<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10457" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/10457?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-02T13:05:07+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20900">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/f535cf797350ca377bfbbce09cbbd545.pdf</src>
      <authentication>bc79663d284d31d07ab2b5b8c9169327</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="33353">
                  <text>.....,..,..,.,,...

1 'I

'I•

"

Race War

Nixon

GRAND OPENING OF THE new Sears Authorized
Catalog Merchant Store was held Thursday morning when a
ribbon cutting ceremony was held . Pomeroy Mayor Charles
Legar using gold scissors had the honor of cutting the ribbon
officially opening the new store. Left to right are Shirley

I

(Cootinued from page. I)
(Continued from page I!_
guidelines. But lliey said ti1e have lent more credence to the
yardstick probably would be negotiations.
more complex than the 3.2 per
Tepper s~id he thought the
cent rate of increase allo~ed armed rush by prison authoriunder the voluntary gmdehnes ties and others was ."wrong."
of the Kennedy and Johnson . "We found a stable situation
in Yard D akin to a town
administrations.
Diff?rent guidel~nes m~y be meeting. There was a police
, established for different mdQS· function, a governing function ,
tnes, they sa1d. . .
a feeding function, all being
N1xon sa1d profits wo~d not carried on capably. The prisobe controlled except for wmd- ners told us the hostages were
fall " profits resulting from the being treated better than they
econonuc policy ttself. He sa1d were " he said.
the Pay Commission would
"We all knew if the prison
~equire businesses .~o cut price.~ was retaken by force , death
tf they run up · exorbitant was inevitable," he said.
profits because of controls on
"What happened at Attica
the wages of their employes was predictable and inevitable.
and the cost of thetr supplies. There was no way not to. know
The labor-management · that it would happen and will
Baity , employee, Gladys Kiger, field trainer, Conrad
public
makeup of the Pay Bo~rd happen again in other places,"
Ohlinger, employee, A. P. Gravelle, Sears representative,
was a concession to orgamze he said.
Theodore Reed, president of the Farmers Bank and Savings,
labor ~hich demanded such a
Tepper said he thought New
Mayor Legar, Lou and Thehna Osborne, ilwners, Loren
tr1part1te
body.
York
State Corrections ComMitchell, Sears area consul!ant; Carolyn McDaniels and
But administration officials missioner Russell D. oswald
·Florence Bearhs, employees.
said the cabinet-level Cost of was a " humane person" whose
Living Council - headed by "heart was in the right place,
Treasury Secretary.. John B. and who acting alone, would not
Connally - would retain ulti- have permitted the armed
mate authority and could veto rush" by police.
the guidelines set by either the
"Gov. Rockefeller is the
preferring
to
control
diagonally
pay
board
or
price
commission.
highest
elected official in the
!3oth had the same number of
pieces remainmg. a queen. a rather than trade for one of Business representatives want- state. As such the ultimate
Fischer's rooks.
·· ed the government to retain ·decision must rest with him,"
rook and five pawns.
With
the
14th
move
Fischer
control of overall policy.
he S81.
.d
Patrosian Draws Ahead
had
By that time, Fischer's went on the offense, with The AFL-CIO c rge a
offensive had practically va- Petrosian building a wall "double-cross" over the provision giving the administration .
nished and Petrosian had around his castled king .
point
came
on
the
veto power over wage and pnce
Clearing
ac hieved a slight positional
advantage with a better pawn 23rd move when Petrosian dec1s10ns. Umon sow-ces uatd
formation on queen side prom- opted for a rook exchange, AFL-CIO . President George
Meany Withdrew h1s offer to
ising favorable possibilities f?r which Fischer accepted .
Win
ovation
serve
as a labor member of the
the ending.
In the nexi four moves, pay board after hearing Nixon's
Fischer, playing white,
Fischer
captw-ed the Russian's address.
opened the game with the
king's pawn and employed a rook, a pawn , a knight and a However, congressional reacRubinstein attack. Petrosian bishop. Petrosian took Fischer's tion to Nixon's speech generally
was favorable .
countered with a· French rook, a bishop and a knight.
After the 29th move, both Nixon said the government
defense.
began
jockeying for position was prepared to enforce the
The first crucial decision
came at the 13th move, when with only a rook, five pawns, wage and price guidelines but
Petrosian retreated a bishop, and their queens left on the ne said the success of the
board .
program would depend upon
At that point, Petrosian and voluntary cooperation of labor,
Fischer reached a draw with a management and the general
repetition of moves and they public .
shook hands while a capacity Nixon acted under the authorJUDGE ABELE
crowd of 12,001 gave them a ity granted to him by the
Judge
Homer E. Abele of
standing ovation.
Economic Stabilization Act
which expires April 30. He the 4th Olstrlct Cow-l of
Jarratt Bobo, 95, Point Rock.
asked Congress to extend the Appeals, McArthur, is the
near Albany. died this morning
guest speaker to the clas!l'of
law for a year.
Bernard Cole
at his home.
There may be a congressional new citizens being sworn in
Mr . Bobo was the son of the
fight over the legislation. Sen . today in the Supreme Court of
late Francis Marion Bobo and Died Wednesday
William Proxmire, D-Wis ., New York at Mineola. He will
Sarah Ann Caster Bobo. Besides
Bernard Cole. 32, of 143 chairman of the Senate-House administer the Oath of
his parents, he was preceded in Glencoe Ave ., Dayton, died
Economic Committee, has Allegiance to his friend, John
death by his wife, Carrie, in Wednesday
morning
in served notice he will try to P. Ellls, formerly ·of South
March of this year .,
Africa, World War II lighter
Cincinnati General Hn&lt;lpitai.
Surviving are a daughter, Mr . Cole was the youngest son rewrite the act to limit the pilot, now an Abele family
President's power.
Mrs. Ruth Silver, Naper, Neb.; of Mrs . Ruby Cole and the late
friend and business associate.
three sons, Meryl of Lancaster , Pearl Cole of near Tuppers In addition to the pay and Judge Abele and his youngest
Henry at home, and Wesley of Plains. He had received his prices bodies. Nixon established son, Andy, flew to New York
Chillicothe ; a sister Miss Viola third kidney transplant Sept. 5. a Dividend Committee , head- Thursday and wlll return
Bobo, a retired WW I nurse, Funeral services will be held at ed by Federal Reserve Chair- Sunday.
Dayton ; and two grandchildren . 10 a .m. Saturday at the man Arthur F . Burns , to
Mr. Bobo was a retired far- Reisinger Funeral Home at supervise interest rates and
corporate dividends. Officials
mer and orchard operator.
Dayton . Burial will also be at said, however, that the commitFuneral service will be held Dayton .
tee should have little to do
at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
because
interest rates have
Columbia Chapel Church at
declined recently and almost all
Point Rock with the Rev .
. PTA TO MEET
Eugene Underwood officiating. The Pomeroy Elementary corporations have complied
Burial will be in the Castor School PTA will meet Monday with Nixon's request to avoid
increases in dividends .
Cemetery.
at 7:30p.m. at the school. Ruby
Friends may call at the Vaughan, president of the
SURGERY OVER
Strong and Son Funeral Home county council, will be the guest SYRACUSE
Ernest
in Wilkesville Saturday af- speaker. There will be room Quillen , who returned horne
ternoon. The body will be taken visitations where teachers will Tuesday following surgery at
to the church, of which he was a explain materials used in their Holzer Medical Center returned
member, one hour preceding classrooms.
to the hospital Thursday. His
the service .
room number is 234.

