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                  <text>;10£ th. e Bend ·

. ',• :~·;:

or~~nization,

RIO GRANDE - How to
live, relaxed, in a complex
~
;~ society is the theme for 8
By Bub HQcOich
;:'. participation workshop to be
.~
''' held here Ort. 29·3().31 at Rlo
College-Community
Po!,IEROY - Mike Zirkle of Middleport has an Grande
Collegt.
interesting story tp tell of an incident in the Steubenville area.
The Arico Workshop is
Mike went Ill a bank there Ill get a check for $187,66 cashed. open to any adult who is inThe mooey was pul into an envelope and he paid no attention
in
learning
until he returned tD his hotel room. When he checked, he found terested
techniques
for
personal
that the bank had made an error a"d the cash tol&lt;lled almollt
development. Arlca, now· an
SI.OOOover the amountlhe check was written for.
non-profit
· · Mike went to lbe bank that night to retlirn the overage. No International
·
ooe would accept it. He returned the next day and wenl
through quite an ordeal trying to return the money. The bank
finally accepted the fact that' it had made a misl&lt;lke and
llccepted the overage giving Mike a receipt for the amount.
MANILA, Philippines
· Mike says no one· has yel thanked him for the trouble he went (UP!) - President Fer·
through to return the money. In fact, what he endured In giving dinand E. Marcos said
the money back was humiliating.
Saturday he will include
national olficials, military
TI!ERE'S NOTI!ING like experience, The Meigs Count~ and police ·personnel in an
Board of Elections, in conducting \raining sessions for new poll expanded purge of his
workers Thursday and . Friday, brought in e.erpeinced ' martial law government.
workers from past elections so the new workers could really
The president announced
get it first hand how election day works.
'plans to cleanup the govern·
Election is coming up on Nov. 2 and the board of elections ment last Tuesday after
office is open from 9 a.m. to t2 noon and from 1 to 4 p.m., being voted an apparent
ll;lohday through Friday and until noon Saturday, Ort. 30, overwhelming mandate to
which is the deadline for aooentee and disabled voting. This continue his martial rule of
voting appears to be running high this year even though the past four years and to
nationwid,e there seems to he a concern over the failure. of assume
ext raord inary
people Ill vote.
powers even In the a.b:jence of
marliallaw.
TilE ANNUAL FALL FOLLIES OF THE ,Big Bend
Minstrel Assn. which was to have been held Th•nksgiving
weekend under the sponsorship of the Meigs Local Athletic I
.
Boosters has been c•lled off until possibly sprir\)(.
I

began in I970
~Iter 50 AmeriCa~s received
mtenslve tra1mng 1n personal
development in the desert
town of Arica , Chile. The
Arl ca method ha,s been
designed to help Americans
cope with the routines of a
technological society.
Participants at the
workshop will have the opportu.nity to learn and
practice met.hods for bOQy -

Filipino purge is ·b roadened
·

..

.
'
'
In an 1nterv1ew with
reporters today; Marcos
explamed .
that
the
housedearung w111 not only
mvol?e l~al OfflCI&amp;Is w1th
pendmg cr~mlnal c.ases.
Marcos said he had
directed Maj . Gen. Fidel
R~mos, actmg armed forces
ch1d, to took mto complamts
pollee had been Involved m
long col)ection from truck
and bus drivers from the
provinces entering Manila
and that some of th0111 had
been "turning their backs on
commis.s(Qri of crimes."

and m.ind relaxation In·
eluding specific forms of
body
exercise
· and
movement , forms
of
meditation, and wa'ls to think
more· naturally and nuidly.
The workshop will oc led by
two teachers !rom the Arica
School ifl New York City.
Mrs. Baille Strbin holds a
Master's Degr'lf in Coun·
.selling Education. She helpe~
orgaruze the Boston Aries
Cerlter and has taught In the
Ari~a Scl\ool for four years.
B1U Stroud was one ofthe 50
.. Americans who first studied
Arico with its founder Oscar
Ichazo. Stroud formerly
taught at Esalen Institute in
California and at Aykers
Island (Prison), New York.
The Arica Workshop begins
t 8 · · 'F 'day Oct 29 and
~onJ~~~s rl with s~sslons
Saturday and Sunday. The
wor.kshop also offers one hour

Leftist Thais
•

gO COIDmUDISl
.
BANGKOK, Thailand
(UP!) - Thailand's new
military · backed civlllan
1 government today .faced
I opposition from leftist
I politicians who announced
I ,they have joined the Com·
I munists.
I Four members of the
I Socialist Party of Thailand,
now
outlawed
under ,
·:Thailand's martial law, said
in' a clandestine radio broad.cast monitored in Bangkok
they were aligning themselves with the Communist
party.
The four also said they

·r----------...;--------------1

Datelin
.e

:1

.

WELL, YOU GOT. TO ADMff that ilghting at 1he
Pomeroy-Mason Bri~e following the repair of the span was I
pretty impressive. It just didn'tlait long.
~
'8 llJ
Fred Morrow of the Ohio Power Co .. says Jhat there is
u
b
"''I · r
apparently difficulty involved with the wiring of lhe syslem.
·BY no art w 1 son Jr.
and Ohio Power Co. personnel are looking in til the matter. The
NO letters to the editor pertaining to candidates or issues
company, howeve.r, is only supplying the power to the lighting
system. It did not insto ll the system.
· Ill be voted upon Nov. 2 will be published in the !ina!'two issues
of the local papers prior to election day .
IT WAS OLD HOME NIGHT for Frank Seth of Pomeroy
+++
PURPOSE of this policy is ID assure Utat no charges or
and Vernal Riffe, Jr., speaker of the Ohio ·House of
1\epresenl&lt;ltives, in Pomeroy Friday night. Mr. Riffe is here statements will be published without adequate opportunity for
from New Boston and Frank was a resident of New Boston for refuting such charges, or statements, Friday's paper (Ort. 29)
a number of years~nd knew the Riffe fami ly. Consequenlly, will be the last day for letters on all .election issues and
U1e two had a lot of catching up to do. Riffe appeared here at a Individual races. Letters should' be in the hands of thc·editorial
department no later than 5 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 28, for
Democratic rally un behalf of Rep . Ron James.
Friday's publication .

G tt•

+++

WIN AT BRIDGE
South plays for smaller set
23
NORTH IDI

• AJ 3
• AKQ.l52

• K

... 7 s '

WEST

EAST

4 K 94

... 10752

••

• 10 9 6
• Q 53

+IO B642
4A Q3

"'K 9 8 5
.

SOUTH
• Q86

• 8 73
• AJ 97

• ·' 10 2

Roth vulnerHbl e

Wt&gt;sl

Easl South
Pass , I N.T.

Pass
Pass

Pass JN .T.
Pass

Pass

Opening lead - 5 t4t

with hi s ace and try the spade
rincsse. If it worked he would
make his contract; if it lost he
W?uld be down al least lwu
tncks . Or he could let the kmg
of d1amonds hold. and hope to
find the hearts 2-2 in which
case hi s th ird heart wouid be
an entry to hi s ace of
dia monds .
South knew that the chance
of a 2-2 llreak was just 40 per
cent and a successful finesse
50 per cent but he did not want
to be two down . so he let the
king of diamonds,hold and was
down one when the hearts fail·
ed to break . .
.
Bon s Shapiro pomts ou t
that h1 s play was wr ong
because. If EaSI held the kmg
of spades he surely would
have asked for a spade lead
and h&lt;· had nul done thal
· .
·

v~.!!:~~:.::~~
~·:::·::.!:J:j
:::·~~::::Z~~::.;,:);/§l,::

Polls show Carter leading
Ford by four point average

offers Arica"method

LETIERS of opinion are welcomed. They should,
however, be less than 31)1) words long (or be subject lo
reduction by the editor) and must be signed with the signee 's
address and telephone number. Names may be withheld upon
publication . However, on reque~t. names will be disclosed.
Lelters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not
personalities.

+++

LOCAL candidates are reminded that questionnaires they
received from Dateline earlier this manU! are due back to the
Tribune by noon Wednesday, Ort. 27. Responses will be
published in the Sunday Times-Sentinel on Oct. 31 .
.
+++
.

ago, approiOIIlately ao percent (9,457) of
Gallla sregJStered voters made 11 to the polis. Unlike the rest
of tbe Buckeye state where registralion figures are down this
year; Gallia's l'Ounl is up 551 over the 1972 registra.tion mark.
Gallia's board of elections reported 12,117 registered voters
following the Ort. 4 deadline.
~UR , years

+++

LARGEST turnout ever for a presidential election in
Gallia County was In 1940 when JJ,509 residenfB cast ballots .
That was before voter registration became a reality here. If 95
percent of Gallia'sregistered voters make it to the polls Nov. 2,
Gallia will establish an all~ime voter turnout mark.

+++

DEMOCRATS will be going all out to break the Republican
t
. Gau·Ja coun1Yon· N
· m
' the past
s rang· hold m
. ov. .2. Only tWlce
120 years has a Democrat preSidential candidate defeated a
GOP candidate in Gallia County. The first time was 1912, and
that came as a result of a split in the Grand Old Party when
Theodore Roosevelt captured the county on the Progressive
(Bull Moose) ticket. Democrat Woodrow Wilson beat GOP
Condidate William Taft 64 years ago by 380 votes in Gallia
County,

.,By.Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
A Florida reader wants ln
· The game was match-point
duplicate a nd like many know If we would open one
match-point bidders, South club in third position when
+++
tried three notrump rather vulnerable . The game is
duplicate
and
you
hold
:
SECOND
Democrat
presidential
win in Gallia came in
than a raise lo four hearts.
•
K
Q
n
•
K
xx
u
•
K
10"
x.
1964,
when
Lyndon
B.
Johnson
carried
the usually rock-ribbed
This time it was a good idea,
,our
answer
is
"ye~a
ndno
.
"
GOP
county
by
a
335
plurality,
defeating
Sen. Barry
since four hearts wa s not going ID make unless the defense lie would open w1th some Goldwater, 4,740to 4,405. JohiiSon's 4,740 votes in.'64 was the
partners. and .~·~s With others most 'ever captured by a Democrat presidential candidate in
really fouled things up.
Weslled his fourth-best club a.nd can l cnhcJZe eJlher ac· Gallia County. Former President Richard Nixon garnered the
aga inst the three .notrump uon .
. most GOP votes ever in 1960 with 7,602. The GOP's largest
contract and the defense had
(Do you have a que~tJon plurality in t~e big race came four years ago when Nixon
four tricks in before you could lo r. the experts' Wnte As.k downed Sen. McGovern by '4,165 votes.
say J'Jack Robinson ."
th e Jacobys " ca re ot th1s
·
+++East dropped the six of newspaper.. The Jacobys Will
HERE are results of Gallia 's previous 28 presidential
diamonds on the fourth club answer IndiVIdual queslJOns elections since lt!li4 ' (Note - John Fremont was the first GOP
niter the three of spades was t1 slamped sell-addressed
'd ,
nd'd ·
d Ohi h'
b ks
1
. 'an
o lStory oo., 'revea
discarded from dummy . West envelopes ~re enclosed . The pre~ ent.la1 ~a 1 ate m 1856
led the three of diamonds and mos l interesting questions Gallia Count) voted Republican 120 years ago . Gallla s GOP
.
it was up to South lo make a wr/1 be used m th is column al$0 won m 1860).
decision . He could overtake and wm re cei ~e c op;es of
dummy's king of diamonds JACOB.Y /,1 0DERN.)
Year-Republican
Vote• Democrats Vot .. Plurality
1864-Lincoln-x
2211 McClellan
\024 ll87
1863-Grant-x
Seymour
1872-Grant-x
Greeley
1876-Hayes-x
Tilden
900
1880--(;arfie)d-x
· Hancock
1178
1884- Blalne
Cleveland-x
1357
11183-Harrison-x
Register at Country Cqusins for a chance to
Cleveland
1435
1892-Harrison
Cleveland-x
1572
win sso.oo worth of groceries at The Jones
1896-McKinley-x
4112 Bryan
2214
1898
Boys of Pomeroy. Drawing will be
1900-McKinley·x
3710 Bryan
1935 1775
Saturday, October 30, at Country Cousins.
1904- Roosevelt-x
Parker
2138
1908-Taft-x
39t4 Bryan
2171
1743
191Z-Taft
1355 Wilson-x
1735
Roosevelt (P)
2027
292
1916-Hughes
2751 Wllson-x
2321
430
192li-Harding-x
5388 Cox
2562 2826
1924-Cooli~e-x
4226 DaYis
22112 1944
1928-Hoover
5JU Smith
' 1900 3B74
193Z-Hoover
5311 Roosevelt-x
3971 1340
1936-Landon
6703 Roosevelt-x
454ll 2155
1m-Wilkie
7384 Roosevell-x
. 3812 3572
1944- Dewey
6479 . Roosevell-x
2955 3524
' 19411-Dewe~.
5695 Truman-x
3430 226S
195Z-Eisenhower-x
6761 Stevenson
3052 3709
1956-Eisenhower-x
7034
Stevenson
.
2874 4160
P. S..Our- super glass special wi II be in effect
1960-Nixon .
7602
Kennedy
-x
4104
3498
for just a few more days until the supply .
1964-Goldwater
4405
Johnson-x
4740
335
ends, so hurry in.
1008-Nixon-x
5139 Humphrey
2660 2m
t973-Nlxon-x
6506 McGovern
2341 4165
1976-Ford
?
?
Carl
er
?
· oPEN
X - Elected
Sunday 9•00 A.M.. Io 10 P.M.
+++
Monday lllru Thursday' 7•00 A.M. Jo 10,00 P.M.
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily
Friday and Saturday 7,00 A.M. lo 12 •00 P.M.
Tribune and weekly Gallia Times ... Wayne B. Foster
presented state fair service award ... Capt. Charley Ymmg
retires
as riverman after completing 50 years service .. .
Located at 698 West Main St .• next to The
Clarence
1Bevo) Francis retires as basketball player .. .
Jones Boys in Pomeroy.
·
PoJIIeroy rally iop~
, Gallipolis, 21\-19.
.

Ualted Pnso IDternaUonat
cent - and 8 per cent
Jimmy Carter holds a 7- undecided.
·potnt lead In Texas and
Time's Oct. t&amp;-19 survey of
Gerald F&lt;rd baa a slmUar 1,578 registered voters,
margin In Virginia whlle · lnclnding the 608 rWllrveyed·, ·
nati.onwlde it's Carter 411 per had given Carter 45 per cent
cent to Ford 44 per cent, ID 42 per cent for Ford, with
according to a weekend 13 per cent undecided.
outburst of news publication
In Tex•s, where Ford campolla,
p1iigner~have said they saw a
Time magazine polled 60s swing from the Democrats,
voters across the country the Corpus Christi Calle.rafter the third debate and Times said Sunday a
found Carter • per cent ahead statewide poll conducted in
of Ford- 411 per cent to 44 per

H
•
omecommg
shOW.repeated

p

in Omeroy
POMEROY
Gal.lla
Academy High School's
marching band repeated its
· Oct. .15 homecoming show at
Marauder Stadium Friday
night during the annual
Meigs homecoming en·
co-unter
with
\'isiting
Gallipolis.
The Blue Devil musicians,
under the direction of Rodney
Tolliver, opened their show
with "Tommy" and then in
concert formation, played the
Bachman Tarnover Over·
drive hit, "Not Fragile."
The band then turned to one
of the most heautiful"baUads
on the charts today \fith the
popular Morris Albert song.

·MARVIN OURS

Marvin Ours managing
newspaper circlilation
.ALL! POLIS :_ Marvin E. of the Ohie Valley Publishbig
Ours, ir., Gallipolis, ha&amp; been Co., according to . an annamed circulation manager nouncement by Richard S.
Owen, president.
The son of Mr. and Mrs.
'' Feelings.''
Marvin
Ours, Sr., Galllpolls,
This was followed by
Ours
will
he in charge of the
"Saturday in the Park" and
distribution
of aU papers
the show was concluded with
published
tiy
Ohio Valley
a majorette routine to Neal
Sadaka's composition, "Bad! Publlshing. These Include the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
Blood:"
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel,
Point Pleasant Register,
Belpre Observer and Mason
County News.
.
A graduate of Gallla
Academy High School, Ours
attended Rio Grande College
where he was a member of
Police Department.
Alpha
Delta
Epsilon
Members voted to divide Fraternity. For the past nine
money they made from a years, he baa been employed
circus between C•rl Hysell, as a motor route driver f9r
toward the Pomeroy court, the Tribune.
Meigs Local Eementary
A former member of the
Physical Education program, Gallia County Disaster
the pediatric toy fund at Services Agency, he Is
Holzer Medical Center, and currently active in the
the Gallia County Jaycees. Gallipolis Volunteer Fire
Hysell is juvenile probation Dept. and the GaUia County
officer.
Volunteer Emergency Squad.
The members discussed He is also a member of the
spponsoring a gospel show. Gallia County CB Club.
The lodge accepted two new
Ours resides with his wife,
members, Robert Hawley, the former Jeanne Germesz
Pomeroy Police and Ernest and son, Brian Christopher on
Smith, Middleport Police.
Eureka Star Rt.

Hudson elected
FOP president

POMEROY - Officers for
1977
of the Gallia - Meigs
against the military-backed
Fraternal
Order o( Police,
regime in Bangkok, because
Lodge
95,
were
elected in the
the parU'amentary system of
chapter's
rec~nt October
government has been ban·
meeting.
ned .
Elected were , Larry
"Since the enemy of the
Hudson,
pre~ident, Pomeroy
· people first resorted to
Police
Department;
Bill
violent ·means to · suppress
Mitchell,
vice
pre&gt;"'lllent;
Ray
and persecute the people, it is
secr etary
therefore right and just for Manley,
treasurer, and Steven Har·
the people to retaliate with ten bach, conductor, all of the
violence," said the broadcast
by ·Khaisaeng Suksai, a Meigs County Sheriff's
Department , Edward Ball,
former member of parlia- chaplain,
security at Kyger
ment and the SoCialist party's
Powet
Plant,
and George
deputy leader.
Miller, Jr., guard , Middleport
intended to use violen ce

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
FURNITURE DEPARTMENT. 3RD FLOOR

chair and a half
r man and .a half.
from BE~~·LINE . . America's
King-of-Comfort
Compare at

22gtll

1

•

e~na

W•dt:

1 Or ass Shepard · Caslers
• ButII btg and nlggad for man ."N ed cc mforl
• E~!ra comfort lor large or avernae-slzed men
• Duep ·· sugg1· Tulted · Urethane-Foam lilted back
t A Berkhne RPc luw• r~; a ch arr and o hall ... and ned to you
ana the fam rl ~ . 1111"! nrce sl thmg ot at lia r him Ia co mo home to.
t Full Ure lhane Foam Seal, f001HlS1and ar ms

• lnhn ne number of r eiH ~1ng positi o n~
• Clenlllne ~Jaug ehy de " Cover

• Desrgned 10 hi nn~ de cor
t Extra Tall

\ \::.,..'..

.

. l '\

-- -- II'
DON'T MISS OUT!

'

'

of college credit at RGC.CC,
Tl\e fee Is $25 (not including
meal cost) and advance
registration may be sent to
Betsey Simpson , Arica
Workshop Registrar , Rio
Grande College • Community
College, !!ox 363, Ri&lt;l Grande,
Ohio 45674.
Interested persons may get
more information by phoning
Betsey Simpson at 4*9748 or
Mr. Jerry Vest at 245-9511.

·'

l nr~• r,

•too•••• ~

Altll ~lliC

DELUXE l · WAV AC:TION MEC:HANISM 1 ~1$ ~irn rotl " in any eom·
!t r !~ble po:Jsit•on - s•ulng . TV·••ewinQ . '" berween or Ml reclining
No le'olef Of naha le 10 OPI\tat4! 1\ htlle boct,o prUSufe Is all a 111k~'
to t h/lllge ;ltl:SITI!ln~

.

Rhodesia
·Issue clear

mid.()ctober showed Carte•
favored by 47 per cent of
voters and Focd by 40 per
cent.
'
.Stalewide newspaper polls
varied widely.
The New Yock Daily News
straw poll, accurate in every
presidential election since
1932, put Carter well ahead of
Ford in the Empire State, bY
53 ID 44 per cent with 3 per ·
cent for Independent Eugene
McCarthy.
·
But in Virginia, the llich·
mood Times-Dispatch poll
showed Ford leading Carter
by 42 to 35 per cent, compared

Weather

Cloudy, colder with chance
of showers tonight. Lows in
upper 3t)s. Cloudy and colder,
chance of snow Tuesday.
' Highs In mid 40s. Chance of
GENEVA , Switzerland nationalists attending the rain 70 per cent today, 50 per
(UPI)- Rhodesian Premier conference said eliBctly the
cent tonight, 30 per cent
Jan Smith said categorically opposite - that cootinued Tuesday.
today that whites must white control of tbe two
control the army and (l&lt;!llce In ministries Is "absolutely"
an interim government unacceptable.
leading to black majority
Smith said that if the
rule.
conference arrives . at an
Smith told a news impasse 1t may be a goqd
conference three days bOfore thing if Secretary of State
the opening of tbe Rhodesia Henry A. Kissinger came to
Conference that oc Is not Geneva. He said that this
prepared to negotiate on this would have ID be a decision of .
point. ' - ...-the British conference
"Clea.rly that is not part of chairman, lvo\r Richard .
the room for negotiation," be
Smith reiterated earller
said,
statements that he came Ill VOL XXVII NO. 133
Black
Rhodesian (Continued on page 10)

IDa survey last month which lelephone poll, sliowed Focd
showed Ford ahead 36 Ill 32 ahead by 45 ID 44 per cent.
per cent. Carter's state
ADetroit News poll showed
campaign complained the Carter standing still at 42 per
poll .was not · sdenUflc .and cent between the first and
involved only persons from third weeks of OctDber, while
socio-economic backgrounds native son Ford feU from 47 to
that traditionally favor 45 per cent, with the rest
·Republican candidates.
switching ID the undecided
Two Illinois polls were . column.
contradictDry.
The Raleigh News &amp;
The Chicago Sun-Times Observer poll showed a near
straw poll showed Carter tie In North Carollna, with
ahead by 51.1 per cent ID 47.5 Carter leading 41.2per cent to
per cent for Ford and 1.4 per · 40.5 per cent.
cent for M~Carthy . But tbe
A poll by the Bangor
Chicago Tribune, in a (Maine) Dally News showed
Ford leading 36.3 to 34.4 per
cent.
That
poll,
a
nonscientific sample of
voters, showed Carter
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
leading 37.1 to 34.1 the week
Wednesday tbroligb
before.
Friday, fair Wedaeoday
Among registered voters in
wllb chance of abowera
Missouri, Carter holds a 2. t
Tbnroday and · Friday.
per
cent , advantage,
Highs In 40s awl low H,s. accordlrig ID a poll taken for
Lowo Wedneoday in apper
the Kansas City Sl&lt;lr 208 and 30s, and in 30s and
Carter with 44.4 per cent
low 4011 early Thursday awl
while Ford bad 42.3 per cent.
Friday.
About I per cent favored
McCarthy,

at

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1976

(
)
(
)
.
·goo
139 31

While the selection is great, why not lay~ay a
Christmas for Him or Her.

'·-

.ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

PRICE FIFTEEN Cf.NlS

Ford stumps California, has
Garagiola for taped .series
•

PLEDGES HONOREJD - ·!illeven ·ple~es of the Ohio
Eta Phl Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority were honored
Sunday at the h&lt;rne of Mrs. Karen Goins, Rock Sprinl(s
.,..*:.;.::x;:-;~:::::::'.$:~'t-::::~::::::::::::::::;;:::~:~:~8?:
. ·:.::;:,:::;.::;:;~:;;;:&gt;,;;:,:,:;,:,::~:::::::!i&lt;!:'.~:~;::;~

·News. • . in

Brief~

"'I

By United Press Iolemallonal
CLEVELAND- A CLEVELAND MAN DIED of a heart
attack Sunday after receiving a swine flu shot In the first day
of aeveland's inoculation program, authorities reported .
Three other persons were hospitalized after receiving shots
but aU had histories of heart or circulatory dillQrders,
accocding to Dr. George U!icht, president of the Academy of
Medicine of Cleveland, which helped administer the
inoculatioo program.
Dead was James McManamoo, 58, business manager of
Bollennakers Local 744. Authorities said he had a shot at a
suburban station in the morning, went to the Browns game in
the afternoon and was stricken en route home. Those
hospitalized were In their 51ls and 60s, Dr. U!icht said.

1!i.U,. a prefere·nttal t~a . Froot row, l~, are COIUlie DOO.son,
Jill Uzon, Kathy Dcidge, Sooya Ohlinger, Mary Fry,
Kay~ Walker; back row, Patty Pickens, Donna Dowler,
Crystal Simpson, Carol Ault and Peggy,SIDut.
.
,,

United Press International
While Jimmy Car_ter
followed his usual weekend
routine of church and rest,
President Ford stumped
southern Calif&lt;ljnia and aired
a television show with sports
figure Joe Garagiola which
could become a mlni-!l&lt;!ries
for the windup of• the

show" Sunday
night .
Garagiola Will stay with the
campaign to air similar
shows in Illinois, Ohio,
Pennsylvania and New York
and pqssibly one more state
this week.
Ford spend.• today In the
northwest stat,es of Or.egon
and Washington be! ere flying
ct J1aign.
eastward Tuesday.
Aides dubbed the 10·
Carter, who broke his self·
station, statewide television imposed · rule and chatted
program t~e "Jerry and Joo about religion and the Bible

Pay raises in July confirmed

COLUMBUS !UP!) - Sl&lt;lte for comment but Chan the raises irrtaaponsible."
Personnel Direc!Dr Phillip S. Cochran, the governor's
.."If Lhat is true, it seems we
Hamiltoo has confirmed that . press aide, said he saw no can call this only one thing:
Administrative Services confiict in the pay raises 'and irresponsible," said Riffe,
Director Richard Krabach budget reductions.
who noted he had not given
ordered pay raises for top
"In times like this, those his staff asaistantB pay raises
appointive officials last July jobs are miserable and this year even though they
after talking to Gov. James tough," Cochran sai.d. "No were ~uthorized because of
A. Rhodes.
ca~inet officer . is making state money problema.
Hamilton said he believed what he's worth."
"Democrats have be~n·
the Increases, granted after
However, Senate Majorlty saying aU along there Is no
Rhodes had ordered a Leader Oliver OCasek, )).. need for the budget cuts,"
sweeping
2 per cent spending Akron, called the pay Riffe said, "This proves
WASHINGTON - MALPRACTICE INSURANCE cost a
cut
a
year
ago aod another I Increase action "hypocrisy." we're right. There must be
patient an estimated $1.24 every tim~ he saw his doctor last
4
' 1t was done in secret,"
year, according to the American Medical Association. It said . per cent cut last week , would
money there or how could he
this amo\lllted to 8.1 per cent of tbe cost of the visit. In 1973 a total more than $200,000 Orasek said. "I condemn give the raise~"
P,.Uent paid an average JO cenfB, oc 2.4 per cent of the b[U, to annually . Some of the that. When the legislature
Ocasek said the pay
increases were for as much authorizes raises, we do it in increase disclosure "Is going
cover insurance costs.
public."
. "Cost of physicians' malpractice insurance is hitting the as $7,000.
ID hurt them (Republicans
Rhodes was not available
House Speaker Vernal seeking legislative seats).
paUent where It hurts - in the pocketbouk," the AMA said.
Riffe, D;New Boston, called
The medical association predicted an "even greater" impact
on patients this year because of rising costs of the insurance.
But the impact will not be only on the pocketbook. A=rding
ID the AMA, the Texas Medical Association has identified steps
.
·,.
doc!Drs take to avoid a sui\ in their"state: 67 per cent were
ordering n\ore X.rays; 66 per cent more lab tests; 51 per cent
The Gatlia·Meigs Post Henry, 47 , Bidwell. There east of SR 7, an M.T. Epting
mere consultations; 50. per cent were delegating less State Highway Patrol said was minor damage.
' truck driven by James E.
responSibility tn other medical personnel, and 411 per cent were today two persons were In·
Another deer was killed at Rich, 22, Galllpolls, struck
hospitalizing their patients more often.
juredandtwodeerkllled in 14 10:45 a.m. on CR 3, five and the second unlt on a C9nraU
traffic accidents over the two tenths miles south of SR train engineered by Jaek E.
WASHINGTON -CANCER SPECIALISTS SAY powerful weekend.
160. It too ran Into the path of Morris of Pomeroy. The
drugs are the best treatment to keep breast cancer from
The Log, Saturday
a cor operated by Maudie L. patrol said Rich was unable
recurring in women who have undergone surgery for tbe
At 8:10a.m. on SR 160, one Harreld, 31, Richwood, W. to stop the truck. There was
disease. Georgetown University physicians said in a half-hour and five tenths mlles north of
minor damage . No citation
television documentary Saturday they are enthusiastic shout · SR 35, a deerran Into the path
At 11 :25 a.m. on Georges was Issued.
the relatively new use of drugs for post..perative breast of a car operated by Luella Creek Rd. one tenth of a mile
Arthur C. Preston, 43,
cancer trealment.
•
Phlllp Schein, chief of medical oncology at Georgetown
Medical Center, said survival statistics - despite improved
surgical tecllliques and the use of radlstion - have not
improved for the past four decades. John S. Macdonald of
Oris Roush, president of the through the computer to protected hines.
Georgetown described a 'study that showed 41 per cent of
patients without any drug treatment had relapsed within two Meigs County Farm Bureau identify the owners.
"Most thieves have to work
years, with only a per ~ent of the chemotherapy patients Federati.on, said today the
Crime in rural Ohio has fast and they can't take the
new ldentlfax Program will Increased more than 300 per time to check valuables for
showing evidence of relapse,'· .
be Introduced .at the annual ·cent since 1964 and Falni Identifying' markS/' Swank
meeting Tuesday night.
Bureau officials hope · said. "If they run Into a
Meigs C9unty Fa'rm "ldentifax" .wJll help control protected home, it's easier
No letters. to the editor later than 5 p. m. Thursday, Bureau members will be able · the Increase. '!Propert y just to go on to another since
perlalnlng to candidates or Oct. 28, for publication to uae a national computer identlficati.oo not only helps a most homes aren't protec·
llauea to be voted upon Nov, 2 Friday.
' bank to prol~ct their person recover his valliables, ted." But, most farmers dDn't
will be published In the flnal1 U!tters of opinion are property, and recover It If .it also serves as a deterrent to. mark equipm~nt or record
two llaues of the local papers welcomed. They should, necessary, through a new crime," said C. Wllliam serial numbers.
of the Ohio Valley PubUshing however, be less tban 300 program sponsored by the Swank, OFBF executi.ve vice
A survey conducted by
Co. prior to election day.
Farm
Bureau president.
words long (or subject to O~io
OFBF showed only one
Purpo1le of this policy b to reduction by the editor) and Federation (OFBF) and
In Monterey Park, . Calli. farmer in flve could produce
uaure tllat no · charges or must be signed with the Nati.onwide Insurance, •
where the ·idea originated, the serial number of his
ltatementa will be published signee's · address and Called "ldentifax," the there were 25 burglaries tractor. Only one In 10 had
without adequate opportunity telephone number. Names program allows people to committed In 5,000 homes recorded the serial numbers
lor refuting such chal'lea or may be withheld upon record their property In a protected by Indentifax from of other fann equipment.
statements. Friday's paper publication. However, on national computer bank. Law 1963-1973. In tbe same period,
Here's the way "idenillax 11
(Oct. :It) will be tbe last day ·request, names will be enforcement officials have 6,000 unregistered homes works. A Fann Bureau
for letten on an eleclloo disclosed. U!Uers should be access to the computer 24 suffered 2,500 burglaries, The member buys a fl.$0
lines and indlvid!lal races. in good taste, addressing hours per day and they can same program in Minnesota "ldentifax" kit which In·
Letten lhould be in the hands llaues, not personalities. ·
check identification marks on is credited with reducing . eludes an individual identhe recovered property liurglarles by 90 per cent In
of the editorial department no
(Continqed on pace 10)
11

Patrol logs 14

Two-day moratorium

VINYl AND COMBINATION · UPHOlSTERY
• FABRICS PRICES $
$
RANGE FROM
TO

PREPARE FOR SCHOOL OF SCREAMS - Four young ladles preparing for • "S.·hool
of Screams" Oct. 311n the old senior high bulldlrig In Pomeroy are members of the Meigs
High Future Homemakers of America, assisted by a young man. T~ event Is under the
direction of Jim Sheets, spOO!IOred by tbe March of Dimes. Shown l..r, are, Anr,lla MnrUn,
Margo Martin, Susan Fleshman and Frank Martin. Costume prizes wltl be given In tlu·oc
categories, ugliest, prettiest and most original in the following age grouP", pre,,chool,
kindergarten, through grade three, fourth grade through six, seventh grade through 12nn&lt;l
adulfB. All who wear costumes will rect;lVll a free game tlckel. There wltl be !H) chnrge for
costuming, how~ver, there will be all charge to go UJC~ugh the chamber of hor,.ors. Mrs.
Rober! Buck Is chairlilan of the March of Dimes.

•

They tried to smuggle this
through. It's phony." Rlffe
said the action "will
definitely
hinder
the
Republican candidates. 1'
Rep. Myrl Shoomaker, ))..
Bourneville, head of the
House Finance
ApproprlaUoos Committee,
said "This .runs contrary ID
what Republicana have 'been
preaching about the tight
money situation."
State Budget Director WU. llam Wilkins said the raises
will c&lt;rne ~ut of department
budgets. He said the cost of
the raises ·~was not suflldent
to be. a major budgetary

concern."

vehicular errors

·

Identifax coming .to Meigs

Recliners,
Rock-0-Loungers
and
Wall-Away Cha.irs

'

•

•

e

va.

In the Furniture Depl on the 3rd Floor
we have a large selectioo of

.

with repoclersln Plains, Go.,
Baptist Church doorway
early Sunday, ,aiso spent Ume
with the television cameras
during the afternoon.
Aides said he taped
"fireside chat" programs
which will be shown at
different times on all three
networks oo election eve.nex.l
Monday night.
The DemocraUc candidate
answered questlOliS about his
religious philosophy and said
he did not know why his Bible
class Is Ill' men only or why
hls church Is all white, He
said he assumed that If a
black
applied
for
membership, he would be
admitted.
Carter said .he had no way
of knowing if some of tbe
biblical stories - like that of
the serpent in the Garden of
Eden - were literally true,
but that much of the Bible Is
written. in allegories.
For Instance, he said, be
dOes not believe the biblical
view that the earth has "four
corners," and doubts the
earth was created In seven
days -it was more likely ID
bave been seven stages, or
seven time periods.
Car!er Is taking todsy off as
well, and embarks on his flnal
carnpa,ign swing Tuesday
m&lt;rning ,
Ford attended a Catholic
service In a mtsaion church,
then Spent the afternoon
telling enthusiastic cro.,ds in
Orange
County
that

Cheshire, was cited for lm·
proper passing following an
acddent at 3:30p.m. on SR 7,
flve tenths of a mile north of
CR 2. Preston's car was
pa118lng and be cut back in too
Three Meigs County youths
soon, striking the left !root of
under
age 18 have been
a~ auto operated by Eddie L.
Wolfe, 23, Pomeroy. There arrested on charges of
breaking .and entering a
was mooerate damage.
Harrilonvllle
area service
There was no contact
station
early
Sunday mor·
between vehicles in an ac- niniJ.
.
cident at 3 p.m. Saturday on
Meigs
Sheriff
~bert
C.
SR 588, two miles east of SR
Hartenbach
said
his
35. George D. AdkinS, 78, Rl.
3, Gallipolis, drove over a department · received a call
hillcrest, swerved to hiJ left, early SWidly morning to tile
lost control of hiJ vehicle effect thlt three male subwhich struck a fence. There Jects had broken Into the
was ·minor daljUlge and no · Larry Vance Service ,Station
(formerly the Bob Clark
cltati.on was llaued.
station)
in the Harrlronvllle
A single ear mishap oe:
area
llld
were thought to still
curred on SR 3211 where
be
In
the
bulldlng'
Char'les B. Tackett, 17, Rt. I,
At
the
time Pi the .call,
Bidwell, lost control of hiJ car
Athena
County
Sheriff's
on the wet pavement. The
deputi.ea
were
oo
Route
Ul at
vehicle ran off tbe highway
Albany
and
proceeded
lm·
striking an embankment.
medlatelytothucene.
At
1
a.
Margaret M. GUkey, SO,
m.
the
Athena
County
Athens, was taken to the
Holzer. Medical Center for deputies took one boy Into
Injuries suffered In an ,ac- custody who admitted being
ddent at 4:20 p.m. Saturday ooe of the persona who had
on SR 160 north of CR 2. Mn. broken Into the station. At
GUkey lost control of her car 1:20 a. m., Sheriff Har·
which ran off the left side of tenbach and Chief of PoUce
the highway. Her vehicle was Bruce Davis, Rutland,
arrested two ~· at a
demolished.
Another Bingle car mishap residence In Harrisonville.
Also assisting In ihe search
(Continued on pace 10)
. was Deputy Sheriff Ray

Callfornlu is n "mu'l win"
stale in ills drive' lor the
presidency.
•' ord SOWlded his fumiliur
campaign themes ; Utut he
has earned the White Houso
because he reslotl\l pubiir
confidence ln the presidency
after Watergate, "tw·ned the
economy around " after
reccssloo 1 "achieved peace
and we are going to koop the
peace" and beilled national
divl'lions.
GOP vice presidential
ca ndidate Robert Dole
attended' a Billy Graham
crusllde, and his Democratic
counterpart stumped the ·
northeastern area.
Dole was greeted with
polite applause when he
entered the stadium, but did
not speok ot the rally.
Graham, who Is not taking
sides, told reportera he
Invited all four candidates
but only Dele accepted. He
said he received a phone call
from the White House, a
'~nice letler" from Carter,
but heard nothing from
Walter Moodale.
Mondale spent a busy
Sunday ca mpaigning in •
ethnic neighborhoods from
Cleveland, Ohio, eastward
through Pennsylvania,
winding up in Bangor, Maine,
for the night. He lashed out at
Ford's economic record and
predicted the Democrats are ,
"going \'IJ win and win
hand'IOmely."

Boys arrested

.

¥'

Manley of the Meigs Sheriff's
Department.
The three Juveniles were
taken to tbe Meigs Sl\erilf's
office where they were turned
over to county Juvenile of.
fleer, Carl Hysell, and lodged
In the county jaU.
Entrance · waa made Into
the stati.on by b~ing out a
giasa In the door. The station
was ransacked candy,
dgarettes, milk and pop
being thrown qver the floor.
Cigarettes, lighfB, gloves and
other 1tems were recovered
from the )uvenlletJ. The three
.will be tried later in the Meigs
County Juvenile Court.

,

1

TWO ASSISTED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call to
BaUey Rrln at 10:20 a. m.
Sunday for Chester Fisher
wbo was taken to Veterana
Memorial Hospital. At 9:40 p,
m. the equad went to the
Dana Covert residence near
Pomeroy for Jessica Covert,
four weeks old, who was IlL
She was taken to Hoher
Medical Center.

•

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1- The DP"~· Senti'lei. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, Oct. ~.1976

··:~pooks
...

didn't

sho~

up

Haunted· house investigated
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - I have wcrds.''
reported prison riots , student
She explained she had a long
disturbances, 6res and strikes. 'nlis
conv~tion with ua religious man:'
wa.&lt;my first crack ala haunted house . ! who had instructed her to shout, upon
entering the house, "Thts horne is
was excited.
Pauline Williams, 18, had reported
protected by the blood of JeSiis.
!he had been forced from her home
Demons get out."
when_tables, glasses, ashtrays, lamps,
I advtsed her that the opUon was
and other assorted objects began Oying
her 's, butaaked it' she could wall a few
through .the air.
minutes ,unu1· the "demons" had a
Prepa red for the worst - or be$1 - I chance to become operational. For
met her al the home· ·of one of her
journalistic sa1&lt;e.
_friends; she was afraid to stay in "her
The very act of entering the house
own home.
:'was one of Ute , most weird and hair
"ll all began a week ago raising experiences I have ever been
Wednesday," Mrs. Williams told me, through .
1
"when corn and dry beans began falling
' Watch out now," she said, as she
into my bathtub from out of mid-air." Inserted the key In the lock. "Several
Well, I might become excited at a
Urnes they began throwing stuff at me
• report of chains rattling or voices In the as I opened the door." ·
• night - but dried beans'
Walking over Ute threshold, the hairs
: "I kn'llw It sounds crazy, but that's oo the back of my head must have been
: what happened," she added, seeing the quivering. My heartbeat quickened,
• look on my face: lasked what else the and I looked wilcDy around .
: poltergeist had maniffllted.
A lamp lying broken on Ute Ooor,
• "Things began falllng onto the Ooor some envelopes scattered around the
: and through the air at me :... even Ught middle of a dining area and an .
: oolbs began breaking and I had to . extremely agitated Mrs. Williams, was
• leave. I was·afraid I might be kllled, " all to be seen. No poltergeist presented
: Mrs. Williams said.
him or herself.
; She said she was unsure whether
"I'm just scared to death," she said,
· someone was trying to make her move
in what I took to be a very poor choice of
: or, in Cact, ddemons from hell" were
words.
· alter her.
She took me oo a tour of Ute two'&lt;!tory
: "I'm really afraid to go In," she said.
home, polnilng to where her spice
: "Do you think I ought to say U1e

Bengals win 27·7 with basics
\

bottles had stood before being thrown,
with great Ioree, tO the other side of-the
house ; the remains of the dried beans
("every time I tried ~ clean them up,
more would pour from lhe ·air " ); and
the objects which had been tossed
aboul.
She had called the pollee, bu~ the
officers had ridiculed hi!r and took her
W a hospital for a mental checkup. The
hospital, she said, found her raUorial.
"At first I was the only one. io see
them thr~w things," she said. "But my
two daughters have seen it, as well as
Jack Alspaugh."
Alspaugh, a friend of Mrs. William's,
refused to accompany us to the house.
"I'JTl an old man/' he said. '~nCe in
that house is enough." Alspaugh said he
had been struck oo the head by a slipper
as he and Mrs. Williams walked from
the house. NobOdy was in the home at
the Ume.
I spent an hour inside the
house ... wailing.
•
''It could happen-any moment," she
kept saying.
The house·iemained-silent.
"Well," she said, as I returned her to
her friend's home, "I don't know what
to do. I can't aHord to continue paying
rent for a home! don't live in. And I'm
afraid for my life and my children il j
Slay there.
"But nobody will help," she added.
"They just all think I'm cra~y .''

: Carter business details released
WASHINGTON (UPI) Th e
Small
Business
Adminis tration says Bllly
· Carter, younger brother of
the Democratic presidential
nominee, won't let the agency
·

·.
:

without formal approval of
the principals.
The SBA recorda showed
Uiat Billy Carter, operator of
the family peanut business
since his brother began hts
relea se som e information bid for the presidency 22
al• oul the Carter family months ago, refused last
business.
week to let the SBA make
'l 't wns Ulld of the matter public the salary and other
ov s9urce fri endly to expense details related to an ·
f1\
·"r•l "ord, and the SBA SBA loan to the Carter famlly
lull
'\l'Tlled the source 's
14 years ago.
ac(i 1., c~·l r ler s c"dmpai gn
The SBA's attempt to
a ides
t1ues lioned
the disclose the information
propriety of lhe news leak. came in response to a
Some of the information Freedom of Information
includes Jimmy Carter's inquiry. Billy Carter, the
salary while he was running records showed, refused til
for governor _of Georgia in grant a waiver after the
1966 and again in 1970, the agency contacted him about
SBA documents showed.
lhe request.
Under federal law, the
Jimmy Carter and his
agency has no authority to mother obtained a .$175,000
disclose data such as that SBA loan for their related
involving the Carter loan businflls interellts in 1962. The ••
1

:

·
·
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money was used to construct ' involvement and role of
cotton gin buildings, a colton federal tax-jlaid employes in
warehouse and an office doing political-work for the
building in 1962.
President Ford Committee ...
The SBA provided three- I thought we had pol that kind
fourths of the total at the of political behavior behind
congressionally sel4 per cent us."
lnterellt. Citizens Bank of
Because the SBA loan inAmericus provided Ute rflll of valved government funds,
the money at 6 per cent. Loan · most records involved are
proceeds were also used to available to the public on
buy and Install platform request under the Freedom of
scalfll and a colton gin, SBA 1nformation Act.
But
documenl• showed.
"proprietary" information
The SBA said: "The loan such as salarifll is withheld
was repaid on a timely unless the individuals
basis:"
involved approve.
Jody Powell, Carter's press
~cretary, said in response to.
questions ·about the report
that Carter disclosed his
salary for the perlnd involved
when he made his income tax
returns public.
"We are somewhat concerned," said Powell, "about the
ROCK SPRINGS - Principal John Lisle has an·
nounced the first six weeks
honor roll a\ the SaUsbury
Elementary School. Making a
grade of ''B" or above in all
their subjects to be listed on
the roll were:
First Grade - No grades.
Second Grade - Brenda
developments, Alexander Sinclair, ~ally Radford,
said:
Jeremiah Prater,
Ph!Uip
- Treatment of income King, Todd CulllllllB, Heather
from investment annuity Cullums, April Clark, Lin
accounts and similar Chase, Melanie Arnold, Darla
contracts with life insurance King.
·
companies is being reviewed.
Third Grade - Beth
l!:arnings on Income in such B)~_In_e, April ' Brlckles, Jodi
account.s may be. treated as Hamson, Barbara Hatfield,
"regular"
income
to . Angle Patterson, Scott
taxpayers.
Pullins, Tim Sloan, ;.nita
- Retirement contribution Smith, Tammy Terry.
plans may be llnnited in the
Fourth Grade - Cynthia
amount of "cost-&lt;&gt;f~lving" Hazelton , Sandra Hort,
escalatDr Increases.
Shawn
Johnson,
T1m
- Request.s for rulings and LeMaster, Charlotte Lyons,
determinations will be open Greg M_urray, James Parker,
for public inspection, Teresa Pratt, Dentse Stegall,
although
personal Jackie.'Wf!ker,
information thai would
Fifth G~ade - Rhonda
identify
a
particular Jeffers, Michael Kennedy,
taxpayer will·be deleted.
Angela Pratt, Craig Sinclair,
- Accountants and other Paula Swindell.
·
tax preparers will be held
Sixth Grade - Scott
responsible, and in some Harrluson, Angela Hatfield,
cases fined, if a taxpayer files Jim Hoyt, Brlll Kmg, Natalie
a return that understates the tambert, John Lyons, Sherri
tax due.
\llarsh~ll, Jotm Smith, Greg
Taylor.

