850 mOtion In grants each year. They have aaked
the university to return the misused mooey to the goverrunent.
In a aeries of eight audit report&amp; obtained by UP!
Wedneaday, made during the past year of operaUons on most
of ·the nine campuses and the central admlriistraUon, ·the
. .university was accused of widespread bookkeeping
Irregularities. They Included failure to keep adequate recorda
&lt;11 how government mooey Is spent and of being unable to
,explain expenditures when questioned by federal auditors.

POl\TLAND,' ORE - WASI'E AND INEFFICIENCY
developed In the Defense Department's $50 million annuel
purchaaaa of wood,products after the department moved its
main lumber bUying office from Portland to Columbus, Ohio,
In 1973, according to a government report quoted by'a Portland
newspaper.
The Oregonian In ita Tl\uraday editions said the GenPral
Accounting Office reported that higher than necesaary grades
of plywund were being used in many Instances and the time lag
between orders and purchases had more than doubled. GAO,
an agency of Congress, said it was im]lOssible to estimate the
total waste of funds.

By HELEN mOMAS
UPI While House Reporter
WASHINGTON -(UP!) President Ford says Jimmy
Carter is ''naive," has a
tendency to "waver , wander,
wiggle and waffle" on the
issues, and should not have
given an interview to Playboy
magazine.
But he says there is
!(nothing personal" in his
criticism of his Democratic
opponent. "I didn't attack his
integrity or anything close to
that."

·

'

Ford tossed barbs at Carter
Wednesday In an East Room
news conference which ap·
peared to be a wann.up for
the third and last presidential
debat• at Williamsburg, Va .,
Friday night:
Ford and Carter both will
show up . at a dinner in
memory of AI Smith in New
York tonight, But their
appearances are timed so
that Ford will have left when
Carter imlves.
Exuding confidence, Ford
also told reporters there Is
"absolutely no validity
whalsoever" to speculation
that he wlll pardon former
Attorney General John

Mitchell and White House
aides H.R. Hahteman and
John D. Ehrlichman who
were convicted in the
Watergate co~erup.
And he said "I think I would
do 'exactly the same thing"
again In helping to blqcj&lt; the
original House inveStlgatloo
of the Watergate scandal
"under the circumstances as
I knew it then ... "
· Responding to a wide range
of political, domestic and
foreign policy questions,
Ford said that , because of
Israel's need !or military

~~:w·~!rdu~~f.~he r~~~
dra.:.tng from .the American
arsenal reserves it! Europe,
lsrael was a burden but today
she is a "strong ally."
Ccn. George Brown , chair·
man of the joint chiefs of
staff evoked criticism when
he .;ud in an Interview that
Israel was a "burden" In the
past because of her requests
for arma.
When asked his views of
Carter's statement that if
elected he wooldend the Arab
boycott on Israel, Ford
launched a biting attack on
his opponent.

-

y.. r.

AmeriCaRI hi" fraquenUy

been named

wlnnon of the

coveted awardl buill wu lhe
first lime In the hlltory of the ·
Nobel prlzea ,thai Am"icans
won all the prllet awarded In
any given year,
The wltlte-halred BeUow,
Saying the boycott had
who
caUl ltimlelf "lUll an
been In effect under four ·
Presidents - Eisenhower, old-!uhloned wrltet," Ia a
Kennedy, Jm11110n and Nlxoo profeuor of Ellfllilh at the
- arid only he, Ford, had Unlvtnity of Chlc110, He has
taken action against II, the alao taught at Prlncetoo,
Yale and the Unlvenlty of
President said:
"I wonder If anybody can MIMIIIOII.
be ao naive as to say In one
senlence that he Ia going to do
something that four other
outstanding Individuals
didn't do even though they
oppoaed the aame thing, and I
think It Ia rldJculous for him
to rr.ake that kind of
allegation."
,,,,,:;i~==:~:::::::::~~''''''''''''''''''''~''':.::::;.,:,,,,,,,,, torw~:.•ereM~=