Fischer, Petrosian Stand 1-1-1
BUENOS AIRES 1UP! I ~
Former World CheS&gt; Champion
T1g ran Petros1an of the Soviet
Union acce pted a draw with
America's

Bobby

first ma tch last week and
Petrosian the skond three days
ago. Their next' match is
Tuesday .
Winner of the tournament,
scheduled for 12 games, will
challenge Wol'id Champion
Boris Spassky of the Soviet
Union for the title .
The 42-year-old Russian ,
world champion from 1963 to
1969, and Fischer drew after 33
moves because of a threewtime
repeti tion of moves . Petrosian
was dangerously close to
running out of time - he had
only three minutes left to make
seven moves -and made quick
defensive moves in an effor t to
reach the 40 required in the two
and one-half hours.

Fischer

Th w·sday to keep their cand1·
d~tes tourna ment series even
afte r three matches.
Each now has one victory and
the draw. ~iving them one and
one-half points. Fischer won the

HELP PROVIDED
The Pomeroy E-R squad
answered a call to the Meigs

I

_!J~~~~~~~rt~

BAKER
FURNITURE
Midd &gt; ~ port.

county
infirmary
at 9:28a.m.
Fannie
Friday where
a patient;
Sovel , had become ill. She was
12ken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Reindeer, which are a type
of caribou, are the only deer
that have been domesticated .