Salisbury's
honor list
announced

1040A form easier tQ
read, ·harder to fill out
WIISHINGTON (UPI) Income tax forms for
•mrkers wilho.ut itemized
de&lt;luctlons will be easier to
N&lt;Jd for the !976taxable year
but harder to fill out,
according to Commissioner
Donald Alexander of the
Internal Revenue Service.
Alexander said the print on
. the 1040A "short" form will
· be larger and easier to read.
· But changes In the law wUI
. requlre taxpayers to make
moce compulallons and to
· choose between two potential
means of applying the 135 tax
credit.
Taxpayers will take the
larger computation of $30
multiplied by the oomber of
exemptions except for the
blindness-age provisions, or 2
per cent of taxable income.
Regardless of the methnd, tbe
maximum credit ts $180 per
family or $00 for marcled

persons flllng separately.
Taxpayers will compute
their standard deduction and
taxable income, then
determine the tax owed from
a single table in the
instruction booklet. There
were multiple tables for the
1975 filing yesr .
Alexanders's reniarks on
taxes were culled ·irom
formal statements and
conversations with reporters
In recent days.
Alexander said IRS expects
to mail M million ' 1Short''
forms to taxpayers by Jan. 7,
about 10 days later than the
1975 forms were mailed.
The standard 1010, or
11
long 11 fcrm, has not been
completed, Alexander said.
But he said IRS wlll be ready
Ul mail these forms by the
first week in January to about
45 million taxpayers.
In other income lax

DR. LAMB

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r f.-·; -'
' I .

f

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I
would like some Information
on getting rid of latin certain
areas of the body. I read thai
whe_n you lose weight or fat,
you lose It over your enUre
body. The weight I gain
seems to settie In my hips and
seat.
·
I'm not overweight, I J'!Si
need rearranging. How do I
get rid of fat In one place and
stay the same or not get
skinny In the other areas that
are jwrt fine?
'
Al8o, coUJa you 1eu me
what exercises are good lo
nauen the derriere?
DEAR READER - I've got
news for · you . You are
.overweight. There ts no such
thing as spot reducing. You
have to be on a general
weight reduction ' program to
get rid of fat even lf you seem
skinny-In some areas, such as
the face.
, You ltave two problems,
lou of muscle maaa in the

THIS IS THE GIRLS VOLLEYBALL TEAM at
Ji:astern High School. Members are, front, Ito r , Jennifer
Gainer, Pam ~urlock, Newell Blake, VIda Weber,
Tammy Fitch; second row, from the left, Jane Milhoan,

limes

back to maintain good
posture for you. These are
movements ol the arms In a
backward fashion as you do lf
you are swimming the
backstroke.
You can help tone up
sagging mnscles In the abdomen, with sit-ups' and you
can tone up that "derclere"
with old fashi!Jled bumpa and
grinds.
To help you in your
rearranging program I am
sending you The Health
Letter number 3-7. Girth
Cqntrol: Avoiding the Big
Middle. Others who want this
Information can send ~0
cents, with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for
it. Just send your letter to me
in care of this newspaper, P.
0. Box' 1561, Radio City
Station, New York, NY'10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I
recently read an article in a
well known magazine about
skin care. It said that lack of
vitamin A can cause such

skin dtseases as psoriasis or
ev~n cancer. I would Uke to
k1111w if this Is true, if taking
vitamin A orally would
relieve psoriasis.
DEAR READ!LR - I am
app olled.
Vitamin . A
deflclencies can cause skin
problems but such a
deficiency will not cause
either psoriasis or · skin
cancer. And they are not the
same thing.
If you have quoted the
article correctly it is one
more example why people
should be c-areful about
'getting health lnfonnation in
articles not written by doc·
tors. !'dany so called health
magazines are the source ·of
much of the health misinformation and folklore that
people read.
·
Taking large doses of
vitamin A on your own can
also lead to vitamin A
toxicity. Such
mlSID·
formation can really be
harynful to people.

21,

NEW YORK (UPI) - Many 11111011g the 49,788 at Shea
Sladlum watcling tbe Baltimore Colla run eyer the ~ew Y&lt;rk ..
Jell left abortly after the f&lt;Rll'lh quarter began.
The rain.had started falllng·agaln and they had found out aU
they wanted to know, anyway.
·
The Jets certsinly weren't going ID win thla one.
Not with Bert Jones at the controls fu' the Colts. He was too
much f&lt;r them. Maybe too much f&lt;r anybody else as weD.
"He's the best in bulnea right now," uid Joe Namath,
sitting in front of hlllocller after Jmea had picked the Jela'
IJBB8 defense like oome master lockamlth In peeing the Colts to
a ~victory &amp;mday. "If you aaked me to pick the No. I
quarterback in the Jeague, he's the one I'd pick. Who else? He
throws weD, bas complete confidence, knows what he's doing .
and he's a helluva guy."
Professional footbaU's premier q~rback himself 11111 thai
mg ago, Joe Namath was making It pretty clear he felt
Baltimore's Bert Jmes had taken over that dlatlnCtion now.
1bere were no great drlmatics in the way ·the Jela' '
,quarterback ~ what he did. He wasn't some .knlgh_l of old
handing over hll sword. N&lt;r was there any great sense o1 the
King Is -Dead Long, Lmg Live the King.
Flattened by a tackler and forced to leave the game In the
fourth quarter, Namath was only saying what he honesUy fell
about Bert -Jones, the Colts' big, gifted ~year-&lt;&gt;ld quarterback, wbq bad Just flniahed completing 16 of 'll passes f&lt;r '/JII
yards. One olth01te was a 79-yard bomb to wide receiver Roger
Carr that stayed in the air nearly hl!lf the day and gave the
winners the last oltheir two touchdowns In tbe final quarter.
"!looked up on that paaa by Berland the baD seemed like It
was In the air forever," said David Taylor, the Colts' offensive
tackle. "II lookad like il would never come down. Wbat an
ann!"
All the Colts talk the same way about Jones.
"Hey, thlB guy ""n unload one 70 yards anytime he Ukes and
hit a dlme," offered Carr, who scored both BaiUmore
IDuchdOWDB, the first one coming on all-yard toos from Jones
in the first quarter.
Beyond quesuon, llert Jones has the strongest arm in the
Nallmal FootbaU League today. He gets a lot on hll throws
and puts them right there, the same way Johnny BenciJ does.
Even Namath at his height never threw with the combined
velocity and accuracy of Jones. The only quarterbac~ I can
ever remember seeing who did was the late Paul Christman
and he wasn't as consistent as Jones.
Untll one of hll· secmd quarter passes intended for Glenn
Doughty was picked off by Jels' linebacker Bob Martin, Jones
had thrown 113 stralaht without an interception. All it was, thai
waa hll mly intercepllm in SUnday's contest, which
represented the Colts' sixth win In seven starts:
Jllhes, son ol Dub Jones, who used to play for Ute Cleveland
Browns and sUU holds the NFL record for six touchdowns In
one day, !tad the lowest paaa Interception percentage in the
league last year, hts third wl,lh the Colts, who made him their
first draft choice in 1973. Jones has matured considerably
since coming up and, coincidentally or 1111\, so have the Coils.
"The guys love him," said Ugh! end Ray Chester. "He's a
team player in every ae!Uie of the w&lt;rd. H somebody fumbles,
he'D run ID-30 yards down the field and you can .bet your
bottom dollar, he'll be somewhere in the middle of the pile
lugging for the ball."
After their victory over the Jets, the Colts handed out two
gauie baiiB. One went to speedy Roger Carr, who travels
quicker than bad news and whom Ilia teammates caD "the
fastest white man in the world," and the other was given to
team trainer Ed Block because, well, the Colts didn't feel there
11ad been any other real standout among them.
Get that! Jones hlta 18 for 'll good lor '/JII yards and two
touchowns, at least two .of his lncompleted passes hit the .
intended receiver right square on the hands, and everybody
stll1 feels that's only an ordinary day for him. Bert Jones
agreed.
"It was nothing special," he said. "We put some points on
the board but had a chance to put on a lot more. We wm it,
though, and that's the main thing:"
The Colts are hard to recognize from the Colts of twp monlhs
ago, With Jones leading them, they look like they're headed
stralahl for the Super Bowl, although It wasn't that long ago
thai team owner Bob Irsay was firing Ted Marchibroda, an
exceUent coach, and the Baltimore players were gping around
saying lrsay was off in left Held somewhere-and didn't know
what he was doing. Jones was one ol the moat outspoken in that
regard. He said it wasn'i lrsay talking, It was the whiskey
talking, referring to the owner's critlci.vn of the coach.
All that seems ID be forgotten now.
lrsay came down to the Colts' dressing room Sunday ID have
his players autograph a football for some kids am someone
asked him what he thought of Jones' performance.
''lthink," said the Colta' owner, ''Bert Jmes, as usua~ was
beautiful."
He said it with enthualasm, as If he meant it, and I'm sure he
cDd.

·statistics; Brends Lanham, Julie carpenter, Robin
Elkins, Vicky Epple, Janel Ambrose, Teresa Edwards,
Kim Batey, Janel Brooks, Laurie Matthews, Teresa
Buckley and Coach Susan Thompson .

HUD charged with defiance
I

CHICAGO ( UPI) ~ A citizens• group has accused the
U.S. Department of HouSing
and Urban Development
. defying Congrells by refi#l!pg
'to compensate families who
bought defective homes with
government-insured mortgages.
The -National People's
Action, a national coalition of
citizens' groups, Sunday cited
a memo In which a Ulp HUD
official told his staff that he
was "unalterably opposed"
to a program calling for
reimbursement of persons
stuck with faulty homes.
fll August of 1974, Congress
approved a plan to
compensate thousands of lowincome families, many of
Whom were victims of
scandals in the Federal
Housing Administration's
mortgage Insurance program. The plaq was exiended
by CongreliS last Au!IUSt.
The reimbursement
program was aimed at
curbing Inadequate FHA
home inspections which often
left home buyers with faulty
roofs and . furnaces, rotted
porches and even structural
failures. ·

But seven months· after
Congress approved the profam, HUD had failed even to
-print application forms, NPA
said.
lt!J·1 n•'.i
And the · day after the
· program was extended by
,. Congress, NPA said, George
0. Hipps, Jr ., acting director
of
HUD's office of
underwr.iting standards,
opposing the plan.

Hipps, In his memo, said
the
a~reement
was
"fundementally discrlmlna·
· tory," offers protection
"under terms w~lch are
impossible to moot," and
"requires a finding ofJ~ult.:•
., "Every claim paid is a tacit
admission of failure, yet the
pressure is overwhelming to
approve claims. The departmen! catches hell whelher.il

.'

)lllys ·or does not pay," lbe
memo said,
HUD's figures show 75 per
cent of the applicants for the
program werer-rejected .
"What we have here is a
· blgh level HUD bureacral
telling . his staff not to
administer the program in
defiance of CongreliS," said
Lenora Rodgers, an NPA
board member.

Carey claims ills fault of Nixon-Ford
COLUMBUS.I UP! ) -New
York Democratic G_ov. Hugh
Carey, whQ~ headaches include keeping New York City
away from the brink of
· bankruptcy, says the nation's
economic problems are the
fault of lack of leadership by
Presidents Nixon and Ford~
"Ford says if the
govenuneqt made a six-jlack
of_tleer, it could . cost $50,"
Carey told the 45th annual
convention of the Federal
Dem_ocratic Women of Ohio

here Friday. "Well, they
(Ford and Nixon) have been
running the brewery. That's
why things are so nat in lilts
country. .
"There are real issues and
differences in this election"
(such as unemployment,
fixed income of the elderly
and inflation). "The average
worker Is not one dime better
off in buying power than he
was a decade ago. .
There is a need for change,
he said.

He 's

~~eart.er

saying

different and it's Ume we
heard something different. "

Carnival
scheduled
'
RACINE - A fall carnival
wasplaMedlorNov.l3 at the
recent meeting of the Racine
PTO.
For tbe camlval a poster
contest will be held with first,
second and .third place prizes
lo be awarded In each class.
Speaking at the meeting was.
·James Profitt, candidate for
sheriff, and Kay Wolfe on
behalf of th~ tuberculosis
leVy renewal 'whiCh received
an endorsement 'from the
PTO.
It was announced that
fathers' night will be obseried on Nov. 15 with Carl
Wolfe to be the speaker at the
meeting. Mrs. Libby Fisher
presided with Mrs. Barbara
Dugan leading in the pledge
to the Oag, and Mrs. Evelyn
Maynard giving devotions.
Refreshments were served
by the teachers.

is sincere.

something

Plain Dealer

Local Bow~
Pome;oy Bowling Center

Weds. Aft
10-13-76

Team

W l

Village Pharmacy

39 17

Pin Busters

37 19

Team 6
Team 2

25 31
2~ 32

Waid Cross &amp; Son

25 Jl

Fonzle Fol lowers

18 38

High si ngle game - Pat
Bent z 153, Grace Roberts,

152.

High ser ies ~ Grace
Robertst 411 ; Pat Bentz 404,

Suzanne Richmond, 394.

Thursday Rejects

Team

10·14-76

~Team

No. One
Team No. Two and Four

Std.
1st
2nd

Welkers Ashland
Team No.5

Jrd
41h

Team No. 6 1

5th

High individual games Charlene DocZL 180 ; Ann

Morris, 161 ;

Sue

Searles,

157.

High individual 3 games Charlene Docz l, 445 ; Ann
Morris, 405; Patti Williams ,

396.
Hig h

team

.

game , t -

Welkers Ashland. 284 ;' ,Tea!Tl

No. One, 271; Team No. Four,

, ~ Sunday

nam

Mixed league

Plcn N !;hovel

Sa lem St. Mkt. ·

face, neck, arms and gain of
fat below the chest. The way
you go about rearranging
yourself is to recognize you
have two problems, not
just one. ·
It Is. a perverse aspect of
nature thst causes WI to lose
fat in our face first and last In
the abdomen and hlpa area. A
good program Is to do
exerctses 'to bulld up mu&amp;cles
In the skinny places and be on
an exercl~e diet program to
lose calories and get rid of the
unwanted fat deposits.
Do Isometric exercises for
your face. That means
contracting eaciJ group of
facial muscles that you can
identify several
eaph
morning - between three
and ten thnes is enough for .
each group.
Also do e1erclses that use
your arms and chest muscles.
Pu8h-ups, pull-"ps and
windmlll uercises are aU
good. Be sure io use exercises
that help pull your shoulders

By MILTON KIIJDIAN
UPI SDorto ldllw

'

No. Four.737 ; Team No. One,

I~

.

~

719.

«H

--. ~
.
.

Welkers Ashland , 713: Team

No such thing as spot reducing

Sport Parade

14

266.
.
High team 3-games -

•

mostly - 'lm Pastorlnl 's
throwing.
Rv rontrast, Bertgals' qua r- •
· "'rllack Anderson pickect the
Oilers' apart ~nd, when side·
lined for a brief period,
watched Reaves do Ute same.
Cornerb ack Ken Rlley's
set
up
Inter ception
Anderson's seven yard
scoring pass to Isaac Curlls
in the flrst quarter.
After Willie Shelby's ~
yard punt returns set up
Bahr's !lrst fie ld goa l,
Andel'liOn .directed the only
· scoring drive of the·game.
Be fired the Bengals 66
yards In 10 plays, but then
suffered a brutse on his
!~r owin g hand and left.
Reaves' first play was a
screen pass to Bruce Coslet
which the tight end ran Into
the endzone,
Anderson came back In the

W L

&gt;16

16

Farmers Bank
41
Seldom Rest Ceramics 36

23

Team No. 5

42

28

Ed's Crossroads' Gro. 26 38
22

Team No. 1
21 43
Men 's high series - Stu
Blankenship, 446 ; Dan

United Press Inlernatlonal
"Thts newspaper cannot
The Republican ·1rckel of agree with everything PresiPresident Gerald Ford and dent 1\ord has done oc that
vice presidential candidate Gov. Carter promises to do 1"
RObert Dole was endorsed the editorial continued. "But
"strongly" Sunday by the looking at what has been done
Cleveland Plain Dealer, . and on what Gov. Carter
Ohio's largest newspaper.
claims he can do, we cast·our
The Akron Beacon-Journal, ballot unhesitatingly for
in contrast,· gave Democrat President Ford."
The Akron paper praised
Jimmy Carter a less than
Ford in much the same way
enthusiatic nod.
The Plain Dealer opined on saying " .. .Mr. Ford played
the front page thai the the key role in bringing us
Republican ticket offers back from the brink. Hts
voters "the soundest possible strength and calm manner
helped him step iniD Ute most
leaders\lip. ·
The editorial cited Ford for difficult semi-jlresidency thts
pulling the nalioo through the na lion has ever handed a
Watergate crisis aftermath, man ' "
for having a strong record in
However, the editorial went
office, and for making "out" oo, "It was \lis lack of
standing appolntment.s" to national stature which
the cabinet and the Supreme earned him the presidency in
Court of the United StaU!s. the first place. The very fact
"B~
~lmost
any_ that he was viewed as
measurement - experience, respectable bil"t
foreign policy, economics, noncontroversial and
ener8J(" (l9\iCY or defelllle, harmless, led Rlcliard Nixon
PresicioiJt .. Ford stands out to select him ..."
"The paper suggested thai
aga!i'isi '' his Democratic
opp6nent/ 1 'Jinuny Carter, even though Carter is ·inexperienced, has an "Imprecise
the editorial said.
It credited him with and vague" ' vision lor
following "a balanced America, has · "cmsuming
economic policy thai has ambition and might be
encouraged growth in the tempted ID promtse anything
private sector without risking just to be elected" and is
a new rmmd of inflation/' "naive alioul what President
calling Improvement in the can and ·cannot do," he might
economy since he took offiee . be "a chance wOrth taking."
'

"dramatic.''

Mrs. Florence Michael and
family entertained her niece
and h"'band, Mr. and Mrs.
Bert Avery, Seattle, Wash.,
and her nephew, Robert
Powers, Otter, Montana, last
weekend.
Mrs. Avery and Mr.
Powers are the children of
Mrs. Michael's late sister,
Mrs. Jennie Powers. Thts ts
U\e first visit ol .Mr. Powers
and Mr. Avery to Ohio. Mrs.
Ave-rY visited the Michaels 50
years ago when sbe was a
llttle girl. The visitors
especially enjoyed . the
autwnn colors and drives
along the Ohio River.
On Sunday they were
guests at a family dinner at
the ho_me of Mr. and Mrs.
Wilber Parker. Samuel
Michael asked the blessing
before the meal. Others
present_were.Loulse Mlcbael,
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Mlcbael,
1 Matthew and Kimberly, aU
J local; Peg Predmore and
I Edward Parker, Columbus.
I
I

less thaD !GO words loag (or be subject to redaclloa by
the edllor) aDd Dlllll be slgoed willl lbe sfpee'a ad·
ilress. Names may be wilbbeill upoa pabllcatioa.
However, oa request, ·Dallies wiD lie dlaclllled. Letlen
should be In good taste, address(JII Ina.., aol per- •
sooaUiieo.
1·

410.

Women's high series -

l

Laura Carpenter. 423; Kathie

Lee, 377 ; Sh-Ir ley Haning, 341.

Men 's high game :.._ Dan
Bowers , 166; Char les Searles,

./ka.t,.- . . .

161 ; Dan Bowers 16o. ·
Womens high game -

.....

... ~.Ft/i5t:

l aura Carpenter and Kathie ·
Lee 143, Laura Carpenter,

141 : Laura Carpenter . 139..

1

Weds. Aft
10-20-76

Recent visitors
are entertained"

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
FOOTBALL RESULTS

Unlltcl Press lnlorn.tlonal
Akron St Vincent 7 Warren
Wesler Reserve 0
Akron Buchtel 65 Akron Cent
Hower

.

.

A&lt;Ademv 0
F~Jrv!tw 2(1

J

\

I
1
I
I

I,

Typo inverted whole meaning

Team
Village Pharmacy
Pin Busters
.
Waid Cro!S and Son
Team 6
Team 2 ·

W L
41 23 Dear Sir :
39 l5
Tn my letter to the edi\Or thai il~red lrt the Oct 22
31 33 edition, !here is a typographic errortluit should be'cleared up.
29 35
The two experts that testified before the House Ways and
26 36
Fonzle Followers
24 40 Means Committee stated that Mr. Rbedes tax lricenlive
High single game - Mary proposal~ were "IMP&lt;YrENT", not Important.
Hoover, 178; Pearl Russell,
I understand that ills hilrd for any oowspaper or maaazlne
156 : Mary Hoover. ISS.
to
eUminate
all errors. However, this error eontradicta the
High series Mary \
very
meaning
of Ute statement,, thai tl)e proposals are
Hoover , 4&lt;10; Selby Manley,
419 ; Jenny Whitlatch, 397. ' woclhless. - C. B. Miller
)

'

RCI!:kY, RN11r .8

This W.O.-.
Ohio Colltto Footb.lll
SclltciUie

Firelends 36 Cle lutheran vi.
0
Huron 7 Sandsusky St Marys

.o '

Indian Volley S 36 Malvern 27
Jewett Scio 26 Conot.ton
Valley 0
Ledgemont u Garfield
Trinity 0
Lorain Southview 21 Akron
Hoban 7
Orrville 4 Fairless 0
Pittsburgh Shadyside 22 Univ
School IS
Richmond Heights 6 Cle
lutheran E 6
Sandv Valley . 28 Tuscarawas
. Valley 20
:1 · •
Tuscarawas Cent ICath 8
Ridgewood 6

0H 10 COLLEGE
FOOTBALL R ESIILT5

. Unlltcl Pross lnlornallonat
Unlltcl Press lnternall0111l
• Olllo St at Indiana
Ollio State 24 Purdue 3
; Cenlral Mich at Bowling Akron 36 East. Mich 0
" ·GrMn
Baldwln -Weltece 43 ·ohto
Wesleyan 7 ·
•
: Eastern Mich at Kent St.
, Miami at Toledo
Case -Western Reserve 1.4
:' Ollio Unlv at Western Mlch Geneva o .
Dayt.., 17 Toledo 14
" Cln et Georgia
' Akron 'at Marshall . ·
Eastern Ill 24 Central' St 8
: Hillsdale at Ashland
Findlay 3t Earlham 3
. ; -c,ntral Sl at Nebraska· Hanover 13 Bluffton 7
l
om.ha. n
John Carroll 19 Thlei 18
• Youngstown St. el Wayne Sl. .Kenyan 10 Grove City 6
! :C•pllal at Wittenberg
Marietta 20 MI. Union 7
, W001ter at Heidelberg
Mlaml .9 Bowling Green 7
; Musklngum at Ohio Northern Musklngum 24 Heidelberg o
, Marietta at Baldwin-Waliace Ohio Northern 13 Capital 11
.. n
Otterbein t7 Denison 7
:· Mt. Union at Denison
Slippery Rock 24 Ashland 20
• Olllo Wosleya~ at Otterbein n , Va Tech. 42 Kent St 14
Villanova 34 Youngstown St.
• Canlsius at Ktnyon
14
Oberlin at Duquosne
•• Washington &amp; Jefferson 21
; Doflonce at Bluffton il
, Anderson el Findlay
Hiarm 7 .
'
William I. Mary 20 Olllo Univ ·
• Honov« at Wlimlngl..,
~ Cue-Western Reserve at 0
Wilmington 12 Taylor 0 1
John Carroll ·
Wltftnberg 33 Wooster 0
at
Carnltllit-Mellon
. Hiram
,.,.
~

I

o

Akron S 12 Akron Firestone 7
Bedford Chane! 22 Cle Cent
C.th t2
Berea 12 Shaker Heights s
BrookShire 18 Newbury 12
Cambridge I~ Bellaire t3
Cle Glenville 10 Cie
Collinwood to
Cle S 1~ Cle W Tech 13
Cot DeSoles 21 Col Hartley o
Col Wofterson 23 Col Wehrle 2
E ·ae Show 24 Parma Nor.
mandy 15
Fairport
14
Gilmour

---------------------------,
Letten of oplaloa are welcomed. Tiley ahoald be

Bowers, 436; Charles Searles,

Pomeroy BoWling Center

..

IL

HOUSToN (UPI) - The aSsorted junk In their crucial Sunday, but they brought tbe · Drun~o . however, on a
tackle-eligible play was too
Clnclnnall
Bengals battle ~th the lleuslo!!.Oilers. game back to basics.
encountered a quick-kick, a ·
In the end, the Bengais, ~2, ~h .
'I sUU lhli1k it was the right
taekJe.ellglble
1JBB8
clobbered the OUers 'll·7 and
..
... and other
claimed the AFC Central thing to do," Pastorlni said.
Division lead. Cleveland and "The receiver was open. I
.-1
1 HOUSI(Ic\, both 4-3, and Pitts· just overthrew him."
Next, the Houston defense
burgh, 3-t, traU .
held,
forced a 'poor· Bengals'
CincinnaU's defense held
I
punland
gave the ball back ID
Ute Oilers lo 28 ysrda in the
N BA Standings
the
OUers'
offense at the
first
half.
as
tbe
Bengais
ev United Press ln1er~ational E u1ern Conference
rolled to a ~ lead on one CinclnnaU Z1 , Four plays
Atlanti c Division
Unlltcl Press lnttrMIID!Ial
Pastorini went back to
w. L pel. GB touchdown pass apiece by "later,
Mo!or lndellindtnts ·
pass
on
first-and.gQal at the 8.
Buffalo
.
'
1
o
1.000
.!(en
Anderson
and
John
W L T PtJ OP
Knick s
2 0 1.000 "I dldn 't even· see him
Reaves,
and
two
Chris
Bahr
Air Force 2 5 0 91 164 NY
Boston
&lt;~ 2
0 1.000 ..,..
coming," Pastorlnl said .
Army · 3 4 0 131 172 NY Net s
I 2 .333.. Jl ~ Held goals.
Bos. Col
5 I 0 101 70 Philad elphia 0 2 .000 1 2
Big Bob Brown hit him and
'And then, when the OUers
CinclnnaH 5 1 0 f9 -49
Central Division
forc
ed a high-bouncing
W. L. Pet. GB started making second half
Colgate
6 0 0 106 61
fumble
. B)g Coy Baco n
Houston
'
1
o
1.000
noises,
Cincinnati
relied
on
a
Dayton
3 s 0 t38 t52 Cleveland
I .000 picked
the ball up and
Flo. St.
2 5 0 114 t75 New Orleans 21 00 1.000
brutish
defense
to
close
the
1~
Ga . Tech
3 ':1 I 153 t75 San An lon lo
lumbered un~l he got tired .
1 1 .500 1
door
during
the
crucial
thirdHawaii
I ~- 0 83 171i. Wash ,.ngton , 1 '1 .500 1
Then he lateraled to rookie
quarter;
H. Cross
1 5 o 89 126 Atlanta
1 1 .500 1
Trailing by 20 points and safely Melvin Morgan, who
Lvl.
3 3 0 131 137
We stern Conferenc:e
Midwest Oivi5 ion
Marshall
J , 4 0 104 147
being booed by their fans, the ran the final distance to
w. L . Pd. GB OUers
Memp. St. ~· 5 2 0 175 126
an
80-yard
moved to a fourth- complete
2 0 1.000 Miami
2 ~ 0 134 106 Denver
touchdown
play.
down-and-goal
·
al
the
.
1 1 .500 1
Navf
t 6 0 61 t86 De.troit
i ~ago
I
I .500
I
"I already had an l!().yar~
Bengals' 1-yard-llne. The
No. e•os 4 4 0 145 116 Ch
Kansas Cit y
0 2 _()()() '1
fumble
run, back in 1974
Notre Dame 5 I 0 158 43 M i! W&amp;Ukee
lioos
changed
to
cheers
when,
0 3 .000 21 1
Penn St.
4 3 0 132 72 Indiana
0 3 .000 21 1 fore the lleld goal team .could
Bacon said, "so I wanted
'Pilcific Division
Pitt
7 0 0 l-46 .- a7
Spread l! around! '
W L . Pet. GB get on the field, Oilers '
Rlchmpnd J ~ o 107 98
s.l'rlously, Bacon said the
Po
r
lland
1
0
1.000
quarterbac'k
Dan
Pastorinl
Rutllers
7 o 0 183 45 Sealtle
1 o 1.000 Bei\gals
finally got Ute big
.
won
a
sideline
argument
and
So. Car.
5 3 0 152 98 Los
Anoe l es
1 2 .333
So. Miss.
0 7 0 61 221 Golden
play they were looking for in
got to try for six points.
Slate
0 I .000
Syracuse
3 4 0 69 151 PhOeni x
0 2 .000 11 1
His pass to lineman !!:!bert last week's 23-6 loss to
Temple
2 4 0 163 148
. S11turda y's Re sults
Pitt.sburgh.
Tulane
2 5 0 87 136 NY Knicks 111 San Anlonio 98
POrtland
11.4
NY
Nets
10.4
"We killed •em with that
Utah St.
1 7 0 97 229
Buffalo 108 Ph il adelph ia lO S .
Villanova 2 4 1 129 159 Houslon
runback,"
he sa.ld.
129 PhoeniK 126
Va. Tech
5 2 o U7 90 Ch icago 102
Houston only tried nine
Indiana 97
WestVa.
3 4 o 95 98 Was hi ngton 9a Detr oi t 91 '
running plays, and gained a
Bo~lon 111 Milwaukee 101, ot
meager 148 toial yards Big Ttn
Denver 121 Kllnsas Cit y 99

r------------,
:
Pro
l
Ohio grid
lStantli.ngs l
standings

Conference All G1m11

WLTPO
Michigan
4 0 0 155 44
Ohio State
4 0 0 137 58
Minnesota
3 I 0 87 59 Illinois
2 2 0 82 63
Purdue
2 2 0 69 60
indiana
2 2 0 34 74
Wl•consln
I 3 0 91 113
Michigan Slate
t 3 0 12 128
Iowa
I 3 0 rt9 84

Northwestern
0 4 0 Sl 10-4

WLTPO

1 0 0 307 58
5 1 I 180 97

5 2 0•143 12t
3 • 0 129 137
3 • 0 124 154
3 4 0 88 156
J A 0 195 182

2 • 1 130 193
3 4 0 97

148

0 7 0 61&gt; t61

Mld·Amerlcon Conference
Conference All Gomes
WL T P 0

W L T f\.0

Ball State
2005020 52013811
Bwoling Green
4 I 0 137 90 5 2 0 174 124
Ohio University
4 I 0 IU 58 5 2 0 1~9 78
Central Michigan
2 1 0 36 42 5 2 0113 110
West, Michigan
3 2 0 142 95 4 3 0 182 137
Kent St.
2 2 0 69 53 3 • 0 114 161
Miami
1 2 0 29 58 I 6 0 75 t52
No. Illinois

010 637 15023180
E. Michigan
0 3 0 32 137 I 6 0 80 224
Toledo
0 5 0 78133 0 7 0 106 178

. Pro Standin2s
WHA Standintl
By United Press lnlern.lional
EiiSf
w I t pts. gf t l
1 1 0 14 ., 25
Quebec
93843
Blrminghm 451
Cincinnat i
331
8&lt;539
New Englnd 2 3 I
5 18 15
lnd lanapots 2 4 1 5 1 9 3 2
2
5
,,
5 26 30
Minnesota

Wut

s

w I \ pts. If go
2 0 10 34 '29

Phoeni,.;
Winnipeg

5 '3 0 · 10 36 19

San Diego

3 2 2

a 29 30

Ho.uslon
Edmonton
CaiQ8ry

3 .. 1
3 2 0

7 25 31
6 18 17

1 6

3 18 27

1

Saturday's Results
, Bir mingham J Ind ianapolis 1
Quebec 6 Houston· 2
New England 5 Cincinnati 4
(only games scheduled)
Sunday's Results
Winnipeg 1 Birm ingham 1
• Calg,Uy 6 san Diego 0
Phoenix 5 Edmonton 3
(only oames scheduled)
Monday's Games
(No games schedul ed )
Tuesday's .G tmtl
Edmonton at Houston
Blrminghllm at Ca loarv ·~
san Oleoo at Minnesota
f'hoenix at Quebec
Cincinnati at New England
(only games sct"!edu l ed~

Al lan Ia 115 Milwaukee 91
Clevel and 100 Los Angeles 95
Sealll e 10.:1 NY Nets 93
I only games scheduled J
Mon~ay 's Games
I No g am e ~ sch eduled J
Tuesday ' s Games
Buff alo at Ny Kni cks
San Antonio a t A tla nt a
Philadelphia at New Or leiJnS
Milwauk ee al Chicago
Sea tt l e at Indiana
Los Ang eles at Kansas City
Golden Sla te at Porlland
I on ly gam es scheduled J
NFL Slind1ngs
By United Preu tnt!:'rnational
American Conference
Eut
w I t pet. pt pa
Ba l! imore
6 1 0 .85 7 203 i l4
New Englnd s 1 o .7 14 198 1d.t
Miami
3 4 o .429 14 2 150
Buffa lo
2 5 o .286 137 i 43
NY Jels
1 6 0 . 143 50 19'1
Central
W I t pet . pf P•
·clncinnali
5 2 0 .714 171 96
Housl on
4 3 0 .57 1 128103
Cleve land
4 3 0 .57 1 !.:IS 187
Pi l tsburgh 3 d 0 .429 158 116
west
w I t pet. pf P•
Oakland
6 I · 0 .857 148 151
Denver
4 3 0' .57 1 171 83
San Diego
4 3 0 .57 1 160 14 1
Kansas (:ltv 2 5 0 .'186 ISO 213
Tampa Bay 0 7 0 .000 56 ,-56
National Conference
east

·Da il as
St . Louis
Washing In
Philadelph i
NY Giant s
Minnesota
Detr oil
ChiciJQO
Green Bay

6
5
4
1
0

W I t pet . pf pi
1 0 .857 181 109
I 0 .833 164 119
1 0 .667 1271 1.!
5 0 .286 971 59
7 0 .000 76 165

Central
W I t pet. pf PI .
6 0 1 .929 15 2 72
3 4 0 .429 128 98
3 4 0 .4 29 lid 103
3 4 0 .4 29 1u ld 8

west

•
wttpct.pfpa
San Fran csc 6 1 0 .857 156 63
Los Ang eh! s 5 1 1 .786 131 100
New Orlens 2 5 0 .286 111 161
AUanla
1 6 0 . 143 64 133
seatt le
1 6 o . 143 112 204
Saturday ' s Results
San Franc isco 15 Alll!nta 01
(only game sch edul ed )
. Sunday's Results
Balli more 20 NV Je l s 0
Los Ang eles 16 New Orleans

10

M innesota Jl Philade lphia 12
New England 26 Buffalo 2'1
Plllsbu'rgh 27 NY Giants o
Cleveland 27 san D iego l1
Dallas 31 Chicago 21
Denver 35 Kansas Cily 26
De troit .tl Sea til e 1.:1
Miami 23 Tampa Bay 20
Oakland 18 Green Bay 1.:1
Cincinna 11 27 Houston 1
(only games scheduled l
Monday ' s Games
SL Louis a·l washington, night
I only game sc heduled )
Ne~t Sunday's Games
Cleveland a t Cincinnati
Dallas al Washlnglon
Denver at Oak,and
Green Bav at Detroit
Kansas City a' Tampa Bay
Minnesota a1 Ch icago
New England al Miami
New Orl eans at Atlanta
NY Jets at Buffa lo
Philadelph ia at NY G iants
San Diego a1 Pillsburgh .
San Francisco at St . Louis
Seattle at Los Angeles
Next Monday's Games
Houston at Balllmore, nigh t
(only game ~ c heduled J

BOWLING
Tuesday Triplicate
Pomeroy Lanes

10·]2-76
Ttam
Pf&gt; ,
Royal Crown Bottling
40
Shamrock Motel
36
Shirts, Ltd.
30
Royal Oak Park
26
New York Clothing
24
Team No.3
·
10
High Individual game Pat Smith, 196 ; second high
!ndlvldual game, Betty
Smith, 167.
High series - Betty Smith ,

Ph lla

5 3 1

I Hole!\

r •~

Ph!la 3 Buffalo 1
Monlrea l 9 Pillsburgn 1
St . Louis J Detro I! 2
Minnesola .4 Chicago J
Basion 4 Los Angeles 2

tonly games scheduled l
Sunday's' Results
Vo!!ncouver 5 NY Rangers d
5-Colorado J
A lanta 3 Pittsburgh 3, !ie
Buff&amp; lo 2 Washington 1
Chicago 7 St. Lou is 2
(only gamts schedultd l
Monday's Games
NY Islanders a1 Monlr&amp;el
(only game scheduled)

•r11a

lllcsctay's Gamu

NY Rangers a1 Cltv eland
Delrolt a1 Lo~ Angeles
Vancouver a l ~ ~ Loui'3
I only qi'lmcs sctlcduled 1

~ate Farni JaasUfliasanw;

too! CaUmefor:cletails." ·

tJk.t I &amp;ood ,..... 111,
Slate Fann ltlhn.

'.

. 1

Whcjll pay you the ;

ps,

~80.

high ' game Sh~mrock 'Motel , 516 ~ team

high series

Motel

~hamrock

1,426 .

Meigs
Frosh 8-0
•
wmners
Van Wll(ord scored a
secon(j quarter touchdown
and added the extra points as
the Meigs High Frfllhmen
downed the G~polis squad
S.. last Thursday evening .
Meigs was led In rushing by
Wllford as he g~lned an even
100 yards on 21 cart!ea. Rick
Blaettnar had 71 on 14 tries,
and Dan Thomas got one yard
in three attempts.
Meigs had a total of 172
yards, and was 0.2 In the
pasing department. Both
tries were intercepted · by
Gallipolis' Rod Harrington. ·
The GaUtsns had a total ol
only 43 yards on the ground,
but they picked up 53 in the
air as Harrington connected
on 7 of 13 and threw one Interception, picked off by
Meigs' Dave Hysell. Dave
Morrison led the Galllans on
the ground with 44 yards In 14
tries.
·
Dan Thomas punted twice
for the Utile Marauders for a
total of 55 yards, whlle
Galllpolls'· Tim Whaley
booted the baD once for 16
yards. Whaley also caughl
three pasaes for 34 yards,
Meigs
0 8 0 0-8
GaiUpolis
0 0 0 ll-,-U

no l!liltte(what

.roo~ lookipg

for 1n·saV1ngs or 1nvestment
certificates... .
'

.

PA88800K SAYINGS

GOLDEN PASSBOOK

5~. s~~.~%

5~~.%

• e..,.....,D•Nrl

• ,.,..._ ......, I • .._..''·"'"

UTI

YIILI

5~.%

UTI

MIAR C~Mfi.ICATI

6~.

6~~
'"'

6~%

laTl

1 l'ttl.

~

lllfltltl 1

Mill~!!• J1 ,....11

·, , .......... "". 1111.... il • _.

HIAR CERT!FtCATE

:' 7'12%
....
--Al

Ull

• ,.,_.., o......;, • ~·•• s(Mt.OI • ,.,..........,., .........p •

'

...- ,.,.... ...... !l.......;.lt. . .

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......
. .·-.. ...
.jllllllliy........
. -··=.:
Alii ........ _ .. . ,' .

1:"::'- ...........
' .....
:=.:

you11 fmdit at

OCT. 25 THRU OCT. 31

~~iMICIL....,...........44

4

·FRENCH .
·
FRIES .....................:......

..

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

2·YEAR CERTIFICATE

7~~.%
SPECIAL

3·MONTH C!I'ITIPICATI '

I-YEAR C!llltftCATE

4·YEAR CERTIFICATE

II JO 29

NY Islanders 5 Toron1o 2

. ~'

·~

team

11 , 34 38

B 37 38
Smythe Division
W I t ph. if l•
Sl . Louis
5 4 0 10 31 38
Chicago
5 5 0 10 33 27
M innesota
3 5 1 · 1 21 37
Vancouver 3 6 0
6 24 4l
Colorado
2 6 1 5 25 31
Wales conference
•
Norris Divislot'l
w I t pfl. If 11
Montreal
9 2 0 16 55 20
Los AngeleS 4 3 3 11 39 29
Pittsburgh
2 5 1. 6 28 47
De troit
2 4 1
5 23 22
Washington 1 5 2
~ 20 38
Adams Division
w, L T. Pts. GF . GA
Boston
1 2 o u AI 28
Cleveland
3 2 2 8 26 19
BuffalO
A A 0
8 11 20
Toronlo
1 4 3 5 30 37
S.turdaY's Rttulh

P"Rme.

490, ser~,n hiah series -

NHL Standings
By Unittd Press lnternttlonal
Campbell Conference
Patrick Divl .. infl
w I t . Ptl~.. tf I !II
NY ISII!nders 6 1 1 13 31 16
Atlanta
5 &lt;11 1
NY Rangers 4 5 o

naU onullv -lel evi~~

1111

. ·.

{on ly games sched uled )
Sunday ' s Games

secood half although he wu
not needed. He said
afterwards his hand was fine.
In other game.i Sunday,~
Pittsburgh shul out the New
York Glanll, 'll-4; Baltimore
blanked the New Vll'k Jell,
2().0 ; Minnesota topped
Philadelphia , 3M2 ; New
England beat Buffalo, 211-22;
Los Angele s topped New
Orleans, 16-10; Dallas
defeated Chicago, 31·21 : •
Miami edged Tampa Bay, 2320; CinclnnaU beat Hollllon,
'¥/-7; Denver topped Kanaaa
City , 35-211; Ol!kland defeated
Green Bay, 18-14, ~nd Detroit
routed SeatUe, 41-14.
'
In a SaturdaY. night game,
Sa n Francisco shut out
Atlanta, 1~.
The St. Louis cardinals
pl ay the Redskln s In
Washington tonight in the

25

e

OhioValley Bank

.
.
on reaaonabie notice of withdraW..
'
When i t comes to your savings, you . This ~ ~xactly what 0~10 V~
want a fair return, the highest le- Bank wan~ and promiiM their dii
gaily po81lible, with a _gulil'llnt:ee of · ~liit~ra. No _ wo~d~r Mvhire.de·

Why settle for. letl8 than the best?

safety fOr your funds, and acf!e88ibility to these funds

CD

posit. oon~l\~e to be ·~ Ul
•all·time hiah. ..-

, .

14cCI_IIre~s

llAI RY ISi.E

Pho!'•
992-52411

'W~ ~Ohio Vall~ BaDk
G•UII)Olll~

...... fiDit.l

Ohio

· Midd leporl,

Ohio

·I

''

'

�...

•
'
1- The DP"~· Senti'lei. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, Oct. ~.1976

··:~pooks
...

didn't

sho~

up

Haunted· house investigated
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - I have wcrds.''
reported prison riots , student
She explained she had a long
disturbances, 6res and strikes. 'nlis
conv~tion with ua religious man:'
wa.&lt;my first crack ala haunted house . ! who had instructed her to shout, upon
entering the house, "Thts horne is
was excited.
Pauline Williams, 18, had reported
protected by the blood of JeSiis.
!he had been forced from her home
Demons get out."
when_tables, glasses, ashtrays, lamps,
I advtsed her that the opUon was
and other assorted objects began Oying
her 's, butaaked it' she could wall a few
through .the air.
minutes ,unu1· the "demons" had a
Prepa red for the worst - or be$1 - I chance to become operational. For
met her al the home· ·of one of her
journalistic sa1&lt;e.
_friends; she was afraid to stay in "her
The very act of entering the house
own home.
:'was one of Ute , most weird and hair
"ll all began a week ago raising experiences I have ever been
Wednesday," Mrs. Williams told me, through .
1
"when corn and dry beans began falling
' Watch out now," she said, as she
into my bathtub from out of mid-air." Inserted the key In the lock. "Several
Well, I might become excited at a
Urnes they began throwing stuff at me
• report of chains rattling or voices In the as I opened the door." ·
• night - but dried beans'
Walking over Ute threshold, the hairs
: "I kn'llw It sounds crazy, but that's oo the back of my head must have been
: what happened," she added, seeing the quivering. My heartbeat quickened,
• look on my face: lasked what else the and I looked wilcDy around .
: poltergeist had maniffllted.
A lamp lying broken on Ute Ooor,
• "Things began falllng onto the Ooor some envelopes scattered around the
: and through the air at me :... even Ught middle of a dining area and an .
: oolbs began breaking and I had to . extremely agitated Mrs. Williams, was
• leave. I was·afraid I might be kllled, " all to be seen. No poltergeist presented
: Mrs. Williams said.
him or herself.
; She said she was unsure whether
"I'm just scared to death," she said,
· someone was trying to make her move
in what I took to be a very poor choice of
: or, in Cact, ddemons from hell" were
words.
· alter her.
She took me oo a tour of Ute two'&lt;!tory
: "I'm really afraid to go In," she said.
home, polnilng to where her spice
: "Do you think I ought to say U1e

Bengals win 27·7 with basics
\

bottles had stood before being thrown,
with great Ioree, tO the other side of-the
house ; the remains of the dried beans
("every time I tried ~ clean them up,
more would pour from lhe ·air " ); and
the objects which had been tossed
aboul.
She had called the pollee, bu~ the
officers had ridiculed hi!r and took her
W a hospital for a mental checkup. The
hospital, she said, found her raUorial.
"At first I was the only one. io see
them thr~w things," she said. "But my
two daughters have seen it, as well as
Jack Alspaugh."
Alspaugh, a friend of Mrs. William's,
refused to accompany us to the house.
"I'JTl an old man/' he said. '~nCe in
that house is enough." Alspaugh said he
had been struck oo the head by a slipper
as he and Mrs. Williams walked from
the house. NobOdy was in the home at
the Ume.
I spent an hour inside the
house ... wailing.
•
''It could happen-any moment," she
kept saying.
The house·iemained-silent.
"Well," she said, as I returned her to
her friend's home, "I don't know what
to do. I can't aHord to continue paying
rent for a home! don't live in. And I'm
afraid for my life and my children il j
Slay there.
"But nobody will help," she added.
"They just all think I'm cra~y .''