Women

injured

Some good news llolpltaland. car wal a total
WASHINGTON UP!
The CHI of Uvlnr, a key
harometet of tile aatl..'a
IDIIalloa rate, I'Qie 1.4 per
tent In September, tile
amalleal adviDee alaee
A prO, the lAbor Dep11rtmeal reported today.
Todoy•1
report I•
weleome
aew1
lor
Pruldeal For•, wboae
pruldenllal eomp1l1•
ellorl baa beea billiard Ia
receat weeb wllll 1 serlea
tf dluppelalfDC eeiiMDk ,
reporll.
·The September eoa·.
owner price fipre.tbe 1aat
to be pubU.lled befono the
electl011 - llldlmea that
delplle alaQIIII lfewlb 1a
the economy, ' lallall••
alowed aomewbal - laal
moalll.
::::~:::::::~::::::::::::::~:~~~::::~:~::::::::.:=~~~:=~:=~:

Auto slides off
street in Racine

RAIN NO DAMPENER HERE-· Wednesday's
constant showers failed to dampen the spirlts of these
senior citizen.&lt;~ who cooked apple butter In large copper
kettles ·near lhe .;,nior citizens center in Porr.zroy.

and subtle analysls of con·
temparary cullufll thai aro
combined In ltls WGrk."
Bellow wu ' the 7th
American to wln a Nobel
prize tltil year - a clean
IIWeep of the 1971 owards.
The aword carries a caah
prize of flfiO,IIOO. In addiUon
to the Literature prize,
Americans have won the
Economics , Chemistry,
Physics and Medicine prb:ea
tltls year. The Nobel Peace
prlH wa s nol awardad tltls

lou u the rault of an aecldall at the lntenectlon of
Locuahnd Broadwa~ Stl., in
Middleport at 2:18 a .m.
today·
Middleport Pollee uid a
car driven by Micbelle
Delaney, 11, Belpre,-11'1111 out
of control at the lntenectlon,
into a yard, and turned ·over
on_lta top In the lltreel.
Taken to the holpltal by the
· Middleport emer1ency

aqaad wu Mill Delanl7 who
received (IOII(ble brolten ribs
•nd la~U0111 and Mrs.

Yvonne BeaDy who IUifered a
pooalble fractured clavicle.
Two male peaencen in the
car refilled trealment.
Min Delaney wlll be
charged with recklen
open1tloo, pollee aaid.
A HeOnd accident oecurrad
at il :II p.m. Wednelclar on
· Locult st., - r the Fourth
st. tntenection, when a car
driven by liJCkT Joe Smith,
IS, Middleport, trnellnl
weal on Loeull St., nened
to avoid an OIICOIIIIng Cllr
tnveUng lift of cenl4r. 'nte
Smith car hit a utility pole.
There wu medltan t1ama1e
to the car. .There wwe no
cttaUooa and no injurlet.

Acar was heilvlly damaged
in a alngle car acctdall
· Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. in
Racine, when Gerrl A.
Rought, ID, Pomeroy,
traveling weol .on SR 124,
rounded a cum and 1011
LEVY ENDOIIIIKD
control on the rain llllck high'nte Erecullve .CGmmlltee
way, went off the road, and .of the Melp Local ilchool
struck a tree.
Diltrict Teachers AuoctaUon
The sheriffs department has endorsed the .4 of one miD
aald at the time of the ac· tuberculolil .levy wblch will
Approximate!~ 40 gallons were produced earlier '!llh · ., cident the driver claimed no' be voted upon at the Nov, 2
orders covering most of it. Working here are, Ito r, Jewel
Injuries, but today reporttd election. The lev)' 11 1
Curtis, Homer Young, C. B. Longstreth, Cblrence
!hat llhe wu nperlenciJ!R renewal and bu been
McNeal, Alice Baise~, Susie Wolfe, Early Roush, Bertha
pain on the rlsht side of her reduced from ·• of one miD
Robinson, and Agn.- While.
head. No citation was lalaed. to the lower .4ofa miD !!pre.

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