0.

I Will BE ABSENT FROM MY OFFICE
FROM OCT. 13 TO OCT. 28. 1971
A nurse will be present from 9 to 12
a.m. and from 1 to 4 p.m. until Oct. 20,
1971, and the office will be closed
thereafter until my return.

J. J. DAVIS, M.D.

}arrott Bobo
Dies Thursday

WEATHER REPORT

. . ./:-,~.:·:·.·~:·:':i&lt;~·,l:·:~ ~:.:1 :·:.~·::

••;.;

1-..! l G l-\1"

.\·..

-·

~1:\'0S lYI)I~\

..'·:·.·..
,v ,

..

\ ·:;&gt;

. ,•,

:;,: ·:

...·.···
..
. ".

i;;,:;.

·,

.. ;;

~

. ..

·. ·~

'

.- .,

..

,. •' '· • " . ' .. .1'; -:•·:····
,:
-·.•"&lt;:

.· -.·. ...

.

,~, •.,·. ...,·::.

RESERVES TO PLAY
The Meigs Marauder reserve
football squad will play Jackson
at Meigs Stadium in Pomeroy
Saturday at 6 p.m.

.

Rernernber. our ~J 1ghtUepos i1 or y is open fo r busine ss

e·,en

·:~ he n we· r~

not.

Thi s way ~·r:·rc ready l'.'hencve r you're ready to do business.

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
POMEROY

RUTlAND

MEIGS THEATR£

William Wilcox Died Thursday
William Keith Wilcox, '!/,
Lan gsville, died Thursday
evening at his residence
following a long illness. ·
A t962 graduate of Rutland
High School. Mr. Wilcox is
sw-vived by his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Francis (Buck )
Wilcox, Langsville: three
brothers, Robert, of Chillicothe;

Kenneth (Flip ), of Middleport,
and Raymond (Butch), Middleport Route I.
Funeral services will he at 2
p.m. Sunday at the Martin
Funeral Home with the Rev .
Bill Carter officiating. Bw-ial
will be in the Miles Cemetery .
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime Saturday .

Arell Blanton
Elizabeth Knowles
INDIAN PAINT

· Technicolor

Member Federal Rese r ve, System
Member Federa l Oeposilln sur ance Corporat ion
All Accounts Insured Up ToS20,000.00

Sunday thru Tuesday
Odober 10 . 12

THE OWL AND
THE PUSSYCAT
Barbara Stfiesand

Geo. Segal
" R"

......

.. -.....--~--

Featurette :

Hokus Pokus: J Stooges
SHOW START57 P.M.

=

Shop All 3 Floors
...

-

-

- --

- · - - - ---= =
¥

-

-----

-

-

~

u

Bargains In Every Department
•

...

bS

=

bS

---

b

Tonight, Saturday
end Sunday
Oct. 8-9-10

DOUBLE FEATURE
FIVE .EASY PIECES

CITY ICE &amp;·FUEL CO.

COLOR
(Rl
PLUS
YOU CAN'T
WIN 'EM ALL

Tony Curtis
Charles Bronson
COLO a

'

POINT

'~

'.

' I
/'

I

PLEAS~NT,

W. VA.

! t

•

•

No Progress With
Strike·Settlement
NEW HAVEN - Negotiations, which
began Thursday morning in Cambridge
between United Steel Workers of America
Union and Foote Mineral Company, were
broken off with "no success," it has heen
learned through Hershel Hunter, staff
representative of the International USA.
However, Hunter said It was tentatively agreed by the union and company

.MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

to meet Monday or Tuesday in Cambridge
with talks to begin at 10 a.m.
Approximately 375 employes of the
Foote Mineral Company's plant near New
Haven have been on strike one week
following expiration of a three-year
cotllract. Two other Foote Mineral plants
located in Cambridge and Steubenville,
Ohio are also affected by the slrlke.

I

OU Student Sebo
·Hit in Side When
Rifle Discharges ·
POMEROY- John Sebo, 18, was shot
through the side Friday night by a .22
calibre bullet from an old rifle he was
cleaijing, but was able to drive himself to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
ThesonofMr.andMrs. John Sebo, 142
Mulberry Ave., Sebo was given first aid at
the Pomeroy hospital, then was taken to
Holzer Medical .Center by Barbara Riggs
where he was treated fw-ther and
released.
A freshman at Ohio University, Sebo
was home for the weekend. His parents
were notified of the accident at the MeigsJackson foothaU game at Jackson. Sheriff
Hartenbach said there would be no.formal
investigation of the incident.