: Carter business details released
WASHINGTON (UPI) Th e
Small
Business
Adminis tration says Bllly
· Carter, younger brother of
the Democratic presidential
nominee, won't let the agency
·

·.
:

without formal approval of
the principals.
The SBA recorda showed
Uiat Billy Carter, operator of
the family peanut business
since his brother began hts
relea se som e information bid for the presidency 22
al• oul the Carter family months ago, refused last
business.
week to let the SBA make
'l 't wns Ulld of the matter public the salary and other
ov s9urce fri endly to expense details related to an ·
f1\
·"r•l "ord, and the SBA SBA loan to the Carter famlly
lull
'\l'Tlled the source 's
14 years ago.
ac(i 1., c~·l r ler s c"dmpai gn
The SBA's attempt to
a ides
t1ues lioned
the disclose the information
propriety of lhe news leak. came in response to a
Some of the information Freedom of Information
includes Jimmy Carter's inquiry. Billy Carter, the
salary while he was running records showed, refused til
for governor _of Georgia in grant a waiver after the
1966 and again in 1970, the agency contacted him about
SBA documents showed.
lhe request.
Under federal law, the
Jimmy Carter and his
agency has no authority to mother obtained a .$175,000
disclose data such as that SBA loan for their related
involving the Carter loan businflls interellts in 1962. The ••
1

:

·
·
~

·

money was used to construct ' involvement and role of
cotton gin buildings, a colton federal tax-jlaid employes in
warehouse and an office doing political-work for the
building in 1962.
President Ford Committee ...
The SBA provided three- I thought we had pol that kind
fourths of the total at the of political behavior behind
congressionally sel4 per cent us."
lnterellt. Citizens Bank of
Because the SBA loan inAmericus provided Ute rflll of valved government funds,
the money at 6 per cent. Loan · most records involved are
proceeds were also used to available to the public on
buy and Install platform request under the Freedom of
scalfll and a colton gin, SBA 1nformation Act.
But
documenl• showed.
"proprietary" information
The SBA said: "The loan such as salarifll is withheld
was repaid on a timely unless the individuals
basis:"
involved approve.
Jody Powell, Carter's press
~cretary, said in response to.
questions ·about the report
that Carter disclosed his
salary for the perlnd involved
when he made his income tax
returns public.
"We are somewhat concerned," said Powell, "about the
ROCK SPRINGS - Principal John Lisle has an·
nounced the first six weeks
honor roll a\ the SaUsbury
Elementary School. Making a
grade of ''B" or above in all
their subjects to be listed on
the roll were:
First Grade - No grades.
Second Grade - Brenda
developments, Alexander Sinclair, ~ally Radford,
said:
Jeremiah Prater,
Ph!Uip
- Treatment of income King, Todd CulllllllB, Heather
from investment annuity Cullums, April Clark, Lin
accounts and similar Chase, Melanie Arnold, Darla
contracts with life insurance King.
·
companies is being reviewed.
Third Grade - Beth
l!:arnings on Income in such B)~_In_e, April ' Brlckles, Jodi
account.s may be. treated as Hamson, Barbara Hatfield,
"regular"
income
to . Angle Patterson, Scott
taxpayers.
Pullins, Tim Sloan, ;.nita
- Retirement contribution Smith, Tammy Terry.
plans may be llnnited in the
Fourth Grade - Cynthia
amount of "cost-&lt;&gt;f~lving" Hazelton , Sandra Hort,
escalatDr Increases.
Shawn
Johnson,
T1m
- Request.s for rulings and LeMaster, Charlotte Lyons,
determinations will be open Greg M_urray, James Parker,
for public inspection, Teresa Pratt, Dentse Stegall,
although
personal Jackie.'Wf!ker,
information thai would
Fifth G~ade - Rhonda
identify
a
particular Jeffers, Michael Kennedy,
taxpayer will·be deleted.
Angela Pratt, Craig Sinclair,
- Accountants and other Paula Swindell.
·
tax preparers will be held
Sixth Grade - Scott
responsible, and in some Harrluson, Angela Hatfield,
cases fined, if a taxpayer files Jim Hoyt, Brlll Kmg, Natalie
a return that understates the tambert, John Lyons, Sherri
tax due.
\llarsh~ll, Jotm Smith, Greg
Taylor.

Salisbury's
honor list
announced

1040A form easier tQ
read, ·harder to fill out
WIISHINGTON (UPI) Income tax forms for
•mrkers wilho.ut itemized
de&lt;luctlons will be easier to
N&lt;Jd for the !976taxable year
but harder to fill out,
according to Commissioner
Donald Alexander of the
Internal Revenue Service.
Alexander said the print on
. the 1040A "short" form will
· be larger and easier to read.
· But changes In the law wUI
. requlre taxpayers to make
moce compulallons and to
· choose between two potential
means of applying the 135 tax
credit.
Taxpayers will take the
larger computation of $30
multiplied by the oomber of
exemptions except for the
blindness-age provisions, or 2
per cent of taxable income.
Regardless of the methnd, tbe
maximum credit ts $180 per
family or $00 for marcled

persons flllng separately.
Taxpayers will compute
their standard deduction and
taxable income, then
determine the tax owed from
a single table in the
instruction booklet. There
were multiple tables for the
1975 filing yesr .
Alexanders's reniarks on
taxes were culled ·irom
formal statements and
conversations with reporters
In recent days.
Alexander said IRS expects
to mail M million ' 1Short''
forms to taxpayers by Jan. 7,
about 10 days later than the
1975 forms were mailed.
The standard 1010, or
11
long 11 fcrm, has not been
completed, Alexander said.
But he said IRS wlll be ready
Ul mail these forms by the
first week in January to about
45 million taxpayers.
In other income lax

DR. LAMB

.

'.

,

r f.-·; -'
' I .

f

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I
would like some Information
on getting rid of latin certain
areas of the body. I read thai
whe_n you lose weight or fat,
you lose It over your enUre
body. The weight I gain
seems to settie In my hips and
seat.
·
I'm not overweight, I J'!Si
need rearranging. How do I
get rid of fat In one place and
stay the same or not get
skinny In the other areas that
are jwrt fine?
'
Al8o, coUJa you 1eu me
what exercises are good lo
nauen the derriere?
DEAR READER - I've got
news for · you . You are
.overweight. There ts no such
thing as spot reducing. You
have to be on a general
weight reduction ' program to
get rid of fat even lf you seem
skinny-In some areas, such as
the face.
, You ltave two problems,
lou of muscle maaa in the

THIS IS THE GIRLS VOLLEYBALL TEAM at
Ji:astern High School. Members are, front, Ito r , Jennifer
Gainer, Pam ~urlock, Newell Blake, VIda Weber,
Tammy Fitch; second row, from the left, Jane Milhoan,

limes

back to maintain good
posture for you. These are
movements ol the arms In a
backward fashion as you do lf
you are swimming the
backstroke.
You can help tone up
sagging mnscles In the abdomen, with sit-ups' and you
can tone up that "derclere"
with old fashi!Jled bumpa and
grinds.
To help you in your
rearranging program I am
sending you The Health
Letter number 3-7. Girth
Cqntrol: Avoiding the Big
Middle. Others who want this
Information can send ~0
cents, with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for
it. Just send your letter to me
in care of this newspaper, P.
0. Box' 1561, Radio City
Station, New York, NY'10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I
recently read an article in a
well known magazine about
skin care. It said that lack of
vitamin A can cause such

skin dtseases as psoriasis or
ev~n cancer. I would Uke to
k1111w if this Is true, if taking
vitamin A orally would
relieve psoriasis.
DEAR READ!LR - I am
app olled.
Vitamin . A
deflclencies can cause skin
problems but such a
deficiency will not cause
either psoriasis or · skin
cancer. And they are not the
same thing.
If you have quoted the
article correctly it is one
more example why people
should be c-areful about
'getting health lnfonnation in
articles not written by doc·
tors. !'dany so called health
magazines are the source ·of
much of the health misinformation and folklore that
people read.
·
Taking large doses of
vitamin A on your own can
also lead to vitamin A
toxicity. Such
mlSID·
formation can really be
harynful to people.

21,

NEW YORK (UPI) - Many 11111011g the 49,788 at Shea
Sladlum watcling tbe Baltimore Colla run eyer the ~ew Y&lt;rk ..
Jell left abortly after the f&lt;Rll'lh quarter began.
The rain.had started falllng·agaln and they had found out aU
they wanted to know, anyway.
·
The Jets certsinly weren't going ID win thla one.
Not with Bert Jones at the controls fu' the Colts. He was too
much f&lt;r them. Maybe too much f&lt;r anybody else as weD.
"He's the best in bulnea right now," uid Joe Namath,
sitting in front of hlllocller after Jmea had picked the Jela'
IJBB8 defense like oome master lockamlth In peeing the Colts to
a ~victory &amp;mday. "If you aaked me to pick the No. I
quarterback in the Jeague, he's the one I'd pick. Who else? He
throws weD, bas complete confidence, knows what he's doing .
and he's a helluva guy."
Professional footbaU's premier q~rback himself 11111 thai
mg ago, Joe Namath was making It pretty clear he felt
Baltimore's Bert Jmes had taken over that dlatlnCtion now.
1bere were no great drlmatics in the way ·the Jela' '
,quarterback ~ what he did. He wasn't some .knlgh_l of old
handing over hll sword. N&lt;r was there any great sense o1 the
King Is -Dead Long, Lmg Live the King.
Flattened by a tackler and forced to leave the game In the
fourth quarter, Namath was only saying what he honesUy fell
about Bert -Jones, the Colts' big, gifted ~year-&lt;&gt;ld quarterback, wbq bad Just flniahed completing 16 of 'll passes f&lt;r '/JII
yards. One olth01te was a 79-yard bomb to wide receiver Roger
Carr that stayed in the air nearly hl!lf the day and gave the
winners the last oltheir two touchdowns In tbe final quarter.
"!looked up on that paaa by Berland the baD seemed like It
was In the air forever," said David Taylor, the Colts' offensive
tackle. "II lookad like il would never come down. Wbat an
ann!"
All the Colts talk the same way about Jones.
"Hey, thlB guy ""n unload one 70 yards anytime he Ukes and
hit a dlme," offered Carr, who scored both BaiUmore
IDuchdOWDB, the first one coming on all-yard toos from Jones
in the first quarter.
Beyond quesuon, llert Jones has the strongest arm in the
Nallmal FootbaU League today. He gets a lot on hll throws
and puts them right there, the same way Johnny BenciJ does.
Even Namath at his height never threw with the combined
velocity and accuracy of Jones. The only quarterbac~ I can
ever remember seeing who did was the late Paul Christman
and he wasn't as consistent as Jones.
Untll one of hll· secmd quarter passes intended for Glenn
Doughty was picked off by Jels' linebacker Bob Martin, Jones
had thrown 113 stralaht without an interception. All it was, thai
waa hll mly intercepllm in SUnday's contest, which
represented the Colts' sixth win In seven starts:
Jllhes, son ol Dub Jones, who used to play for Ute Cleveland
Browns and sUU holds the NFL record for six touchdowns In
one day, !tad the lowest paaa Interception percentage in the
league last year, hts third wl,lh the Colts, who made him their
first draft choice in 1973. Jones has matured considerably
since coming up and, coincidentally or 1111\, so have the Coils.
"The guys love him," said Ugh! end Ray Chester. "He's a
team player in every ae!Uie of the w&lt;rd. H somebody fumbles,
he'D run ID-30 yards down the field and you can .bet your
bottom dollar, he'll be somewhere in the middle of the pile
lugging for the ball."
After their victory over the Jets, the Colts handed out two
gauie baiiB. One went to speedy Roger Carr, who travels
quicker than bad news and whom Ilia teammates caD "the
fastest white man in the world," and the other was given to
team trainer Ed Block because, well, the Colts didn't feel there
11ad been any other real standout among them.
Get that! Jones hlta 18 for 'll good lor '/JII yards and two
touchowns, at least two .of his lncompleted passes hit the .
intended receiver right square on the hands, and everybody
stll1 feels that's only an ordinary day for him. Bert Jones
agreed.
"It was nothing special," he said. "We put some points on
the board but had a chance to put on a lot more. We wm it,
though, and that's the main thing:"
The Colts are hard to recognize from the Colts of twp monlhs
ago, With Jones leading them, they look like they're headed
stralahl for the Super Bowl, although It wasn't that long ago
thai team owner Bob Irsay was firing Ted Marchibroda, an
exceUent coach, and the Baltimore players were gping around
saying lrsay was off in left Held somewhere-and didn't know
what he was doing. Jones was one ol the moat outspoken in that
regard. He said it wasn'i lrsay talking, It was the whiskey
talking, referring to the owner's critlci.vn of the coach.
All that seems ID be forgotten now.
lrsay came down to the Colts' dressing room Sunday ID have
his players autograph a football for some kids am someone
asked him what he thought of Jones' performance.
''lthink," said the Colta' owner, ''Bert Jmes, as usua~ was
beautiful."
He said it with enthualasm, as If he meant it, and I'm sure he
cDd.

·statistics; Brends Lanham, Julie carpenter, Robin
Elkins, Vicky Epple, Janel Ambrose, Teresa Edwards,
Kim Batey, Janel Brooks, Laurie Matthews, Teresa
Buckley and Coach Susan Thompson .

HUD charged with defiance
I

CHICAGO ( UPI) ~ A citizens• group has accused the
U.S. Department of HouSing
and Urban Development
. defying Congrells by refi#l!pg
'to compensate families who
bought defective homes with
government-insured mortgages.
The -National People's
Action, a national coalition of
citizens' groups, Sunday cited
a memo In which a Ulp HUD
official told his staff that he
was "unalterably opposed"
to a program calling for
reimbursement of persons
stuck with faulty homes.
fll August of 1974, Congress
approved a plan to
compensate thousands of lowincome families, many of
Whom were victims of
scandals in the Federal
Housing Administration's
mortgage Insurance program. The plaq was exiended
by CongreliS last Au!IUSt.
The reimbursement
program was aimed at
curbing Inadequate FHA
home inspections which often
left home buyers with faulty
roofs and . furnaces, rotted
porches and even structural
failures. ·

But seven months· after
Congress approved the profam, HUD had failed even to
-print application forms, NPA
said.
lt!J·1 n•'.i
And the · day after the
· program was extended by
,. Congress, NPA said, George
0. Hipps, Jr ., acting director
of
HUD's office of
underwr.iting standards,
opposing the plan.

Hipps, In his memo, said
the
a~reement
was
"fundementally discrlmlna·
· tory," offers protection
"under terms w~lch are
impossible to moot," and
"requires a finding ofJ~ult.:•
., "Every claim paid is a tacit
admission of failure, yet the
pressure is overwhelming to
approve claims. The departmen! catches hell whelher.il

.'

)lllys ·or does not pay," lbe
memo said,
HUD's figures show 75 per
cent of the applicants for the
program werer-rejected .
"What we have here is a
· blgh level HUD bureacral
telling . his staff not to
administer the program in
defiance of CongreliS," said
Lenora Rodgers, an NPA
board member.

Carey claims ills fault of Nixon-Ford
COLUMBUS.I UP! ) -New
York Democratic G_ov. Hugh
Carey, whQ~ headaches include keeping New York City
away from the brink of
· bankruptcy, says the nation's
economic problems are the
fault of lack of leadership by
Presidents Nixon and Ford~
"Ford says if the
govenuneqt made a six-jlack
of_tleer, it could . cost $50,"
Carey told the 45th annual
convention of the Federal
Dem_ocratic Women of Ohio

here Friday. "Well, they
(Ford and Nixon) have been
running the brewery. That's
why things are so nat in lilts
country. .
"There are real issues and
differences in this election"
(such as unemployment,
fixed income of the elderly
and inflation). "The average
worker Is not one dime better
off in buying power than he
was a decade ago. .
There is a need for change,
he said.

He 's

~~eart.er

saying

different and it's Ume we
heard something different. "

Carnival
scheduled
'
RACINE - A fall carnival
wasplaMedlorNov.l3 at the
recent meeting of the Racine
PTO.
For tbe camlval a poster
contest will be held with first,
second and .third place prizes
lo be awarded In each class.
Speaking at the meeting was.
·James Profitt, candidate for
sheriff, and Kay Wolfe on
behalf of th~ tuberculosis
leVy renewal 'whiCh received
an endorsement 'from the
PTO.
It was announced that
fathers' night will be obseried on Nov. 15 with Carl
Wolfe to be the speaker at the
meeting. Mrs. Libby Fisher
presided with Mrs. Barbara
Dugan leading in the pledge
to the Oag, and Mrs. Evelyn
Maynard giving devotions.
Refreshments were served
by the teachers.

is sincere.

something

Plain Dealer

Local Bow~
Pome;oy Bowling Center

Weds. Aft
10-13-76

Team

W l

Village Pharmacy

39 17

Pin Busters

37 19

Team 6
Team 2

25 31
2~ 32

Waid Cross &amp; Son

25 Jl

Fonzle Fol lowers

18 38

High si ngle game - Pat
Bent z 153, Grace Roberts,

152.

High ser ies ~ Grace
Robertst 411 ; Pat Bentz 404,

Suzanne Richmond, 394.

Thursday Rejects

Team

10·14-76

~Team

No. One
Team No. Two and Four

Std.
1st
2nd

Welkers Ashland
Team No.5

Jrd
41h

Team No. 6 1

5th

High individual games Charlene DocZL 180 ; Ann

Morris, 161 ;

Sue

Searles,

157.

High individual 3 games Charlene Docz l, 445 ; Ann
Morris, 405; Patti Williams ,

396.
Hig h

team

.

game , t -

Welkers Ashland. 284 ;' ,Tea!Tl

No. One, 271; Team No. Four,

, ~ Sunday

nam

Mixed league

Plcn N !;hovel

Sa lem St. Mkt. ·

face, neck, arms and gain of
fat below the chest. The way
you go about rearranging
yourself is to recognize you
have two problems, not
just one. ·
It Is. a perverse aspect of
nature thst causes WI to lose
fat in our face first and last In
the abdomen and hlpa area. A
good program Is to do
exerctses 'to bulld up mu&amp;cles
In the skinny places and be on
an exercl~e diet program to
lose calories and get rid of the
unwanted fat deposits.
Do Isometric exercises for
your face. That means
contracting eaciJ group of
facial muscles that you can
identify several
eaph
morning - between three
and ten thnes is enough for .
each group.
Also do e1erclses that use
your arms and chest muscles.
Pu8h-ups, pull-"ps and
windmlll uercises are aU
good. Be sure io use exercises
that help pull your shoulders

By MILTON KIIJDIAN
UPI SDorto ldllw

'

No. Four.737 ; Team No. One,

I~

.

~

719.

«H

--. ~
.
.

Welkers Ashland , 713: Team

No such thing as spot reducing

Sport Parade

14

266.
.
High team 3-games -

•

mostly - 'lm Pastorlnl 's
throwing.
Rv rontrast, Bertgals' qua r- •
· "'rllack Anderson pickect the
Oilers' apart ~nd, when side·
lined for a brief period,
watched Reaves do Ute same.
Cornerb ack Ken Rlley's
set
up
Inter ception
Anderson's seven yard
scoring pass to Isaac Curlls
in the flrst quarter.
After Willie Shelby's ~
yard punt returns set up
Bahr's !lrst fie ld goa l,
Andel'liOn .directed the only
· scoring drive of the·game.
Be fired the Bengals 66
yards In 10 plays, but then
suffered a brutse on his
!~r owin g hand and left.
Reaves' first play was a
screen pass to Bruce Coslet
which the tight end ran Into
the endzone,
Anderson came back In the

W L

&gt;16

16

Farmers Bank
41
Seldom Rest Ceramics 36

23

Team No. 5

42

28

Ed's Crossroads' Gro. 26 38
22

Team No. 1
21 43
Men 's high series - Stu
Blankenship, 446 ; Dan

United Press Inlernatlonal
"Thts newspaper cannot
The Republican ·1rckel of agree with everything PresiPresident Gerald Ford and dent 1\ord has done oc that
vice presidential candidate Gov. Carter promises to do 1"
RObert Dole was endorsed the editorial continued. "But
"strongly" Sunday by the looking at what has been done
Cleveland Plain Dealer, . and on what Gov. Carter
Ohio's largest newspaper.
claims he can do, we cast·our
The Akron Beacon-Journal, ballot unhesitatingly for
in contrast,· gave Democrat President Ford."
The Akron paper praised
Jimmy Carter a less than
Ford in much the same way
enthusiatic nod.
The Plain Dealer opined on saying " .. .Mr. Ford played
the front page thai the the key role in bringing us
Republican ticket offers back from the brink. Hts
voters "the soundest possible strength and calm manner
helped him step iniD Ute most
leaders\lip. ·
The editorial cited Ford for difficult semi-jlresidency thts
pulling the nalioo through the na lion has ever handed a
Watergate crisis aftermath, man ' "
for having a strong record in
However, the editorial went
office, and for making "out" oo, "It was \lis lack of
standing appolntment.s" to national stature which
the cabinet and the Supreme earned him the presidency in
Court of the United StaU!s. the first place. The very fact
"B~
~lmost
any_ that he was viewed as
measurement - experience, respectable bil"t
foreign policy, economics, noncontroversial and
ener8J(" (l9\iCY or defelllle, harmless, led Rlcliard Nixon
PresicioiJt .. Ford stands out to select him ..."
"The paper suggested thai
aga!i'isi '' his Democratic
opp6nent/ 1 'Jinuny Carter, even though Carter is ·inexperienced, has an "Imprecise
the editorial said.
It credited him with and vague" ' vision lor
following "a balanced America, has · "cmsuming
economic policy thai has ambition and might be
encouraged growth in the tempted ID promtse anything
private sector without risking just to be elected" and is
a new rmmd of inflation/' "naive alioul what President
calling Improvement in the can and ·cannot do," he might
economy since he took offiee . be "a chance wOrth taking."
'

"dramatic.''

Mrs. Florence Michael and
family entertained her niece
and h"'band, Mr. and Mrs.
Bert Avery, Seattle, Wash.,
and her nephew, Robert
Powers, Otter, Montana, last
weekend.
Mrs. Avery and Mr.
Powers are the children of
Mrs. Michael's late sister,
Mrs. Jennie Powers. Thts ts
U\e first visit ol .Mr. Powers
and Mr. Avery to Ohio. Mrs.
Ave-rY visited the Michaels 50
years ago when sbe was a
llttle girl. The visitors
especially enjoyed . the
autwnn colors and drives
along the Ohio River.
On Sunday they were
guests at a family dinner at
the ho_me of Mr. and Mrs.
Wilber Parker. Samuel
Michael asked the blessing
before the meal. Others
present_were.Loulse Mlcbael,
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Mlcbael,
1 Matthew and Kimberly, aU
J local; Peg Predmore and
I Edward Parker, Columbus.
I
I

less thaD !GO words loag (or be subject to redaclloa by
the edllor) aDd Dlllll be slgoed willl lbe sfpee'a ad·
ilress. Names may be wilbbeill upoa pabllcatioa.
However, oa request, ·Dallies wiD lie dlaclllled. Letlen
should be In good taste, address(JII Ina.., aol per- •
sooaUiieo.
1·

410.

Women's high series -

l

Laura Carpenter. 423; Kathie

Lee, 377 ; Sh-Ir ley Haning, 341.

Men 's high game :.._ Dan
Bowers , 166; Char les Searles,

./ka.t,.- . . .

161 ; Dan Bowers 16o. ·
Womens high game -

.....

... ~.Ft/i5t:

l aura Carpenter and Kathie ·
Lee 143, Laura Carpenter,

141 : Laura Carpenter . 139..

1

Weds. Aft
10-20-76

Recent visitors
are entertained"

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
FOOTBALL RESULTS

Unlltcl Press lnlorn.tlonal
Akron St Vincent 7 Warren
Wesler Reserve 0
Akron Buchtel 65 Akron Cent
Hower

.

.

A&lt;Ademv 0
F~Jrv!tw 2(1

J

\

I
1
I
I

I,

Typo inverted whole meaning

Team
Village Pharmacy
Pin Busters
.
Waid Cro!S and Son
Team 6
Team 2 ·

W L
41 23 Dear Sir :
39 l5
Tn my letter to the edi\Or thai il~red lrt the Oct 22
31 33 edition, !here is a typographic errortluit should be'cleared up.
29 35
The two experts that testified before the House Ways and
26 36
Fonzle Followers
24 40 Means Committee stated that Mr. Rbedes tax lricenlive
High single game - Mary proposal~ were "IMP&lt;YrENT", not Important.
Hoover, 178; Pearl Russell,
I understand that ills hilrd for any oowspaper or maaazlne
156 : Mary Hoover. ISS.
to
eUminate
all errors. However, this error eontradicta the
High series Mary \
very
meaning
of Ute statement,, thai tl)e proposals are
Hoover , 4&lt;10; Selby Manley,
419 ; Jenny Whitlatch, 397. ' woclhless. - C. B. Miller
)

'

RCI!:kY, RN11r .8

This W.O.-.
Ohio Colltto Footb.lll
SclltciUie

Firelends 36 Cle lutheran vi.
0
Huron 7 Sandsusky St Marys

.o '

Indian Volley S 36 Malvern 27
Jewett Scio 26 Conot.ton
Valley 0
Ledgemont u Garfield
Trinity 0
Lorain Southview 21 Akron
Hoban 7
Orrville 4 Fairless 0
Pittsburgh Shadyside 22 Univ
School IS
Richmond Heights 6 Cle
lutheran E 6
Sandv Valley . 28 Tuscarawas
. Valley 20
:1 · •
Tuscarawas Cent ICath 8
Ridgewood 6

0H 10 COLLEGE
FOOTBALL R ESIILT5

. Unlltcl Pross lnlornallonat
Unlltcl Press lnternall0111l
• Olllo St at Indiana
Ollio State 24 Purdue 3
; Cenlral Mich at Bowling Akron 36 East. Mich 0
" ·GrMn
Baldwln -Weltece 43 ·ohto
Wesleyan 7 ·
•
: Eastern Mich at Kent St.
, Miami at Toledo
Case -Western Reserve 1.4
:' Ollio Unlv at Western Mlch Geneva o .
Dayt.., 17 Toledo 14
" Cln et Georgia
' Akron 'at Marshall . ·
Eastern Ill 24 Central' St 8
: Hillsdale at Ashland
Findlay 3t Earlham 3
. ; -c,ntral Sl at Nebraska· Hanover 13 Bluffton 7
l
om.ha. n
John Carroll 19 Thlei 18
• Youngstown St. el Wayne Sl. .Kenyan 10 Grove City 6
! :C•pllal at Wittenberg
Marietta 20 MI. Union 7
, W001ter at Heidelberg
Mlaml .9 Bowling Green 7
; Musklngum at Ohio Northern Musklngum 24 Heidelberg o
, Marietta at Baldwin-Waliace Ohio Northern 13 Capital 11
.. n
Otterbein t7 Denison 7
:· Mt. Union at Denison
Slippery Rock 24 Ashland 20
• Olllo Wosleya~ at Otterbein n , Va Tech. 42 Kent St 14
Villanova 34 Youngstown St.
• Canlsius at Ktnyon
14
Oberlin at Duquosne
•• Washington &amp; Jefferson 21
; Doflonce at Bluffton il
, Anderson el Findlay
Hiarm 7 .
'
William I. Mary 20 Olllo Univ ·
• Honov« at Wlimlngl..,
~ Cue-Western Reserve at 0
Wilmington 12 Taylor 0 1
John Carroll ·
Wltftnberg 33 Wooster 0
at
Carnltllit-Mellon
. Hiram
,.,.
~

I

o

Akron S 12 Akron Firestone 7
Bedford Chane! 22 Cle Cent
C.th t2
Berea 12 Shaker Heights s
BrookShire 18 Newbury 12
Cambridge I~ Bellaire t3
Cle Glenville 10 Cie
Collinwood to
Cle S 1~ Cle W Tech 13
Cot DeSoles 21 Col Hartley o
Col Wofterson 23 Col Wehrle 2
E ·ae Show 24 Parma Nor.
mandy 15
Fairport
14
Gilmour

---------------------------,
Letten of oplaloa are welcomed. Tiley ahoald be

Bowers, 436; Charles Searles,

Pomeroy BoWling Center

..

IL

HOUSToN (UPI) - The aSsorted junk In their crucial Sunday, but they brought tbe · Drun~o . however, on a
tackle-eligible play was too
Clnclnnall
Bengals battle ~th the lleuslo!!.Oilers. game back to basics.
encountered a quick-kick, a ·
In the end, the Bengais, ~2, ~h .
'I sUU lhli1k it was the right
taekJe.ellglble
1JBB8
clobbered the OUers 'll·7 and
..
... and other
claimed the AFC Central thing to do," Pastorlni said.
Division lead. Cleveland and "The receiver was open. I
.-1
1 HOUSI(Ic\, both 4-3, and Pitts· just overthrew him."
Next, the Houston defense
burgh, 3-t, traU .
held,
forced a 'poor· Bengals'
CincinnaU's defense held
I
punland
gave the ball back ID
Ute Oilers lo 28 ysrda in the
N BA Standings
the
OUers'
offense at the
first
half.
as
tbe
Bengais
ev United Press ln1er~ational E u1ern Conference
rolled to a ~ lead on one CinclnnaU Z1 , Four plays
Atlanti c Division
Unlltcl Press lnttrMIID!Ial
Pastorini went back to
w. L pel. GB touchdown pass apiece by "later,
Mo!or lndellindtnts ·
pass
on
first-and.gQal at the 8.
Buffalo
.
'
1
o
1.000
.!(en
Anderson
and
John
W L T PtJ OP
Knick s
2 0 1.000 "I dldn 't even· see him
Reaves,
and
two
Chris
Bahr
Air Force 2 5 0 91 164 NY
Boston
&lt;~ 2
0 1.000 ..,..
coming," Pastorlnl said .
Army · 3 4 0 131 172 NY Net s
I 2 .333.. Jl ~ Held goals.
Bos. Col
5 I 0 101 70 Philad elphia 0 2 .000 1 2
Big Bob Brown hit him and
'And then, when the OUers
CinclnnaH 5 1 0 f9 -49
Central Division
forc
ed a high-bouncing
W. L. Pet. GB started making second half
Colgate
6 0 0 106 61
fumble
. B)g Coy Baco n
Houston
'
1
o
1.000
noises,
Cincinnati
relied
on
a
Dayton
3 s 0 t38 t52 Cleveland
I .000 picked
the ball up and
Flo. St.
2 5 0 114 t75 New Orleans 21 00 1.000
brutish
defense
to
close
the
1~
Ga . Tech
3 ':1 I 153 t75 San An lon lo
lumbered un~l he got tired .
1 1 .500 1
door
during
the
crucial
thirdHawaii
I ~- 0 83 171i. Wash ,.ngton , 1 '1 .500 1
Then he lateraled to rookie
quarter;
H. Cross
1 5 o 89 126 Atlanta
1 1 .500 1
Trailing by 20 points and safely Melvin Morgan, who
Lvl.
3 3 0 131 137
We stern Conferenc:e
Midwest Oivi5 ion
Marshall
J , 4 0 104 147
being booed by their fans, the ran the final distance to
w. L . Pd. GB OUers
Memp. St. ~· 5 2 0 175 126
an
80-yard
moved to a fourth- complete
2 0 1.000 Miami
2 ~ 0 134 106 Denver
touchdown
play.
down-and-goal
·
al
the
.
1 1 .500 1
Navf
t 6 0 61 t86 De.troit
i ~ago
I
I .500
I
"I already had an l!().yar~
Bengals' 1-yard-llne. The
No. e•os 4 4 0 145 116 Ch
Kansas Cit y
0 2 _()()() '1
fumble
run, back in 1974
Notre Dame 5 I 0 158 43 M i! W&amp;Ukee
lioos
changed
to
cheers
when,
0 3 .000 21 1
Penn St.
4 3 0 132 72 Indiana
0 3 .000 21 1 fore the lleld goal team .could
Bacon said, "so I wanted
'Pilcific Division
Pitt
7 0 0 l-46 .- a7
Spread l! around! '
W L . Pet. GB get on the field, Oilers '
Rlchmpnd J ~ o 107 98
s.l'rlously, Bacon said the
Po
r
lland
1
0
1.000
quarterbac'k
Dan
Pastorinl
Rutllers
7 o 0 183 45 Sealtle
1 o 1.000 Bei\gals
finally got Ute big
.
won
a
sideline
argument
and
So. Car.
5 3 0 152 98 Los
Anoe l es
1 2 .333
So. Miss.
0 7 0 61 221 Golden
play they were looking for in
got to try for six points.
Slate
0 I .000
Syracuse
3 4 0 69 151 PhOeni x
0 2 .000 11 1
His pass to lineman !!:!bert last week's 23-6 loss to
Temple
2 4 0 163 148
. S11turda y's Re sults
Pitt.sburgh.
Tulane
2 5 0 87 136 NY Knicks 111 San Anlonio 98
POrtland
11.4
NY
Nets
10.4
"We killed •em with that
Utah St.
1 7 0 97 229
Buffalo 108 Ph il adelph ia lO S .
Villanova 2 4 1 129 159 Houslon
runback,"
he sa.ld.
129 PhoeniK 126
Va. Tech
5 2 o U7 90 Ch icago 102
Houston only tried nine
Indiana 97
WestVa.
3 4 o 95 98 Was hi ngton 9a Detr oi t 91 '
running plays, and gained a
Bo~lon 111 Milwaukee 101, ot
meager 148 toial yards Big Ttn
Denver 121 Kllnsas Cit y 99

r------------,
:
Pro
l
Ohio grid
lStantli.ngs l
standings

Conference All G1m11

WLTPO
Michigan
4 0 0 155 44
Ohio State
4 0 0 137 58
Minnesota
3 I 0 87 59 Illinois
2 2 0 82 63
Purdue
2 2 0 69 60
indiana
2 2 0 34 74
Wl•consln
I 3 0 91 113
Michigan Slate
t 3 0 12 128
Iowa
I 3 0 rt9 84

Northwestern
0 4 0 Sl 10-4

WLTPO

1 0 0 307 58
5 1 I 180 97

5 2 0•143 12t
3 • 0 129 137
3 • 0 124 154
3 4 0 88 156
J A 0 195 182

2 • 1 130 193
3 4 0 97

148

0 7 0 61&gt; t61

Mld·Amerlcon Conference
Conference All Gomes
WL T P 0

W L T f\.0

Ball State
2005020 52013811
Bwoling Green
4 I 0 137 90 5 2 0 174 124
Ohio University
4 I 0 IU 58 5 2 0 1~9 78
Central Michigan
2 1 0 36 42 5 2 0113 110
West, Michigan
3 2 0 142 95 4 3 0 182 137
Kent St.
2 2 0 69 53 3 • 0 114 161
Miami
1 2 0 29 58 I 6 0 75 t52
No. Illinois

010 637 15023180
E. Michigan
0 3 0 32 137 I 6 0 80 224
Toledo
0 5 0 78133 0 7 0 106 178

. Pro Standin2s
WHA Standintl
By United Press lnlern.lional
EiiSf
w I t pts. gf t l
1 1 0 14 ., 25
Quebec
93843
Blrminghm 451
Cincinnat i
331
8&lt;539
New Englnd 2 3 I
5 18 15
lnd lanapots 2 4 1 5 1 9 3 2
2
5
,,
5 26 30
Minnesota

Wut

s

w I \ pts. If go
2 0 10 34 '29

Phoeni,.;
Winnipeg

5 '3 0 · 10 36 19

San Diego

3 2 2

a 29 30

Ho.uslon
Edmonton
CaiQ8ry

3 .. 1
3 2 0

7 25 31
6 18 17

1 6

3 18 27

1

Saturday's Results
, Bir mingham J Ind ianapolis 1
Quebec 6 Houston· 2
New England 5 Cincinnati 4
(only games scheduled)
Sunday's Results
Winnipeg 1 Birm ingham 1
• Calg,Uy 6 san Diego 0
Phoenix 5 Edmonton 3
(only oames scheduled)
Monday's Games
(No games schedul ed )
Tuesday's .G tmtl
Edmonton at Houston
Blrminghllm at Ca loarv ·~
san Oleoo at Minnesota
f'hoenix at Quebec
Cincinnati at New England
(only games sct"!edu l ed~

Al lan Ia 115 Milwaukee 91
Clevel and 100 Los Angeles 95
Sealll e 10.:1 NY Nets 93
I only games scheduled J
Mon~ay 's Games
I No g am e ~ sch eduled J
Tuesday ' s Games
Buff alo at Ny Kni cks
San Antonio a t A tla nt a
Philadelphia at New Or leiJnS
Milwauk ee al Chicago
Sea tt l e at Indiana
Los Ang eles at Kansas City
Golden Sla te at Porlland
I on ly gam es scheduled J
NFL Slind1ngs
By United Preu tnt!:'rnational
American Conference
Eut
w I t pet. pt pa
Ba l! imore
6 1 0 .85 7 203 i l4
New Englnd s 1 o .7 14 198 1d.t
Miami
3 4 o .429 14 2 150
Buffa lo
2 5 o .286 137 i 43
NY Jels
1 6 0 . 143 50 19'1
Central
W I t pet . pf P•
·clncinnali
5 2 0 .714 171 96
Housl on
4 3 0 .57 1 128103
Cleve land
4 3 0 .57 1 !.:IS 187
Pi l tsburgh 3 d 0 .429 158 116
west
w I t pet. pf P•
Oakland
6 I · 0 .857 148 151
Denver
4 3 0' .57 1 171 83
San Diego
4 3 0 .57 1 160 14 1
Kansas (:ltv 2 5 0 .'186 ISO 213
Tampa Bay 0 7 0 .000 56 ,-56
National Conference
east

·Da il as
St . Louis
Washing In
Philadelph i
NY Giant s
Minnesota
Detr oil
ChiciJQO
Green Bay

6
5
4
1
0

W I t pet . pf pi
1 0 .857 181 109
I 0 .833 164 119
1 0 .667 1271 1.!
5 0 .286 971 59
7 0 .000 76 165

Central
W I t pet. pf PI .
6 0 1 .929 15 2 72
3 4 0 .429 128 98
3 4 0 .4 29 lid 103
3 4 0 .4 29 1u ld 8

west

•
wttpct.pfpa
San Fran csc 6 1 0 .857 156 63
Los Ang eh! s 5 1 1 .786 131 100
New Orlens 2 5 0 .286 111 161
AUanla
1 6 0 . 143 64 133
seatt le
1 6 o . 143 112 204
Saturday ' s Results
San Franc isco 15 Alll!nta 01
(only game sch edul ed )
. Sunday's Results
Balli more 20 NV Je l s 0
Los Ang eles 16 New Orleans

10

M innesota Jl Philade lphia 12
New England 26 Buffalo 2'1
Plllsbu'rgh 27 NY Giants o
Cleveland 27 san D iego l1
Dallas 31 Chicago 21
Denver 35 Kansas Cily 26
De troit .tl Sea til e 1.:1
Miami 23 Tampa Bay 20
Oakland 18 Green Bay 1.:1
Cincinna 11 27 Houston 1
(only games scheduled l
Monday ' s Games
SL Louis a·l washington, night
I only game sc heduled )
Ne~t Sunday's Games
Cleveland a t Cincinnati
Dallas al Washlnglon
Denver at Oak,and
Green Bav at Detroit
Kansas City a' Tampa Bay
Minnesota a1 Ch icago
New England al Miami
New Orl eans at Atlanta
NY Jets at Buffa lo
Philadelph ia at NY G iants
San Diego a1 Pillsburgh .
San Francisco at St . Louis
Seattle at Los Angeles
Next Monday's Games
Houston at Balllmore, nigh t
(only game ~ c heduled J

BOWLING
Tuesday Triplicate
Pomeroy Lanes

10·]2-76
Ttam
Pf&gt; ,
Royal Crown Bottling
40
Shamrock Motel
36
Shirts, Ltd.
30
Royal Oak Park
26
New York Clothing
24
Team No.3
·
10
High Individual game Pat Smith, 196 ; second high
!ndlvldual game, Betty
Smith, 167.
High series - Betty Smith ,

Ph lla

5 3 1

I Hole!\

r •~

Ph!la 3 Buffalo 1
Monlrea l 9 Pillsburgn 1
St . Louis J Detro I! 2
Minnesola .4 Chicago J
Basion 4 Los Angeles 2

tonly games scheduled l
Sunday's' Results
Vo!!ncouver 5 NY Rangers d
5-Colorado J
A lanta 3 Pittsburgh 3, !ie
Buff&amp; lo 2 Washington 1
Chicago 7 St. Lou is 2
(only gamts schedultd l
Monday's Games
NY Islanders a1 Monlr&amp;el
(only game scheduled)

•r11a

lllcsctay's Gamu

NY Rangers a1 Cltv eland
Delrolt a1 Lo~ Angeles
Vancouver a l ~ ~ Loui'3
I only qi'lmcs sctlcduled 1

~ate Farni JaasUfliasanw;

too! CaUmefor:cletails." ·

tJk.t I &amp;ood ,..... 111,
Slate Fann ltlhn.

'.

. 1

Whcjll pay you the ;

ps,

~80.

high ' game Sh~mrock 'Motel , 516 ~ team

high series

Motel

~hamrock

1,426 .

Meigs
Frosh 8-0
•
wmners
Van Wll(ord scored a
secon(j quarter touchdown
and added the extra points as
the Meigs High Frfllhmen
downed the G~polis squad
S.. last Thursday evening .
Meigs was led In rushing by
Wllford as he g~lned an even
100 yards on 21 cart!ea. Rick
Blaettnar had 71 on 14 tries,
and Dan Thomas got one yard
in three attempts.
Meigs had a total of 172
yards, and was 0.2 In the
pasing department. Both
tries were intercepted · by
Gallipolis' Rod Harrington. ·
The GaUtsns had a total ol
only 43 yards on the ground,
but they picked up 53 in the
air as Harrington connected
on 7 of 13 and threw one Interception, picked off by
Meigs' Dave Hysell. Dave
Morrison led the Galllans on
the ground with 44 yards In 14
tries.
·
Dan Thomas punted twice
for the Utile Marauders for a
total of 55 yards, whlle
Galllpolls'· Tim Whaley
booted the baD once for 16
yards. Whaley also caughl
three pasaes for 34 yards,
Meigs
0 8 0 0-8
GaiUpolis
0 0 0 ll-,-U

no l!liltte(what

.roo~ lookipg

for 1n·saV1ngs or 1nvestment
certificates... .
'

.

PA88800K SAYINGS

GOLDEN PASSBOOK

5~. s~~.~%

5~~.%

• e..,.....,D•Nrl

• ,.,..._ ......, I • .._..''·"'"

UTI

YIILI

5~.%

UTI

MIAR C~Mfi.ICATI

6~.

6~~
'"'

6~%

laTl

1 l'ttl.

~

lllfltltl 1

Mill~!!• J1 ,....11

·, , .......... "". 1111.... il • _.

HIAR CERT!FtCATE

:' 7'12%
....
--Al

Ull

• ,.,_.., o......;, • ~·•• s(Mt.OI • ,.,..........,., .........p •

'

...- ,.,.... ...... !l.......;.lt. . .

:-a:

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--:.:.........

......
. .·-.. ...
.jllllllliy........
. -··=.:
Alii ........ _ .. . ,' .

1:"::'- ...........
' .....
:=.:

you11 fmdit at

OCT. 25 THRU OCT. 31

~~iMICIL....,...........44

4

·FRENCH .
·
FRIES .....................:......

..

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

2·YEAR CERTIFICATE

7~~.%
SPECIAL

3·MONTH C!I'ITIPICATI '

I-YEAR C!llltftCATE

4·YEAR CERTIFICATE

II JO 29

NY Islanders 5 Toron1o 2

. ~'

·~

team

11 , 34 38

B 37 38
Smythe Division
W I t ph. if l•
Sl . Louis
5 4 0 10 31 38
Chicago
5 5 0 10 33 27
M innesota
3 5 1 · 1 21 37
Vancouver 3 6 0
6 24 4l
Colorado
2 6 1 5 25 31
Wales conference
•
Norris Divislot'l
w I t pfl. If 11
Montreal
9 2 0 16 55 20
Los AngeleS 4 3 3 11 39 29
Pittsburgh
2 5 1. 6 28 47
De troit
2 4 1
5 23 22
Washington 1 5 2
~ 20 38
Adams Division
w, L T. Pts. GF . GA
Boston
1 2 o u AI 28
Cleveland
3 2 2 8 26 19
BuffalO
A A 0
8 11 20
Toronlo
1 4 3 5 30 37
S.turdaY's Rttulh

P"Rme.

490, ser~,n hiah series -

NHL Standings
By Unittd Press lnternttlonal
Campbell Conference
Patrick Divl .. infl
w I t . Ptl~.. tf I !II
NY ISII!nders 6 1 1 13 31 16
Atlanta
5 &lt;11 1
NY Rangers 4 5 o

naU onullv -lel evi~~

1111

. ·.

{on ly games sched uled )
Sunday ' s Games

secood half although he wu
not needed. He said
afterwards his hand was fine.
In other game.i Sunday,~
Pittsburgh shul out the New
York Glanll, 'll-4; Baltimore
blanked the New Vll'k Jell,
2().0 ; Minnesota topped
Philadelphia , 3M2 ; New
England beat Buffalo, 211-22;
Los Angele s topped New
Orleans, 16-10; Dallas
defeated Chicago, 31·21 : •
Miami edged Tampa Bay, 2320; CinclnnaU beat Hollllon,
'¥/-7; Denver topped Kanaaa
City , 35-211; Ol!kland defeated
Green Bay, 18-14, ~nd Detroit
routed SeatUe, 41-14.
'
In a SaturdaY. night game,
Sa n Francisco shut out
Atlanta, 1~.
The St. Louis cardinals
pl ay the Redskln s In
Washington tonight in the

25

e

OhioValley Bank

.
.
on reaaonabie notice of withdraW..
'
When i t comes to your savings, you . This ~ ~xactly what 0~10 V~
want a fair return, the highest le- Bank wan~ and promiiM their dii
gaily po81lible, with a _gulil'llnt:ee of · ~liit~ra. No _ wo~d~r Mvhire.de·

Why settle for. letl8 than the best?

safety fOr your funds, and acf!e88ibility to these funds

CD

posit. oon~l\~e to be ·~ Ul
•all·time hiah. ..-

, .

14cCI_IIre~s

llAI RY ISi.E

Pho!'•
992-52411

'W~ ~Ohio Vall~ BaDk
G•UII)Olll~

...... fiDit.l

Ohio

· Midd leporl,

Ohio

·I

''

'

�'·-

t - Tile lliiUy Sentinel, MlddleJl011-.l'~I. 0., Monday. Oct. 25. 19711
-

It

0

'

•

5- The lliiUy Sentinel, MldcBeport-Ptmeroy, 0 .. Mon~·v n.-t. 25.1171

"

' Hockey
l'nternational
League Stondings

United Press lnternation.a l
North
wltpts. gfga

Kalamozoo
Muskegon

3 1 0 6 21 14

3 3 o 6 31 21
22262320
2 1 1 S 17 13

Flint

Saginaw

2304 .t422

PortHurono

South
w tt pts. gf ga

Toledo
Columbus

Fort Wayne
Dayton
•

3
2
1
1

2 0 6 21 19
0 1 5 16 10
3 o 2 11 26

4 0 2 18

Saturd,ay•s Results
Muskegon 8 Kalamazoo 4
Saginaw 4 Port Huron l

25

'

"

Dayton l Fort Wayne l

17

Colombus 2 fl int 2

n
RICK TAYLOR

MARK MAGNOTTA

4

Columbus 7r Dayton S .
Saginaw 5 Flint l , lie
Tol ed~,• Fort Wayne 1
,.,.,onday•s Garries
· No games scheduled
Tuesday's Games
No games schedUled .

DAN EDWARDS

ARCADIA, Calif. (UPI J Frank McMOhon's . Diabolo,
the classics-placed son of
Damascus who shattered a
bone in his hoof during a race
at Sanla Anita last February,
apparently won't have. W be
destroyed .
·
''For the first time since his
injury, he appears In be
safe," veterinarian Gregar.y
Ferraro said Sunday.
After the accident, Diabolo
underwent surgery. A final
cast placed on his hind leg
last week will come off in two
weeks, Ferraro said.
Diabolo
has · been
convalescing at UC Davis and
may be able to start stud
duties this year.

l'of'OUR SOPHOMORES - These four sophomores are·playing for the 1976
Meigs Marauder football squad. Rick Taylor, 6'2"165lb. tight end, is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Donllld Taylor of 11 Fisher St., Pomeroy.
MARK MAGNOTTA, sqn of Joe Magnotta of Lincoln Street, Middleport, is
vying for a guard position. He's 5'7" and 170pounds.
'·
DAN EDWARDS is a 5'9", 161 pound !ackle. His parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Edwards of Rutland. .
..
,
RANDY ARNOLD, !HI, is working out al another 1.ackle poSillon. He s the
son of Mr. and Mrs. S1.acie Arnold of Route 1, Minersville . .

Poole sharp 'in backup role
£•

CLEVELAN D ( UPI ) After Pruitt left the game
Clevelaud football fans found in the second quarter with an
out Sunday what would ankle injury that kept him out
happen if Greg Pruitt got of the second haU, Poole
hurt- you just put in Larry came in In chalk up 64 yards
Poole.
in 16 carries and added
another :;:; yards via pass
receptions to spark the
Browns to a 21-17 NFL
vic~ry over the San Diego
Chargers.
"I know I have In be ready
at aU times and I just kept
saying In myself, 'l have to do

can't do

bettert' said Poole.

"I was very happy In know
that Brian (Sipe) had confidence in me In give me the
ball and I was very happy to
contribute to the team ,"

added the 6-0, 195-pound
second-year running back
!rom Kent State.
Poole w'!f~tll~ key factor in
the final 82-yard , drive that
was capped by quarterback
Sipe's 10-yard scoring pass to
~car Roan with 14 :10 left in

the game.
Poole carried twice for 20
yards and it was a 19-strike
from Sipe to Poole that wok
the ball to the Chargers sixyard line, from where Sipe
flipped the clincher to Roan ,
"I am very pleased and
happy with the victory and it
was our hest all-around job of
the year," said Cleveland
coach Forrest Gregg. "Poole
dld a great job and I thought
lhe learn lei down a little
after Pruitt's jnjury,"

While the Browns were
racing to a 14-0 first-period
lead on a three-yard scoring
pass from Sipe to Reggie
Rucker and Pruill's one-yard
plunge, the Browns defensive
United PreuiDtematlonal
unit he)d the offensiveThe Los Angell'S Lakers
minded Charg ·~s to only 12
must he getting the message
yards rushing atld nine yards
that it takes more than
Prevention is the
passing In the first quarter.
Kareeni Abdul-Jabbar to
ByBILLMADDEN
conference would probably
"Our defense played well in
make them winners in. the
UPI Sports Writer
want to draw any one of the the first half but they did a
best polity...
National Basketball
Take it from the football three as a New Year's Day super job in the ;second half,"
Association.
folks of Norman, Okla. and opponent.
FOR CURBING
added Gregg."·
The Luker s' fans and Lineoln, Neb.: The Big Eight
Elsewhere across the
San Diego came roaring
CRIME LOSSES
managemem, if not aU NBA Conference is about as safe In nation, it was muscle-flexing back ii1 the second quarter
observers, thought the tread as a midnight stroll day for most of the top 10 and lied lhe game with 12
You can help cut down on
acquisition of the 7-fool-1 through New York's Central powers. No. 1 Michigan seconds left in the half on a crime losses .... losses that
Jabbar would brinl! the Park.
routed Indiana 35-&lt;l, No. 2 pass from running back Don
directly
aff ect
you,
whether they happen to you
Lakers a championship last
It was the kind of weekend Pittsburgh buried Navy 4!HI, Woods to Sam Scarber.
or not .
season. They were badly whlch has become typical of No. 4 UCLA mauled Defensive end Larry Jones
disappointed when 'the the rocky Big Eight this year. California 35-19, No. 6 set up the 39-yard drive by
Ta ke the crim e of arson .
Lakers didn't even make the A weekend where even third- Southern California drubbed picking off a Sipe aerial.
You ' re
pa_ylng
an
playoffs.
ranked Nebraska and fifth- Oregon Slate &gt;6-0, No. 7
Two minutes. earlier,
inC r easingly heavy subs idy
Now the Lakers are three rated Oklahoma could gel Maryland trounced Duke 30- Chargers . quarterback Dan
for deliberately ' set fires
games into a new season and mugged in thei r own 3, No. 8 Ohio S1.ate toyed with Fouts capped a 70-yard, ninethrough your Insurance
·the message remains the backyard .
Purdue 24-3, No. 9Texa~ Tech play drive by hitting charlie
premiums.
same: Jabbar can't do it
Th e l hI r d • r a n ked walloped Arizona 52-27 and Joiner with a 15-yard scoring
In surance cos ts
are
aione.
Cornhuskers feU victim to No. 10 Georgia ripped pass.
adversely" affec ted by
The Cleveland Cavaliers upstart Missouri, which has Kentucky 31-7.
The Chargers took the seburglaries, robberies and
won their second straight already claimed road
Of particular significance cond-half
kickoff and
car
th efts .. . . plus the
game and dealt the Lakers viclnries over Ohio S1.ale and was the Pillsburgh -Navy marched 52 yards to lake a
countless CB radios and
their second loss in three Southern California. Using a runaway where the Panthers' 17-14 lead
on
Ray
bicycles that t urn up
games Sunday night with a back-up quarterback, Pete Tony Dorsett became the Wersching's 22-yard field
mi ssing .
100-95 triumph at Richfield, Woods, and a surprise 93- NCAA's iill-time major goal before the Browns
Ohio, Jabbar scored a game- yard pass play to slotback college leading rusher with rallied to win their third
One thing you can do is to
s upp o r t
programs
high 29 points but the . Cavs Joe Stewart, Missouri rallied 180 yards which surpassed straight game . for the first
providing stiffer penalties
held bim without a field goal from behind to shock Archie Griffin's four:1ear time since 1973.
for
wrong doers
and
from 3:47 of the second period Nebraska 34-24 before the tntal of 5,177. It was a 32-yard
"Cleveland p1ayedJVell but
proposals for strengthened
In 9:41 of lhe final period as hometown Lincoln fans who
TD run which pushed Dorsett I felt our team was just not up
!hey led aU the way.
aren'l accustomed to such past Griffin. Immediate ly for the game," said San ·cr ime investigation efforts .
Campy Russell scored 16 Indignities.
afterward, Dorsell's mother Diego coach Tom Prothro. "I
You ca n also make It
pqints and Jim Brewer had 18
Woods, a junior playing in left her se11t in the stands anU fell we' were a bit flat all
tougher for crooks ; Use
rebounds to lead the halanced place of lhe injured ·Steve rushed onto the field to week.'' '
'
good. strong locks. Mark
Cleveland at1.ack. The Csvs PisarkiewiC2, hit six of 16 embrace her son.
possessi ons with your
Fouts, \vho hit on 23 of 35
social security number.
are lied for first place with passes and he. ran for only 38
Dorsett, who also scored ~sses for -~ yatds, felt the
Houston in the Central yards on 15 carries.
.,;; lJ!O other TDs and now has • Chargers were ready for the
Our agency provides
Division ollhe NBAeach with
·" I wasn'tthrowing the ball. 5,195 career yards, needs only game but "just weren't
financ ia l protection and
a ~ recoT-!1:• •
very well in the game," said: ' 102 more to break Howard making the plays when they
service when crime losses
The Lakers . cut the Csvs' , Woods. "For some rea!!Op I ,.. ~vens' all-college mark of needed them."
occur ... but many can be
lead In 9fHI2, on two [ree, , ·couldn't get a spiral down !be 5 297 set at Louisville and
"Cleveland has a good
prevented . That's why we
throws by ,Dwight Lmrun' middle but we hit the ones we' Randolph-Macon.
sound team, good personnel
say - prevention is the
with 57 seconds left in the needed."
0 1 her hi g h 1i g h 1 and a S&lt;iUd defense," added
best pol icy .
game but Brewer clinched
The one Missouri needed performances over . the Fouts.
the game with a field goal most was a 93-yard Woods In weekend included four
Pruitt had picked up 34
from 15 feet, .out 22 seconds · .Stewart tnuchdown pass on.a ·IAluchdowna by Ricky Bell's yards in six. carries and
later.
. ··third down from Missouri's t~nderstudy, freshman gra_bbed four passes for 49
Elsewhere in the NBA, the,~ .'?.Wn two. -The tnuchdown, ; Charles 1"!Jite, in Soulhl"'n yards in·the first quarter and
992-2 t45
Atlanta Hawks defeaf.l!ll ~ ~lOng with a two-poll)! , . CaVs rout"•ol Oregon S1.ate ; then left.midway through the
102 W. Main
Pomeroy
Milwaukee Bucks ll:Hil arnt, f onverslon pass from W&lt;$111;';. l3rl8haln Young quarterback second period after 1.aking a
the Sea1Ue SuperSonics heat . to Stewart, gave 16th-ranked ' ·Gifford Nielsen's 445 yards
the New York Nets 104-93.' · Missouri a 31-24 lead.
.' passing in lhe Coullljrs'' 45-14
· Hawks 115, Bueks 91
. ·.• ,. Mean.whlle, in Norman, win over Utah State; Field.
Steve H&amp;wes scored 19 , where Oklahoma's Soo~rs goals o(42 and 33 yards by
points and Tom Hend~raon almost n.Ver lose, there W4S." Flotlda's David Posey which
DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
had 18 to pace the Hawks' yet another shocker with ;j/1~' helped lllt the lith-ranked
DR
. A .J .STAEHLI
OR, K.H.CHU
attack while Bob Dandridge · state rival Oklahoma Sl;lf,e ualol'li to a 20-18 win over
(J)
0~ . VI CTOR V. LIANG
led both teams with 29. The the
perpetrator . Th e Tennessee.
FOR PRICES CALL COLLECT
Hawks led' by 20 points at Cowboys, who hadn't heaten · In other ga mes, Notre
f""'""""AREA CODE (614)---,
halftime and handed the Oklahoma in 10 years, used a Dame with President Ford in
L_ 252-3181 __J
Bucks · their thir.d straight 159-yard . performance by the st~ds watching, got by
One
or Two Day Full Denture
loss.
Terry Miller, which included South Carolina 13.6 a1
Service, Partlals, Extractions ,
Soules 104, Neta '3
a 72-yard louehdown gallop, Columbia
S.C., Texas
Rookies Dennis Johnsoo and three field goals !rom survived ~ 13.12 scare with
·and Bob Wilkerson came oil ,Abby Daigle to upset Ill!&gt; SMU, Arkansas , scotched
Xlhe bench in the third quarter Sooners, 31-24.
Houston's hopes for an easy
to llft Seattle to a 22-polnt
The 'Oklahoma
and walR·to the Southwest Conferlead and put lhe game Out of Nebraska losses left Lhe Big enceutfe, 14-7, Colorado kept
reach for the fatigued Nets, Eight with a three-way tie for pace with the other Big Eight
who have played three road' first among the Sooners, muggers by toppling 18thgames In as many nights. It Cornhuskers and Missouri. ranked Jowa S1a1e 3.1-14, "
was the Sanies' fLrst NBA And although .all three are week after Lhe Cyclones had
Tomorrow If You Tak e Cure OJ Your 'f' ee fh 1'noln~· ·
game of lhe year played marred by defeat now, there ·upset Missow·i, and Ala!Jarrm
MOI&lt;VAY THROuGH FR IDAY
· hefore a sellout crowd of issomeconsolationinthefact put away Louisville 24·"·
8:30A.M. TO 6:30P.M.
14,098.\
that no one outside &lt;he
\

it alone Big Eight no

easy play pen

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CRICKET LIGHTER .

next week, " said Pruitt. "I

like to run on a wet field."
Sipe had another fine day at
the Browns helm &gt;nil '""
third-year signal ·caller from
San Diego Slate connected on
23 of 28 passes for 246 yards
and touchdowns.
Sipe se1 a new Cleveland
passing record when he hii on
12 straight passes in the first
half, erasing Lhe old record of
11 set by George Ratterman
in 1956 and lied by Milk Plum
in 1960.
Bill Walsh, the offensive
coordlnator for the Chargers,
summed up the Browns team
with, "The Browns should
play Houston an even game
and I think Cleveland is in·a
position to challenge aU the
way lor their division title.
They are a vastly improved
.team."

I

....

---~--1---~~--

four-yard pass !rom Sipe.
"My ankle is sore ,right now
but I lhink I Should be ready

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rom Sawyer, Heidi,· Black Beauty.
A CliriitiiiaS Carol a'nd m iifY

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Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

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t - Tile lliiUy Sentinel, MlddleJl011-.l'~I. 0., Monday. Oct. 25. 19711
-

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5- The lliiUy Sentinel, MldcBeport-Ptmeroy, 0 .. Mon~·v n.-t. 25.1171

"

' Hockey
l'nternational
League Stondings

United Press lnternation.a l
North
wltpts. gfga

Kalamozoo
Muskegon

3 1 0 6 21 14

3 3 o 6 31 21
22262320
2 1 1 S 17 13

Flint

Saginaw

2304 .t422

PortHurono

South
w tt pts. gf ga

Toledo
Columbus

Fort Wayne
Dayton
•

3
2
1
1

2 0 6 21 19
0 1 5 16 10
3 o 2 11 26

4 0 2 18

Saturd,ay•s Results
Muskegon 8 Kalamazoo 4
Saginaw 4 Port Huron l

25

'

"

Dayton l Fort Wayne l

17

Colombus 2 fl int 2

n
RICK TAYLOR

MARK MAGNOTTA

4

Columbus 7r Dayton S .
Saginaw 5 Flint l , lie
Tol ed~,• Fort Wayne 1
,.,.,onday•s Garries
· No games scheduled
Tuesday's Games
No games schedUled .

DAN EDWARDS

ARCADIA, Calif. (UPI J Frank McMOhon's . Diabolo,
the classics-placed son of
Damascus who shattered a
bone in his hoof during a race
at Sanla Anita last February,
apparently won't have. W be
destroyed .
·
''For the first time since his
injury, he appears In be
safe," veterinarian Gregar.y
Ferraro said Sunday.
After the accident, Diabolo
underwent surgery. A final
cast placed on his hind leg
last week will come off in two
weeks, Ferraro said.
Diabolo
has · been
convalescing at UC Davis and
may be able to start stud
duties this year.

l'of'OUR SOPHOMORES - These four sophomores are·playing for the 1976
Meigs Marauder football squad. Rick Taylor, 6'2"165lb. tight end, is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Donllld Taylor of 11 Fisher St., Pomeroy.
MARK MAGNOTTA, sqn of Joe Magnotta of Lincoln Street, Middleport, is
vying for a guard position. He's 5'7" and 170pounds.
'·
DAN EDWARDS is a 5'9", 161 pound !ackle. His parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Edwards of Rutland. .
..
,
RANDY ARNOLD, !HI, is working out al another 1.ackle poSillon. He s the
son of Mr. and Mrs. S1.acie Arnold of Route 1, Minersville . .

Poole sharp 'in backup role
£•

CLEVELAN D ( UPI ) After Pruitt left the game
Clevelaud football fans found in the second quarter with an
out Sunday what would ankle injury that kept him out
happen if Greg Pruitt got of the second haU, Poole
hurt- you just put in Larry came in In chalk up 64 yards
Poole.
in 16 carries and added
another :;:; yards via pass
receptions to spark the
Browns to a 21-17 NFL
vic~ry over the San Diego
Chargers.
"I know I have In be ready
at aU times and I just kept
saying In myself, 'l have to do

can't do

bettert' said Poole.

"I was very happy In know
that Brian (Sipe) had confidence in me In give me the
ball and I was very happy to
contribute to the team ,"

added the 6-0, 195-pound
second-year running back
!rom Kent State.
Poole w'!f~tll~ key factor in
the final 82-yard , drive that
was capped by quarterback
Sipe's 10-yard scoring pass to
~car Roan with 14 :10 left in

the game.
Poole carried twice for 20
yards and it was a 19-strike
from Sipe to Poole that wok
the ball to the Chargers sixyard line, from where Sipe
flipped the clincher to Roan ,
"I am very pleased and
happy with the victory and it
was our hest all-around job of
the year," said Cleveland
coach Forrest Gregg. "Poole
dld a great job and I thought
lhe learn lei down a little
after Pruitt's jnjury,"

While the Browns were
racing to a 14-0 first-period
lead on a three-yard scoring
pass from Sipe to Reggie
Rucker and Pruill's one-yard
plunge, the Browns defensive
United PreuiDtematlonal
unit he)d the offensiveThe Los Angell'S Lakers
minded Charg ·~s to only 12
must he getting the message
yards rushing atld nine yards
that it takes more than
Prevention is the
passing In the first quarter.
Kareeni Abdul-Jabbar to
ByBILLMADDEN
conference would probably
"Our defense played well in
make them winners in. the
UPI Sports Writer
want to draw any one of the the first half but they did a
best polity...
National Basketball
Take it from the football three as a New Year's Day super job in the ;second half,"
Association.
folks of Norman, Okla. and opponent.
FOR CURBING
added Gregg."·
The Luker s' fans and Lineoln, Neb.: The Big Eight
Elsewhere across the
San Diego came roaring
CRIME LOSSES
managemem, if not aU NBA Conference is about as safe In nation, it was muscle-flexing back ii1 the second quarter
observers, thought the tread as a midnight stroll day for most of the top 10 and lied lhe game with 12
You can help cut down on
acquisition of the 7-fool-1 through New York's Central powers. No. 1 Michigan seconds left in the half on a crime losses .... losses that
Jabbar would brinl! the Park.
routed Indiana 35-&lt;l, No. 2 pass from running back Don
directly
aff ect
you,
whether they happen to you
Lakers a championship last
It was the kind of weekend Pittsburgh buried Navy 4!HI, Woods to Sam Scarber.
or not .
season. They were badly whlch has become typical of No. 4 UCLA mauled Defensive end Larry Jones
disappointed when 'the the rocky Big Eight this year. California 35-19, No. 6 set up the 39-yard drive by
Ta ke the crim e of arson .
Lakers didn't even make the A weekend where even third- Southern California drubbed picking off a Sipe aerial.
You ' re
pa_ylng
an
playoffs.
ranked Nebraska and fifth- Oregon Slate &gt;6-0, No. 7
Two minutes. earlier,
inC r easingly heavy subs idy
Now the Lakers are three rated Oklahoma could gel Maryland trounced Duke 30- Chargers . quarterback Dan
for deliberately ' set fires
games into a new season and mugged in thei r own 3, No. 8 Ohio S1.ate toyed with Fouts capped a 70-yard, ninethrough your Insurance
·the message remains the backyard .
Purdue 24-3, No. 9Texa~ Tech play drive by hitting charlie
premiums.
same: Jabbar can't do it
Th e l hI r d • r a n ked walloped Arizona 52-27 and Joiner with a 15-yard scoring
In surance cos ts
are
aione.
Cornhuskers feU victim to No. 10 Georgia ripped pass.
adversely" affec ted by
The Cleveland Cavaliers upstart Missouri, which has Kentucky 31-7.
The Chargers took the seburglaries, robberies and
won their second straight already claimed road
Of particular significance cond-half
kickoff and
car
th efts .. . . plus the
game and dealt the Lakers viclnries over Ohio S1.ale and was the Pillsburgh -Navy marched 52 yards to lake a
countless CB radios and
their second loss in three Southern California. Using a runaway where the Panthers' 17-14 lead
on
Ray
bicycles that t urn up
games Sunday night with a back-up quarterback, Pete Tony Dorsett became the Wersching's 22-yard field
mi ssing .
100-95 triumph at Richfield, Woods, and a surprise 93- NCAA's iill-time major goal before the Browns
Ohio, Jabbar scored a game- yard pass play to slotback college leading rusher with rallied to win their third
One thing you can do is to
s upp o r t
programs
high 29 points but the . Cavs Joe Stewart, Missouri rallied 180 yards which surpassed straight game . for the first
providing stiffer penalties
held bim without a field goal from behind to shock Archie Griffin's four:1ear time since 1973.
for
wrong doers
and
from 3:47 of the second period Nebraska 34-24 before the tntal of 5,177. It was a 32-yard
"Cleveland p1ayedJVell but
proposals for strengthened
In 9:41 of lhe final period as hometown Lincoln fans who
TD run which pushed Dorsett I felt our team was just not up
!hey led aU the way.
aren'l accustomed to such past Griffin. Immediate ly for the game," said San ·cr ime investigation efforts .
Campy Russell scored 16 Indignities.
afterward, Dorsell's mother Diego coach Tom Prothro. "I
You ca n also make It
pqints and Jim Brewer had 18
Woods, a junior playing in left her se11t in the stands anU fell we' were a bit flat all
tougher for crooks ; Use
rebounds to lead the halanced place of lhe injured ·Steve rushed onto the field to week.'' '
'
good. strong locks. Mark
Cleveland at1.ack. The Csvs PisarkiewiC2, hit six of 16 embrace her son.
possessi ons with your
Fouts, \vho hit on 23 of 35
social security number.
are lied for first place with passes and he. ran for only 38
Dorsett, who also scored ~sses for -~ yatds, felt the
Houston in the Central yards on 15 carries.
.,;; lJ!O other TDs and now has • Chargers were ready for the
Our agency provides
Division ollhe NBAeach with
·" I wasn'tthrowing the ball. 5,195 career yards, needs only game but "just weren't
financ ia l protection and
a ~ recoT-!1:• •
very well in the game," said: ' 102 more to break Howard making the plays when they
service when crime losses
The Lakers . cut the Csvs' , Woods. "For some rea!!Op I ,.. ~vens' all-college mark of needed them."
occur ... but many can be
lead In 9fHI2, on two [ree, , ·couldn't get a spiral down !be 5 297 set at Louisville and
"Cleveland has a good
prevented . That's why we
throws by ,Dwight Lmrun' middle but we hit the ones we' Randolph-Macon.
sound team, good personnel
say - prevention is the
with 57 seconds left in the needed."
0 1 her hi g h 1i g h 1 and a S&lt;iUd defense," added
best pol icy .
game but Brewer clinched
The one Missouri needed performances over . the Fouts.
the game with a field goal most was a 93-yard Woods In weekend included four
Pruitt had picked up 34
from 15 feet, .out 22 seconds · .Stewart tnuchdown pass on.a ·IAluchdowna by Ricky Bell's yards in six. carries and
later.
. ··third down from Missouri's t~nderstudy, freshman gra_bbed four passes for 49
Elsewhere in the NBA, the,~ .'?.Wn two. -The tnuchdown, ; Charles 1"!Jite, in Soulhl"'n yards in·the first quarter and
992-2 t45
Atlanta Hawks defeaf.l!ll ~ ~lOng with a two-poll)! , . CaVs rout"•ol Oregon S1.ate ; then left.midway through the
102 W. Main
Pomeroy
Milwaukee Bucks ll:Hil arnt, f onverslon pass from W&lt;$111;';. l3rl8haln Young quarterback second period after 1.aking a
the Sea1Ue SuperSonics heat . to Stewart, gave 16th-ranked ' ·Gifford Nielsen's 445 yards
the New York Nets 104-93.' · Missouri a 31-24 lead.
.' passing in lhe Coullljrs'' 45-14
· Hawks 115, Bueks 91
. ·.• ,. Mean.whlle, in Norman, win over Utah State; Field.
Steve H&amp;wes scored 19 , where Oklahoma's Soo~rs goals o(42 and 33 yards by
points and Tom Hend~raon almost n.Ver lose, there W4S." Flotlda's David Posey which
DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
had 18 to pace the Hawks' yet another shocker with ;j/1~' helped lllt the lith-ranked
DR
. A .J .STAEHLI
OR, K.H.CHU
attack while Bob Dandridge · state rival Oklahoma Sl;lf,e ualol'li to a 20-18 win over
(J)
0~ . VI CTOR V. LIANG
led both teams with 29. The the
perpetrator . Th e Tennessee.
FOR PRICES CALL COLLECT
Hawks led' by 20 points at Cowboys, who hadn't heaten · In other ga mes, Notre
f""'""""AREA CODE (614)---,
halftime and handed the Oklahoma in 10 years, used a Dame with President Ford in
L_ 252-3181 __J
Bucks · their thir.d straight 159-yard . performance by the st~ds watching, got by
One
or Two Day Full Denture
loss.
Terry Miller, which included South Carolina 13.6 a1
Service, Partlals, Extractions ,
Soules 104, Neta '3
a 72-yard louehdown gallop, Columbia
S.C., Texas
Rookies Dennis Johnsoo and three field goals !rom survived ~ 13.12 scare with
·and Bob Wilkerson came oil ,Abby Daigle to upset Ill!&gt; SMU, Arkansas , scotched
Xlhe bench in the third quarter Sooners, 31-24.
Houston's hopes for an easy
to llft Seattle to a 22-polnt
The 'Oklahoma
and walR·to the Southwest Conferlead and put lhe game Out of Nebraska losses left Lhe Big enceutfe, 14-7, Colorado kept
reach for the fatigued Nets, Eight with a three-way tie for pace with the other Big Eight
who have played three road' first among the Sooners, muggers by toppling 18thgames In as many nights. It Cornhuskers and Missouri. ranked Jowa S1a1e 3.1-14, "
was the Sanies' fLrst NBA And although .all three are week after Lhe Cyclones had
Tomorrow If You Tak e Cure OJ Your 'f' ee fh 1'noln~· ·
game of lhe year played marred by defeat now, there ·upset Missow·i, and Ala!Jarrm
MOI&lt;VAY THROuGH FR IDAY
· hefore a sellout crowd of issomeconsolationinthefact put away Louisville 24·"·
8:30A.M. TO 6:30P.M.
14,098.\
that no one outside &lt;he
\

it alone Big Eight no

easy play pen

DAl£ C. WARNER
INS.

TRY

w

~~s~~

wuh ' coupon
Limit 7

;,·

SUPER SOUR
. WAFER ROLLS

I

75' ·

Reg . $1.19
SAVE 44c

1
1

, OJ: , Shari

.

',.,.
0

.,

'

''

With Cou pon
Limi.!_! _

7 Piece

:

JAW
BREAKERS

l

Ideal tar any

59'

I
1

Reg . U .J 9
SAVE 11.40

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CRICKET LIGHTER .

next week, " said Pruitt. "I

like to run on a wet field."
Sipe had another fine day at
the Browns helm &gt;nil '""
third-year signal ·caller from
San Diego Slate connected on
23 of 28 passes for 246 yards
and touchdowns.
Sipe se1 a new Cleveland
passing record when he hii on
12 straight passes in the first
half, erasing Lhe old record of
11 set by George Ratterman
in 1956 and lied by Milk Plum
in 1960.
Bill Walsh, the offensive
coordlnator for the Chargers,
summed up the Browns team
with, "The Browns should
play Houston an even game
and I think Cleveland is in·a
position to challenge aU the
way lor their division title.
They are a vastly improved
.team."

I

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four-yard pass !rom Sipe.
"My ankle is sore ,right now
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Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
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R- 'l'hP DaUv Sentinei,Middleoor•-Pomeroy, 0,. Monday,Ocl. 25, 1976

Tuberculosis levy
endorsed by circk

r-·so-·c~ia~T~&amp;- Members

I Calendar

MONUAY
The tuberculosis renewal Qorothy Reibel, a charter
RUTLAND GARDEN Club,
levy was endorsed and member when Friendly
current officers re-elected lor Circle was organized by Mrs. 7:30 Monday at the Church of
another year when Frlendl¥ Ralph Kuether in the spring Christ with Mrs. Robert
Canaday and Mrs. Roy
Glrcle met Tuesday evening of 1937, was welcomed.
at Trinity Cllurch.
Miss
Erma
Smith Snowden, hostesses . In·
Mrs. Mary V. Reibel, presented the program en· stallation of office rs and bulb
president, conducted the titled "When You Doubt," sale.
meeting. Other officers re- · based on Psabn 53: She noted
DIRECTORS
of .the
elected were Mrs. Pe.a rl that although the Psabns Pomeroy Middleport Lions
Mora, vice president; Mrs. record the doubts, fears and Club will meet at 7:30
Leonard Jewell, secretary, discouragements of the Monday night at the office of
and Mrs. Elza Gihnore, Jr., people of that day , they end Norbert Compton.
treasurer .
with
triumph
and · BEND 0' the River Garden
Members were reminded of thanksgiving for past Club, Monday , 7; 30 p.m. at
·" Happy Land" presented blessings and a certai n the home of Mrs. Andrew
yesterday at the church knowledge of God's mercy . Cross. Program to be on the
· · under sponsorship of the . Unison prayer ~losed the theme "Putting Your Garden
Meigs County Historica l meeting.
to Bed for the Winter" with
Society and of family night to
Mrs. Wilson and Mrs. Opha ·all members partici pating.
be held Sunday at 5:30p.m. In Offut served a dessert oourse
fZAAK WALTON League
the church social rocrn. Alsc carrying out a Halloween regular meeting Monday, 7_,
announced was a meeting of · motif. Favors were or- p.m. All prospective mem.Church Women United at namental gourds raised by bers invited to attend.
Grace Episcopal Church on Mrs. Offut.
OH IO ASSOC IATION
, Nov. 5 at 1'30 p.m. .
Others attending were Mrs. Public School Employes,
A birthday card was signed James
Fugate,
Miss Chapter 17, Monday 7:30p.m.
for a belov1d member of the, Ellzabeth Fick, Miss Mary E. in cafeteria at Meigs Junior
church, Mrs. Louis Reil10l. Chapman , Mrs. Wilbur High, Middleport.
Mrs. Robert K· Wilson Perrin, Mrs. Roy Mayer,
TUESDAY
thanked members for cards Mrs. Donald Hauck, Mrs.
MEIGS AREA Holiness
sent her mother, Mrs. Donald Thomas Young, Mrs. David Association Tuesday, 7:30
Smith, who is recuperating at Russell and Eric.
p.m. at the Danville
the Wiison home. Miss
Wesleyan Church. Rev . Lelon
Glasure is pastor. Rev. Floyd
F. Shook, pastor of the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church
U
I I
guest speaker. Public invited.

·
fi
d
•ns
·
t
mat""'Ons
ete
R

Past malrons of Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Sta r, were entertained Friday evening at
th e Middleport Masoni c
Temple by the past matrons
of Evangeline Chapter 172,
O.E.S.
Mrs. Katie Anthony extended the welcome and Mrs.
Mary Hughes gave devotions
taken from II Timothy. Mrs.
Anthony read " The Best is
Yet to Be" by the Rev.
Charles L. AUen. Games
were played with gifts going
to the winners. Marl.e Custer
won the door prize.
Refreshments of salad,
sandwiches and •coffee were

served from a table centered
with a fall arrangement and
decorated with cornicopias
and candles. The table was
prepared by Mrs. Beulah
Hayes,. Mrs. Evelyn Lewis,
and Mrs. Anthony.
Guests were Mrs. Thebna
Dill, Mrs. Marie Custer, Mrs
Evelyn Lanning , Mrs. Ella
Smith, Mrs. Sylvia Midkiff
and Mrs. Edna Schoenleb.
Evangeline past matrons
attending besides those
named wer e Mrs . Marie
Hawkins , Mrs . Gra ce
French, Mrs. Roma Harris,
Mra. Roma Haw kins, ·Mrs.
Rowena Vaughan, Mrs.
Helen Reynolds.

Installation highlights
recent club meeting
RUTLAND - Installation
of new officers highlighted
the recent meeting of the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners
at the home of Mrs. Margaret
Edwards.
Installed were Mrs. Sharon
· Barr, president; Mrs. Suzy.
Carpenter, vice president;
Mrs. Joan Fetty, secretary,
and Mrs. Charlotte WIIUord,
treasurer. Each of the new
officers were presented with
a ·gift of bulbs. Two retiring
officers, Mrs. Lois Walker
and Marjorie Bishop, also
received gifts of bulbs.
The regional meeting to be '
held at the Belpre Methodist
Church on Nov. 6 was an·
nounced, and it was noted
that the 1977 Gardeners Day
Out of the Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs will be in this
region. It was reported that

RA CINE AME RICAN
. · Legion Auxiliary, Post 602,
7: 30 Tuesday .at the hall.
Donations of pies an~ sand·
. wiches or money for the
Election Day luncheon are
needed by the Auxiliary.
Contributors should conta ct
Mrs. Leora Young, 949·2236 or
Mrs. Jolla Norris. 247_2272 .
HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citizens Club potluck · and
birthday supper, 6 p.m.
·Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
Nellie Borgan , Harrisonville.
SPE CIA L MEETING,
Racine Masonic ~dge 461,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Work- In
the MM degree; vlBitors and
members welcome.
REVIVAL AT Mt. Her-.
mon U.B. Church through
Oct. 31, 7:30 each eveing with
Rev . Lee Hammond, Portsmouth , speaking during
week and Rev. James Leach,
pastor, on Sunday. G'ospel
Tones, Chester, singing on
Oct. 28. Public invited.
AMERICAN LEGION
Auxiliary, Drew Webster
Post 39, 7:30 Tuesday at the
hall. l\'lrs. Don Hunilel to have
the program

flower arrangements were .
made for the home tour on
Oct. 5, and that several trees
In the village were trimmed.
Atrip to Fenton and Dudley's
on Oct. 26 at 4:30 was an·
WEDNESDAY
nounced. A report was given
RUTLAND
FRIENDLY
on Mrs. Janet Bolin and Mrs.
Gardeners,
7:30
p.m. Wed·
Carpenter's trip to a Judges
'
nesday
at
the
home
of Mrs.
Day program in Columbus.
Jack
W
alk
er
,
Main
St.,
Mrs. Edwards gave
Rutla
nd
.
Special
guest
devotions entitled "Let's Not
Take It for Granted." The demonstrator, Reba Mullins,
program by Mrs. Fetty was Jackson florist who will
on gifts made with flowers present autumn floral design.
and she displayed Christmas Mrs. Walker .to present an
tree bulbs, plaques, pictures educational exhibit of bulbs
of dried and pressed flowers for fall planting. Members to
sachet pillows stuffed with take box of bulbs for ex·
dried flowers, door hangings, change.
THURSDAY
domes and cubes of dried
TURKEY SUPPER,
flowers.
Refreshments were served Wilkesville Temple, by the
Pythian Sisters, Thursday
by the hostess.
with serving to begin at S
p.m. P rice $2.50 with public
invited. Proceeds to go for
payment on hall.

1Council observes

!~l Helen Help

ex~hange •il Us •••
presents

Birthday and Bnnlversary
gifts were received by
several members from their
secret pals at the Thu~y
night meeting of the Chatter
Club at · the home of Mrs.
Elaine Spires with Mrs. Lola
Harrison as co-hostess.
Mrs. Marie Leifheit
received both a birthday and
an anniversary gilt and
others receiving anniversary
gilts were Mrs. · Dorothy
Roach, Mrs. Unda Van Meter
Bnd Mrs. Mary Starcher.·
Gifts were also presented to
the hostesses.
Mrs. Susan Cleland con·
duc'ted the meeting with
plans being d(scussed for the
Christmas dinner party. It
will be held at Crow's Steak
House. Mrs. Roach thanked
the club for flowers sent
during her hospitalization.
Games were ·played with
prizes going to Mrs. Betty
Biggs, Mrs. Roach, Mrs.
Starcher, Mrs. Opal Biggs,
Mrs. Ruth Young, Mrs. Van
Meter and Mrs. Esther
Harden. Mrs. Hattie Fisher
and Mrs. Cleland won the
door .prizes Others attending
were Mrs. Frances Carleton
and Mrs. Lee Enoch.
Sandwiches, chips, coffee,
cake and 50ft drinks were

By Helen Bottel

+++

Dear Helen :
There's a book out now tiUed 'something Uke, "Warning :
Sex May Be Hazardous to Your Health." It makes dire
conclusions that "overindulgence" can help along everything
from mental disorders to arthritis to heart attacks and even
cancer.
' And evidently the author believes "overlndillgence" is
when you,aren't using sex for procreation. He states that too
much sex, more than any other factor·, ages a woman.
What do you say to THAT? - READER
Dear Reader:
Only this: I doubt the book will ever hit the best-seller list.

- H.

.

+++

Dear Helen:
.
Ernest Hemingway did not, as one of your readers claims,
say, "What's moral is what you do good at. What's Immoral is
HALLOWEEN PARTY
The Meigs County what you do bad at."
The actual quotes, from "Death in tbe Afternoon," is "So
Pomona Grange Is spon·
far,
about morals, I know only that what is moral is what you
sorlng a county wide
feel
good after and what is Immoral is what you feel bad
Halloween party for .
after."
He was talkil\g about bullfights and said these
Grange youth and their
standards
worked for him, but he wouldn't push them on
friends.
others.
CAREFUL
READER
The party will be Oct. 30,
8 p.m. at the Hemlock
Grove Grange Hall. There Dear Careful:
Thanks to you - and a dozen other Hemingway buffs for
Is no charge. Those at·
te•dlng are asked to wear a setting the record straight.
To each his own standards - but they wouldn't work for
costume. Games and prizes
me.H.
·
'
will be provided as well as
.
+++
refreshments. For additional Information Dear Helen:
When this couple invites us for dinner, I end up doing most
contact Keith Ashley,
of
the
work. The woman is so disorganized she must be bailed
Meigs County Youth
out
of
her
own kitchen or she'd never get tbe meal on the table ..
Director.
Afterwards, I wash dishes while she flutters around being
useless. ·
If she can't manage, why does she have company? UPSET
•

The president, Susan Baer,
presided atthe meeting of Xi
Gamma Mu Tuesday at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company in Middleport.
Donna Nease feminded the
chapt~r to continue saving
RC bottle caps.
Debbie Finlaw, . social
chairman, reported the
chapter's ·next social will· he
held on Nov: 2 at the home of
Carol Adams after the
regular business meeting .
The social event will be a
card .wuty. Annie Chapman
reported on plans being made
for the ways and means
proj ect to be held in March, a
:8
B
card party and style show.
RACINE - A membership sale on Nov. 6 at the Racine
Susan Baer announced that
drive will be conducted by the Home National Bank and
all baked items lor the
newly organized Racine donations for this will be
Halloween party for the
Junior High School Athletic appreciated, a sa le of tote
March of Dimes are to he
Boosters.
•bags,
and
perhaps
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Davis, taken to the school between 3
Plans for the drive were preparation of a community
and 5:30 p. m. on Oci. 31.
made at a meeting Wed- calendar. Mrs. Virginia Rt. 4, Pomeroy, the former
The cultural report was
nesday night. at school. Pam Reese Is chairman of the Terri Bumgardner, announce given by Donna Nease and
Rusaell reported the mem- ways and means coiruniitee. the birth of their first child, a Martha McPhail on "How
bership cards will be
Glen Tucker presided at the daughter, Bridget Leanne. Does Communicating Affect
available this week, and it meeting and It was decided The seven pound, 15 ounce · Our Language and Life
was decided that the cards that meetings will be held on girl was born on Oct. 22. Style."
will be aent home with all of the first Wednesday of each Grandparents are Mr. and
Hostesses for the meeting
the students and that the one month . Dorothy Johnson Mrs. David Davis, Rt. 4, were Janet Pickens and Doris
selllng the most cards will gave a report on the Southern Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs. Ewing.
receive a $5 gift. Mrs. Delores High School Athletic Boosters David Bumgardner, Rt. 1,
Wolfe was named mem· meeting and noted that they Middleport . Grea t ·
bership chairman.
had given penlllsslon for the ' grandparents are Mr. and
Otper fund raising ac· Junior High Boosters to use Mrs. George Fobner, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs.
NOWYOUKNOW
tlvities will Include a bake the concession stand.
• Elwood
Bowers, Rt. 3,
The term ·laser is an
Pomeroy, and Mrs. George acronym for the words light
Bumgardner, Mason, W. Va. amplification by stimulated
Great-great-grandmothers
· emission of radiation.
'
are
Mrs.
Edgar
Cunningham,
SYRACliSE _;'The M.Y.F. Carol and Tina Gibbs, Jaye
of the Syracuse Churches · Ord, Tonia and Sonia Ash, South Carolina ; Mrs. Herbert
enjoyed a Halloween party Teresa · Holstein, Teresa Miller, Middleport, and Mrs.
recently at th~ Asbury Ferrell, Mary Beth .Slavin, Lewis Lawrence, Oakland, LOST - 2 female Beagle
iJuppies, 6 montbs old in
Church.
the Rev. ·and Mrs. Richard Calif.
Racine. If found call
In CO!tume judging, first Jar.iis, Stephanie Ord, Mlck
28.
13.
prize, a Bible, was won by .Ash, Roy , Rose Ann .and
Ttna a/lei Carol Gibbs. Second Kimberly Jenkins.
·'
and third prizes were giant
suckers and th~ were won
; by Teresa Holstein and Jaye.
• Ord. Games included a
' ICavenger hunt, apple bobSTRIKE AVOIDED .
bing and a relay. Praye~ by
TOLEDO,
Ohio (UPI ) - A
Mary Beth Slavin preceded
lentative
agreement
between
' the serving of 'pizza, chips,
city
officials
and
represen·
cookleo and pop. Halloween
aucltera were given as.favors. tatives of four labor unions
representing several hundred
Attending were Jack and
city
workers was reached ·
Eddie Duffy, Ricky Baker,
Sunday
night, apparently
. Joe Bob Hemsley, C. T.
halting
plans
for a strike
Chapman, Roger Hubbard, Tuesday.
Paid By Candidate

:r:':':':M:':,b:;;h;;:: :dri~::;,:;:=; :,:'/1~

New arrival

Keep a GOOD

HARTENBACH

CHESTER Annual
friendahlp night of Diatrlct 13,
Daughters of America, wu
held Thunday 'night at the
Cheater Elementary School.
Mrs. Enna Cleland served
as cowte.ilor . for the olr
. servance which opened with
nicognitlon of the district
offlcel'!l and the reception .of
the national and ·state of.
fleers. Team captain waa
Mrs. Mary Holter and
flagbearers were Doris
Grueser and Marg-ret
Tuttle. Received were Mrs.
Dorothy Ritchie, District 13
deputy of ·Chester . Council
323; Mrs. Faye Hoselton,
state outside sentinel, of Belle
Prairie Cowtell 289; Mrs.
Mary Moose, state legislation
committee, Perry Council
283; Kay Hockman, deputy of
Kyger Council 227; Mrs.
Edna Reibel, deputy of
Theodorus Council 17,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Esaa Varner,
deputy of Belle Prairie
Council, and Mrs. Esther
Ridenour, deputy of Chester
Council 323.
Mrs. , Joan .Weyersrnlller
· was
reinstated
Into
Theodorus Council 17. Mrs.
Zelda Weber was nominated,
elected and installed as
district secretary. Mrs.
Ritchie annowteed .that the
slogan of the state councilor,
Dorothy M. Henthorn, is
"Courage and
Determination", and her motto Ia
"Forward March." It was
also announced that the
sunshine project of the state
councilor iii lunda for the
Daughters of America Home
at Tiffin. Each council was
asked to participate in a fund
raising project. Each deputy
was asked to take up a " heart
strings" offering at each
meeting.
The Christmas party for
the deputy club was set for
Dec. 5 at 2p.m. at the Chester
hall. It )'ill be a potluck

••te.r

dinner with a $2 ilft exchange. The Put CauncUon;
Club h¢lday party wu ·announced for Dec. 12 at 2 p.m.
at the Wllmar Restaurant ,In
Parkersburg with a
homemade gift ezcliallge.
The spring rally wu anno~~J~Ced for Man;b.l2 at .s t.
Mark's Metbodl4f::C!lurdl In
Belpre with · registration ·to
begin at 9 a.m. and the
meeting at 10 a.m. Janice
Lawson, Syracuse; Llna
McVay, Marietta, and Nina
Rope, Kyger, were named :to
the nominating collllllittee.
Belle Pralrte Council asked
members to send . blrtbday ·
cards to Mn. Ada Tolson, 119
Third st., Marietta, 167&amp;11, on
Nov . J~. her tooth blrthday.:It
was reported that Mrs.
Margaret Stacey baa been
hospitallzed but is now at the
home of her cjaughler, Mrs:
Ann Ruth Teater, 5864 Troy
Villa Blvd., Dayton, 45424.•
A reception honoring Mary
·Jean Richter, state vice
couneilor, wu annowteed lbr
Oct. 24, and one for Florent:e
Pope, associate state
councilor, for - Nov. 6 &amp;t
WillC!wick. An o.flerlng was
taken with the money to be
presented to George Pickens,
speaker at the 1976 rally. ;
A potluck dinner was h~d
preceding the int!fting. Mrs.
Hoselton presented Mrs.
Ritchie with a:gift, Membefs
from
Belle
Prairie,
Theodorus, Kyger, Guidillg
Star of Syracuse, Perry ahd
Marietta Councils attended.
SUPPER SET
WILKESVILLE - Pythlan
Sisters of WUkesvllle will
hold a turkey supper Thunday night at the WUkesvWe
temple with the serving to
start at 4 p.m. The price •is
$2.50 and the public is Invited
to attend. Proceeds wUI he
used lor payment on the h.n.

STATE REPRESENTATIVE

RON JAMES

ByJ. R. KIMMINS
OJLUMBUS (UP! ) - Ohio
voters are among thoee in six
states who will decide Nov. 2
If ooclear powered utility
plants can energize the state
at high cost for the rest of the

century or If the reactors are · Assembly to approve the
a time bcrnb lacldng only a construction or expansion of
fuse.
any new nuclear-fired power
If approv~d as an
generating plant,
amendment to the Ohio
-require utUities to carry
Coostutition, Issue 6 would :
~ge 81IIOQ!lts of inslirance to
-require the General protect themselves against
dsmage suits in the event of a
rare accident at an operating
plant.

Polly's Pointers Columbus ,'Watterson

•2

is AA golf champion ·

·Adhesive
squares
--·. '""'-·,
By Poly Cramer . stuck on wall
'
POlLY'S PROBLEM
terii, so I Wied some empty
'.
DEAR POLLY - We had a match books. I opened the
, .picture futened to the wall fronts, wound the wanted
,that bad been painted with amounts around the backs,
tats paint. To hang It, we broke off the yam and closed
• Uled tboae. arnail adhesive the. covers. I attached the
" ll(uarea that are sticky on loose yarn end of one to my
• both aides. Now we have knitting and then opened the~
.. removed the picture, but the cover and went ahead with
;:adhealve squares remained the knitting. - MARSUA A.
•Oil the · wall. I wonder If
"·IDYone luio'tfS how to remove
•. them, 10 we do not have to ·
.,.repaiDlthe will.: - MRS. J . s.
.. • DEAR MRS. J. S.. - My
penoaal experience wit~
' Reb IICIDaml baa been aad• .
, Wllea I bave removed lllem,
Ill the pahat bu come with
· them 111111 otte. left a ~~quare
COLUMBUS tUPI) .. WeataU• where paiDt bad Leading teams and inIn the 51st annual
,.beea. Tbls bad to be IDled dividuals
state Boys Golf Tournamentl
. ..wltll pahal before 1 flu! coat
Class AAA
• woa)d be IDlOOtb with lbe real 1. Youngs town Ursu line 322•
·Oil tile wall. If lillY reader C8ll 331-.153
2.
O•ford
Talawanda
329-331llelp ua we ~ Uke to bear · 660
~from you, :... POLLY.
3. Upper Arlington 322-34Q-

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Led
by Julian Taylor's 76-78-154,
defending Class AAA
champion Youngstown Ursuline has captured a seven·
stroke victory in the 51st
a11nual state Boys Golf
Tournament.
The repeat champions
carded a 331 team score
Saturday for a 653 total.
The AA title was won by
Col~blis Walte!'son with .a
660 for 36 holes at Ohio State's

~76 _
l)hio

golf
tourney results

662

Scarlet course. Tiffin Calvert
took the single-A crown with
694 strokes. ·
·
Rainy, cold w·eather pushed
most scores far above par,
but Rocky Miller of Mount
VeJ11on managed a tw~ver
74 to take Class AAA medallst
honors with a IS2 total for
both days of the tourney.
Mllte McGee of Middletown
Madison was low In AA with
IS&amp;.
In single-A; Rick Steiner of
Tiffin Calvert won on the first
bole ilf a sudden-death playoff
over Mark Starlnlerl of
,Tusclirawa~
Cen tral
Catholic. For Friday, and
Saturday's Ill-hole rounds,
each had a 168 total.

the issue would ban nuclear reliance to the atom : uUUUes
development in Ohio. Propo- caii make more mmey,
nents said that wasn~ so, but · Opponents say electricity
admitted It would delay tbe produced by -nuclear plants Is
cons\fuctlon of any ·more cheaper, that generating the
energy does not pollute and
nuclear power stations.
"The central issue is econo- that nuclear plants remove
mics," said former Public U.S. reliance on foreign
Utiliti es Commission supplies of oil.
The safety question Is
Chairman Henry Eckhart, a
another
ballgame.
strong proponent ol Issue 6.
Ohioans for Utility Reform
"The prospect of a peri!On
" Nuclear energy Is not
(OUR) collected well over cheap energy," sal&lt;l Echkart, getting kllled In a nuclear
307,000 sigMtures for Issue 6 pointing to a claim by the . accident in one In five bllllon
and three olher energy. major supplier ol nuClear a year," according to ~nil­
related proposals. The issues reactor fuel that it cannot Issue 6 llteraiure.
survived
two
court meet orders for the. fuelOpponents also point out
challenges-w-remain on tbe ca ll~d "yellowcake"- at that a similar Issue failed in
ballot.
originslly-negotiated prices. California June 8. Left out is
Nuclear power plants cost the fact that just before the
about
S1 billion each and have issue went down two4~ne,
Uned up against Issue 6 is
the formidable might of Citi- a lifespan of abou! 30 years. the California legislature
zens for Safe, Lower Cost Utilities can write off the passed a bill giving itself veto
Electricity , • a coalition of entire cost in 16 years.
Coal.fired plants cost far
investor-&lt;&gt;wned utilities,
organized labor and business, less, lnst far longer, and
which pledged $1 million to cannot he depreciated as
defeai aU the energy..-elated qui ckly. Thus, argues
Eckhart, the reason utilities
Issues.
Opponents said adopti"" of want to shift generating

A nn·RUtJ..e. ues
J
•b .
Crt es

South African·life
Ron James is a lui-time State
Representative - working for all

people ·in his d5trict.

* FOR BEITER EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS

*FOR FAIR UTILITY RATES

*AGAINST GUN CONTROL

The Youth Fellowship of
Enterprise United Methodist
Church is sponsoring '. a
Halloween party for children
12 years old and under at the
Enterprise United Methodist
Church basement on Wednesday, 6:30 to 8:30. There
wUI . be refreshments. Those
who come may wear
costumes.
~

I.

$58

. NOT PROMISES.

Ca lvert

•

_

84-84- 168
2.
Mark
Stariniert .
Tuscarawas Cen tral Catholic

.88-SQ-168
3. Steve Maibeiger, Tilfin
Ca lvert ·
Bo-86- 170

330-335--665
. · DEAR POLLY - I have 4. Findlay
5.
Worthington
333-344-.177 4. G{j ry Johnson, Hav llnd' found a way to keep the 6. Cleveland Heig hts
340-3311- WynTrc
. leaves on my polled plants 678 .
85·86--171
. from rubbing themselves to 7. Shaker Heights 344-342-.186 tie Don Marquette; Mogadore
333-356-:--689
82-89- 171
' death against the topa of the. 8. Ravenna
Gallon
333-363-.196 tie Mark Steg ner, Woodslleld
·pots. Dip a scrubbed pot, top 9.
10. Painesville Riversi de 34585·86-171
down, into a shaDow amount 355--700
tie Denny Barlekm p, Tffn.
ol melted paraffin. It should 11 . Kettering Fa irmont
Clvrt
351-352- 703
84-87- 171
, be jllllt deep enough to coat West
355 ~356-711
8. Jim Tarulli, Tuscarawas
" the top rim of a depth of about 12. Middletown
Individuals
Central Catholic
" one-eighth to one-quarter of . I. Rocky Miller, Mount
93-89- 172
..u inch Inside and out. - Vernon
78-74-152 9. Cha rles Duffy, Woodsfield
.
84-89- 173
2. Mi lc h Atlens pach, O x ~
::MRS.' O.D.F.
fordTiwnd
14-79153
X·Won
on
first
hole
of
sudden"' DEAR POLLY~ I want to 3. Julian Tayl or, Xongst. deatb playoff..
·'• tell the reader who would Uke wnUrsln
76:70,154
~-to mak.e.a dpwn quilt that the 4. Bob Stanger, Cleveland
79-79- 1581 GARDENA, Calif. (UP!) : .'Way linake them bas proved Heghls
.''most successful. I buy closely 5. Ted Moore, Findlay 81·81- Ron Shwnan of Mesa, Ariz.,
162
..
woven unbleached mu8Iln or tie 8111 Nahs, Upper Arlington led all the way in winning the
79-B:l-162 $25,000 Pacific Coast Open
.Jbeeting for the lining -enough for both top and lie Mark Allenspach, Pxford sprint car championships at
Talawanda
79-83 -162 Ascot Park.
'
~'bottom. Cat to size and put 8.
Ray VanGulen, Findlay 81 · Shuman, who finished
:rrnnt and back pieces 8:1-164
.
:to8etber. Stitch around all, tie Bob ~erkins , Upper second to Bobby Jones of
80-84-164 Danville, Ill., in the Western
• but leave one end open. Fold Arllngtn
•
championships at Phoenix,
stfched llnlng In eighths,
.._,_,__
Calss AA
Ariz., won $4,500 Saturday
.,•w•~&gt;&amp; so the open end is at 1. Columbus Wallecson 338~
night.
· :the ends of the creases. Then 322-660
:;presswlthahotirOn.Openup 2. Shelby
333·341-674
~1nd stitch alongthese creaae 3. Warren Kennedy 348-337345-348-69j
:'llnes to make tubeS to hold ~~eshocton
~ d9wn. Lay on a !tat 5. Middletown Madison 344·
&gt;rface and put the down in 45(1-()94
~in the open end. Spread 6. Orrville
360-340-700
~YI!ry thinly, as the leat~ters 7. Clyde
362-348-710
""""'"
fluff
Bast
the
8.
Springfield
Shawnee
366·
,,,.w
up.
e
open . 347~713
~d shut and baste across 9. Gallipolis Gallia 373-368;-:every ten Inches from top. to 741
r-llottom, right through the 10. Lorain Calhollc 381 -367~thers. Then stitch on the
Utica
377-3~763
:"'rrachlne. · Thla will rnalie
Individuals
:-Jiown IDled sectiODS over the 1. Mike McGee, M i d ~
:,entire quilt. Hang on the llne dlelownMdsn
•lo Duff and shake off any
~ 79 ·79-158
:'Joose feathers. If SOII)e of the
Mawhorr, Shelby 81 . .
: !llluarea seem to have ~ 3. Eddy Beach, Coshocton
1bt "Up &amp; OUt" Hydro-Miat
.:'lJI8ny feathers make a slit
.
· 7'1 -81 - 160
oyatem l.lfta dirt, atalna,
'..'•nd remove . some. If they . 4. Tlm Hlrt, Clyde 85-77- 162
old ..,.mpoo reolduo ond
r
5. Bill Hoban, Columtius ·
• leem~thlndothesame ·and Wallersn
81 -82- 163
80'll. o1 the molotureln juol
:.ildd more feathers. Sew any 6. Jerry Stanislaw, Warrn
0111a18p. H'othou. . •
~lilts shut. For the outside Knndy
rnothod poaleulonalo UMt
Sl-8:1-164
Do-11-pU- lnd uvo.
;cover, I use a light percale on
Cliff Snyder, Colum~us
~l»oth sides a/lei tie. Such a 7.
OCT.·NOV. SNCIAL
Wllrsn
FREI! ,_of o profooolonal
•!lUll! II washable, and the
90-77-167
Upllololrf
:leathers cannot move or lie Brad Bauer , Colmbs
Wllrsn
~lbift. -LUQr.
- " " " Hydro-Milt
84-83-167
- I.AIIo:.; DEAR POLLY - To tle Darryl Spellch,
Wm&gt;
Pacf n'aNII F01111
;Jli'Oiecl my fingers when I cut Knndy
Upho"""' t ClooJw lor
''1'0Se8 with thomy stems, I
85·82- 167
lUll- (Reg. VII. P .21).
10.
Mike
Mawhorr,
Shelby
81·
:hold the stem with a spring
87- 168
~type clothespin.
. ClassA
~ I could not find the bobbins .I. Tlf11n Calvert 344-350-&lt;194
1 wanted to use to wind the 2. Tuscarawas Central
'llllall amounts of colored Catholic
347-349-696
:'r am needed for a sock pat· 3. Mogadore
355 - 3~715
103 South Second St.
"
4. Woodsfield ·360-364- 724
Mason, West VIrginia
5. Sidney Lehman 368-363- 731
...••
6. Haviland Wayne Trace
369-371-740 Also available il all
•
7. Ashtabula St. John381 ~366parlicfpoting TAYLOR
••
747
RENTAL CENTERS.
•

.

Pomeroy Elementary

.

'

School~

·''

.

'

~

. 8&amp;00 P.M., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28

HON. CLARENCE E. MILLER,
SPEAKER·

'

Be There and Bring Your Frl~nds
'

'

.

.

:., Mila J. Woods to Paul F. '
!4-mberger,
Dorothy
~berger, Lots,:, Pomeroy.
: Nora Buchanan to Wtlliam
luc:hanp, Doril Buchanan,
~ a,, Olive. ,
., Harold R. Lohse, Elizabeth
ill. Lohse to Earl 0 . Thoma,
·Ratay A. Thoma, Lot,

.,_.y.

];_17 Ease Col. and So. Ohio ·

t,ec. Ca.
r&lt;SybU Eberaba'ch Comm.,
lerachel B. Ma!IUel ·dec. to
"rjorle J. Manuel, Parceis,

.-racuse.
Marjorie J. Manuel to John

!). Lisle, Jinlce M. Lisle,

Pd. Pol. Adv.

t

."'•••

~ Transfers
:

Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy

.

..

reason
us•••
•

'

.

I is!
~-----

1

...

e.rceis, Syracuse.
.
..'

WORTH

200 ·EXTRA

TOP VALUE STAMPS

Big Value Bonus!

Thfs coupon good for 200 Extro Top Value Stam1&gt;5 with
a purchase of SS .OO or more at Big Jlm'a Plozo, 407
Peorl St., Middleport, Ohio.

In today's co mpelil1ve env ir on·
menl. you need a good reaso n
lor swilching slores ·
We lh ink Top Val ue
Slamps. and lh e g1 Hs
Ihey can be redeemed
for . are a very go od

· Coupon Good Oct. 26th thru No.v. 1.

reason.

No Price
Increase!
Do Top Value Stamps in·
crease food p rices? We
assure you, here and ~ow .
!hat lhey don 't. Some ol our
pnces vary I rom day 10 day.
as they a lw ays have and
always w1il. As lhey do 1n
every slore. We are deler·
mined 10 stay competitive. on
price. as we always have. You
will not pay exira lor the bonus
ol Top Value Stamps.

He re are just a lew ol the
thousands at high-qual1ty. brand
na me gd! s you 9an get tree for
Top Value Stamp9

Make The Move!
We want you r business. We' re
proving il wilh the exira bonus of
To p Value Slamps . Make lhe ·
swilch loday and slarl enjQying
our fine food . low prices and some
of th e wonderful gilts you gel free
for Tbp Value Stamps.

How Do Top Value
Stamps Pay Off?

"

\

\

"'

Meigs
"'
·.,~· Property

REPUBLICAN .RALLY
PUBLIC INVITED
.

BAKER
FURNITURE
MIDDI.EPORT, 0.

to 5 I CLOSE'
1-EA,ST COURT

Individuals .
K·Rifk Steine r. Tiffi n

..

RON JAMES PERFORMANCE Comm.' tr -:••d.Jemea

Also Monday , Tues., Wed .,
and Fri~IY 10:00 a.m. IO
l :DD p.m. and Wed . evonl"'l
6:30 to 9:00.

393-77 1

Pickens Hardware
Co. Inc.

*AGAINST TAX INCREASES

Pd.

Now
open
Mond1y
evenings 6 tJO • 9 : DO p.m.

8. Ci nci nnati Countr-y Day 378·

Tool,._

RON JAMES IS ON RECORD

"PARTY PLANNED

THE TOWN KILN
CERAMIC SHOP

THEY BEAT AS THEY SWEEP ·
AS THEY CLEAN

Js:!:[;/

meeting and announced
World Community Day to be
held Nov. 5 at Grace
Episcopal Church. Forty·
eight sick calla were reported
by members during the past
month.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Eurana Thomas with
Mrs. Pat Thomas, a contributing hostess . Guests
were Mrs. Rope, Mrs. Eddie
Smith, Mrs. Opal Kloos, Mrs.
Carrie Grueser, Mrs. Jean
Nease, Mrs. Dorothy Karr
and Miss Cindy Thomas.

ANNOUNQNG
NEW HOURS

HOOVER SWEEPERS

;f

·

Mrs. Ann Rupe talked on
South Africa and the ex·
perienoes of the year the
Rope family.Spent there at a
recent meeting of the United
Methodist Women of the
Forest Run United Methodist
Church. '
,
Mrs. Rope told of native
life, the customs of the
people, the food and ac·
tlvities, and of the numerous
places they visited whUe
there, including the Victoria
falls and the Wildlife
Preserve. She displayed
handcrafted items for the
group to see.
The meeting opened with
"How Great Thou Art" and
the Lord's Prayer in unison.
Mrs. Mary K. Roush had
devotions using the topic, "Is
It By Your Wisdom, the
Hawk's Source", with
scripture from Psabn 104.
Mrs. Edith Sisson, vice
president; had charge of the

power over new nliclear plant
construction.
Adoption of Issue 6 will not
affect two nuclear facilities
oow under cmstructlon In
Ohio.
Next: laue 7

::oua

Dear Upsel :
.
If you don't Uke her hospitality, why do you accept tbe
invitaUon? You might let thiB woman off · the .hook by
suggesting after-dinner get-togethers instead. Perhaps she's
better at cards thari cooking. - H.

M YF enjoys festivity ·

H9-

EDmtR'S NOTE:. '1'1111 ta llflkle e:tplllu State Issue I,
~ f..nll Jll 1 leriet of 11 deallq with eoulnlethia ud
dilplteloeo b7 UPI illte~oue aper1dell of
powtl' ,
nporten Lee LeMan! ... J. plull, u pilced on tile ballot
L J:tm..lw • tile~~~- ud by Obloua for Ulillty Reform
_ . . . 1! Illite Ia &lt;*lo'a u.r.qb laltlaUve petlllon.
eleet111 Nov. l. 'l'odly'a

•~ /'friendship night'

Divorcee's Life Not Fun and Gamea
Dear Helen :
·
I'm a graduate of !be School of Hard Knocks and I got my
decree sii years ago. I'm raising two teens In a quiet sulmb ;
some of the women around here give me a royal pain. M.ost
have their own cars, whatever they want, and men who tl'eat
them very weD. Yet All they do is complain Jlboul their. hJJSband!j - pet!Y
things like, "He won't go out." Then'!bey look at me enviOUSly,:
the attractive dlvQI'cee who has lots of dates, a good job, and no
dull man holding her back.
My life n\ay look glamorous, but it's filled with ~dgery,
aggravation and lonellness. I can feel the weight of
respmslblllty so heavy DIY body wants to collapse, but there's
no shoulder I can lean IJI.
·
·
I llved through a bad marriage (though for a while the
"living" bit was a toss-up). If I ever get a chance to marry
someone as nice as most of the husbands in my neighborhood ,
believe me I won't complain!
Why don't women appreciate what they've got? - NOT SO
HAPPY DIVORCEE
Dear NSHP ; :
... Possibly because they take it for granted that they'll
always have "hbn." And for some, the prospects ll(en't aU that
enticl1!g.
Isn't it sad the other person's life Is what many people
want until they get it ~ and reallze what t~tey had wasn't so.
bed after all. - H.
·
·

s~rved .

Sorority
gathers

Issue .6 would control. how fast atomic power is developed

a

:Mo.:
...:.:.:.x.:·:. . .:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:-~·:.:. ·,;·;·;·:·.··········..·••·•...•.:-:-:-')"-:.-.:~·-A~'.!N·*"*
,
.. .-.-. . . . , • .-.-. • • • . . . .......,. &lt;.• • • • ' •' · ' •' •'•' •'•''•._ o, o ;'0 oiV.J'i'o'\"~WNU n~~t• • • ••.•. ~

The Meigs FFA are now
taking orders for fresh fruit
until November 5th.

·'uice Oranges '6.75 1u11 ease
,

'"· Naval Oranges

$3.75 holf case

58,()() full case
$4.00 half case

Golden GrapefruR '6.75 fu II .c~s~·
$3,75 half ~ase
II case
Pink GrapefruR .f&amp;.15tu
$J.7,S.half case
Tangekl
'6.75•fu II ca;e

In highly desi rable. high quality
gilts. Thousands of brand name
gilts ... lhings that you want and
need . Things you can now get .
' free lot Top Value Stamps.·
·

Quality Guaranteed?

Books Fill Fast? ·

The very highesl qual ily ... backed
by Top Va lue 's famou s 2-Way
Golden Guaranlee: You can't gel ·
better g1lts lor lewer stamps any·
where. Ana you musl be 100%
sat isfied

You bet' II. lor exam ple, you spend
$50 a week al merchants th ai give
Top Value Stamps. you lil.l a book
w1lh Top Value Siam ps in 3 weeks
.. more )hac 17 hon ks · 1n just a
year .

$3.75

Orders can be taken by
contacting any FFA member or
by calling 992-2158 or 992-2159. ·

"2·1471
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R- 'l'hP DaUv Sentinei,Middleoor•-Pomeroy, 0,. Monday,Ocl. 25, 1976

Tuberculosis levy
endorsed by circk

r-·so-·c~ia~T~&amp;- Members

I Calendar

MONUAY
The tuberculosis renewal Qorothy Reibel, a charter
RUTLAND GARDEN Club,
levy was endorsed and member when Friendly
current officers re-elected lor Circle was organized by Mrs. 7:30 Monday at the Church of
another year when Frlendl¥ Ralph Kuether in the spring Christ with Mrs. Robert
Canaday and Mrs. Roy
Glrcle met Tuesday evening of 1937, was welcomed.
at Trinity Cllurch.
Miss
Erma
Smith Snowden, hostesses . In·
Mrs. Mary V. Reibel, presented the program en· stallation of office rs and bulb
president, conducted the titled "When You Doubt," sale.
meeting. Other officers re- · based on Psabn 53: She noted
DIRECTORS
of .the
elected were Mrs. Pe.a rl that although the Psabns Pomeroy Middleport Lions
Mora, vice president; Mrs. record the doubts, fears and Club will meet at 7:30
Leonard Jewell, secretary, discouragements of the Monday night at the office of
and Mrs. Elza Gihnore, Jr., people of that day , they end Norbert Compton.
treasurer .
with
triumph
and · BEND 0' the River Garden
Members were reminded of thanksgiving for past Club, Monday , 7; 30 p.m. at
·" Happy Land" presented blessings and a certai n the home of Mrs. Andrew
yesterday at the church knowledge of God's mercy . Cross. Program to be on the
· · under sponsorship of the . Unison prayer ~losed the theme "Putting Your Garden
Meigs County Historica l meeting.
to Bed for the Winter" with
Society and of family night to
Mrs. Wilson and Mrs. Opha ·all members partici pating.
be held Sunday at 5:30p.m. In Offut served a dessert oourse
fZAAK WALTON League
the church social rocrn. Alsc carrying out a Halloween regular meeting Monday, 7_,
announced was a meeting of · motif. Favors were or- p.m. All prospective mem.Church Women United at namental gourds raised by bers invited to attend.
Grace Episcopal Church on Mrs. Offut.
OH IO ASSOC IATION
, Nov. 5 at 1'30 p.m. .
Others attending were Mrs. Public School Employes,
A birthday card was signed James
Fugate,
Miss Chapter 17, Monday 7:30p.m.
for a belov1d member of the, Ellzabeth Fick, Miss Mary E. in cafeteria at Meigs Junior
church, Mrs. Louis Reil10l. Chapman , Mrs. Wilbur High, Middleport.
Mrs. Robert K· Wilson Perrin, Mrs. Roy Mayer,
TUESDAY
thanked members for cards Mrs. Donald Hauck, Mrs.
MEIGS AREA Holiness
sent her mother, Mrs. Donald Thomas Young, Mrs. David Association Tuesday, 7:30
Smith, who is recuperating at Russell and Eric.
p.m. at the Danville
the Wiison home. Miss
Wesleyan Church. Rev . Lelon
Glasure is pastor. Rev. Floyd
F. Shook, pastor of the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church
U
I I
guest speaker. Public invited.

·
fi
d
•ns
·
t
mat""'Ons
ete
R

Past malrons of Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Sta r, were entertained Friday evening at
th e Middleport Masoni c
Temple by the past matrons
of Evangeline Chapter 172,
O.E.S.
Mrs. Katie Anthony extended the welcome and Mrs.
Mary Hughes gave devotions
taken from II Timothy. Mrs.
Anthony read " The Best is
Yet to Be" by the Rev.
Charles L. AUen. Games
were played with gifts going
to the winners. Marl.e Custer
won the door prize.
Refreshments of salad,
sandwiches and •coffee were

served from a table centered
with a fall arrangement and
decorated with cornicopias
and candles. The table was
prepared by Mrs. Beulah
Hayes,. Mrs. Evelyn Lewis,
and Mrs. Anthony.
Guests were Mrs. Thebna
Dill, Mrs. Marie Custer, Mrs
Evelyn Lanning , Mrs. Ella
Smith, Mrs. Sylvia Midkiff
and Mrs. Edna Schoenleb.
Evangeline past matrons
attending besides those
named wer e Mrs . Marie
Hawkins , Mrs . Gra ce
French, Mrs. Roma Harris,
Mra. Roma Haw kins, ·Mrs.
Rowena Vaughan, Mrs.
Helen Reynolds.

Installation highlights
recent club meeting
RUTLAND - Installation
of new officers highlighted
the recent meeting of the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners
at the home of Mrs. Margaret
Edwards.
Installed were Mrs. Sharon
· Barr, president; Mrs. Suzy.
Carpenter, vice president;
Mrs. Joan Fetty, secretary,
and Mrs. Charlotte WIIUord,
treasurer. Each of the new
officers were presented with
a ·gift of bulbs. Two retiring
officers, Mrs. Lois Walker
and Marjorie Bishop, also
received gifts of bulbs.
The regional meeting to be '
held at the Belpre Methodist
Church on Nov. 6 was an·
nounced, and it was noted
that the 1977 Gardeners Day
Out of the Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs will be in this
region. It was reported that

RA CINE AME RICAN
. · Legion Auxiliary, Post 602,
7: 30 Tuesday .at the hall.
Donations of pies an~ sand·
. wiches or money for the
Election Day luncheon are
needed by the Auxiliary.
Contributors should conta ct
Mrs. Leora Young, 949·2236 or
Mrs. Jolla Norris. 247_2272 .
HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citizens Club potluck · and
birthday supper, 6 p.m.
·Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
Nellie Borgan , Harrisonville.
SPE CIA L MEETING,
Racine Masonic ~dge 461,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Work- In
the MM degree; vlBitors and
members welcome.
REVIVAL AT Mt. Her-.
mon U.B. Church through
Oct. 31, 7:30 each eveing with
Rev . Lee Hammond, Portsmouth , speaking during
week and Rev. James Leach,
pastor, on Sunday. G'ospel
Tones, Chester, singing on
Oct. 28. Public invited.
AMERICAN LEGION
Auxiliary, Drew Webster
Post 39, 7:30 Tuesday at the
hall. l\'lrs. Don Hunilel to have
the program

flower arrangements were .
made for the home tour on
Oct. 5, and that several trees
In the village were trimmed.
Atrip to Fenton and Dudley's
on Oct. 26 at 4:30 was an·
WEDNESDAY
nounced. A report was given
RUTLAND
FRIENDLY
on Mrs. Janet Bolin and Mrs.
Gardeners,
7:30
p.m. Wed·
Carpenter's trip to a Judges
'
nesday
at
the
home
of Mrs.
Day program in Columbus.
Jack
W
alk
er
,
Main
St.,
Mrs. Edwards gave
Rutla
nd
.
Special
guest
devotions entitled "Let's Not
Take It for Granted." The demonstrator, Reba Mullins,
program by Mrs. Fetty was Jackson florist who will
on gifts made with flowers present autumn floral design.
and she displayed Christmas Mrs. Walker .to present an
tree bulbs, plaques, pictures educational exhibit of bulbs
of dried and pressed flowers for fall planting. Members to
sachet pillows stuffed with take box of bulbs for ex·
dried flowers, door hangings, change.
THURSDAY
domes and cubes of dried
TURKEY SUPPER,
flowers.
Refreshments were served Wilkesville Temple, by the
Pythian Sisters, Thursday
by the hostess.
with serving to begin at S
p.m. P rice $2.50 with public
invited. Proceeds to go for
payment on hall.

1Council observes

!~l Helen Help

ex~hange •il Us •••
presents

Birthday and Bnnlversary
gifts were received by
several members from their
secret pals at the Thu~y
night meeting of the Chatter
Club at · the home of Mrs.
Elaine Spires with Mrs. Lola
Harrison as co-hostess.
Mrs. Marie Leifheit
received both a birthday and
an anniversary gilt and
others receiving anniversary
gilts were Mrs. · Dorothy
Roach, Mrs. Unda Van Meter
Bnd Mrs. Mary Starcher.·
Gifts were also presented to
the hostesses.
Mrs. Susan Cleland con·
duc'ted the meeting with
plans being d(scussed for the
Christmas dinner party. It
will be held at Crow's Steak
House. Mrs. Roach thanked
the club for flowers sent
during her hospitalization.
Games were ·played with
prizes going to Mrs. Betty
Biggs, Mrs. Roach, Mrs.
Starcher, Mrs. Opal Biggs,
Mrs. Ruth Young, Mrs. Van
Meter and Mrs. Esther
Harden. Mrs. Hattie Fisher
and Mrs. Cleland won the
door .prizes Others attending
were Mrs. Frances Carleton
and Mrs. Lee Enoch.
Sandwiches, chips, coffee,
cake and 50ft drinks were

By Helen Bottel

+++

Dear Helen :
There's a book out now tiUed 'something Uke, "Warning :
Sex May Be Hazardous to Your Health." It makes dire
conclusions that "overindulgence" can help along everything
from mental disorders to arthritis to heart attacks and even
cancer.
' And evidently the author believes "overlndillgence" is
when you,aren't using sex for procreation. He states that too
much sex, more than any other factor·, ages a woman.
What do you say to THAT? - READER
Dear Reader:
Only this: I doubt the book will ever hit the best-seller list.

- H.

.

+++

Dear Helen:
.
Ernest Hemingway did not, as one of your readers claims,
say, "What's moral is what you do good at. What's Immoral is
HALLOWEEN PARTY
The Meigs County what you do bad at."
The actual quotes, from "Death in tbe Afternoon," is "So
Pomona Grange Is spon·
far,
about morals, I know only that what is moral is what you
sorlng a county wide
feel
good after and what is Immoral is what you feel bad
Halloween party for .
after."
He was talkil\g about bullfights and said these
Grange youth and their
standards
worked for him, but he wouldn't push them on
friends.
others.
CAREFUL
READER
The party will be Oct. 30,
8 p.m. at the Hemlock
Grove Grange Hall. There Dear Careful:
Thanks to you - and a dozen other Hemingway buffs for
Is no charge. Those at·
te•dlng are asked to wear a setting the record straight.
To each his own standards - but they wouldn't work for
costume. Games and prizes
me.H.
·
'
will be provided as well as
.
+++
refreshments. For additional Information Dear Helen:
When this couple invites us for dinner, I end up doing most
contact Keith Ashley,
of
the
work. The woman is so disorganized she must be bailed
Meigs County Youth
out
of
her
own kitchen or she'd never get tbe meal on the table ..
Director.
Afterwards, I wash dishes while she flutters around being
useless. ·
If she can't manage, why does she have company? UPSET
•

The president, Susan Baer,
presided atthe meeting of Xi
Gamma Mu Tuesday at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company in Middleport.
Donna Nease feminded the
chapt~r to continue saving
RC bottle caps.
Debbie Finlaw, . social
chairman, reported the
chapter's ·next social will· he
held on Nov: 2 at the home of
Carol Adams after the
regular business meeting .
The social event will be a
card .wuty. Annie Chapman
reported on plans being made
for the ways and means
proj ect to be held in March, a
:8
B
card party and style show.
RACINE - A membership sale on Nov. 6 at the Racine
Susan Baer announced that
drive will be conducted by the Home National Bank and
all baked items lor the
newly organized Racine donations for this will be
Halloween party for the
Junior High School Athletic appreciated, a sa le of tote
March of Dimes are to he
Boosters.
•bags,
and
perhaps
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Davis, taken to the school between 3
Plans for the drive were preparation of a community
and 5:30 p. m. on Oci. 31.
made at a meeting Wed- calendar. Mrs. Virginia Rt. 4, Pomeroy, the former
The cultural report was
nesday night. at school. Pam Reese Is chairman of the Terri Bumgardner, announce given by Donna Nease and
Rusaell reported the mem- ways and means coiruniitee. the birth of their first child, a Martha McPhail on "How
bership cards will be
Glen Tucker presided at the daughter, Bridget Leanne. Does Communicating Affect
available this week, and it meeting and It was decided The seven pound, 15 ounce · Our Language and Life
was decided that the cards that meetings will be held on girl was born on Oct. 22. Style."
will be aent home with all of the first Wednesday of each Grandparents are Mr. and
Hostesses for the meeting
the students and that the one month . Dorothy Johnson Mrs. David Davis, Rt. 4, were Janet Pickens and Doris
selllng the most cards will gave a report on the Southern Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs. Ewing.
receive a $5 gift. Mrs. Delores High School Athletic Boosters David Bumgardner, Rt. 1,
Wolfe was named mem· meeting and noted that they Middleport . Grea t ·
bership chairman.
had given penlllsslon for the ' grandparents are Mr. and
Otper fund raising ac· Junior High Boosters to use Mrs. George Fobner, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs.
NOWYOUKNOW
tlvities will Include a bake the concession stand.
• Elwood
Bowers, Rt. 3,
The term ·laser is an
Pomeroy, and Mrs. George acronym for the words light
Bumgardner, Mason, W. Va. amplification by stimulated
Great-great-grandmothers
· emission of radiation.
'
are
Mrs.
Edgar
Cunningham,
SYRACliSE _;'The M.Y.F. Carol and Tina Gibbs, Jaye
of the Syracuse Churches · Ord, Tonia and Sonia Ash, South Carolina ; Mrs. Herbert
enjoyed a Halloween party Teresa · Holstein, Teresa Miller, Middleport, and Mrs.
recently at th~ Asbury Ferrell, Mary Beth .Slavin, Lewis Lawrence, Oakland, LOST - 2 female Beagle
iJuppies, 6 montbs old in
Church.
the Rev. ·and Mrs. Richard Calif.
Racine. If found call
In CO!tume judging, first Jar.iis, Stephanie Ord, Mlck
28.
13.
prize, a Bible, was won by .Ash, Roy , Rose Ann .and
Ttna a/lei Carol Gibbs. Second Kimberly Jenkins.
·'
and third prizes were giant
suckers and th~ were won
; by Teresa Holstein and Jaye.
• Ord. Games included a
' ICavenger hunt, apple bobSTRIKE AVOIDED .
bing and a relay. Praye~ by
TOLEDO,
Ohio (UPI ) - A
Mary Beth Slavin preceded
lentative
agreement
between
' the serving of 'pizza, chips,
city
officials
and
represen·
cookleo and pop. Halloween
aucltera were given as.favors. tatives of four labor unions
representing several hundred
Attending were Jack and
city
workers was reached ·
Eddie Duffy, Ricky Baker,
Sunday
night, apparently
. Joe Bob Hemsley, C. T.
halting
plans
for a strike
Chapman, Roger Hubbard, Tuesday.
Paid By Candidate

:r:':':':M:':,b:;;h;;:: :dri~::;,:;:=; :,:'/1~

New arrival

Keep a GOOD

HARTENBACH

CHESTER Annual
friendahlp night of Diatrlct 13,
Daughters of America, wu
held Thunday 'night at the
Cheater Elementary School.
Mrs. Enna Cleland served
as cowte.ilor . for the olr
. servance which opened with
nicognitlon of the district
offlcel'!l and the reception .of
the national and ·state of.
fleers. Team captain waa
Mrs. Mary Holter and
flagbearers were Doris
Grueser and Marg-ret
Tuttle. Received were Mrs.
Dorothy Ritchie, District 13
deputy of ·Chester . Council
323; Mrs. Faye Hoselton,
state outside sentinel, of Belle
Prairie Cowtell 289; Mrs.
Mary Moose, state legislation
committee, Perry Council
283; Kay Hockman, deputy of
Kyger Council 227; Mrs.
Edna Reibel, deputy of
Theodorus Council 17,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Esaa Varner,
deputy of Belle Prairie
Council, and Mrs. Esther
Ridenour, deputy of Chester
Council 323.
Mrs. , Joan .Weyersrnlller
· was
reinstated
Into
Theodorus Council 17. Mrs.
Zelda Weber was nominated,
elected and installed as
district secretary. Mrs.
Ritchie annowteed .that the
slogan of the state councilor,
Dorothy M. Henthorn, is
"Courage and
Determination", and her motto Ia
"Forward March." It was
also announced that the
sunshine project of the state
councilor iii lunda for the
Daughters of America Home
at Tiffin. Each council was
asked to participate in a fund
raising project. Each deputy
was asked to take up a " heart
strings" offering at each
meeting.
The Christmas party for
the deputy club was set for
Dec. 5 at 2p.m. at the Chester
hall. It )'ill be a potluck

••te.r

dinner with a $2 ilft exchange. The Put CauncUon;
Club h¢lday party wu ·announced for Dec. 12 at 2 p.m.
at the Wllmar Restaurant ,In
Parkersburg with a
homemade gift ezcliallge.
The spring rally wu anno~~J~Ced for Man;b.l2 at .s t.
Mark's Metbodl4f::C!lurdl In
Belpre with · registration ·to
begin at 9 a.m. and the
meeting at 10 a.m. Janice
Lawson, Syracuse; Llna
McVay, Marietta, and Nina
Rope, Kyger, were named :to
the nominating collllllittee.
Belle Pralrte Council asked
members to send . blrtbday ·
cards to Mn. Ada Tolson, 119
Third st., Marietta, 167&amp;11, on
Nov . J~. her tooth blrthday.:It
was reported that Mrs.
Margaret Stacey baa been
hospitallzed but is now at the
home of her cjaughler, Mrs:
Ann Ruth Teater, 5864 Troy
Villa Blvd., Dayton, 45424.•
A reception honoring Mary
·Jean Richter, state vice
couneilor, wu annowteed lbr
Oct. 24, and one for Florent:e
Pope, associate state
councilor, for - Nov. 6 &amp;t
WillC!wick. An o.flerlng was
taken with the money to be
presented to George Pickens,
speaker at the 1976 rally. ;
A potluck dinner was h~d
preceding the int!fting. Mrs.
Hoselton presented Mrs.
Ritchie with a:gift, Membefs
from
Belle
Prairie,
Theodorus, Kyger, Guidillg
Star of Syracuse, Perry ahd
Marietta Councils attended.
SUPPER SET
WILKESVILLE - Pythlan
Sisters of WUkesvllle will
hold a turkey supper Thunday night at the WUkesvWe
temple with the serving to
start at 4 p.m. The price •is
$2.50 and the public is Invited
to attend. Proceeds wUI he
used lor payment on the h.n.

STATE REPRESENTATIVE

RON JAMES

ByJ. R. KIMMINS
OJLUMBUS (UP! ) - Ohio
voters are among thoee in six
states who will decide Nov. 2
If ooclear powered utility
plants can energize the state
at high cost for the rest of the

century or If the reactors are · Assembly to approve the
a time bcrnb lacldng only a construction or expansion of
fuse.
any new nuclear-fired power
If approv~d as an
generating plant,
amendment to the Ohio
-require utUities to carry
Coostutition, Issue 6 would :
~ge 81IIOQ!lts of inslirance to
-require the General protect themselves against
dsmage suits in the event of a
rare accident at an operating
plant.

Polly's Pointers Columbus ,'Watterson

•2

is AA golf champion ·

·Adhesive
squares
--·. '""'-·,
By Poly Cramer . stuck on wall
'
POlLY'S PROBLEM
terii, so I Wied some empty
'.
DEAR POLLY - We had a match books. I opened the
, .picture futened to the wall fronts, wound the wanted
,that bad been painted with amounts around the backs,
tats paint. To hang It, we broke off the yam and closed
• Uled tboae. arnail adhesive the. covers. I attached the
" ll(uarea that are sticky on loose yarn end of one to my
• both aides. Now we have knitting and then opened the~
.. removed the picture, but the cover and went ahead with
;:adhealve squares remained the knitting. - MARSUA A.
•Oil the · wall. I wonder If
"·IDYone luio'tfS how to remove
•. them, 10 we do not have to ·
.,.repaiDlthe will.: - MRS. J . s.
.. • DEAR MRS. J. S.. - My
penoaal experience wit~
' Reb IICIDaml baa been aad• .
, Wllea I bave removed lllem,
Ill the pahat bu come with
· them 111111 otte. left a ~~quare
COLUMBUS tUPI) .. WeataU• where paiDt bad Leading teams and inIn the 51st annual
,.beea. Tbls bad to be IDled dividuals
state Boys Golf Tournamentl
. ..wltll pahal before 1 flu! coat
Class AAA
• woa)d be IDlOOtb with lbe real 1. Youngs town Ursu line 322•
·Oil tile wall. If lillY reader C8ll 331-.153
2.
O•ford
Talawanda
329-331llelp ua we ~ Uke to bear · 660
~from you, :... POLLY.
3. Upper Arlington 322-34Q-

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Led
by Julian Taylor's 76-78-154,
defending Class AAA
champion Youngstown Ursuline has captured a seven·
stroke victory in the 51st
a11nual state Boys Golf
Tournament.
The repeat champions
carded a 331 team score
Saturday for a 653 total.
The AA title was won by
Col~blis Walte!'son with .a
660 for 36 holes at Ohio State's

~76 _
l)hio

golf
tourney results

662

Scarlet course. Tiffin Calvert
took the single-A crown with
694 strokes. ·
·
Rainy, cold w·eather pushed
most scores far above par,
but Rocky Miller of Mount
VeJ11on managed a tw~ver
74 to take Class AAA medallst
honors with a IS2 total for
both days of the tourney.
Mllte McGee of Middletown
Madison was low In AA with
IS&amp;.
In single-A; Rick Steiner of
Tiffin Calvert won on the first
bole ilf a sudden-death playoff
over Mark Starlnlerl of
,Tusclirawa~
Cen tral
Catholic. For Friday, and
Saturday's Ill-hole rounds,
each had a 168 total.

the issue would ban nuclear reliance to the atom : uUUUes
development in Ohio. Propo- caii make more mmey,
nents said that wasn~ so, but · Opponents say electricity
admitted It would delay tbe produced by -nuclear plants Is
cons\fuctlon of any ·more cheaper, that generating the
energy does not pollute and
nuclear power stations.
"The central issue is econo- that nuclear plants remove
mics," said former Public U.S. reliance on foreign
Utiliti es Commission supplies of oil.
The safety question Is
Chairman Henry Eckhart, a
another
ballgame.
strong proponent ol Issue 6.
Ohioans for Utility Reform
"The prospect of a peri!On
" Nuclear energy Is not
(OUR) collected well over cheap energy," sal&lt;l Echkart, getting kllled In a nuclear
307,000 sigMtures for Issue 6 pointing to a claim by the . accident in one In five bllllon
and three olher energy. major supplier ol nuClear a year," according to ~nil­
related proposals. The issues reactor fuel that it cannot Issue 6 llteraiure.
survived
two
court meet orders for the. fuelOpponents also point out
challenges-w-remain on tbe ca ll~d "yellowcake"- at that a similar Issue failed in
ballot.
originslly-negotiated prices. California June 8. Left out is
Nuclear power plants cost the fact that just before the
about
S1 billion each and have issue went down two4~ne,
Uned up against Issue 6 is
the formidable might of Citi- a lifespan of abou! 30 years. the California legislature
zens for Safe, Lower Cost Utilities can write off the passed a bill giving itself veto
Electricity , • a coalition of entire cost in 16 years.
Coal.fired plants cost far
investor-&lt;&gt;wned utilities,
organized labor and business, less, lnst far longer, and
which pledged $1 million to cannot he depreciated as
defeai aU the energy..-elated qui ckly. Thus, argues
Eckhart, the reason utilities
Issues.
Opponents said adopti"" of want to shift generating

A nn·RUtJ..e. ues
J
•b .
Crt es

South African·life
Ron James is a lui-time State
Representative - working for all

people ·in his d5trict.

* FOR BEITER EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS

*FOR FAIR UTILITY RATES

*AGAINST GUN CONTROL

The Youth Fellowship of
Enterprise United Methodist
Church is sponsoring '. a
Halloween party for children
12 years old and under at the
Enterprise United Methodist
Church basement on Wednesday, 6:30 to 8:30. There
wUI . be refreshments. Those
who come may wear
costumes.
~

I.

$58

. NOT PROMISES.

Ca lvert

•

_

84-84- 168
2.
Mark
Stariniert .
Tuscarawas Cen tral Catholic

.88-SQ-168
3. Steve Maibeiger, Tilfin
Ca lvert ·
Bo-86- 170

330-335--665
. · DEAR POLLY - I have 4. Findlay
5.
Worthington
333-344-.177 4. G{j ry Johnson, Hav llnd' found a way to keep the 6. Cleveland Heig hts
340-3311- WynTrc
. leaves on my polled plants 678 .
85·86--171
. from rubbing themselves to 7. Shaker Heights 344-342-.186 tie Don Marquette; Mogadore
333-356-:--689
82-89- 171
' death against the topa of the. 8. Ravenna
Gallon
333-363-.196 tie Mark Steg ner, Woodslleld
·pots. Dip a scrubbed pot, top 9.
10. Painesville Riversi de 34585·86-171
down, into a shaDow amount 355--700
tie Denny Barlekm p, Tffn.
ol melted paraffin. It should 11 . Kettering Fa irmont
Clvrt
351-352- 703
84-87- 171
, be jllllt deep enough to coat West
355 ~356-711
8. Jim Tarulli, Tuscarawas
" the top rim of a depth of about 12. Middletown
Individuals
Central Catholic
" one-eighth to one-quarter of . I. Rocky Miller, Mount
93-89- 172
..u inch Inside and out. - Vernon
78-74-152 9. Cha rles Duffy, Woodsfield
.
84-89- 173
2. Mi lc h Atlens pach, O x ~
::MRS.' O.D.F.
fordTiwnd
14-79153
X·Won
on
first
hole
of
sudden"' DEAR POLLY~ I want to 3. Julian Tayl or, Xongst. deatb playoff..
·'• tell the reader who would Uke wnUrsln
76:70,154
~-to mak.e.a dpwn quilt that the 4. Bob Stanger, Cleveland
79-79- 1581 GARDENA, Calif. (UP!) : .'Way linake them bas proved Heghls
.''most successful. I buy closely 5. Ted Moore, Findlay 81·81- Ron Shwnan of Mesa, Ariz.,
162
..
woven unbleached mu8Iln or tie 8111 Nahs, Upper Arlington led all the way in winning the
79-B:l-162 $25,000 Pacific Coast Open
.Jbeeting for the lining -enough for both top and lie Mark Allenspach, Pxford sprint car championships at
Talawanda
79-83 -162 Ascot Park.
'
~'bottom. Cat to size and put 8.
Ray VanGulen, Findlay 81 · Shuman, who finished
:rrnnt and back pieces 8:1-164
.
:to8etber. Stitch around all, tie Bob ~erkins , Upper second to Bobby Jones of
80-84-164 Danville, Ill., in the Western
• but leave one end open. Fold Arllngtn
•
championships at Phoenix,
stfched llnlng In eighths,
.._,_,__
Calss AA
Ariz., won $4,500 Saturday
.,•w•~&gt;&amp; so the open end is at 1. Columbus Wallecson 338~
night.
· :the ends of the creases. Then 322-660
:;presswlthahotirOn.Openup 2. Shelby
333·341-674
~1nd stitch alongthese creaae 3. Warren Kennedy 348-337345-348-69j
:'llnes to make tubeS to hold ~~eshocton
~ d9wn. Lay on a !tat 5. Middletown Madison 344·
&gt;rface and put the down in 45(1-()94
~in the open end. Spread 6. Orrville
360-340-700
~YI!ry thinly, as the leat~ters 7. Clyde
362-348-710
""""'"
fluff
Bast
the
8.
Springfield
Shawnee
366·
,,,.w
up.
e
open . 347~713
~d shut and baste across 9. Gallipolis Gallia 373-368;-:every ten Inches from top. to 741
r-llottom, right through the 10. Lorain Calhollc 381 -367~thers. Then stitch on the
Utica
377-3~763
:"'rrachlne. · Thla will rnalie
Individuals
:-Jiown IDled sectiODS over the 1. Mike McGee, M i d ~
:,entire quilt. Hang on the llne dlelownMdsn
•lo Duff and shake off any
~ 79 ·79-158
:'Joose feathers. If SOII)e of the
Mawhorr, Shelby 81 . .
: !llluarea seem to have ~ 3. Eddy Beach, Coshocton
1bt "Up &amp; OUt" Hydro-Miat
.:'lJI8ny feathers make a slit
.
· 7'1 -81 - 160
oyatem l.lfta dirt, atalna,
'..'•nd remove . some. If they . 4. Tlm Hlrt, Clyde 85-77- 162
old ..,.mpoo reolduo ond
r
5. Bill Hoban, Columtius ·
• leem~thlndothesame ·and Wallersn
81 -82- 163
80'll. o1 the molotureln juol
:.ildd more feathers. Sew any 6. Jerry Stanislaw, Warrn
0111a18p. H'othou. . •
~lilts shut. For the outside Knndy
rnothod poaleulonalo UMt
Sl-8:1-164
Do-11-pU- lnd uvo.
;cover, I use a light percale on
Cliff Snyder, Colum~us
~l»oth sides a/lei tie. Such a 7.
OCT.·NOV. SNCIAL
Wllrsn
FREI! ,_of o profooolonal
•!lUll! II washable, and the
90-77-167
Upllololrf
:leathers cannot move or lie Brad Bauer , Colmbs
Wllrsn
~lbift. -LUQr.
- " " " Hydro-Milt
84-83-167
- I.AIIo:.; DEAR POLLY - To tle Darryl Spellch,
Wm&gt;
Pacf n'aNII F01111
;Jli'Oiecl my fingers when I cut Knndy
Upho"""' t ClooJw lor
''1'0Se8 with thomy stems, I
85·82- 167
lUll- (Reg. VII. P .21).
10.
Mike
Mawhorr,
Shelby
81·
:hold the stem with a spring
87- 168
~type clothespin.
. ClassA
~ I could not find the bobbins .I. Tlf11n Calvert 344-350-&lt;194
1 wanted to use to wind the 2. Tuscarawas Central
'llllall amounts of colored Catholic
347-349-696
:'r am needed for a sock pat· 3. Mogadore
355 - 3~715
103 South Second St.
"
4. Woodsfield ·360-364- 724
Mason, West VIrginia
5. Sidney Lehman 368-363- 731
...••
6. Haviland Wayne Trace
369-371-740 Also available il all
•
7. Ashtabula St. John381 ~366parlicfpoting TAYLOR
••
747
RENTAL CENTERS.
•

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Pomeroy Elementary

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. 8&amp;00 P.M., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28

HON. CLARENCE E. MILLER,
SPEAKER·

'

Be There and Bring Your Frl~nds
'

'

.

.

:., Mila J. Woods to Paul F. '
!4-mberger,
Dorothy
~berger, Lots,:, Pomeroy.
: Nora Buchanan to Wtlliam
luc:hanp, Doril Buchanan,
~ a,, Olive. ,
., Harold R. Lohse, Elizabeth
ill. Lohse to Earl 0 . Thoma,
·Ratay A. Thoma, Lot,

.,_.y.

];_17 Ease Col. and So. Ohio ·

t,ec. Ca.
r&lt;SybU Eberaba'ch Comm.,
lerachel B. Ma!IUel ·dec. to
"rjorle J. Manuel, Parceis,

.-racuse.
Marjorie J. Manuel to John

!). Lisle, Jinlce M. Lisle,

Pd. Pol. Adv.

t

."'•••

~ Transfers
:

Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy

.

..

reason
us•••
•

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.

I is!
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1

...

e.rceis, Syracuse.
.
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WORTH

200 ·EXTRA

TOP VALUE STAMPS

Big Value Bonus!

Thfs coupon good for 200 Extro Top Value Stam1&gt;5 with
a purchase of SS .OO or more at Big Jlm'a Plozo, 407
Peorl St., Middleport, Ohio.

In today's co mpelil1ve env ir on·
menl. you need a good reaso n
lor swilching slores ·
We lh ink Top Val ue
Slamps. and lh e g1 Hs
Ihey can be redeemed
for . are a very go od

· Coupon Good Oct. 26th thru No.v. 1.

reason.

No Price
Increase!
Do Top Value Stamps in·
crease food p rices? We
assure you, here and ~ow .
!hat lhey don 't. Some ol our
pnces vary I rom day 10 day.
as they a lw ays have and
always w1il. As lhey do 1n
every slore. We are deler·
mined 10 stay competitive. on
price. as we always have. You
will not pay exira lor the bonus
ol Top Value Stamps.

He re are just a lew ol the
thousands at high-qual1ty. brand
na me gd! s you 9an get tree for
Top Value Stamp9

Make The Move!
We want you r business. We' re
proving il wilh the exira bonus of
To p Value Slamps . Make lhe ·
swilch loday and slarl enjQying
our fine food . low prices and some
of th e wonderful gilts you gel free
for Tbp Value Stamps.

How Do Top Value
Stamps Pay Off?

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Meigs
"'
·.,~· Property

REPUBLICAN .RALLY
PUBLIC INVITED
.

BAKER
FURNITURE
MIDDI.EPORT, 0.

to 5 I CLOSE'
1-EA,ST COURT

Individuals .
K·Rifk Steine r. Tiffi n

..

RON JAMES PERFORMANCE Comm.' tr -:••d.Jemea

Also Monday , Tues., Wed .,
and Fri~IY 10:00 a.m. IO
l :DD p.m. and Wed . evonl"'l
6:30 to 9:00.

393-77 1

Pickens Hardware
Co. Inc.

*AGAINST TAX INCREASES

Pd.

Now
open
Mond1y
evenings 6 tJO • 9 : DO p.m.

8. Ci nci nnati Countr-y Day 378·

Tool,._

RON JAMES IS ON RECORD

"PARTY PLANNED

THE TOWN KILN
CERAMIC SHOP

THEY BEAT AS THEY SWEEP ·
AS THEY CLEAN

Js:!:[;/

meeting and announced
World Community Day to be
held Nov. 5 at Grace
Episcopal Church. Forty·
eight sick calla were reported
by members during the past
month.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Eurana Thomas with
Mrs. Pat Thomas, a contributing hostess . Guests
were Mrs. Rope, Mrs. Eddie
Smith, Mrs. Opal Kloos, Mrs.
Carrie Grueser, Mrs. Jean
Nease, Mrs. Dorothy Karr
and Miss Cindy Thomas.

ANNOUNQNG
NEW HOURS

HOOVER SWEEPERS

;f

·

Mrs. Ann Rupe talked on
South Africa and the ex·
perienoes of the year the
Rope family.Spent there at a
recent meeting of the United
Methodist Women of the
Forest Run United Methodist
Church. '
,
Mrs. Rope told of native
life, the customs of the
people, the food and ac·
tlvities, and of the numerous
places they visited whUe
there, including the Victoria
falls and the Wildlife
Preserve. She displayed
handcrafted items for the
group to see.
The meeting opened with
"How Great Thou Art" and
the Lord's Prayer in unison.
Mrs. Mary K. Roush had
devotions using the topic, "Is
It By Your Wisdom, the
Hawk's Source", with
scripture from Psabn 104.
Mrs. Edith Sisson, vice
president; had charge of the

power over new nliclear plant
construction.
Adoption of Issue 6 will not
affect two nuclear facilities
oow under cmstructlon In
Ohio.
Next: laue 7

::oua

Dear Upsel :
.
If you don't Uke her hospitality, why do you accept tbe
invitaUon? You might let thiB woman off · the .hook by
suggesting after-dinner get-togethers instead. Perhaps she's
better at cards thari cooking. - H.

M YF enjoys festivity ·

H9-

EDmtR'S NOTE:. '1'1111 ta llflkle e:tplllu State Issue I,
~ f..nll Jll 1 leriet of 11 deallq with eoulnlethia ud
dilplteloeo b7 UPI illte~oue aper1dell of
powtl' ,
nporten Lee LeMan! ... J. plull, u pilced on tile ballot
L J:tm..lw • tile~~~- ud by Obloua for Ulillty Reform
_ . . . 1! Illite Ia &lt;*lo'a u.r.qb laltlaUve petlllon.
eleet111 Nov. l. 'l'odly'a

•~ /'friendship night'

Divorcee's Life Not Fun and Gamea
Dear Helen :
·
I'm a graduate of !be School of Hard Knocks and I got my
decree sii years ago. I'm raising two teens In a quiet sulmb ;
some of the women around here give me a royal pain. M.ost
have their own cars, whatever they want, and men who tl'eat
them very weD. Yet All they do is complain Jlboul their. hJJSband!j - pet!Y
things like, "He won't go out." Then'!bey look at me enviOUSly,:
the attractive dlvQI'cee who has lots of dates, a good job, and no
dull man holding her back.
My life n\ay look glamorous, but it's filled with ~dgery,
aggravation and lonellness. I can feel the weight of
respmslblllty so heavy DIY body wants to collapse, but there's
no shoulder I can lean IJI.
·
·
I llved through a bad marriage (though for a while the
"living" bit was a toss-up). If I ever get a chance to marry
someone as nice as most of the husbands in my neighborhood ,
believe me I won't complain!
Why don't women appreciate what they've got? - NOT SO
HAPPY DIVORCEE
Dear NSHP ; :
... Possibly because they take it for granted that they'll
always have "hbn." And for some, the prospects ll(en't aU that
enticl1!g.
Isn't it sad the other person's life Is what many people
want until they get it ~ and reallze what t~tey had wasn't so.
bed after all. - H.
·
·

s~rved .

Sorority
gathers

Issue .6 would control. how fast atomic power is developed

a

:Mo.:
...:.:.:.x.:·:. . .:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:-~·:.:. ·,;·;·;·:·.··········..·••·•...•.:-:-:-')"-:.-.:~·-A~'.!N·*"*
,
.. .-.-. . . . , • .-.-. • • • . . . .......,. &lt;.• • • • ' •' · ' •' •'•' •'•''•._ o, o ;'0 oiV.J'i'o'\"~WNU n~~t• • • ••.•. ~

The Meigs FFA are now
taking orders for fresh fruit
until November 5th.

·'uice Oranges '6.75 1u11 ease
,

'"· Naval Oranges

$3.75 holf case

58,()() full case
$4.00 half case

Golden GrapefruR '6.75 fu II .c~s~·
$3,75 half ~ase
II case
Pink GrapefruR .f&amp;.15tu
$J.7,S.half case
Tangekl
'6.75•fu II ca;e

In highly desi rable. high quality
gilts. Thousands of brand name
gilts ... lhings that you want and
need . Things you can now get .
' free lot Top Value Stamps.·
·

Quality Guaranteed?

Books Fill Fast? ·

The very highesl qual ily ... backed
by Top Va lue 's famou s 2-Way
Golden Guaranlee: You can't gel ·
better g1lts lor lewer stamps any·
where. Ana you musl be 100%
sat isfied

You bet' II. lor exam ple, you spend
$50 a week al merchants th ai give
Top Value Stamps. you lil.l a book
w1lh Top Value Siam ps in 3 weeks
.. more )hac 17 hon ks · 1n just a
year .

$3.75

Orders can be taken by
contacting any FFA member or
by calling 992-2158 or 992-2159. ·

"2·1471
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"'•;.·.~~- ~,,w..._..._,, .WioiWCW~ WUI.IM:t'Qy, V., MUittlltY a_~':. IMt_u•'!

Astro-

P~.f.~~~f!~~:.,...

I ,

G~h

PubiiCitlon . •

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

.

Television log for easy viewi~g

Bernice Bede Oeol
Far T.-.J, Ocl. :It, 1171

~~·.r1 9,~,'' ;:~mo;d" 1:~ 1

AIII!B CMorch 21·Aprll 111
Frank discussiOn w4th associates ;
can work tnlngs out l or all par ties concerned today . Don't pull
anv punches.

Bashan

NOw

w fll notthtn
bt relpOnllble
tor
mort
one Incorrect
lnurtlon .

·s

For Wont Ad Sorvlco

or project requiring concen -

be attempted today. You're up to
the task .

· • GEMINI (M1y 21.Jun1 20) You
have an exceltent mental attitude .
lodav and can turn anv deali ngs
you have Into a fun affair for all.

CARD or: THANKS

6 OBITUARY

CANCEACJunt21-Julr221Your '

, U . OO ' lor

lQ

word

mlf'!d readily responds to Mw 1 "-mlnlm__vm ,
_
Ideas for your home . Oon 't
EaCn aetdTOOnal word 3
cent, ,
hesitate to make changes . Th e
ILIND ADS
!amity w ill be pleased .
A.ddltlonal 25c Charge

LEO (Julr 23-A•~. 22lll's beslto
••

' .
VI ROO (Aug. 23-8opt, 221 Shop- ,
'

Coll949-2510.

Found-1971 Cion ring, South
. Porhrsburg .· Plttase ldentlfy
to cla im , found ot Meigs High
School grounds. Phone 992·

1

NOTICES
ping Interests you today. Ever ll ..
ATTN .: !!
you can't gel out. you'll enjoy '
"LL HOUSEWIVES
browsing th rough the mall order
A I Yard Sales , Rummage ,
catalogues.
Porch and Ba ~ement Porcn
and easement Sa les , e tc .
UBRA (Stpl, 23-0ct. 231 An In- must be p.ald In adv11nce .
quiring mind, see~lng new InforGet yours in etH iy by
mation; Is yours today. Vou 'll b,
s.topplng by our otrlce at
The Dally Se ntinel, 111
able to put this knowledge lo
Court St . or wr l; .. .g Box
future use.
729 , Pomeroy, Ohio ..,.5769
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nav. 221 w ith your remittance .
Some sec ret info,matlon lrom. '--..-~-..------1
which you should be able lo
profit could come ·your way today. Be alert. Act upon It,
FROSTY 's CB RADIO Equipment ,
SAQITT ARIUS CNov. 23-Doc.
eve rything 1n two~oy rad io ,
21) Hobno bbing with new people
antenna!. and ol':cas Phone
today could Inspire you. Their
Portland, 843 -2855
acl1.1ice or mlluence could furthe r
Solar water heating units now
your mterests.
ovo1loble . A home impro11e·
CAPRICOf';N (Dec:. 22·Jen. 18)
ment tho! pay!. f or itself .
Bigger' and betler th ings will ocFederally opprovedoves lncupy you r mind today. You'll go
sured in Staller .. For informa after them ln a quiet, un ~
lion , co li Karl Cu lp. Phone
demonstrative way .
992 -7525 alter 5 p.m. on
weekends or write, Route 3,
AQUARIUS (Jen. 20·Ftb. 1i)
Pomeroy .
Toda y you 'll live up 10 your sun ·- sign by prefe rr ing to be with
PUBLIC NOTICE
many new people who can
T he annual election of the
sa llsly your curiosity . Av oid
Meigs County Agricultural
dullar,ds.
Socie!y D irec tors will'be held
.,., November 9, 1976 at
PISCES CFeb. 20·Moreh 201 You Tuesda
the office of the Me los County
coul d put another's lhoughls or commissioners in the court
actions to work today . For this , house at Pomeroy. Ohio from
5 to9p . m .
you'll be held In high esleem,
Qualifications for directors
ar e that they must 'be a
qualified vo t er of · Meig S
County and must have a
membership ticket in said
society of 1976.
Candidates petitions must
OcL 28, 1178
be filed wllh the Secretary no
than 5 p,m Tuesday,
Cooslderable thoughl and effort later
November 2, 11976 . Only
will be spent this year In im· persons holding membe rship
proVIng your material and f ln an- tic kets at the close of the 1976
cral base. A younger contact may ·Co unty Fair or a 1 least (IS)
calendar days before the date
get lnvot11ed .
ot elec tion ere qualified to

2779.

Someone needed Ia live in with
lnvolid woman . Please coli

992 ·2097.

SCO!PIQ VOIume ' ·I

SundaY school attendance
&lt;11 October 17 was 51, the

·
offering $23.85.
$5.00 was

voted for the

Christmas

Seal

campaign.
The UMW Tuesday Oct.

Manning D . Webste-r

C

Judge

ourl Ol Common Pleas ,
Probate Division

19

Tim2 I on

'

1975 MONTE CARLO , automatic:,
power steering , power brolces ,
air con ditioning, AM radio and
stereo. rally wheels , will sell
reasonAble . Phone 992 -7036.

---

.
1973 VW THING , 35 mpg. near
perhtct
condition .
Rick
Gilmore, Rt . I . Reedsville (Suc_ce~s~ od) or p~one 992-5~~ --

and in good condition . "Quick

sole". $395 or best offer , Phone ' 1976' Chevrolet 4 wheel drive

-- .. ---

for gymnasium PLEASURE HORSES and ponies .
blea c; hers In Sout hern Loc~ll
ol'o will buy hones and
H ig h Sc hool has been e)(
ponies . Phone (6i4) 698-3290
tended , from October 18, 1976
RUth Reeves .
.
to 12 : 00 o'clock noo n on
----~-~-November 4. 1976
Ak:C Rvgist•red Solnt Bernard
·
PuppieS , 2 male , 1 female. 3
Southern Loca l Board of
month s old. Strong and
Educalfofl
healthy . Phone (30oi) 773 •5405

1971 HONDA Cl-450, 12 ,000
mil es sfssy bar . crash bars.
pull bock handl e bors, new lire
and seals. Scrambler side
pipes. $650 Coli 949-21180.

1%8 13 ft . Stop-over· camping

troller . Furnace. Ice box , sleeps
4, $575, Phone9B5·3806. .

·· -----

.

j •

work pref•rred . On school
work program. Phone 99'2-

3940.

Anti-Freeze

Only

$375

~

ol !:• Moalllna.
Cl
t ~ ~ •Powers
ara "~- 1 d rectwed
fJ

'&lt;

~; . word

~

and ' ftOl;ert

fO

of

(

10 ) 25, lie

•-·~

thfi''"death of,.,her

brother J,ohn Barnett in
• · · Gary, Indiana, Some of the
~
•t younger relatives attended
'~ ' services there for him the
:: first of the 'past week ""'m

R"ns FOR SENIOR CitiZENS.

Convenient to ahopPTng on
Third ond Mill Strn!s In Mld·
dleporl . Brand new hilh quailt
oportmenh
Se• the

•

1.
I

y

manager at
992-7721 .

ter,11 , N

C

arpea
ru ewa
Mr and Mrs Earl Starkey

A •
pt.

28 ' or

ca

II

AVAILABLE at Riverside Apart -

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ments ,

•

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10 GALLON'

tonk .

wr ite

1974 Dodge 1/r ton pickup. win dow air conditioners. 2 C.B.
radio , Phone 992-7066.
\

EL~~~~~~~~t;~~!~~s~; 29~~~~~:
Hoover Sweeper&amp;,

fish

Hor~t~ey Leomond , P. 0 Box 63,
2-?cfne, Ohio:::·_ _ _ _ __

Smgen fn walnut consolelle ,
l
eoturing buttonholes , blind
htrn. Sews on knits. Co!oh or
-~er_msCalf992- 5146 .
_

Veterana Memorial Hoapltal,
a Week or 10 days IIJO. She is

FISHING TACKLE
CLEAR~NCE

trailer, $.450. Phone (614) 698 -

:.,ppl•s and cider, bring con ·tainers for apples. Brinker Hill General Electric clothes dryer ,
O&lt;ehords, phono 992-7600.
like new. White , CAll (61~) 367 -

· - - - - --'-- - - --

Goro~e

Eq~lp.ment ,

-

n66.0r 992-2495.
cheap ,
bus•nen burldm~ 50 X 60, ·~ - Pigs , 6 and 7 week!. old . Also ,
·, cell ent co!"dttlon . cement
boby beet. Coll949-211l.
drlve, Rut land Corp., pr ice
d d C II 742 · 2602
1 5 Small more pony free to good
rfl uce . a
. o ter
home . Male dolmotion. a lso
P·l!' · Reason for self 1ng . poor
need o babysitter 5 nights per
health.
week . CAl l 992 - 551~ after 5
__...._...._
-- :;;:;:-::_-_ ··- ....,

reported

'Carrie

--~~·-·-· ::.... ...:. '·, ~~ ~- - · •.Pomeroy

recovai.nl nicely. -Ill~·

8wtrtil

.
'+
of ~Ill · The ~ortbeaet Cbuter

The _._, lnd -~I
WillY
caa:u111orm on Friday eventitg wu

"'''

New ear corn for sole. Phon&amp;

7•2·2359.
New Ashley Woodburning Stove
deoler,hip offering savings of
up 10$50 on any Ashley cabinet
or tconomy model. Also,
Cameron Cool ' Circulator!.
Christine Giglio , . At . ~ .
Pomeroy , Ohio: Phone {614)

698.7191 .

2 Bad,om Mobile Homo outside, USEO FORESTRY EQUIPMENT.
Racine. phone 992-2659.
Timberjock 2300 Skidder· Case
· 2 bedroom

t~all
~ Phon~

992-

_:.:::.::.:;:.::::..:.:.:.:::.!.:_....:..j

PUtz-2174

2.

Pass

4•

Auctioneer, (wm plete Service . Pho ne 949·2487
or 9~9 -2000. Rac ine, Ohio, Crill

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

HOMESITES ,lor sale, I acre and
_3825.
bedroom home . living room ,
up. Middleport, near Rutland.
dini ng ·room , fireplace , full
REMODELING , Plumbing, heating '
Call992·7&lt;81.
bo!oement, extra lot wtth douand all types of general repair.
ble cor . goroge , $23.000 f1rm . -NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths,
Work guoronteed 20 years eJC all elec., I cere . Middleport,
perience. Phone 992-2409.
_Pho~e (3041 743·~
63
~2~6:._
. __
close to Rutland . Phone 992 House, 5 rooms and both, I acre
7481 .
0&amp;0 TREE Tr imming , 20 years eJC of land, $11 .500. Phone 742perience . Insured freP
2769 .
estimates. Coil 992·2384 or
House t or sole, IVJ bedrms ., par-

ty , W. Vo . Phone (304} 772·

3102" (3041772·3227.

600 Skid-King Skidder; ln,terno·

ed woo&lt;;ts. wciler and good oc·
cess in Monroe County. W. Vo .
$1,000 down . coli (3041 772 -

3102 or 130&lt;1772·3227.
HOUSE for sole, 5 rooms . o~d

both: ' oil elect,ic , par tia lly
'"feted. patio. See Irene Cuntftf • Fout!h Street , Syrocu5e,
Ol•lu.

political
novel &amp;
film (3 wds.)
t Cut down
5 Fopplab
I Spanish
queen
7 Road to
political
victory

I
passed them on
wa4 over here!
ljOU sure~

(2

h

21

shop, 2 story frame,

15 Lampreys
18 Baby's
playthings
Sgts. and
cpls.
Zl Bull seaalon
Z3 Set In
moUon
U ForlreliB
~I

8 Manage
aaleiuard
• Emancipate
%8
Wares
11 German city

II "- Are
Such
Thlnp"
zt Birdie

minus one
30 VIrginia
and othen
15 Never, In
Munich
• Shlnlll

11 :DO-New&amp; 3,4,6,8,10,13,15.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15: Movie "Death Cruise"

6,13: Kolek 1: Mary Hortman 10; ABC News 33.
12 :oo-MO'IIt "This Property, 11 Condemned" 10
Janakl 33.
12:»-Movlt .. Cutter" 8.
I :OCl-Tomorrow 3,4: News 13.

temple

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned . Modern
Sanitation, 992-3954 or 992·

3

2428.

bedrooms, bath, utility R.,
lots or storage. panelln!i
and
other features .

NEW LISTING -S acres, 4
room house that needs
everything. Dug well,

WILL do roofi ng, construction,
plumbing and heating. No iob
too Iorge or. too smoll. PhDI'1&amp;

se,soo.oo.

. 742·2348 .

TUPPERS PLAINS Brand new. , 3 bedrooms,

a . lonesome

country rood. First $5.000.

CARPENTER,

flooring , ceiling,
paneling. Phone 992·2759.

~~~~~n1 ~1oo::~~'catl:::;~';~

NEW LIST lNG- 5 rooms,
2 bedrooms, nlce bath,
dining , nat. gas F.A.·

DOZER work end welding. Con·
toct James Parsons, Rt. 1,
Racine , on Carmel Rood .

utility R., tully carpeted,
large gar~. approx. 1
acre. $23,000.00.
POMEROY - Close ln. 5
bedrooms, 1'12 ·baths. full
basement, N.G. or coal
heat, nice kitchen. A REAL
BUY AT $7,Soo.OO.
LET US SELL YOUR
PROPERTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND '
BROKER
99l·22l9

furnace, basement with

washer-dryer. Equipped
kllchen. $12,900.
Like new 2V.
eat-in

kitchen,

utility room, ·
cer~mlc bath , nat. gas F.A.

furnace,

wds.)

Yetterday'a Almrer

SEPTIC Systemli in&amp;talled by
l1censed installer. Shepard
Conlroctors. Phone 742 · 2~09 .

level lot. Needs some paper
"" paint. S8,900.00.
POMEROY - Welk to

acres. $46,000.

nice

II. Y 10019)

Rutland, Ohio. Pho ne 742-2008.

furnace, bath, garage, nice

kitchen, famlly .room , sun

RT. 124 -

enclosed

room ,

porch, front porch, N.G.

a woman's

carport and 1/a

acre. $37,500.

EXCAVATING. BACKHOES ANO
DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL,
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED. tOW
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS . Bill
PULLINS. PHONE 992·2478 DAY
OR NIGHT. . •
.

.,

AND 'rnEI&lt;E: WERE
PRCNISION.5 IN
1HE: CUP30ARD I

MOBILE Home Repair, Efec.,
plumbing and healing. Phonq,

992·5858.

GAS and Oil H.atlng Soles and
Service, 2~ hours. Phone 8-432165 or 843-2341.

MAY13E 'THIS
PlACE IS USED
BY HUNTERS...
OR HIKERS .. ..

. RIVER LOT - 7lxl19 fo
the water. Eledrlc, water
and sewage. Only $3,000.
Real nice 3
bedroom spill level , 1'12
baths, equipped kit. with
·bar,
dlnln·g·
area,

t

11 ACRES -

Plains. $41,500.
SMALL fortn for sale , 10 '1. down ,
owner financed. M onroe Coun-

br;ck, 2 or 3 bedrooms,
dining

LARGE NEW - 9 room,

bedrooms ,

newspaper, P. 0 . Box 489,
Radio City Station, New York,

EXCAVATtNG , dozer . backhoe
ond ditcher . Charles R. Hatfield , Bo ck Hoe Service,

Ml'lDLEPORT -I'/, story

water, basement, 2 baths,
furnace &amp; garden . 512,000.

on

MODERN, send $1 to: "Win
at Brfdgo," clo this

5232.

DOUBLE - 2 live , ....m
apartments. Nat. gas, city

electric

A Kel}!.uoky reader wants to
know Ifcontract bridge is only
50 years old.
The answer is that it was invented by the late Harold S.
Vanderbilt In 1925, so it Is 51
years old right now.
(For a copy ol JACOBY

z cay

TEAFORD

deck, garage and over

~~~~

3 Well-known

------·-

baths,

Oswald: "At three notrump
South loses three hearts and a
spade and needs to locate the
queen of diamonds to score
nine tricks. "

DOWN

tially

Virgil B. Sr. , Realtor
110 Mechanic Pomoroy;o.

sa[e.1'

ll...,cts

(6141698·7257 Albony.
furnished . carpeted .
$7~ or see a t 10 lynn 51. , just SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·
off Vine St., Middleport.
vice, all makes, 992-2284 . The
992·3129, or 992·5•34.
Fabric Shop .' Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
56 acre form . 6 room Mouse and . - - - - - - - - - - .
Service. We sharpen Scissors. '
both, 2 outbuildings, all fenced
with mineral rights. Asking
EXCAVATING. dozer, loader and
$25,000 Phone 742-2766.
backhoe work ; dump trucks
and lo-boys for h•rei will haul
till dirt, to soil. limestone and
gravel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef·
fers , day phone 992·7089,
night phone 992-3525 or 992·

21t2

Pass

Pass
OP"nlng lead - Q \f

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS , 38 Sam or Fanny
I "Abide39 Laughing
me''
sound
tO Pub sign

Bradford.
• Sweepers, toasters , frons, all
small appliances . lawn mower,
ne~ l to Sidle Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (6111) 985·

3 bedrooms, 1% baths , Iorge liv·
ing roo m. dini ng room and kit ·
chen , lulfy corpe led. Phone

Pass
Pass

Jim: " North has nine hlsh·
card points and could well
raise his portlier directly w
three notrump .- The Stayman ,
conventlo.n allows him Ill respond two clubs. This Ia an artificial, forcing· bid and asks
the opener to bid two of a major suit if he has four cards
there or to bid two diamonds
if he does not ·have one. 'j'his
time South rebids two spades
and North bids the spade
game. West opens the queen'
of hearts. South · loses one
heart and the ace of spades
and 111ay or may not lose a dlamqnd depending on ·which way
he finesses ' for the queen. In
any event , four spades is

~M'(}td

BRADFORD,

Roof Repair , Pointing, and Pol ·
~~in g . Inquire at_J92-5416.

Syracuse, going from Pomeroy .
1/ ba ths , air conditioned . F.A .
gas furnace , ful l basement and
garage , possession immediately. Phone 992-2266 evenings

24

Oswald : "The standard
netrump shows a hand with 16
Ill 18 high-card,pojnts and a 4J..J-3; 4+3-2 or l).J..J..2 distribu·
tion. The doubletOn, if there is
one is supposed to include the
jack or a higher honor, but
everyone has been known to
vioiafe this rule and occasionally open one notrump

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Estep Welding and Fabrkotton.
Portab le welding rigg , welding
on oil types , specializing in
aluminum truck bod ies. Day or
night . phone (614) 698-6160.

3 bedroom house on the r1ght in

Pass

Jim: "Since the opening
notrump is a picture bid , It is
easy for partner Ill know if
there is no game, . B possible
game, a sure game, a possible

FAB.RIC SALES.

Ph. 675-34"
Daily
T.9:30-l:OO
iiii:OOO Fridays

L__

(614 ) 667-6304 .

basement, . family room
and garage near Tuppers

Trailer. odvlra only . Call992 -7639 6 end 7 week old pig 5 and~ babY
or 992-3181'
·
beet . Phorle 94~- 2115 .
COUNTRY forrn lond with sed ....J
·

, , .
tlonol . S78 Hough Skiddor:
0129 or992·
),,
• ·~
• ~ · ·•• JohnO&amp;oro2010Whoo1Loador .
Ono. 1,1) Trollo!
I .. tiel at ,,... Con&lt;o&lt;t 0'" G&lt;o, .., or Lyons
__ ,ft.,, "-, .., •II ,... .
247 .IMulborry.· &gt;t.• ~omlttoy .· Equ•pmenl Co .. Inc. c;,cl.,ille,
7
~R~-•
tN
.iN
Ohio, Phone fl12 -3044 or- '/97Oh 113113 Pl1011e (614) .474 -6028 or
Everyone welcome. ·
3736.
. 5% •1o•

llllllflllll&amp;lriltaanlnl'lctllll - ~-wWbl~beNallbe
Ill tbe bfc IIJt.
'
l!lulrrb.""here,• Saturday·

p m. or s~s Woodyard .

Landmiii

6 room hovsw and ·, llalh ., - J t t k W. Carsey, Mgr.
Kingsbury Reali.' Honi1on,;Uo .
Pllont ttl-2111
. Phono,742·2577 .
·
-

quite deslnictlve In this area
10 ooli.olft•• and electrical
....... ,..

goroge, 1orge 1ot . Phone (t&gt; 141

Soulb

slam or a sure slam."

pt, Pleasant

667-6304 .

Nonh Ea11

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

281M in Street ·

Phone 992-337.! .

tanks or

..-..11

· ,.

LI'I''I'.L£ ORPHAN . ANIIIIE-HE'I DONE IT AGAIN

EXPERIENCEL

_for~ a_PP:'~·--~-

i8alft. ·

that 111111 0'8rtea 1a 1111n a
plllitnl In Holler
HoopltaL
'
Mrs. E mma Flnc h un·
derwent major surgery in

DIR~

New three bedroom house
cor pet , large ~lichen: attached

~hone

J,iTTLII: ORPHAN ANNlli

SiltS.
,
Velvets, ny Ion prints,
herculons. vinyl solids, and '
fancy prints, accessories.

341
Rutland
St , Middlep"'·
A
good
inve;stment
' at only
SIO,OOO. Phone 992·3843::,._ _

.J109

Wesl

Fuel oil tonk cop·, 275 gallon s, like ' 3
new . SAO. Pl-Io~ (614) 667 -3303,
Lyons , Linzy. Tuppers Plam s.
;
Oh!O .
.
...

.'

IW11cal

Wall to wall
carpe t, range , refrigerator and
garbage disposal Lo rge brick 2
cor gorog9 and workshop .
Steel utility building. Located

\fKIU
IQ75

I N.T.

mattresses. paddln~ . Ideal
for campers. Vartety of

permanently .

\fQ.JI06
1832
•QHI
\fA 9
1 KeG
.AK62

(6141985 .. 155
Chesler, Ohio
· 10-17·1mo1Pdl

FAB,dC.
sofa, Cftltr c:ushions,

For

EAST
6972

Both vulnerable

PHOTOGRAPHY

POI.J~FOAM
UP~TERY
3 bedroom immobile home with
2.4 acre lo t Twa rooms built -on

WEST
.AI

SOUTH IDI
• Q 10 8 5

KEN GROVER

Box 2a-A
Rutland, Ohio 45775
Ph. 1614) 742·2409
We Deliver
7.2a.4 rnos.

9-30-1 mo.

Pllontttl-2181

3837.

ments . I bedroom oparl·
$100 per month ; 2 t
L
here, and the . Clarence were at Unlverslt)' Hcm!!tal, . ' bodroom oparlmenl$, $133 per
SALE
;: . ' Barnett lamily from Tuppers Columbus, one day w.-~
on!'~-~~~273.~ Ntw wOOd-burning stove.
~ '1 Plains.
,
, , ~- week to see their da~, 1 3 Bedroom mobil~ hoi"•· lumi•h- Reg. S288.!5
}
Mr. and Mrs. E111e~r Wlnda Jones, who la
od ond unlurnldl~ , odojlt, on·
Now S238.95
'•;• VinByardandaol~ Confined to the holpital ' lor
ly.- ,Wotor 'atlll ,' hool ,paid . Ntw luol oil stove. Reg.
"' vlllled her Jlll'tllta. Mr. illd .· trea~
.·, ,,. -~7•2·2~' ',- ,.,., . 5372.37 .
llaw•m 31
,1 ' Mn. Artbur Allll!ra dul
Mra. Wlller Jordan ••liedI" Very nicol2 • 65 hOu.o lrOMor fbr .Ntw EcHo, wator ·1011..;11
•• , eel!
'
her ~A
rlflt In Mbson, W.Va.·Adults Reg. $349.95 Nows 219 . 9~
.J~l w .
.
on
I va
or:tly . no pets . Contact Sondrd ,
1 used Homtlite cho.ln sow'
, BW A-. bu been vlllliniJ Gilkey, wbo la confined to
m -5693. ' Monday through
1
;~ hla
Mr. and ~- Veteran's Memo~l al _F.ri~~, 9!'_1'2: _ -.--~ ·-s200
1 'Leonard Amoe, and . Kenny. Holpttal; Pomeroy. ,· ,
·Of"E and 2 bedroom lutnlshed 1 u•od MtCullough choln
'"''· Word bu been received
apartments . Coli 992·3129 or liW
m:
,

· Truss Rafter Co.

At f41-2801
·
Or
949-2860
PLEASE
NO SUNDAY CALLS
1

JacM W. C.ney, Mgr.

-

,

t

it..

GLEN R. BISSELL

2

Pomeror Landmark

10 )( 5() 1966 Liberty priced ta r
quick so le. Located on Olive
Twp Road 261 , long Sottom,
Good condition. Phone 985·

'

for SHW mohthl)' ' plua,.WC:. or
SilO including elt&lt;trfC( LOWER

Southeastern Ohio

Commercial property approx. 17
acres , level land, located ot
Tuppe:r1 Plains on Oh io, Route

CQ.OP BRAND

MOBILE home lor ~ole or rent , 3
b@droonu, ol utilities paid.
Phone 992-nSl .

NORTH

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Welldings

CONTACT

Gal.

~1\K.~ ~ JW ~Safi,

,r

·c";:.J. Washington.

. FREE ESTIMATES!

.with a worthlesS doubleton."

• K J63
\f 7 s 2
I AJ 101
.B 3

PHOTOGRAPHY

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

TUESDAY,OCTOI.~R 26,1976
o:IIO-SunriM Semester 10.
.6:15-'Farm R-t 13,
6:2G-Not For Womon Only 13.
6:»-TN&lt;her'a Classroom . , Ntws 6; Sunr ise
Semnter 8; Concerns &amp; Commonts 10.
6:45--Mornlng R~ 3.
6:$GeGood Morning, Weal VIrginia 13.
6:55-Good Morning, Trl Slate 13.
l : ~ Today 3,A,I5 ; Good Morning, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Chuck White R-ts 10.
7:0$-Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7: 31)-SchOOIIH I 0.
.
8:011-Lallle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sua me St. ;13:
a:30-Big Valley 6.
9:00-A.M. 3; Phil Donohue •• 13, 15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10.
,
9:»-Croos.Wits3; Ont Llht lo Ll.,.6; Good Day a.
IO:OD-Sanf9'd &amp; Son 3,4,15: Pr!ce It Right 8,10; Mlko
DouglaS 13.
.
10:15-Gentrol H~~~pltal 6, •
10:»-Hollywood Squaros 3.~.15.
II :OCl-Whetl ot Fortune 3, 15; Wtekday •: Edge of
Night 6; GambiU, 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
11 :»-Sumpers3;4, 15; Happy Deya 6.13; Love ot Lifo
a,10: Sesame St. 20.
11 :55-Take Kerr 8; Ms. Flxlt 10.
12 :DO-News 3,6,8,10; Don Ho 13; Bob Braun ~ ~ ~
Grand Slam 15.
12:30-Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13 ; Storch
lor Tomorrow 8,10.
T2 :55-NBC News 3,15.
T:OCl-SomerMf 3; Ryen 's Hope 6,131 Conctnlrotlon a;
Young &amp; tho Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:25-Pollttcal Program 6, 13.
'
I :311-Days ot Our Lt.., 3,4,15: Family Feud 6, 13; As
The World Turns 1, 10.
.
·
2:00-'.$20,000 Pyramid 13; Dinah 6.
2:30-Doctors 3,.,15; One Life to Llvo 13; Guiding
Llghl8,10. .
3:1»--·Another World 3,A, 15: All In The Fomlly 8, 10,
Consumer Survival Kit 20. ...~ :'
3: 15-General Hospital 13.
3:»-Be.wllthed 6: Match Game 8, 10; Llllaa Yogo &amp;
You 20.
A:oo-Misler Cartoon 3; Marcus Welby, M.D. ~ ~
Somerset 151 Howdy Doody 6; Mickey Moose Club
8; Se•,m• St. 20,33; Movie "Tho Feminist 8, the 6
Fun" 10: Dinah 13.
A:30-My Thr~ Sons 3; Emergency Ont 6; Pnrtrldgo
Family 8; Fllnlltonet 15.
5:DO-Big Valley 3; Merv, Griffin 4: Brady Bunch 8;
Mloter Rogers 20,33: Star Trek 15:
5:»-News 6; Femlly Affair 8: Elec. Co. 20,33; Adum12 13.
•
.
6:0Cl-News 3,A,8,10,13,15; ABC News 61 Zoom 20;
Consumer Experience 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,A,I5; ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20: lTV
Utlllzollon 33.
7:06-Truth or Cons. 3; Probe A; Bowling tor Dollars 6;
L.el's Go To The Racn 8; Newt 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; Family Affair 15: Cooking wllh a Continental Flavor 20; American lnun Forum 33.
7:30--Hollywood Squares 3;tA; Lel'l Deal with It 6:
Match' Game PM 11 MlocNoii-Lohrtr Roporj 20,33;
tn The Know 10; Wild Kingdom 13; Nuhvllle on tho
. Road 15.
a:oo-Baa Baa Black ShMp 3,A,15; Happy Days 6,13;
Peggy Fleming 1,10; May the Bnl Person Win : 33:
Eames Celtbroflon 20.
1:»-Loverne &amp; Shirley 6. 13.
9:0Cl-Polltt Woman J.A,I5; Rlth Man, Poor Man 6,131
MASH e,10: Tht Maze: Story of William Kurotek 33.
9:30-0nt Day et A Time I,10; s - t OhiO 20; My
Father Calls 1M Son 33.
10:!10-Pollce Story 3,4; Family 6; Julio &amp; Dick In
Covent Gardin 15; Switch e,10; Political Spirit of
'76 13; News 20; Klllora 3.1.
'0130-Biatk Peri!)ICIIvo on tho News~.
:55-Political Program 8, lo.

·Major suit tailor-made

PROFESSIONAL

3891.

Alfred's revival haa been 1101 25, ltc
_::1~
290
~._ _._ _:__ _ __
All Rods, Reels &amp;
set for Nov. 7-14 with a dif.
Stove. $200. Relrifrotor , $100, Line One· Third Off
ferent speaker each evening.
PUBLIC NOTICE
both I yoot ol . Phone 949·
All Lures
A scbedule will be published
The date- to'r receiVing J AND • RM . lurr'lofshtd ,ond un· · ...::m
:.:..;:4.:.·- - -- - - - '12 Price
.
lime
approa·~es.
proposals
for
&amp;dd
lllon5
to
furnished
opts,
Pho,
n
e
ot.
9'92·
Sweet
potatqn
$
OO
SS
OO
and
4
as the
1' .
..a;•
Southern Loc&lt;'ll High SChool
5434 .
·•
b ' 1' · ' · '
There will be
1 1 ust has been extende-d
'
S6 00 usne. RW. Lewis , Rt .
0
GRAV~l£WACTDR
spec a m C Iober 28 , 1976 to 12 · 00 °0~locck
• COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork. Rt . . 124 : Racine , Ohio. Phone 843- .
and group singlng.
noon on No vember · 4• 197j.
JJ, ten miles north of Pomeroy . • 24.~3:::
2·'----------Pomeroy, Ohio
"t~
Mr-. and Mrs. Wilber
· ,
Lorge lots with concrete patios. Firewood. Call 949 . 2630 or 992 _
Winter Hours:
...;.. , Parker hosted 8 Jamily eJ~~J~IS:nn Local Board of
sidewalks. runners and oH
nal
Mon ., Tues., Wtd. &amp; Fri. 9, dinner SWJday in honor of
Jane Weg ner ,- Cierk
strMtporking. Phont992·7•'19 . __ -..:,. ...--.,---.---. _ _ _ __
1
-''.. Mrs Parker's .,_,.,1..-.; , Mr . QO:M. F6
ONE bedroo"' aportm•ntt~ ot UNFINISHED G.~.O. stock cor and 5
Thur. &amp; 5at. 9-Noon
:_•,'1 aiXI
o - Ave,~ry,.,.'"'.,..le,' ~ •. . Racine, Oh lo 45771
f ' VILLI\G£ MANoR In Mlild~rt .. port•. Phooo 992·2659.

Mrs. ucu

...

.

Pomeroy , Ohio or' phone 992 -

" 13041675.2310 , Pt. Ploaltilnl. .__uprlg~ts. $18. CoU 992·5~ W. Va.
, •·
CAMPER. $600. "lso, ho&lt;So

28.

~I

You can uve hundreds
even tlltuoands or dollors
with aluminum 0.. Yinyl
siding.
·

-

scHool: · SEWING MACHINES .

mater'lal

contact

.9:30-AII's Fair i,1o.
10:0D-E..cutlve Sulle 8,10; N.ws 20; Soundstage J3.
10:30-Ftrm DlgKI 20.
IO:_.,olttleel Program I, 10.
11 :00--Ntwl 3,~1,10,15; Mac:Nelt-Loh,.... R~ 33.
11 :»-Jollnl!y c......., 3.~ 15: Movie "Tht Morning
Afttw" I; Ml!.ry Harfman 10: BlkH Blktt. Bikes 33.
12:00--Newa 6,13; Movie " The Swlmmtr" 10; Janekl
33. .
12:»-Coolege .Footboll '76 6: Jronatdt 13.
I :DO-'-Tomorrow 3,4, •
1:Jib-NtWII3 . /

·WIN AT BRICGE.

We repair the old and build
the new . Papering. paintIng, pa~ell""' ·. wl_n~ow
replacements,
glass,
roofing, hot mix. si ding,
storm windows, doors,
remodel
kitchens and
baths, elc. Phone 949·2023.
No sunday Calls Pleue.
10 -14 -1 mo . pd.

( 10 -11 -lmo. pd . )

F~~~~~~;~i?~~~~

STRANDED
WITH MEl&gt;.
TWISTED
ANI&lt;LE

D&amp;D
. .
Construction

supplies . Travel

appointment ,
Robert Cod ner .

----·-

COAL for sole, Open 6 days ~r
week and even ings. for further 1974 .o(Q h . DORSEY TRAILER w ith
IF YOU have a ••rvk• to offer,
sl1ding tandem Coli 992-7657
information call (61.4) 367-7338,
want to buy or ult someth ing.
·-oftvr5p.m .
oe ldoking for work . . . or APPLES. FITZPATRICK ORCHARO .
-----whotev•r .. . you'll Qtl resu lts
STATE WUTE 689. PHONE FORO ET aluminum slot mag
foster with o SentinefWant Ad .
wheel!. . $30 . White ScandinaWILKE5VILLE .I6141669·37B5.
. Coil 992· .21~56
::c._·- -- vian style open fireplace with
~ · ~fULLER Brush Product!. for sole .
ch imney kit. $150. New 6 It, x 6
Phone 992-3.410.
It, building, wood with metal
- -siding. insulated , sao . .. h.p .
MODERN slereo . AM ·FM radio. a
roto tiller , I yeor old, $150.
track
tope
combination .
Phone '9'92-2820 from 9 ti ll4 ond
Bolonce $97.4() or term1 : Coli
osk for Tina .
~
m-3%5. -

.

BLONDE

trailer s, truck campers,
ca mp l n.g trailers , truck
caps . Special Saturday
night s. Open evenings or by

POTATOES and pumpkins . C. W.
COINS , 1929 and older currency .
Proflill . Portla nd , Ohio. Phone
gold and !ilver, mop. Will buy , &amp;r&gt;im~
843·2254 .
sell, or trade , for a good selec ·
lion of coins . Hc:ive supplles for Will do odd jObs , rOof1ng . pai nling , gutter work . Phone 992metal
deteclors . Roger
7409.
Wamsler, , on Leoding Creekand Rut and Rood . Phone 7~2 - H1gh schoo l girl-senior ovoilobl'i!
2331 for on off•r.
for port -time :...ark , secretOry

·

HIOUOH TO
LE'AVE TH!l

Show ing:
Swiss Colony ;
Maple Leaf ; Playmor;
Cricke t. Sa les, rerltel,

tru ck. Phone 949-2132

-

.
-~-- - 1973 Vega 'G.T. Station Wagon
$1200. Coll742·2818 or co ntact
__ R_i~_?!~~-!t~y . Rut l. on_~ ._ohlo . _

HARP· HEARTED

Rlinbow Rld_ge
Bnhan Area
Longaottam, Ohio ·

servic e,

11 IU~III~D
OUT EASY
JU~T WA;.N' T

Abbott ..

Gum:R SERVI

~

992·5524.

Auto Ports, Rutlond,

·

4-10·1

MONDAY, OCl:O.to;R n . ""
5:0Cl-B1g Valley 3; Merv urlltln 4: Brody Bunch 8:
Mister Rogtrs 20,33; Star rek 15.
5:»-News 6: Family Altair 8; Eloc . Co. 20.33; Adam12 13.
6 : ~News 3,A,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 6; loom 20;
Education In Transl!lon 33.
6:»-NBC Newo3,A,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS ~ews 8,10: Hodgopodge lodge 20.
7:0Cl-Town Hall : Decision '76 3; To Tell th~t Truth 4
Bowling tor Dolton 6; Buck OWens 8; tAws 10; T1
Tell the Truth 13; Family Affolr 15; Oil-From God's
Bedroom 201.Know Yoor Stf.ools 33.
.
7:30-Bobby VInton 4: Muppet Show 6; Gong Show I ;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33: Price Is 'Right 10;
Candid Camera 13; Friends of Man 15.
I :DO-&lt;:apt. &amp; Tennille 6,13; Movie "Amelia EarhorY'
4, 15; Rhoda 8, tO; Adams Chf'onlclos 20,33.
l:;t0-$128,000 Question 8; Phyllis 10.
9:0Cl-NFL Footboll6, 13; Maude 8,10; In Performance
· at Wolf Troo 20J3.

•CAPI'AIN EASY .

1~1rwnt~.

FAIRMONT STEEL
PRODUCTS, INC .
F airmonl, Minn. 56031
I0-22·lmo. pd .

CODNER'S
CAMPERS

1969 Novo, e1dra sha rp , new
point bucket seoh , o ir shocks,
mags. Phone 9-19 -2480 ,

~ -- ---...... ....____~

we as Chriltians should read
andstu.lutheBibie" (regular
UJ'
and Organized and plan to put ' Jone Wagner. Clerk
it in practice.) Attendance
~~~~~~~Oh io 45771
was

7•2-2796.

-~

1969 Novo , 6 cv,linder , gooa con·

$$CASH$$ for iunked . autos .
Phone 742 -2081. Frye's Truck &amp;

The P.~:~~~c~~~T:~Zetv lng
proposa l• lor labor and .

the subject "How

~

TIMBER ,

condition . Will pay $10' each .
First floor onlv. Wrltt fiv ing
d1r ections to Wiit..n P1ono Co.,
80 )( 188, Sardhi , Ohio43946.

Phone 1'141 669-4N.S ,

evenings

Lirt'{lfioER m•

·

·----

from Oct. 18-24.
Worshlpservlceswereheld

10 :45, with the Rev .
Thomas using scripture
readings from Psabn 119 and

II.UMIIIUI

parts, or complee households . For· .sole by 'Owne r, 1969 4 door
LOCUST POSTS. round or sp lit .
Write M. 0 . Miller. Rt . -4 , · Cadillac Sedqn DeV ille, ful l
Pt"lone 949-2774.
Pomeroy, OhiO. Co11992-7760.
-·,.-- --·-·- power. excellent condition.
COAL, limestone , and calcium
Phone 992-2413.
CASH poid for oil moke• and
.ch lond e and calcium brine for
mode ls of mobile home s. 1967 Fiat , $400. Phone 992-5462.
dust control and special mixing
1
Phonf!' ore(J code 614-423-'1531 .
~olt for formers . Mom St reet ,
Pomeroy Forest Products . Top price for stand ing
sawtimber. Coli Kent Hanby ,
1·446-8570.

Montgomerv Trailer Sale•
At. l,lox 121
Langsville, OH 45741

IIINIIIJIIS

1970. Buick Riviera , good cond i·
lion, new tires , 5900. Phone

B...uick_........__w
2D. CAll (30&lt;1·882·2793.
___
•
-

1969 Dodge Coronet, runs good

OLD furniture , ice bDIC.Iii', , ·bra$S
beds, wall telephones ond

( 10) 18, 25 !lll I , Jtc

at

1973 Cadilloc Eldorado Conver toble, like new .; 1973 Toyota 2
0 , ewclillen t cond ltio,n: 1969

Waitress . opply In person. Craw's
St.ak House, Pomeroy.

~~~~~~§~~~

at Thelma Henderson's was
aMounced and the revival at
the Chester.N•••rene Church
.........

POMEROY, OHIO

1969 Dodge Coronet , runs good
end in good condition. "Quick
sole '' , $395 or best offer . Phone

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT fuel oil !.love. Phone 99'2-6010
Cue No. 11958
from 6 to 6.
Estate of. William F . Harri s, _:::::::~~-...,---~
Deceased .
Wonted old upright pianos in an-,

lO ber 1976.

mw'm

vinyl roof, ridlal

POM~~~!E~~!~~ CO. 'iii'·
\CI
'-----;.;..;;:

992·5524.

Phyll is E Harris, ot R. D . 1,
Racine , OhiO, haS been duly

Social Notes

gr~li

Pb. "2-lftl

Baby!oitter wonted .. 3 days per
w•ek , Must have own tronspor ·
lotron . 1638 lincoln Helght5 ,
Pomeroy.
·

WANTED . Chipwood. Poles max imum diameter, 10 Inches on
largest end . $8.00 per ton ,
~ote .
bundled slobs, $6.00 per ton .
The Me igs Agricultural
Deliver to Ohio Pollet Com·
society . By · Mrs . Wallace
pony , Rt . 2. Pomeroy, Oh io .
Bradford, secre tary .
Phon• 99'2-2689 .
( 101 11 , 18, 2S, 31c
fuel oil slav• . Phone 992-6010
-------~--­
from 6 to 6.

appo rnled· Admlnistratri)( of
lhe Estate of Willi.&amp;m F .
Harr is. deceased, 1ate ot R. o.
I , RliC 1ne , Meigs County, Ohio .
CredItors &amp;re reql!ired to
file their claims with safd
fiduciary wlfhln four months .
Dated th is 12th day of Oc -

WIIIOOIIS &amp; 00011

$3995

i
"

Revive the
of your rtlf!L
your own home
by Von Schrader
dry-foam method,
No muss. No fuss.
No oilor. Use the
same day.
AIIWCiflc

Avellable In many si zes,
flatbeds , gravity beds and
a variety of sp!cialty
bod in for fleet use.

SIDIK.solfiTT

dition . $800. Phone 992-7054.

2?~~- - - - - -

NOtice is hereby given r'hat

Alfred

locall owner car, gr~ finish,

1

Haul

Free
color brochure

lloon lnlo "*&amp;Attics

W·W tires. air cond. 1 V-8, with automatic, power
st@erlng and brake.s.

~

~Birthday

Red!

S11llll

1974 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO

.

r----------,

~--

IIISIIialion Stnitn
l1ooicioc lllilollo

finish, less than 9,000 miles, showroom clean .

.
.........
Babysitter wanted, 3 days per
1
w•ek , Must hove own tronapor- 1968 Cha .. rolet C-20, 1. ton
ptdwp truck. Good condition .
totion . 1638 lincoln Heights ,
Phone 992 -7727 . .-...::

,. ~Your

(Are ~ou a Scorpto? Bermce
Oso/ hes written a special AstraGraph Lerrer for you. For your
co py send 50 cents and a selfaddressed, stamped envelope to
Astra-Grap h, P.O. Box 489 .'
Radio City Station, Nt~w 'r'ork.
N 'r' 10019. Be sure to ask fo r

~

197~ DATSUN
52195
210 2 door. local car. 4 speed trans., 44,200 miles, good
tires, dark green finish. real economy.

Lost: lodi•• l.ather billfold in
front of Duttons in Middleport

plan
day run ni ng errands or
.... dropping In on friends . You 'll be,. oaily, a ; ~· a .m . :to Fi:~O
quite restless, so keep o~ ,the r Noon Saturday .
move.
·
Phont todey 992 -2l'S6.

·

,· -----~----'---------------~-----,._,

1976 AMC HORNET
Sll95
Sportabout, 6 cyl., automatic, power steering. deluxe
equipment, whitewall tires, luggage rick, dark green

985·9996 or 985·4141.,_ _ _

per Advorll•emont .
a 30OFFICE
a toHOURS
l oo

a

· ' ftiiiiiJY
~

.

_·_ _ _ _

Skote -A ·Woy announc•• but
ac l1•dul• :
Ra cine
ond
Min•rsv lt le,
Middleport ,
Pomeroy Saturday nights .
Open Weds .', Frfdoyond Sotur·
doy, •very 1:30 t6 10:00
AvQiloble for private partie,,
Mo nday , Tuadoy , ond
Thutsdoy evening, Saturday
and Sunday ofl•rnoons. Phpne
for
reurvotion$ , ~85 - 3929 ,

consecut iVe Insertions.
26 cents r,er ward Six
consecu1 1~ e nsvtlons.
2S Per Cent O!scount on
pa id ldl And ads paid
with in 10 dayt.

Pomeroy
·M otor Co.

SIGNS

OF

o7c:::.~g
pl;~~,:d.nts,
-,.

2'270.

cenlt per word one
l n~trtlon .
.
Minimum Charge SI.OO.
14 ctntl per word three

lratlon and brainpower should

(# , .

btg lnn•r•. lntttmtd iGfft , advoncitd stud•nts. Call
m.

RATES

TAURUS CAprll 20-Mor 201 Any
job

6:30p.m. al lh•l• building 1n · ...

iectlonel. The publ llhtr

NEW LISTING - 3 year
old

brkk

veneer,

3

bedrooms, 2 baths; nice
kitchen, large dining with
sliding glass doors. Nice
carpeting, 2 car garage arid
4 lots. On river front .
$37,500.
CONVERT
YOUR
PROPERTY INTO CASH.
INVEST AND LIVE ON
THE INTERES:r

~

·:• e•
•

•

••

I!

l •••.
·~
~

:

:
•

••••

•

Mon, Tues., Wed.

••

8:00ti15:00

LI;&gt;OO

•

. · f~,;~. i~ a }

.~············.

..
,.
Close Sat. At 5 p.m. , •

RUTLAND PURNrnJRI
742-2211

• •.
SYQLOWJMW
(AMwen.......-o•)

"

GR0 AE J
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: POsiTIVE~ MISTAKEN AT
TOP OF ONE'S VOICE. - · AMBROSE BIERCE

.

II...W..• QUliN lUll!.y UNPACK ' IIURMUR
THE ........,.. -" n.oo..c,.,...J...•a
..,...,.,.. IIIINfl....,

I WAS, ALL SET TO
POUND ~W. AND '(ET 'IW

I TLIOOO

CAME. TO M'&lt; RESCUE (l!&lt;ifN.
I lii\5 F16HTIN61l!AT ,CAT

,

111

~~·--------~

I DtDNI EI'EN KNOW IT WAS

A REAL CAT. I THOOGI1T
IT WAS YOU DRE55ED
IN A CAT SUIT!

I

......

~Nolo.oRAh:

•«~~~~~~~

IW'rt;A.H~

~~~

,,· :!-, l

'

I

�..

...

..

.
·'
' .
"'•;.·.~~- ~,,w..._..._,, .WioiWCW~ WUI.IM:t'Qy, V., MUittlltY a_~':. IMt_u•'!

Astro-

P~.f.~~~f!~~:.,...

I ,

G~h

PubiiCitlon . •

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

.

Television log for easy viewi~g

Bernice Bede Oeol
Far T.-.J, Ocl. :It, 1171

~~·.r1 9,~,'' ;:~mo;d" 1:~ 1

AIII!B CMorch 21·Aprll 111
Frank discussiOn w4th associates ;
can work tnlngs out l or all par ties concerned today . Don't pull
anv punches.

Bashan

NOw

w fll notthtn
bt relpOnllble
tor
mort
one Incorrect
lnurtlon .

·s

For Wont Ad Sorvlco

or project requiring concen -

be attempted today. You're up to
the task .

· • GEMINI (M1y 21.Jun1 20) You
have an exceltent mental attitude .
lodav and can turn anv deali ngs
you have Into a fun affair for all.

CARD or: THANKS

6 OBITUARY

CANCEACJunt21-Julr221Your '

, U . OO ' lor

lQ

word

mlf'!d readily responds to Mw 1 "-mlnlm__vm ,
_
Ideas for your home . Oon 't
EaCn aetdTOOnal word 3
cent, ,
hesitate to make changes . Th e
ILIND ADS
!amity w ill be pleased .
A.ddltlonal 25c Charge

LEO (Julr 23-A•~. 22lll's beslto
••

' .
VI ROO (Aug. 23-8opt, 221 Shop- ,
'

Coll949-2510.

Found-1971 Cion ring, South
. Porhrsburg .· Plttase ldentlfy
to cla im , found ot Meigs High
School grounds. Phone 992·

1

NOTICES
ping Interests you today. Ever ll ..
ATTN .: !!
you can't gel out. you'll enjoy '
"LL HOUSEWIVES
browsing th rough the mall order
A I Yard Sales , Rummage ,
catalogues.
Porch and Ba ~ement Porcn
and easement Sa les , e tc .
UBRA (Stpl, 23-0ct. 231 An In- must be p.ald In adv11nce .
quiring mind, see~lng new InforGet yours in etH iy by
mation; Is yours today. Vou 'll b,
s.topplng by our otrlce at
The Dally Se ntinel, 111
able to put this knowledge lo
Court St . or wr l; .. .g Box
future use.
729 , Pomeroy, Ohio ..,.5769
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nav. 221 w ith your remittance .
Some sec ret info,matlon lrom. '--..-~-..------1
which you should be able lo
profit could come ·your way today. Be alert. Act upon It,
FROSTY 's CB RADIO Equipment ,
SAQITT ARIUS CNov. 23-Doc.
eve rything 1n two~oy rad io ,
21) Hobno bbing with new people
antenna!. and ol':cas Phone
today could Inspire you. Their
Portland, 843 -2855
acl1.1ice or mlluence could furthe r
Solar water heating units now
your mterests.
ovo1loble . A home impro11e·
CAPRICOf';N (Dec:. 22·Jen. 18)
ment tho! pay!. f or itself .
Bigger' and betler th ings will ocFederally opprovedoves lncupy you r mind today. You'll go
sured in Staller .. For informa after them ln a quiet, un ~
lion , co li Karl Cu lp. Phone
demonstrative way .
992 -7525 alter 5 p.m. on
weekends or write, Route 3,
AQUARIUS (Jen. 20·Ftb. 1i)
Pomeroy .
Toda y you 'll live up 10 your sun ·- sign by prefe rr ing to be with
PUBLIC NOTICE
many new people who can
T he annual election of the
sa llsly your curiosity . Av oid
Meigs County Agricultural
dullar,ds.
Socie!y D irec tors will'be held
.,., November 9, 1976 at
PISCES CFeb. 20·Moreh 201 You Tuesda
the office of the Me los County
coul d put another's lhoughls or commissioners in the court
actions to work today . For this , house at Pomeroy. Ohio from
5 to9p . m .
you'll be held In high esleem,
Qualifications for directors
ar e that they must 'be a
qualified vo t er of · Meig S
County and must have a
membership ticket in said
society of 1976.
Candidates petitions must
OcL 28, 1178
be filed wllh the Secretary no
than 5 p,m Tuesday,
Cooslderable thoughl and effort later
November 2, 11976 . Only
will be spent this year In im· persons holding membe rship
proVIng your material and f ln an- tic kets at the close of the 1976
cral base. A younger contact may ·Co unty Fair or a 1 least (IS)
calendar days before the date
get lnvot11ed .
ot elec tion ere qualified to

2779.

Someone needed Ia live in with
lnvolid woman . Please coli

992 ·2097.

SCO!PIQ VOIume ' ·I

SundaY school attendance
&lt;11 October 17 was 51, the

·
offering $23.85.
$5.00 was

voted for the

Christmas

Seal

campaign.
The UMW Tuesday Oct.

Manning D . Webste-r

C

Judge

ourl Ol Common Pleas ,
Probate Division

19

Tim2 I on

'

1975 MONTE CARLO , automatic:,
power steering , power brolces ,
air con ditioning, AM radio and
stereo. rally wheels , will sell
reasonAble . Phone 992 -7036.

---

.
1973 VW THING , 35 mpg. near
perhtct
condition .
Rick
Gilmore, Rt . I . Reedsville (Suc_ce~s~ od) or p~one 992-5~~ --

and in good condition . "Quick

sole". $395 or best offer , Phone ' 1976' Chevrolet 4 wheel drive

-- .. ---

for gymnasium PLEASURE HORSES and ponies .
blea c; hers In Sout hern Loc~ll
ol'o will buy hones and
H ig h Sc hool has been e)(
ponies . Phone (6i4) 698-3290
tended , from October 18, 1976
RUth Reeves .
.
to 12 : 00 o'clock noo n on
----~-~-November 4. 1976
Ak:C Rvgist•red Solnt Bernard
·
PuppieS , 2 male , 1 female. 3
Southern Loca l Board of
month s old. Strong and
Educalfofl
healthy . Phone (30oi) 773 •5405

1971 HONDA Cl-450, 12 ,000
mil es sfssy bar . crash bars.
pull bock handl e bors, new lire
and seals. Scrambler side
pipes. $650 Coli 949-21180.

1%8 13 ft . Stop-over· camping

troller . Furnace. Ice box , sleeps
4, $575, Phone9B5·3806. .

·· -----

.

j •

work pref•rred . On school
work program. Phone 99'2-

3940.

Anti-Freeze

Only

$375

~

ol !:• Moalllna.
Cl
t ~ ~ •Powers
ara "~- 1 d rectwed
fJ

'&lt;

~; . word

~

and ' ftOl;ert

fO

of

(

10 ) 25, lie

•-·~

thfi''"death of,.,her

brother J,ohn Barnett in
• · · Gary, Indiana, Some of the
~
•t younger relatives attended
'~ ' services there for him the
:: first of the 'past week ""'m

R"ns FOR SENIOR CitiZENS.

Convenient to ahopPTng on
Third ond Mill Strn!s In Mld·
dleporl . Brand new hilh quailt
oportmenh
Se• the

•

1.
I

y

manager at
992-7721 .

ter,11 , N

C

arpea
ru ewa
Mr and Mrs Earl Starkey

A •
pt.

28 ' or

ca

II

AVAILABLE at Riverside Apart -

"

•

1 .,..,

'

·

•

ments ,

•

~-------

10 GALLON'

tonk .

wr ite

1974 Dodge 1/r ton pickup. win dow air conditioners. 2 C.B.
radio , Phone 992-7066.
\

EL~~~~~~~~t;~~!~~s~; 29~~~~~:
Hoover Sweeper&amp;,

fish

Hor~t~ey Leomond , P. 0 Box 63,
2-?cfne, Ohio:::·_ _ _ _ __

Smgen fn walnut consolelle ,
l
eoturing buttonholes , blind
htrn. Sews on knits. Co!oh or
-~er_msCalf992- 5146 .
_

Veterana Memorial Hoapltal,
a Week or 10 days IIJO. She is

FISHING TACKLE
CLEAR~NCE

trailer, $.450. Phone (614) 698 -

:.,ppl•s and cider, bring con ·tainers for apples. Brinker Hill General Electric clothes dryer ,
O&lt;ehords, phono 992-7600.
like new. White , CAll (61~) 367 -

· - - - - --'-- - - --

Goro~e

Eq~lp.ment ,

-

n66.0r 992-2495.
cheap ,
bus•nen burldm~ 50 X 60, ·~ - Pigs , 6 and 7 week!. old . Also ,
·, cell ent co!"dttlon . cement
boby beet. Coll949-211l.
drlve, Rut land Corp., pr ice
d d C II 742 · 2602
1 5 Small more pony free to good
rfl uce . a
. o ter
home . Male dolmotion. a lso
P·l!' · Reason for self 1ng . poor
need o babysitter 5 nights per
health.
week . CAl l 992 - 551~ after 5
__...._...._
-- :;;:;:-::_-_ ··- ....,

reported

'Carrie

--~~·-·-· ::.... ...:. '·, ~~ ~- - · •.Pomeroy

recovai.nl nicely. -Ill~·

8wtrtil

.
'+
of ~Ill · The ~ortbeaet Cbuter

The _._, lnd -~I
WillY
caa:u111orm on Friday eventitg wu

"'''

New ear corn for sole. Phon&amp;

7•2·2359.
New Ashley Woodburning Stove
deoler,hip offering savings of
up 10$50 on any Ashley cabinet
or tconomy model. Also,
Cameron Cool ' Circulator!.
Christine Giglio , . At . ~ .
Pomeroy , Ohio: Phone {614)

698.7191 .

2 Bad,om Mobile Homo outside, USEO FORESTRY EQUIPMENT.
Racine. phone 992-2659.
Timberjock 2300 Skidder· Case
· 2 bedroom

t~all
~ Phon~

992-

_:.:::.::.:;:.::::..:.:.:.:::.!.:_....:..j

PUtz-2174

2.

Pass

4•

Auctioneer, (wm plete Service . Pho ne 949·2487
or 9~9 -2000. Rac ine, Ohio, Crill

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

HOMESITES ,lor sale, I acre and
_3825.
bedroom home . living room ,
up. Middleport, near Rutland.
dini ng ·room , fireplace , full
REMODELING , Plumbing, heating '
Call992·7&lt;81.
bo!oement, extra lot wtth douand all types of general repair.
ble cor . goroge , $23.000 f1rm . -NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths,
Work guoronteed 20 years eJC all elec., I cere . Middleport,
perience. Phone 992-2409.
_Pho~e (3041 743·~
63
~2~6:._
. __
close to Rutland . Phone 992 House, 5 rooms and both, I acre
7481 .
0&amp;0 TREE Tr imming , 20 years eJC of land, $11 .500. Phone 742perience . Insured freP
2769 .
estimates. Coil 992·2384 or
House t or sole, IVJ bedrms ., par-

ty , W. Vo . Phone (304} 772·

3102" (3041772·3227.

600 Skid-King Skidder; ln,terno·

ed woo&lt;;ts. wciler and good oc·
cess in Monroe County. W. Vo .
$1,000 down . coli (3041 772 -

3102 or 130&lt;1772·3227.
HOUSE for sole, 5 rooms . o~d

both: ' oil elect,ic , par tia lly
'"feted. patio. See Irene Cuntftf • Fout!h Street , Syrocu5e,
Ol•lu.

political
novel &amp;
film (3 wds.)
t Cut down
5 Fopplab
I Spanish
queen
7 Road to
political
victory

I
passed them on
wa4 over here!
ljOU sure~

(2

h

21

shop, 2 story frame,

15 Lampreys
18 Baby's
playthings
Sgts. and
cpls.
Zl Bull seaalon
Z3 Set In
moUon
U ForlreliB
~I

8 Manage
aaleiuard
• Emancipate
%8
Wares
11 German city

II "- Are
Such
Thlnp"
zt Birdie

minus one
30 VIrginia
and othen
15 Never, In
Munich
• Shlnlll

11 :DO-New&amp; 3,4,6,8,10,13,15.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15: Movie "Death Cruise"

6,13: Kolek 1: Mary Hortman 10; ABC News 33.
12 :oo-MO'IIt "This Property, 11 Condemned" 10
Janakl 33.
12:»-Movlt .. Cutter" 8.
I :OCl-Tomorrow 3,4: News 13.

temple

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned . Modern
Sanitation, 992-3954 or 992·

3

2428.

bedrooms, bath, utility R.,
lots or storage. panelln!i
and
other features .

NEW LISTING -S acres, 4
room house that needs
everything. Dug well,

WILL do roofi ng, construction,
plumbing and heating. No iob
too Iorge or. too smoll. PhDI'1&amp;

se,soo.oo.

. 742·2348 .

TUPPERS PLAINS Brand new. , 3 bedrooms,

a . lonesome

country rood. First $5.000.

CARPENTER,

flooring , ceiling,
paneling. Phone 992·2759.

~~~~~n1 ~1oo::~~'catl:::;~';~

NEW LIST lNG- 5 rooms,
2 bedrooms, nlce bath,
dining , nat. gas F.A.·

DOZER work end welding. Con·
toct James Parsons, Rt. 1,
Racine , on Carmel Rood .

utility R., tully carpeted,
large gar~. approx. 1
acre. $23,000.00.
POMEROY - Close ln. 5
bedrooms, 1'12 ·baths. full
basement, N.G. or coal
heat, nice kitchen. A REAL
BUY AT $7,Soo.OO.
LET US SELL YOUR
PROPERTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND '
BROKER
99l·22l9

furnace, basement with

washer-dryer. Equipped
kllchen. $12,900.
Like new 2V.
eat-in

kitchen,

utility room, ·
cer~mlc bath , nat. gas F.A.

furnace,

wds.)

Yetterday'a Almrer

SEPTIC Systemli in&amp;talled by
l1censed installer. Shepard
Conlroctors. Phone 742 · 2~09 .

level lot. Needs some paper
"" paint. S8,900.00.
POMEROY - Welk to

acres. $46,000.

nice

II. Y 10019)

Rutland, Ohio. Pho ne 742-2008.

furnace, bath, garage, nice

kitchen, famlly .room , sun

RT. 124 -

enclosed

room ,

porch, front porch, N.G.

a woman's

carport and 1/a

acre. $37,500.

EXCAVATING. BACKHOES ANO
DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL,
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED. tOW
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS . Bill
PULLINS. PHONE 992·2478 DAY
OR NIGHT. . •
.

.,

AND 'rnEI&lt;E: WERE
PRCNISION.5 IN
1HE: CUP30ARD I

MOBILE Home Repair, Efec.,
plumbing and healing. Phonq,

992·5858.

GAS and Oil H.atlng Soles and
Service, 2~ hours. Phone 8-432165 or 843-2341.

MAY13E 'THIS
PlACE IS USED
BY HUNTERS...
OR HIKERS .. ..

. RIVER LOT - 7lxl19 fo
the water. Eledrlc, water
and sewage. Only $3,000.
Real nice 3
bedroom spill level , 1'12
baths, equipped kit. with
·bar,
dlnln·g·
area,

t

11 ACRES -

Plains. $41,500.
SMALL fortn for sale , 10 '1. down ,
owner financed. M onroe Coun-

br;ck, 2 or 3 bedrooms,
dining

LARGE NEW - 9 room,

bedrooms ,

newspaper, P. 0 . Box 489,
Radio City Station, New York,

EXCAVATtNG , dozer . backhoe
ond ditcher . Charles R. Hatfield , Bo ck Hoe Service,

Ml'lDLEPORT -I'/, story

water, basement, 2 baths,
furnace &amp; garden . 512,000.

on

MODERN, send $1 to: "Win
at Brfdgo," clo this

5232.

DOUBLE - 2 live , ....m
apartments. Nat. gas, city

electric

A Kel}!.uoky reader wants to
know Ifcontract bridge is only
50 years old.
The answer is that it was invented by the late Harold S.
Vanderbilt In 1925, so it Is 51
years old right now.
(For a copy ol JACOBY

z cay

TEAFORD

deck, garage and over

~~~~

3 Well-known

------·-

baths,

Oswald: "At three notrump
South loses three hearts and a
spade and needs to locate the
queen of diamonds to score
nine tricks. "

DOWN

tially

Virgil B. Sr. , Realtor
110 Mechanic Pomoroy;o.

sa[e.1'

ll...,cts

(6141698·7257 Albony.
furnished . carpeted .
$7~ or see a t 10 lynn 51. , just SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·
off Vine St., Middleport.
vice, all makes, 992-2284 . The
992·3129, or 992·5•34.
Fabric Shop .' Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
56 acre form . 6 room Mouse and . - - - - - - - - - - .
Service. We sharpen Scissors. '
both, 2 outbuildings, all fenced
with mineral rights. Asking
EXCAVATING. dozer, loader and
$25,000 Phone 742-2766.
backhoe work ; dump trucks
and lo-boys for h•rei will haul
till dirt, to soil. limestone and
gravel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef·
fers , day phone 992·7089,
night phone 992-3525 or 992·

21t2

Pass

Pass
OP"nlng lead - Q \f

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS , 38 Sam or Fanny
I "Abide39 Laughing
me''
sound
tO Pub sign

Bradford.
• Sweepers, toasters , frons, all
small appliances . lawn mower,
ne~ l to Sidle Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (6111) 985·

3 bedrooms, 1% baths , Iorge liv·
ing roo m. dini ng room and kit ·
chen , lulfy corpe led. Phone

Pass
Pass

Jim: " North has nine hlsh·
card points and could well
raise his portlier directly w
three notrump .- The Stayman ,
conventlo.n allows him Ill respond two clubs. This Ia an artificial, forcing· bid and asks
the opener to bid two of a major suit if he has four cards
there or to bid two diamonds
if he does not ·have one. 'j'his
time South rebids two spades
and North bids the spade
game. West opens the queen'
of hearts. South · loses one
heart and the ace of spades
and 111ay or may not lose a dlamqnd depending on ·which way
he finesses ' for the queen. In
any event , four spades is

~M'(}td

BRADFORD,

Roof Repair , Pointing, and Pol ·
~~in g . Inquire at_J92-5416.

Syracuse, going from Pomeroy .
1/ ba ths , air conditioned . F.A .
gas furnace , ful l basement and
garage , possession immediately. Phone 992-2266 evenings

24

Oswald : "The standard
netrump shows a hand with 16
Ill 18 high-card,pojnts and a 4J..J-3; 4+3-2 or l).J..J..2 distribu·
tion. The doubletOn, if there is
one is supposed to include the
jack or a higher honor, but
everyone has been known to
vioiafe this rule and occasionally open one notrump

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Estep Welding and Fabrkotton.
Portab le welding rigg , welding
on oil types , specializing in
aluminum truck bod ies. Day or
night . phone (614) 698-6160.

3 bedroom house on the r1ght in

Pass

Jim: "Since the opening
notrump is a picture bid , It is
easy for partner Ill know if
there is no game, . B possible
game, a sure game, a possible

FAB.RIC SALES.

Ph. 675-34"
Daily
T.9:30-l:OO
iiii:OOO Fridays

L__

(614 ) 667-6304 .

basement, . family room
and garage near Tuppers

Trailer. odvlra only . Call992 -7639 6 end 7 week old pig 5 and~ babY
or 992-3181'
·
beet . Phorle 94~- 2115 .
COUNTRY forrn lond with sed ....J
·

, , .
tlonol . S78 Hough Skiddor:
0129 or992·
),,
• ·~
• ~ · ·•• JohnO&amp;oro2010Whoo1Loador .
Ono. 1,1) Trollo!
I .. tiel at ,,... Con&lt;o&lt;t 0'" G&lt;o, .., or Lyons
__ ,ft.,, "-, .., •II ,... .
247 .IMulborry.· &gt;t.• ~omlttoy .· Equ•pmenl Co .. Inc. c;,cl.,ille,
7
~R~-•
tN
.iN
Ohio, Phone fl12 -3044 or- '/97Oh 113113 Pl1011e (614) .474 -6028 or
Everyone welcome. ·
3736.
. 5% •1o•

llllllflllll&amp;lriltaanlnl'lctllll - ~-wWbl~beNallbe
Ill tbe bfc IIJt.
'
l!lulrrb.""here,• Saturday·

p m. or s~s Woodyard .

Landmiii

6 room hovsw and ·, llalh ., - J t t k W. Carsey, Mgr.
Kingsbury Reali.' Honi1on,;Uo .
Pllont ttl-2111
. Phono,742·2577 .
·
-

quite deslnictlve In this area
10 ooli.olft•• and electrical
....... ,..

goroge, 1orge 1ot . Phone (t&gt; 141

Soulb

slam or a sure slam."

pt, Pleasant

667-6304 .

Nonh Ea11

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

281M in Street ·

Phone 992-337.! .

tanks or

..-..11

· ,.

LI'I''I'.L£ ORPHAN . ANIIIIE-HE'I DONE IT AGAIN

EXPERIENCEL

_for~ a_PP:'~·--~-

i8alft. ·

that 111111 0'8rtea 1a 1111n a
plllitnl In Holler
HoopltaL
'
Mrs. E mma Flnc h un·
derwent major surgery in

DIR~

New three bedroom house
cor pet , large ~lichen: attached

~hone

J,iTTLII: ORPHAN ANNlli

SiltS.
,
Velvets, ny Ion prints,
herculons. vinyl solids, and '
fancy prints, accessories.

341
Rutland
St , Middlep"'·
A
good
inve;stment
' at only
SIO,OOO. Phone 992·3843::,._ _

.J109

Wesl

Fuel oil tonk cop·, 275 gallon s, like ' 3
new . SAO. Pl-Io~ (614) 667 -3303,
Lyons , Linzy. Tuppers Plam s.
;
Oh!O .
.
...

.'

IW11cal

Wall to wall
carpe t, range , refrigerator and
garbage disposal Lo rge brick 2
cor gorog9 and workshop .
Steel utility building. Located

\fKIU
IQ75

I N.T.

mattresses. paddln~ . Ideal
for campers. Vartety of

permanently .

\fQ.JI06
1832
•QHI
\fA 9
1 KeG
.AK62

(6141985 .. 155
Chesler, Ohio
· 10-17·1mo1Pdl

FAB,dC.
sofa, Cftltr c:ushions,

For

EAST
6972

Both vulnerable

PHOTOGRAPHY

POI.J~FOAM
UP~TERY
3 bedroom immobile home with
2.4 acre lo t Twa rooms built -on

WEST
.AI

SOUTH IDI
• Q 10 8 5

KEN GROVER

Box 2a-A
Rutland, Ohio 45775
Ph. 1614) 742·2409
We Deliver
7.2a.4 rnos.

9-30-1 mo.

Pllontttl-2181

3837.

ments . I bedroom oparl·
$100 per month ; 2 t
L
here, and the . Clarence were at Unlverslt)' Hcm!!tal, . ' bodroom oparlmenl$, $133 per
SALE
;: . ' Barnett lamily from Tuppers Columbus, one day w.-~
on!'~-~~~273.~ Ntw wOOd-burning stove.
~ '1 Plains.
,
, , ~- week to see their da~, 1 3 Bedroom mobil~ hoi"•· lumi•h- Reg. S288.!5
}
Mr. and Mrs. E111e~r Wlnda Jones, who la
od ond unlurnldl~ , odojlt, on·
Now S238.95
'•;• VinByardandaol~ Confined to the holpital ' lor
ly.- ,Wotor 'atlll ,' hool ,paid . Ntw luol oil stove. Reg.
"' vlllled her Jlll'tllta. Mr. illd .· trea~
.·, ,,. -~7•2·2~' ',- ,.,., . 5372.37 .
llaw•m 31
,1 ' Mn. Artbur Allll!ra dul
Mra. Wlller Jordan ••liedI" Very nicol2 • 65 hOu.o lrOMor fbr .Ntw EcHo, wator ·1011..;11
•• , eel!
'
her ~A
rlflt In Mbson, W.Va.·Adults Reg. $349.95 Nows 219 . 9~
.J~l w .
.
on
I va
or:tly . no pets . Contact Sondrd ,
1 used Homtlite cho.ln sow'
, BW A-. bu been vlllliniJ Gilkey, wbo la confined to
m -5693. ' Monday through
1
;~ hla
Mr. and ~- Veteran's Memo~l al _F.ri~~, 9!'_1'2: _ -.--~ ·-s200
1 'Leonard Amoe, and . Kenny. Holpttal; Pomeroy. ,· ,
·Of"E and 2 bedroom lutnlshed 1 u•od MtCullough choln
'"''· Word bu been received
apartments . Coli 992·3129 or liW
m:
,

· Truss Rafter Co.

At f41-2801
·
Or
949-2860
PLEASE
NO SUNDAY CALLS
1

JacM W. C.ney, Mgr.

-

,

t

it..

GLEN R. BISSELL

2

Pomeror Landmark

10 )( 5() 1966 Liberty priced ta r
quick so le. Located on Olive
Twp Road 261 , long Sottom,
Good condition. Phone 985·

'

for SHW mohthl)' ' plua,.WC:. or
SilO including elt&lt;trfC( LOWER

Southeastern Ohio

Commercial property approx. 17
acres , level land, located ot
Tuppe:r1 Plains on Oh io, Route

CQ.OP BRAND

MOBILE home lor ~ole or rent , 3
b@droonu, ol utilities paid.
Phone 992-nSl .

NORTH

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Welldings

CONTACT

Gal.

~1\K.~ ~ JW ~Safi,

,r

·c";:.J. Washington.

. FREE ESTIMATES!

.with a worthlesS doubleton."

• K J63
\f 7 s 2
I AJ 101
.B 3

PHOTOGRAPHY

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

TUESDAY,OCTOI.~R 26,1976
o:IIO-SunriM Semester 10.
.6:15-'Farm R-t 13,
6:2G-Not For Womon Only 13.
6:»-TN&lt;her'a Classroom . , Ntws 6; Sunr ise
Semnter 8; Concerns &amp; Commonts 10.
6:45--Mornlng R~ 3.
6:$GeGood Morning, Weal VIrginia 13.
6:55-Good Morning, Trl Slate 13.
l : ~ Today 3,A,I5 ; Good Morning, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Chuck White R-ts 10.
7:0$-Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7: 31)-SchOOIIH I 0.
.
8:011-Lallle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sua me St. ;13:
a:30-Big Valley 6.
9:00-A.M. 3; Phil Donohue •• 13, 15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10.
,
9:»-Croos.Wits3; Ont Llht lo Ll.,.6; Good Day a.
IO:OD-Sanf9'd &amp; Son 3,4,15: Pr!ce It Right 8,10; Mlko
DouglaS 13.
.
10:15-Gentrol H~~~pltal 6, •
10:»-Hollywood Squaros 3.~.15.
II :OCl-Whetl ot Fortune 3, 15; Wtekday •: Edge of
Night 6; GambiU, 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
11 :»-Sumpers3;4, 15; Happy Deya 6.13; Love ot Lifo
a,10: Sesame St. 20.
11 :55-Take Kerr 8; Ms. Flxlt 10.
12 :DO-News 3,6,8,10; Don Ho 13; Bob Braun ~ ~ ~
Grand Slam 15.
12:30-Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13 ; Storch
lor Tomorrow 8,10.
T2 :55-NBC News 3,15.
T:OCl-SomerMf 3; Ryen 's Hope 6,131 Conctnlrotlon a;
Young &amp; tho Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:25-Pollttcal Program 6, 13.
'
I :311-Days ot Our Lt.., 3,4,15: Family Feud 6, 13; As
The World Turns 1, 10.
.
·
2:00-'.$20,000 Pyramid 13; Dinah 6.
2:30-Doctors 3,.,15; One Life to Llvo 13; Guiding
Llghl8,10. .
3:1»--·Another World 3,A, 15: All In The Fomlly 8, 10,
Consumer Survival Kit 20. ...~ :'
3: 15-General Hospital 13.
3:»-Be.wllthed 6: Match Game 8, 10; Llllaa Yogo &amp;
You 20.
A:oo-Misler Cartoon 3; Marcus Welby, M.D. ~ ~
Somerset 151 Howdy Doody 6; Mickey Moose Club
8; Se•,m• St. 20,33; Movie "Tho Feminist 8, the 6
Fun" 10: Dinah 13.
A:30-My Thr~ Sons 3; Emergency Ont 6; Pnrtrldgo
Family 8; Fllnlltonet 15.
5:DO-Big Valley 3; Merv, Griffin 4: Brady Bunch 8;
Mloter Rogers 20,33: Star Trek 15:
5:»-News 6; Femlly Affair 8: Elec. Co. 20,33; Adum12 13.
•
.
6:0Cl-News 3,A,8,10,13,15; ABC News 61 Zoom 20;
Consumer Experience 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,A,I5; ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20: lTV
Utlllzollon 33.
7:06-Truth or Cons. 3; Probe A; Bowling tor Dollars 6;
L.el's Go To The Racn 8; Newt 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; Family Affair 15: Cooking wllh a Continental Flavor 20; American lnun Forum 33.
7:30--Hollywood Squares 3;tA; Lel'l Deal with It 6:
Match' Game PM 11 MlocNoii-Lohrtr Roporj 20,33;
tn The Know 10; Wild Kingdom 13; Nuhvllle on tho
. Road 15.
a:oo-Baa Baa Black ShMp 3,A,15; Happy Days 6,13;
Peggy Fleming 1,10; May the Bnl Person Win : 33:
Eames Celtbroflon 20.
1:»-Loverne &amp; Shirley 6. 13.
9:0Cl-Polltt Woman J.A,I5; Rlth Man, Poor Man 6,131
MASH e,10: Tht Maze: Story of William Kurotek 33.
9:30-0nt Day et A Time I,10; s - t OhiO 20; My
Father Calls 1M Son 33.
10:!10-Pollce Story 3,4; Family 6; Julio &amp; Dick In
Covent Gardin 15; Switch e,10; Political Spirit of
'76 13; News 20; Klllora 3.1.
'0130-Biatk Peri!)ICIIvo on tho News~.
:55-Political Program 8, lo.

·Major suit tailor-made

PROFESSIONAL

3891.

Alfred's revival haa been 1101 25, ltc
_::1~
290
~._ _._ _:__ _ __
All Rods, Reels &amp;
set for Nov. 7-14 with a dif.
Stove. $200. Relrifrotor , $100, Line One· Third Off
ferent speaker each evening.
PUBLIC NOTICE
both I yoot ol . Phone 949·
All Lures
A scbedule will be published
The date- to'r receiVing J AND • RM . lurr'lofshtd ,ond un· · ...::m
:.:..;:4.:.·- - -- - - - '12 Price
.
lime
approa·~es.
proposals
for
&amp;dd
lllon5
to
furnished
opts,
Pho,
n
e
ot.
9'92·
Sweet
potatqn
$
OO
SS
OO
and
4
as the
1' .
..a;•
Southern Loc&lt;'ll High SChool
5434 .
·•
b ' 1' · ' · '
There will be
1 1 ust has been extende-d
'
S6 00 usne. RW. Lewis , Rt .
0
GRAV~l£WACTDR
spec a m C Iober 28 , 1976 to 12 · 00 °0~locck
• COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork. Rt . . 124 : Racine , Ohio. Phone 843- .
and group singlng.
noon on No vember · 4• 197j.
JJ, ten miles north of Pomeroy . • 24.~3:::
2·'----------Pomeroy, Ohio
"t~
Mr-. and Mrs. Wilber
· ,
Lorge lots with concrete patios. Firewood. Call 949 . 2630 or 992 _
Winter Hours:
...;.. , Parker hosted 8 Jamily eJ~~J~IS:nn Local Board of
sidewalks. runners and oH
nal
Mon ., Tues., Wtd. &amp; Fri. 9, dinner SWJday in honor of
Jane Weg ner ,- Cierk
strMtporking. Phont992·7•'19 . __ -..:,. ...--.,---.---. _ _ _ __
1
-''.. Mrs Parker's .,_,.,1..-.; , Mr . QO:M. F6
ONE bedroo"' aportm•ntt~ ot UNFINISHED G.~.O. stock cor and 5
Thur. &amp; 5at. 9-Noon
:_•,'1 aiXI
o - Ave,~ry,.,.'"'.,..le,' ~ •. . Racine, Oh lo 45771
f ' VILLI\G£ MANoR In Mlild~rt .. port•. Phooo 992·2659.

Mrs. ucu

...

.

Pomeroy , Ohio or' phone 992 -

" 13041675.2310 , Pt. Ploaltilnl. .__uprlg~ts. $18. CoU 992·5~ W. Va.
, •·
CAMPER. $600. "lso, ho&lt;So

28.

~I

You can uve hundreds
even tlltuoands or dollors
with aluminum 0.. Yinyl
siding.
·

-

scHool: · SEWING MACHINES .

mater'lal

contact

.9:30-AII's Fair i,1o.
10:0D-E..cutlve Sulle 8,10; N.ws 20; Soundstage J3.
10:30-Ftrm DlgKI 20.
IO:_.,olttleel Program I, 10.
11 :00--Ntwl 3,~1,10,15; Mac:Nelt-Loh,.... R~ 33.
11 :»-Jollnl!y c......., 3.~ 15: Movie "Tht Morning
Afttw" I; Ml!.ry Harfman 10: BlkH Blktt. Bikes 33.
12:00--Newa 6,13; Movie " The Swlmmtr" 10; Janekl
33. .
12:»-Coolege .Footboll '76 6: Jronatdt 13.
I :DO-'-Tomorrow 3,4, •
1:Jib-NtWII3 . /

·WIN AT BRICGE.

We repair the old and build
the new . Papering. paintIng, pa~ell""' ·. wl_n~ow
replacements,
glass,
roofing, hot mix. si ding,
storm windows, doors,
remodel
kitchens and
baths, elc. Phone 949·2023.
No sunday Calls Pleue.
10 -14 -1 mo . pd.

( 10 -11 -lmo. pd . )

F~~~~~~;~i?~~~~

STRANDED
WITH MEl&gt;.
TWISTED
ANI&lt;LE

D&amp;D
. .
Construction

supplies . Travel

appointment ,
Robert Cod ner .

----·-

COAL for sole, Open 6 days ~r
week and even ings. for further 1974 .o(Q h . DORSEY TRAILER w ith
IF YOU have a ••rvk• to offer,
sl1ding tandem Coli 992-7657
information call (61.4) 367-7338,
want to buy or ult someth ing.
·-oftvr5p.m .
oe ldoking for work . . . or APPLES. FITZPATRICK ORCHARO .
-----whotev•r .. . you'll Qtl resu lts
STATE WUTE 689. PHONE FORO ET aluminum slot mag
foster with o SentinefWant Ad .
wheel!. . $30 . White ScandinaWILKE5VILLE .I6141669·37B5.
. Coil 992· .21~56
::c._·- -- vian style open fireplace with
~ · ~fULLER Brush Product!. for sole .
ch imney kit. $150. New 6 It, x 6
Phone 992-3.410.
It, building, wood with metal
- -siding. insulated , sao . .. h.p .
MODERN slereo . AM ·FM radio. a
roto tiller , I yeor old, $150.
track
tope
combination .
Phone '9'92-2820 from 9 ti ll4 ond
Bolonce $97.4() or term1 : Coli
osk for Tina .
~
m-3%5. -

.

BLONDE

trailer s, truck campers,
ca mp l n.g trailers , truck
caps . Special Saturday
night s. Open evenings or by

POTATOES and pumpkins . C. W.
COINS , 1929 and older currency .
Proflill . Portla nd , Ohio. Phone
gold and !ilver, mop. Will buy , &amp;r&gt;im~
843·2254 .
sell, or trade , for a good selec ·
lion of coins . Hc:ive supplles for Will do odd jObs , rOof1ng . pai nling , gutter work . Phone 992metal
deteclors . Roger
7409.
Wamsler, , on Leoding Creekand Rut and Rood . Phone 7~2 - H1gh schoo l girl-senior ovoilobl'i!
2331 for on off•r.
for port -time :...ark , secretOry

·

HIOUOH TO
LE'AVE TH!l

Show ing:
Swiss Colony ;
Maple Leaf ; Playmor;
Cricke t. Sa les, rerltel,

tru ck. Phone 949-2132

-

.
-~-- - 1973 Vega 'G.T. Station Wagon
$1200. Coll742·2818 or co ntact
__ R_i~_?!~~-!t~y . Rut l. on_~ ._ohlo . _

HARP· HEARTED

Rlinbow Rld_ge
Bnhan Area
Longaottam, Ohio ·

servic e,

11 IU~III~D
OUT EASY
JU~T WA;.N' T

Abbott ..

Gum:R SERVI

~

992·5524.

Auto Ports, Rutlond,

·

4-10·1

MONDAY, OCl:O.to;R n . ""
5:0Cl-B1g Valley 3; Merv urlltln 4: Brody Bunch 8:
Mister Rogtrs 20,33; Star rek 15.
5:»-News 6: Family Altair 8; Eloc . Co. 20.33; Adam12 13.
6 : ~News 3,A,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 6; loom 20;
Education In Transl!lon 33.
6:»-NBC Newo3,A,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS ~ews 8,10: Hodgopodge lodge 20.
7:0Cl-Town Hall : Decision '76 3; To Tell th~t Truth 4
Bowling tor Dolton 6; Buck OWens 8; tAws 10; T1
Tell the Truth 13; Family Affolr 15; Oil-From God's
Bedroom 201.Know Yoor Stf.ools 33.
.
7:30-Bobby VInton 4: Muppet Show 6; Gong Show I ;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33: Price Is 'Right 10;
Candid Camera 13; Friends of Man 15.
I :DO-&lt;:apt. &amp; Tennille 6,13; Movie "Amelia EarhorY'
4, 15; Rhoda 8, tO; Adams Chf'onlclos 20,33.
l:;t0-$128,000 Question 8; Phyllis 10.
9:0Cl-NFL Footboll6, 13; Maude 8,10; In Performance
· at Wolf Troo 20J3.

•CAPI'AIN EASY .

1~1rwnt~.

FAIRMONT STEEL
PRODUCTS, INC .
F airmonl, Minn. 56031
I0-22·lmo. pd .

CODNER'S
CAMPERS

1969 Novo, e1dra sha rp , new
point bucket seoh , o ir shocks,
mags. Phone 9-19 -2480 ,

~ -- ---...... ....____~

we as Chriltians should read
andstu.lutheBibie" (regular
UJ'
and Organized and plan to put ' Jone Wagner. Clerk
it in practice.) Attendance
~~~~~~~Oh io 45771
was

7•2-2796.

-~

1969 Novo , 6 cv,linder , gooa con·

$$CASH$$ for iunked . autos .
Phone 742 -2081. Frye's Truck &amp;

The P.~:~~~c~~~T:~Zetv lng
proposa l• lor labor and .

the subject "How

~

TIMBER ,

condition . Will pay $10' each .
First floor onlv. Wrltt fiv ing
d1r ections to Wiit..n P1ono Co.,
80 )( 188, Sardhi , Ohio43946.

Phone 1'141 669-4N.S ,

evenings

Lirt'{lfioER m•

·

·----

from Oct. 18-24.
Worshlpservlceswereheld

10 :45, with the Rev .
Thomas using scripture
readings from Psabn 119 and

II.UMIIIUI

parts, or complee households . For· .sole by 'Owne r, 1969 4 door
LOCUST POSTS. round or sp lit .
Write M. 0 . Miller. Rt . -4 , · Cadillac Sedqn DeV ille, ful l
Pt"lone 949-2774.
Pomeroy, OhiO. Co11992-7760.
-·,.-- --·-·- power. excellent condition.
COAL, limestone , and calcium
Phone 992-2413.
CASH poid for oil moke• and
.ch lond e and calcium brine for
mode ls of mobile home s. 1967 Fiat , $400. Phone 992-5462.
dust control and special mixing
1
Phonf!' ore(J code 614-423-'1531 .
~olt for formers . Mom St reet ,
Pomeroy Forest Products . Top price for stand ing
sawtimber. Coli Kent Hanby ,
1·446-8570.

Montgomerv Trailer Sale•
At. l,lox 121
Langsville, OH 45741

IIINIIIJIIS

1970. Buick Riviera , good cond i·
lion, new tires , 5900. Phone

B...uick_........__w
2D. CAll (30&lt;1·882·2793.
___
•
-

1969 Dodge Coronet, runs good

OLD furniture , ice bDIC.Iii', , ·bra$S
beds, wall telephones ond

( 10) 18, 25 !lll I , Jtc

at

1973 Cadilloc Eldorado Conver toble, like new .; 1973 Toyota 2
0 , ewclillen t cond ltio,n: 1969

Waitress . opply In person. Craw's
St.ak House, Pomeroy.

~~~~~~§~~~

at Thelma Henderson's was
aMounced and the revival at
the Chester.N•••rene Church
.........

POMEROY, OHIO

1969 Dodge Coronet , runs good
end in good condition. "Quick
sole '' , $395 or best offer . Phone

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT fuel oil !.love. Phone 99'2-6010
Cue No. 11958
from 6 to 6.
Estate of. William F . Harri s, _:::::::~~-...,---~
Deceased .
Wonted old upright pianos in an-,

lO ber 1976.

mw'm

vinyl roof, ridlal

POM~~~!E~~!~~ CO. 'iii'·
\CI
'-----;.;..;;:

992·5524.

Phyll is E Harris, ot R. D . 1,
Racine , OhiO, haS been duly

Social Notes

gr~li

Pb. "2-lftl

Baby!oitter wonted .. 3 days per
w•ek , Must have own tronspor ·
lotron . 1638 lincoln Helght5 ,
Pomeroy.
·

WANTED . Chipwood. Poles max imum diameter, 10 Inches on
largest end . $8.00 per ton ,
~ote .
bundled slobs, $6.00 per ton .
The Me igs Agricultural
Deliver to Ohio Pollet Com·
society . By · Mrs . Wallace
pony , Rt . 2. Pomeroy, Oh io .
Bradford, secre tary .
Phon• 99'2-2689 .
( 101 11 , 18, 2S, 31c
fuel oil slav• . Phone 992-6010
-------~--­
from 6 to 6.

appo rnled· Admlnistratri)( of
lhe Estate of Willi.&amp;m F .
Harr is. deceased, 1ate ot R. o.
I , RliC 1ne , Meigs County, Ohio .
CredItors &amp;re reql!ired to
file their claims with safd
fiduciary wlfhln four months .
Dated th is 12th day of Oc -

WIIIOOIIS &amp; 00011

$3995

i
"

Revive the
of your rtlf!L
your own home
by Von Schrader
dry-foam method,
No muss. No fuss.
No oilor. Use the
same day.
AIIWCiflc

Avellable In many si zes,
flatbeds , gravity beds and
a variety of sp!cialty
bod in for fleet use.

SIDIK.solfiTT

dition . $800. Phone 992-7054.

2?~~- - - - - -

NOtice is hereby given r'hat

Alfred

locall owner car, gr~ finish,

1

Haul

Free
color brochure

lloon lnlo "*&amp;Attics

W·W tires. air cond. 1 V-8, with automatic, power
st@erlng and brake.s.

~

~Birthday

Red!

S11llll

1974 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO

.

r----------,

~--

IIISIIialion Stnitn
l1ooicioc lllilollo

finish, less than 9,000 miles, showroom clean .

.
.........
Babysitter wanted, 3 days per
1
w•ek , Must hove own tronapor- 1968 Cha .. rolet C-20, 1. ton
ptdwp truck. Good condition .
totion . 1638 lincoln Heights ,
Phone 992 -7727 . .-...::

,. ~Your

(Are ~ou a Scorpto? Bermce
Oso/ hes written a special AstraGraph Lerrer for you. For your
co py send 50 cents and a selfaddressed, stamped envelope to
Astra-Grap h, P.O. Box 489 .'
Radio City Station, Nt~w 'r'ork.
N 'r' 10019. Be sure to ask fo r

~

197~ DATSUN
52195
210 2 door. local car. 4 speed trans., 44,200 miles, good
tires, dark green finish. real economy.

Lost: lodi•• l.ather billfold in
front of Duttons in Middleport

plan
day run ni ng errands or
.... dropping In on friends . You 'll be,. oaily, a ; ~· a .m . :to Fi:~O
quite restless, so keep o~ ,the r Noon Saturday .
move.
·
Phont todey 992 -2l'S6.

·

,· -----~----'---------------~-----,._,

1976 AMC HORNET
Sll95
Sportabout, 6 cyl., automatic, power steering. deluxe
equipment, whitewall tires, luggage rick, dark green

985·9996 or 985·4141.,_ _ _

per Advorll•emont .
a 30OFFICE
a toHOURS
l oo

a

· ' ftiiiiiJY
~

.

_·_ _ _ _

Skote -A ·Woy announc•• but
ac l1•dul• :
Ra cine
ond
Min•rsv lt le,
Middleport ,
Pomeroy Saturday nights .
Open Weds .', Frfdoyond Sotur·
doy, •very 1:30 t6 10:00
AvQiloble for private partie,,
Mo nday , Tuadoy , ond
Thutsdoy evening, Saturday
and Sunday ofl•rnoons. Phpne
for
reurvotion$ , ~85 - 3929 ,

consecut iVe Insertions.
26 cents r,er ward Six
consecu1 1~ e nsvtlons.
2S Per Cent O!scount on
pa id ldl And ads paid
with in 10 dayt.

Pomeroy
·M otor Co.

SIGNS

OF

o7c:::.~g
pl;~~,:d.nts,
-,.

2'270.

cenlt per word one
l n~trtlon .
.
Minimum Charge SI.OO.
14 ctntl per word three

lratlon and brainpower should

(# , .

btg lnn•r•. lntttmtd iGfft , advoncitd stud•nts. Call
m.

RATES

TAURUS CAprll 20-Mor 201 Any
job

6:30p.m. al lh•l• building 1n · ...

iectlonel. The publ llhtr

NEW LISTING - 3 year
old

brkk

veneer,

3

bedrooms, 2 baths; nice
kitchen, large dining with
sliding glass doors. Nice
carpeting, 2 car garage arid
4 lots. On river front .
$37,500.
CONVERT
YOUR
PROPERTY INTO CASH.
INVEST AND LIVE ON
THE INTERES:r

~

·:• e•
•

•

••

I!

l •••.
·~
~

:

:
•

••••

•

Mon, Tues., Wed.

••

8:00ti15:00

LI;&gt;OO

•

. · f~,;~. i~ a }

.~············.

..
,.
Close Sat. At 5 p.m. , •

RUTLAND PURNrnJRI
742-2211

• •.
SYQLOWJMW
(AMwen.......-o•)

"

GR0 AE J
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: POsiTIVE~ MISTAKEN AT
TOP OF ONE'S VOICE. - · AMBROSE BIERCE

.

II...W..• QUliN lUll!.y UNPACK ' IIURMUR
THE ........,.. -" n.oo..c,.,...J...•a
..,...,.,.. IIIINfl....,

I WAS, ALL SET TO
POUND ~W. AND '(ET 'IW

I TLIOOO

CAME. TO M'&lt; RESCUE (l!&lt;ifN.
I lii\5 F16HTIN61l!AT ,CAT

,

111

~~·--------~

I DtDNI EI'EN KNOW IT WAS

A REAL CAT. I THOOGI1T
IT WAS YOU DRE55ED
IN A CAT SUIT!

I

......

~Nolo.oRAh:

•«~~~~~~~

IW'rt;A.H~

~~~

,,· :!-, l

'

I

�10-The Dailv Sentinel, Pumcroy·Midcllet,&gt;url. o .• t&gt;J ouwiy, uctooer 2:1, 1~1.b

I ssue· clear .

•

(Continued from page I)
Geneva on llle basis of the
si~-point peace package put
for ward by Kissinger in
September.
the African nationalis! leaders, claiming they were not
c'&lt;Oflsulted; have said they
"('001plelely reject that pack·
~ge ," setiing up an apparent
impasse with white leaders
three days before the formal
start ol peace tall&lt;s. They are
demanding majority rule ·
within a fe w months rather .
Utatt the two-.year period in
lhc Kissinger proposal.
"l am not suggesting that
there are tenns that can't be
di~ussed," Smilh said. u·Bul
we must ~oegoliate within the
frumework ol the Kissingeo·
nt;r·Perncht.''
The two outstanding points
o[ U1e Kissinger package, he
m1id, are that the .head of a
bir ada l Council of· State
clwge&lt;l wiU1 drafting a new
MORTGAGE PAPERS BURNED- New Haven American Legion Post 140 members
burne&lt;l thc mortgage on·thelr clubhouse Saturday afternoon .in a special ceremony . Burning
t:onslitution be a white ~nd
th e papers are, 1-r, EJ)'lo Wood, Dick Ord., representing both the Legion and Mason County
Uwt whites keep !he defense
Ba nk, and Danny Workman.
and law and order ministr \~s .
h is the duty of the Genev.a
('Qnference to set up the
Cnuncil of Slate, which in
\Unt has to appoint a, black
rirst minister of a CoWlcil o(
Veterans Memorial Hospllai daughter, Pomeroy.
Miuisters, Smitll said.
(Births, Oct. !4)
Saturdny ·Adm issi ons Smilh said he would
Nettie
Cross,
Racine;
Harry
Mr.
and
Mrs. Ricky Leach,
wrlcome African majority
Thomas,
Pomeroy;
Fred
son,
Jackson;
Mr. and Mrs.
ruJc as soon as 'possible.
Bi
rtcher,
Pomeroy
;
Shi
rley
Dana
Palmer,
son, Jackson.
At the sarne time , "it is a
Wolfe,
Racine;
Dale
Jacobs,
po.,ibiltty" that he would
agree to greater black Midd leport.
BEING IN LUCK
SaturdRy Disc haraes Afric m1 partic ipation in
Kathy
Reynolds
of
Eugene
Fisher,
Nondis
Hl!orlcsia 's governme nt if
Flatwoods
ha~
her
own
Fields, Mattie Teafo rd,
lhl'rc is a breakdown.
sprinkling system "!hen a
Ali [our ol the black African Dennis McKinney.
Sund ay Adnlissions ~ fire broke out at her home
ie,,dcrs had by todayrejected
hite " Sunday
night
tht• Ki~si ngcr propusuls mld Delara Spencer , Racin e;
A
fuel
oil
stove
blew
up
dc nwmll"d m a jority qtle Danny Shain, Racine; Mary
ond
tbe
fire
caused
a
break
'within a few mon lh s" rather Games, Pomeroy; Kenneth
in a neorby water joint.
West, Athens; Galdys Dillon, The water Irani the
than within two years.
ROBERT YATES
Reedsvill e;
Erma le ne damaged joint practically
IN:
TEXAS - Robert A.
Johnson, Reedsville ; Hazel
extinguished
the
fire,
Yales,
son of Mn. Patricia
Lynch, Athens; Nancy B0so,
Pomeroy Fire Chief
Slaven;
18 stationed at ·tbe
Portland ; Debra Dai ley, Charles Legar reported.
CA!.t. ANSWERED
Sheppard
Alf Force Base
Middleport.
Damagel!l were l!let at about
'f h'c
Midd leport
In
Wichita
Falls,
Teus. He
Sundoy Discharges - Ava
Emergency Unit answered a Gilk ey, Donald Covert , 1200.
recently completed bls
c" Uto the Dana Covert home Josephine Ma llory, John
basic lralolng at Sao An·
at 8:34 p. m. Sunday for four Willbarger.
toolo, Texas. Yates Is a
week old, Jessica Covert, who
l lt71. graduate of, ~eigs
wus ill. She was taken to
High School.
Holzer Medical Center
Vetcruns Memorial Hospital.
iBirt~s, Oct. 22)
MEETTU~DAY
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Davis,
The Galla-Meigs Com·
rnunity Action Agency boord
of directors will hold its
monthly meeting oil Tuesday,
beginning at 8 p. m. in the
Cheshire central office.

..

HOSPITAL NEWS

TilE INN PLACE
'lue-sday Night
Specia~

ASK TOWED
Marria ge licenses were
issued to Lee Roy Cadle, 26,
Rt. I, Rutland, and Cherry
Ann Cadle, 24, Pomeroy;
Garry Lee Smith, 23, Racne,
· and Melissa Jane Proffitt, 21, .
Racine; Harry Roger But·
cher, '!/, Rt . 4, Pomeroy, and
Regina Annette Bing, 20, Rt.
4, Pomeroy; Earl Yates, 59,
Oak Hill, and Dorothy V.
Harden, 58, Syracuse.

MEIGS THEATRE
ClOSED FO.R

Visi1 Our Salad Bar
B B-Q Spare Ribs
Fr ie d Ri ce
Golden Peach Teasers
Hot Roil s
Coffee. Tea or Milk

Plus ta x

THE MEIGS INN
992-3629

Cannel News,
By the Day

Pomeroy, 0 .

VACATION
WATCH FOR
OPENING .OATE

Daunt Brinker of Findlay,
Ohio visited with Mrs. Dean
Brinker and Betty Van Meter
and Margaret Ann Johnson
on Thursday·
.
Melvin Circle of Columbus,
Ohio called lit the home ol
Mary Circle Wednesday.
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle
of New Haven were at the
Circle home on SWlday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
Johnson, Sheryl LeAnn and
Patrick called at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Ran·
dolph Pomeroy R.D. on
Sunday.
Steve Circle was guest of
"'
Bob BtlI Lee on FridaYni.,.t.
Jr. Johnson and William
Carleton of Racine called at
the Arthur Earl Johnson
horne on SaturdaY·
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
Chester called at the home of
Robert Lee and family
recenlly.

COOK
IT
OR
CAN
111~
,.
ONLY

$32995 .
BONUS OFFER THIS WEEK!

Young man is .wreck victim
A 19-year-old man died ol
Injuries suffered in a traffic
accident al3 :04 a. m. Sunday
on Eutern Ave. near the
Working Man's Friend
Service Slatioo.
Gallipolis City police
Identified the. victim as
·Timollly Len Riehle, Rt. 2,
Gallipolla, an employee of the
Pennyfare Mart.e t. Ac·
cording to Dr. Donald R.
Warehime, Gallla County
Coroner, Riehle died from
internal hemorrhaging
caused· by massive chest
Injuries.
Listed in critical condition
at St. Mary's Hospital In
Huntingloo at 11 a. m. Wday
was Terry Unroe, 18, Rt. 2,
Crown City, a passenger In
the' wrecked car. Unroe is in
the bospltal's tntenJ!ve care
unit with maS.ive head Injuries.
.
The car was owned by
Unroe, but police had not
determined wbo was driving
at noon today.
·
According to the r_eport, the
soulllbound Cl)r, apparenUy
traveling at a high .rate of
speed, went out of control
.over llle center line, striking
two guardrail posts, spun
around while traveling 16 feet
In the air and struck an
electric pole.
Four other passengers,
Terry E. Waugh, 19, Rt. 1,
Northup; Tim Waugh, )8, Rt.
1, Northup; Rocky Rece, 17,
Gallipolis, and Keith Mayo,
18, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, escaped
serious injury.
The accident Is still under
Investigation.
Rece was taken to the
county jail on an affidavit
signed by Gary Bane,
Juvenile Probation Officer,
charging violation ol his
probation.

Patrol logs
(Continued from page I)
occurred a.t 11 :40 p.m.
Saturday on CR 3, one and's'
tentlis miles east of SR J
where Va.nce E. D~ay,
Lower River Rd., lost coni!
of his car which ran off th•
road into a ditch. ,
And On Sunday
Wade T. Young, 20,
Cheshire, was clled to
Municipal Court for failure to
yield right of way following
an accident at 4:05 a.m.
Sunday on SR 35 at Jerry St.
Young pulled out to go east
and slornmed headon Into a
semi rig operated byHarless
Hosey, 40, South Charleston,
Ohio.. Young complained of
minor injuries but was not
treate&lt;l. There was mnderate
damage.
. thens,
Roya 1 L. Starr, 51, A
was charged willl failure to
stop within the assured clear
distance following a three-car
collision at 4 p.m. Sunday on
SR 7 north of Addison. The
Starr vehicle struck tlle rear
end of a car driven by Harold
E s rtz .- Mld.di r1
. wa , "'•
epo ,
forcing it to butt the rear of a
car operated by . Albert D.
steede, 58· Blirlingame,· ,Calif·
Peggy S. Hill, 24, Racine,
· was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by llle
Racine Volunteer squad .
following a single car acctdent at 4:40p.m. on SR 338,
one and three tenths riilles
east of SR 124. Officers said
the Hill car, going east, ran
off the leltslde of llle highway, then overturned. Her
car was .demolisl!ed.
A single car accident occurred at S:3li p.m. on SR 160
where Wllllam R.lsaacs, Jr.,
21, Vinton, lost control of his
car on wet roadway. The
vehicle left the highway,
striking a tree.
Mark Gilkey, 17, Mid·
dieporl, had minor injuries In
a traffic occident at7' 10 p.m.
Sunday on sa· 554, two and
four tenths miles west of CR
32. Gjlkey lost control of his
car which ran off the right
side of the highway into a
ditch. Gilkey was taken to
Veterans Memorial HospitaL
William Games, 18, Bid·
well, was cited for assured
clear distance following an
accidentat7:20 p.m. Sunday
at the juncilon of SR 160 and
SR 35. ,
·
'According to the patrol,
Games' car struck the rear
'end of a vehicle driven by
Wanda Miller, 31, Ravenswood. There was minor
damage.

It was llle city's llrst traffic
fatality in over a year.
Timothy Len Riehle, 19,
(Portsmouth Rd.) Rt . 2,
GallipoU.,'was born Oct. 20
1957 in Gallipolis to Bobby L.
and llo!U! Lee Pierotti Riehle.
He ·was an enploye Of the
Pennylare Market and a 1975
graduate of GaiDa Academy
High School.
In addition to his parents,
he ti ilurvlved by three
sis~s, Cathy, Chrissy· artd
Diane; two b.rothers, Thomas
and John, aU at home, and his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Hugo"Pierotti, Gallipolla, and
Mrs. Sadie Richie, Crown
City. ·
.He was a member of St.
Louis Catholic Church and
assistant boy seoul leader of
Troop 200.
Funeral services will be 9
a. m . Wednesday at St. Louis
Catholic Church with the

Identifax
(Continued from page I )
tllicaiion number In the fonn
of a stencil.
Each kit contains special
hard·metal·lipped stylus . to
engrave the number on each
valuable. In addition, a
"Fa'rm. Machinery Manual"
is included which shows
where the number should be
placed on each piece of fann
equipment. Warning
stickers to be placed .on
windows and doors are atso
included. The stickers tell a
prospective thief that the
properly is registered and
can be traced.
The number is registered
with the computer In New
York. Then, any law en·
forcement officer can call llle
registry's toll·free number,
identify himself and receive
the name, ~ ddress and
telephone number o! the
owner. The process tak.es less
than 60 seconds. "ldentlfa."
Is operated by Listfax, a New
York City based computer
Sl .ce finn .
.e program Is designed to
h• • Farm Bureau members
•rotect themselves.
The annual meeting is
tesday night, October 26, at
' :21 p. m. at the Chester
Grade School at Chester.
Tickets are still available
by calling 992-2181. A good
last-moving program Is being
planned with the Aladdin
"'emple Shrine Chanters as
oe entertainment.

a

INGELS FURNITURE
.
.

Met c i!I U ~ OY&amp;n Ignition .. 140 degree lo·lem "keep werm "
oven se ntng,

ELECTRIC SPECIAL FEATURES •. . Two 2,100 watt and two
1,250 walt elements . , . Open coli eleme rm . . , Fou r and t!we

106 N. 2ND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, D.

'

turn elements wilh porcelain ins8rt .. oven end surlece ln-

dlce!or lights , ,

992·2635

s r o ra:~e drawer

eteme111

R.J mo~ilble

top elements .

LHt up bPI~&amp; element

Removilble

Tl\1 do ~~o n br oil

No more ;help for
Nashville's cops

By EUZABETH WHARTON

NASHVn.LE, Tenn. (UP!) altercation ;nth a ·~
- Willlam Gleaves said siopped along the inlel'llate.
Sunday he'U never again try highway. The driver ~ed
1o help a police officer - ''not ·the officer, hitting him in the
face several times. Ramley
evep if he was dying."
The 34-ye ar-old Metro was not seriously injured.
"They didn't .even ast me
Public Workers employe is
Gleaves
biller about the treatment he my name,"
received Sunday when he complained. "All they did
stopped to help an officer be w.S tell me to lie down fnd
spotted slumped over the then IIley started kicking me
steering wheel of his pollee in the sides and stepping m
cruiser, stopped with 1\s blue · my back. One of llle
lights !lashing. The officer's policemen said he'd shot six
pistol was on llle grotutd.
people this week and 'II lllls
· He' said he pulled over and .guy moves, I'D · shoot hbn
then asked a man In a pickup t(JQ."'
'
' "
truck with a CB radio t:o get
However, Gleaves said,
some · help for the officer. wben the officers realized lie
When police converge&lt;! on the was not the one who attacked
scene, Gleaves said he and Ramsey, they apologized .
others yelled to them to call But, that doesn't satisfy
for an ambulance.
Gleaves who silid he plans to
"When we did that, an take the matter to Police
officer told us to lie down oo Chief Joe Casey and Mayor
the groWld," Gleaves said. Richard Fulton,
"The next thing I knew the
"I work for Metro myself
police were kicking me on the and 1 felt like a fool to help
back and in the ribs. They someone .and Illen get kicked
didn't even ask me any like that," Gleaves said .
questions.''
"The next time I see a
Patrolm,m Robert D. policeman who has heen hurl,
Rlimsey -had been injured I woul$'t do anything
mmutes earlier durin~ an even if he was dvinl!."

ELBERFELDS

MADE HOSPITAL INSPECTION - Monday Lt . Gov. Richard Celeste, and Ron James,
incumbent candidate ft. State .Representative, !..-, talk to Scott Lucas, s~nte&lt;l,
administrator of Veterans Memorial Hospital. Celeste and James earlier m the day VtSited
with senior citizens at Proctorville and students at Rio Grande College where an open forum
meeting was held. Celeste and James were interested In the ~ration of Veterans
Memorial Hospital. They discussed several of the services the hospttal .offers. They led in
the General Assembly's expediting the establishment of the Ohio Uruversity College of
Osteopathic Medicine Utis year.
•

•

•

TOYLAND OPEN

VOL. XXVII NO. 134

PO~ EROY·MIDDLEPORT,

United Press lnternaliooal
The campaign's !ina! week
countdown begins today, and
· . politics shifts into overdrive
with all four top candidates
seeking votes in key states.
Jinuny Carter, who took
two days off to rest' and tape
some television spots,
sche.duled a teh!vision
interview before flying to a
rally at Columbia, S.C. , to
shore up his southern support
in a state said lo be wavering.
Carter later was flying to
Ulinois.
.President Ford flew to
Pittsburgh, with later stops
scheduled in Illinois.
Both v.ice presidential can·
' dldates , Walter Mondale and
Robert Dole, also mined the
industrial northeast after a
Monday both would rather
forget. ·
F6rd, in obvious good
hUJIIor Monday as he made
his way northward on the
Pacific Coast, cracked jokes
at a regional meeting of the
National Association of

at y

e
OHIO

Broa dcasters in · Portland,
Ore; •
Asked his view on the
debates, Ford said he thought
they might have been better
11
if J immy Catter ariswered
(he question s and . I
questioned my answers."
Seriously, he said, he would
like to see debates
"institutionalized In our
American p:~lilical system,''
rut does not know how that
could be done because of the
equal time c'tmflicts.
Polls In tl'tl state show the
presidential race very close
with one survey by The
Qregonian newspaper giving
Carter 43 per cent, Ford 40
per cent, inctependerit t;Jugene
McCarllly 6 per cent and
undecided .II per cent.
Earlier in SeatUe, Ford
tAlked about the economy,
called for an end to "noise
pollution" at airports and
asked for regulatory reform
to " Ire~ aviation !rom
ar)Jitrary and unnecessary
restrictions and regulations."
in an interview Monday .on

•

·Carter sees world
tiring of bluster.

By Ualtecl Press lnttruatioaal
Jimmy Carter said Wday the world Is Ure&lt;l of "bluffs
and blustering" by the Unltect SUites on when and where It
would use mllitary force.
"1'hey want the truth," said the DemocroUo oomlnee
ABC-TV , Car!er was told
in defending an earlier statement that, U he were
there was some concem that
ptesidenCand Russia attacked Yug...,tavia, he wo,uld not
he had an "overweenin g
commit
U. S, troops to fight the Soviets.
sense ol rnlsslon and wanted
President
Ford, In a harcJ.Itltting campaign spe~h 'a t
to be.. president too much."
Pittsbw-gh
Wday,
said Carter's debate statement on
He smiled and replied , "I
Yugoslavia
was
an
invitalioo ·to Russian aggression .
prefer to win hatlies Ulan looe
Carter spoke in a CBS Morning News interview from
them."
Plains, Ga ., before heading for South Carolina and lltlnoh;
Both Moodale and Dole mel
their first major scheduling I · in hls final wt:ek of battling Ford lor the Willie House.
FQrd also arranged to campaign in Illinois la ter tQday.
snafus Monday.
"I think the world is tired of bluffs and blustering,"
Mondale arose before dawn
said
Carter when asked about Ford 's attack on his
to greet steelworkers on the
Yugoslavia
statement. He agreed that a president ahould
early shift - and found it had
ket:P
his
military
options open at limes, but said Ford had
begun 10 minutes before he
also promised on at least six different occasioos that he
arrive&lt;!. An open air rally
would not commit American forces in certain situations.
was canceled because of the
These included Angola , I.ehanon, Eastern Europe and
weather, and only 19 of an
lthodesla, Carter 'said.
invited 50 unemployed
workers showed up for a
breakfast meeting with him.
He later urged crowds to
vote and reminded them that
one extra Democratic vote
per precinct would have
elected Hubert Humphrey
Instead ol Richard Nixon in
1968.
Dole finally made it to
Bangor, Maine, for an
appearance that had been on
(Continued on page 2)

Council delays
•
pay zncreases
in Middleport

Pay incrl!llses lor Middleport Village employt!B were
postponed until the next meeting Monday nigh\ by village
COWlCll.
. .
Finance Committee Chalr'11"n Marvin Kelly said his
committee bas rel'Onunended the raises suggested by Mayor
Fred Hoffman to be effective Jan . I, 1977.
Councilman James Brewer, who said the raises total an
additional $8100 a year in expenditures, thought the time
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS wrong for raising employes because residents In June passed u
tax levy to provide additional services. Brewer S8id the raise•
would take a sizeable portion of the levy, although he . also.
admitte&lt;l employes should have more pay. It was made clea r,
however, that the $8100 could come from savings In other
funds.
Mayor Hoffman, however, said the incTeases would not
necessarily affect levy lunds because tile village has hHd a
savmgs In the past year on employes salaries .tnce Horoid
Chase was not replaced with an employe of equni salary ond
,the cemetery bas heen operating without a sexton.
Clerk~reasurer Gene Grate interjected he was' surprised
thot Kelly's committee would make suc-h a recommendation
without consulting him since Ills his job to advise council on
availability ol village funds . Grate said he is working on 11
report to show cotutcll what ftutd s may he available and would·
compensaUon must go to have had It ready last night had he known the salary increase~
GaUipoliB.
issue was to come up. .
.
Suggestions (input) was
Kelly said if committees cannot recommend then the
accepted by the commis81on committees should be done away with. He said committe&lt;\
from communities and members felt the ftutds for the increased salaries would bo
townships, and speclaUatl In available based upon the monlllly report J"'epared by Grate .
a variety of flelds 0 to updale'
It WfS agreed that Grate will have hia report on llle money
(Continued on page zj
that mat go 'for aalary lncreaaes ready for llle next meeting
when llle mailer w(ll a~ain be discussed. M'YID' !ioflman sal~
his recommendations were that employes with over five years
of service should receive 10 percent raises and those with one
to live years of employment with the town should receive about
five percent.
Mayor Hoffman said that pre-applicationJ can ba
complete&lt;! now for projecta with funding through the
Department ol Housing and Urban Development and he wlll
bold public meetings on Nov. t and II, 7:30 p.m. to secw-e
public input on what projects people would like to see carried
out. The m~ximum ftutds for any project totalllOO,OOO.
Council approved the recent village comprehensive plan
update as completed by Buckeye Hllls-Hocking Valley
·
(Continued on page 2) ·

enttne

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1976

l .
JNews • • •in Brief~ Capita zmprovements
.
study has $6000 grant

'*''':'ii:'i:::::::~:::::::::,:::x:::::::~::::::::::.: ::~:~!:!:~:~:~:::::::::i:::::~::::::::;::::::::~:::;:::::;::::::::::~-::~:::::~

Located on First Floor, Main Store
Stop in Elberfeld's on the first floor
and see the grand selection of toys.,...
games- wh'eel goods- dolls .:... for
boys ·and girls of all ages. All
excellent quality famous brands
you'll know and have seen
advertised on television.
· . Open.. Every Weekday &amp; Saturday ''30 to 5
Open Friday, 9:30 liiB:OO p.m.

.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Are Preferred People

...

'
By Uulted Press International
.
COLUMBUS - UNEMPillVMENT IN OHIO declined
from 6.4 per cent in August to 6.2 per cent in September,
largely because of the end of the United Rubber Workers unum
strike and teachers returning to the classroom, the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services r_epor~ today . .
.
The Bureau said employment tn Ohio s factortes rose 2.8
Meigs County will receive a empl~yment serilice office in ·would he available at the
per cen t from August to 1,301,000 workers. "Nearly one. ha~ of
Department
of Meigs County If a location senior citizens ·center ln
the increase occurred as workers returned to. thetr .Jobs .Ohio
Pomeroy.
Development
grant
of
16,000
can he found.
following termination of dls~utes in. the. production of ~res ,
Wells said, however, tllat
for
a·
capital
improvements
Mrs.
Eleanor
Thomas,
other rubber produ.cts and atr condtttorung eqwpment, the
capability
study,
according
to
the
office would be a full·lime
executive
director
of
the
bureau said.
a report 'at a meeting of the Meigs Cotutly Council on operation. Currently,
SCRANTON, PA ·.: BOB DOLE: SHOWS every indication Meigs County Regional Aging, said if the office needa residents of llle county (Jilng
unemplo.yment
he wants to earn his reputation as President Ford's hatchet Plaruling Commission at The space on. a part lime
. basis, It for
rnan 'durin~ the final week of. the campaign. Dropping down . Farmers Bank 8~ilding
frbm over-Cast, rainy or snowy skies across New England and Monday afternoon.
C. E. Blakeslee, ~eculive
the Midwest Dole repeatedly branded the Democrats as a
party of a w~ak America and responsible for previous wars. director of the commission,
He also launcbed a personal attack on Walter 'Mondale, saymg was authorized to sign ' a
it would be "downright frightening" to have hun as v1ce contract with the Ohio
president.
, Department of Development
Dole at every stop Monday, attacked Jimmy Carters and the Buckeye Hills
statcme~ts on taxes, defenSe policy. and federal spending. Regional Deveiopm.ent.
After spending the day in Maine, Rhode Island, New York and Planning Commission on the
study. The grant share is
(Conlinued on page 21
$6,000 and the local share to
be provided is $3,000 to make
the total cost $9,000.
Jennings and Associates,
.
.
Inc., Columbilll, whoh~s been
employed to do the study will
DEER OFF LIMITS
go to work at once. Bla~eslee
Amooalh•
rare allldl on
said llle study will be divided
' Pomeroy'a Malo St., about
Into several sections and will
The Meigs Local School Granville Flesher, impartial project what can be done in
I:ZI a. m, today waa a doe
District Board of Educatoin hear ing officer for the the way of capital imdeer.
Monday night refused to handicapped, and Lynne provements from 1978
The deer, wltaeuea aald,
The Meigs County Com·
accept resignations of seven Crow, prevailing wage . through 1982
tame down Mulberry Ave.
miuloners
were Qotilled
kindergarten school bus officer.
...t moved oato Malo St.
Allirst, llle existing capital
Monday
by
Maxine Plumdrivers when it met in special
Florence Barrett, a cook, Improvements will be studied
Trafllc waa alowed or
mer,
executive
director, lblt
session.
'
was given a leave of absence and listed.
atoppecl In both dlreellous
the
commlaaloners
may
The seven drivers, Esther for the remainder of the
to atve lbe deer tile rllbt of
Then local officials will
begin
interviewing
archllectll
mack, Letha Cotterill, !'laoml semester and the board meet with the consultaDt to
way aa lbe aalmal moved
design a multi.purpoee ·
f1oyd,
Faye
Manley, approved the attendance of come up with suggestions of
West oa Malo St. lo oe~r the tobuDding
to be erect!l(l rM~tr
Charlotte Dillard, Pauline John W. Blaettnar to a what Is needed In capital
old depot where H vaabed
Vetera
..
Memorial Holpltal.
Snowden and Linda Morris; conference in Columbus on bnprovements.
' lnlo a wooded area,
The building wiD be occupied
submitted resigf18tions to the Nov. 5 and 6 with five high
RECEIVES TROPHY .,.. Bill Kautz, left, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Kautz, was presented
Next will come definite
by aenlor · cltizena, Com·
board liecause .they drive school students to attend also . proposal and cost estimates.
a.trophy-by Ray Justis, president of the Soutbeastern Ohio Garden Tracto,r Club, on behalf
munity
Mental Health Center
regular routes for $4.56 an Expenses will be paid from
of Ute club, for having received lhe JllOiit pointa, 95, for the year In pulls he has participated
The final phase will deal
FUN
NIGHT
SET
and
other
agencies.
hour and kindergarten roules the high school D.E.C.A. with cost estimates 11nd in. This is the first time the ~lub has given such an award . The award was presented at .a
Trick
or
treat
in
Pomeroy
The
alate
will also provide
for $3.02 an holD'. The board fun! .
dinner of the club, held Oct. 24 at Racine Fire Station with 28per99nsattending. Eligibility IS
proposaiB.
wiD
be
held
Thursday,
Oct.
an
architect
to design the
held that the lower payment
The board approved
Meigo County Com- base&lt;! on the most points earned and whether you placed first, second or third as so many
21;
lrilm
6
to
7
p.m.
for
buildlna
.
Attending
were
for the kindergarten route extended service two weeks lnissioner Henry Wells, who points are given for each placing. Also, a person must be o member of the club to be eligible.
children
12
and
under.
The
Henry
WeU.,
Warden
Ours
driving was in accordance before school and two weeks 'is vice chairmlln of the
The club meets on the first Wednesday of each month at llle Dale Kautz residence. Anyone
siren
will
110und
to
begin
and
and
Bernard
GWtey,
corn·
with an agreement signed alter school for Ronald Logan planning commission, wishing to join may call Justis atli67-3730or Dave Washburn, vice president at64l2-4211.
end the actlvilles.
·
mluloners and Martha
between the board and who is the occupational work reported there will be an
Chambers, clerk.
uncertified employes of· the experience coordinator. Supt.
district last autumn and Charles L. Dowler and
•
deviation from it cannot he building principals wm be
HOLIDAY COM~G
tolerated.
directed
to
compile .
students
ol the Meiga local
The board also tumed down Individual building reports
.
.
.
School
District
will have an
a request for a leave of and to maintain the reports
The Pomeroy Chamber of number five was a big rfp off advertisements in the lnlroduced as the new tuteXpectec1 holiday Mooday.
absence·for 19'16-77 year from for Public inspeciion by Nov,.
Conunerce .at its noon lun· and six should be deCided by brochure a non-member secreta!')' of the chamber. Classes will not be helcl on
,
Cecilia .Rinaldi, high sChool I. .
cheon meeting Monday at the tlle scientists. It was in· would be charged luU price, a · Mrs. Chapman replaces tliat day because It hal been
Spanish teacher. It indicate&lt;! · It was informally agreed to
Meigs Inn voted unanimously dlcated that nwnber seven chamber member given 50 L;yme Crow wbo has ac- set for parent-teacher con·
. her resignation would be proceed with repairs · to the
to support the new one·mlll . waaanewtaxpayers' burden. ·pert"ml off.
cepted other employment. ferencea. Teachers will be at
accepted.
furnace · of the Pomeroy
Fred W. Crow, Jr .,
Crow also announced there
current
expe
..
e
levy
on
the
Attending were Crow, Paul the buDding, students will
John Bentley, high school Elementary School at the
Powell's Super Value and November ballot ln.Pomeroy president of the cllamber, will be i. meeting Wednesday Slmoo, Fred Morrow, Walter not. Parents wlshln&amp; a
faculty member, wa:il!ir~d as request of Asst. Supt. Dan the ·Meigs Jaycees will to be used for street lighting. aMounced that.a recognlllon night of the Pomeroy
Grueaer, RalP!t Graves, BW conference are to phone the
wrestling coach for one year Morris. Cost will be 'about
Mayor Clarence Andrews dinner. will ·be held at the Cllizenl' Action Group. The Grueaer, N. W. Compton, respective achoola lh~lr
sponsor
the
third
annual
and Rick Van Maire, a
the chamber to endorse Meigs Inn.at 6 p. m. on Nov. purpoee olthe neltly fonned VIrgil Teaford, Wendell children attend to make an
substitute, was employed as ~il~wing . the special COIIIJIIunily Halloween patty. asked
·'
Oct. 30to be held at the issue, for if the levy faUs 10 in honor of E. F. Robinson. group lito palnl up and clean- Hoover, Dale Warner, Ted . appointment.
junio• high scbool basketball meeting, the board con1erred Saturday,
Robinson, a former mayor up the village of Pomeroy. Reed, Leo Vaugban, Jolui
Powell's Super Value at 6:30 Pomroy 'will be without three·
coach for one year, pending with all JDembers of the
fourths ·of Its street lights. of ,~omeroy, started in the Paul Simon lain charge ol the Weeka, Waller Robb, Mayor
PICIUPPUTOFF
.
approval of the Ohio Athletic coaching staff who were · p.m.
laundry businesa with his Pomeroy approach cleanup. (:larence Andrews, C. ,~.
The
levy
is
neceuary
due
to
Due
lo weatlter condlllons,
There wUI be free cider,
.Association. ·van Matre will invited to meet with the board
lather 75 years ago, Robinson
Simon
Monday
reported
llle
Increase&lt;!
cost
ol
power.
Bialtealee,
Scott
·
L
ucaa,
Jack
leaf
pickup,
for the conthis · month's doughnuts and treats for
be paid the supplemental following
baa. been in public service 40 lhlt tbe river bank can be Ca~y 'and Mrs. Chapman. venlence ol reslderill, In
Following
a
talk
on
Issues
regular
meeting.
Purpose
of
children,
games
and
prizes
salary for the position even
years. Walter Grueser arid
though he Is a substitute the joint session was to awarded lor the prettiest, four through seven to be Richard Jones head the cleaned up before winter but ::::::=~::::::~..;~;:;:;:;:;~:~::~::::;~:;:;:;:;~:~;::;::::;:;:;:::::;:· Pomeroy hal lien postponed
most of the work wiD have to'
voted
on
Nov.
2
by
Churck
to the week of Nov. 1, Mayor
EXTENDED OUTWoK
teacher. No regular faculty dlscuas any problems which Scariest and J11ost original In
committee
for
the
dinner.
wail
until
spring.
He
stated
Williamson,
,representing
the
Clarence Andrews anTbaraday tbroagb
member would accept the might exist in the athletic different age groups. There
Crow
also
reported
thut
tllat
he
had
10
boys
from
utility
companies,
on
behaU
Saturday, ebaoce of rain or 1 nounces. ·· ·
wlll be special prizes on
junior high basketball program.
plans
are
In
the
making
to
of
the
Ohio
Chamber
of
Met.~
High,
to
8l8ist
In
the
now 1'llllrlday aad fair
Board members attending grocery items at Powell's the
coaching spot, it was
Friday aad Saturday.
ASKTO.WED
were Wendell Hoover, . day of the event. Aportion of Commerce, Farm Bureau, organize a "Greelin&amp;s 'program Monday.
reported.
Caravan"
similar to
Crow also announced lhlt Htgbl 'l'lllrlday In . . ud
A marrtaae ·11C8111e bu
The board appointed John president; Mrs. Jenriife~ the proceeds of the days sales Wildlife Division and others, Welcome Wagon for new
chamber endorsed
there will be a meeting on lowo • Ill, m!l4eralfll&amp; by
'been Issued to Dale Keith
Redovian, , Tille
IX Sheets, Virgil King , Robert will be donated by Powell's to the
people
coming
Into
the
area.
negative
voles
on
each.
Christmas lighting Wed· Friday alld Saturday to
Anderson, II, Rt. 2, Albany,
· Coordinator; Martha Snowden and Dr. Keith the Meigs Jaycees. Watch for
Williamson said thai luue Packages will contain nesdny at the Meigs Museum. hlgblta 5411 aad lnata MI.
an ad to appear in the paper
and Julia Rodriguez Bayo, 24,
VeMari, local Identification , Ri~~15 .
Barbara Chapman was
lour would not help the needy, brochures and souvenirs. For
this week .
Rl. 2, Albany.
. ol h~ndicapped coorinda tor;

Resignatio~s

of
drivers refused

At Farmers Bank

Architect

is wanted

Powell p /a ns

•

Because We Furnish A
We invite you' to use this preferred service with n~
service charge. All those 65 years and over ar'e
welcome to open an account any lime. Stop in and
see us now, ·

' .

~J
•
• ~ en '

Business group

endors~s - light

levy

third. party

for Halloween

Free Checking Account For You

OAS SPECIAL FEATURES _,: . l fghtwe'Jgll j, removable on a

ASKS SUPPORT
Sharon Shevon Bentz
llled lor support under the
Reciprocal Agreement Act
against Larry Roderick
Smith in Meigs County
Common Pleas Couri.

Waugh-}laDey·Wood FIDitfll
Home from 8 to 9 p. m.
Tueods:y. RAtoary lll'vlce will
beatap. m.

SENIOR CITIZENS

piece burners ... M(jtchinQ ec tor porcelain bac: ~g u a rd , . , Lil t·
up/Lift·olf cooht op . , . Euy grip cont ro l knotls . .. Ant!-turn
burner QII IBS ... Slanted, easy to r&amp;ed manifold panel .. ,

Rev. A. J. Golublewlkl of·
ficiatlng. Burial will be In
Mollnd Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the

Candidates move
into high gear

POMEROY,' OHIO
'

S40,ooo.oo Maximum Insurance For Each. DePGsltor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

•
\

.

•

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