New Queen
GALUPOUS - Agasoline war was in
full swing here Satw-day afternoon.
Fo.ur service station, U. S. Oil, 2001
Eastern Ave.; Bonded Service, 723 Second
Ave.; Hi·Lo Oil Co. Inc. (Working Man's
Friend), 1188 Eastern Ave., and the new
Save More Service Station on Upper Rt. 7
below the old Silver Bridge each were
selling gasoline at reduced prices.
Three stations, U. S. Oil, Save More
and Hi-Lo had regular gasoline at 25.9
cents per gallon with premium at 26.9
cents. Bonded was selling regular at 26
cent.s high test at 30.
All fow-·stations agreed on three things

Lawsuits blvolve
Property, Money ·

TWO EMPLOYED
CHESTER - David Chadwell,
Chester, and Fred Kessinger of Mid·
dleport, have been employed as, teachers
in the Eastern Local SChool District. They
replace Lawren'ce !lose and Violet
Mlllhone, both of whom have been
. teaching at the Riverview School. Rose
and Mrs. Millhone1 both retired, accepted
temporary assignments in the d~trict
pending Chadwell and Kessinger completing their student teaching, which tjl~y
'now have dbne:

Families

15 CENTS

. .. I

'

UNIT ONE COOLING TOWER - Structural steel is being erected at Ohio
Power's $488 million James M. Gavin Plant near Cheshire. 'l'hls Is the first major
steel work f&lt;r the plant. Evacuation work began at the site las! March.

POMEROY - Three suits for money .
and one forrepossession of property have
been filed In Meigs County Common Pleas
Cow-l.
The Pomeroy National Bank, Rutland
Branch, filed suit against David Eugene
McDonald and Velvie Virgiilia McDonald,
et al, Columbus, for $1,415.12 pius interest
from Oct. 21, 1969.
The Citizens National Bank filed two
. suits, one against Robert and Hope lm·
boden et al, Rutland, asking $4,329.00 and
'
.
interest from Nov. 29, !970, and the other
against Theodore E . Smith and ~usan
Thomas Smith, Langsville, for $13,507.09
and interest from Sept. 7, 1971.
Filing for repossession of property is
the Glick Fw-niture Company, Columbus,
against James B. Horsley and Ray Horsley, Middleport.

•

Jack Nicholson

(Technicolorl

Contlnl.lous Service On
Fridays 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.

WASHINGTON - RAW AGRICULTIJRAL products will
continue to be excluded from price cootrols in the period following
the end of the !JO.day wage-pricuatefreeze Nov.J3.
White House spokesmen made it clear the raw products would
not be subject to controls in a background paper expiaining the
program for the post-freeze period outlined by President Nixon
Thursday night.

- -

Storewide Sale

•

'

':

THE REV. CHARLES SIMONS URGED all members of the
Middleport First Baptist Chw-ch to listen to the new radio
IX'Ogram of the chw-ch on WMPO at 7 : 4~ a.m. Sunday . He parUcularly wants them to pay attention to the soloist's singing of two
songs, "Sing and Shout Out" and "Let Your Light Shine." At the
10:15 a.m. service, words to the songs will be distributed to the
congregatioo who will sing the selections at which time they will
be recorded for future broadcasts.

=-• .... -•-....•wna

- ..-

i :;
/

Than lllJOO

Eastern, eigs in
Bi · or 22 Pupils

I

.' I '.

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

SUNDAY, OCTOBE~ 1_0, 1971

Pomeroy-Middleport

BEN-TOM CO. OFFICIAlS WANT it known that a com!X'essor which appeared in a photograph of The Sentinel this week
at a lot on East Second St. belongs tO Ben-Tom. The photograph
was taken to show the use of state equipment oo the privately
owned lot. The hack hoe also in the photograph is the property of
the State Highway Department.

MRS. MARILYN WOLFE, ASSISTANT CASHIER of the
Pomeroy National Bank, was among the local group of banking
personnel attending a Group 7 meeting of the Ohio Bankers Assn .
Tuesday night in Coshocton. Marilyn's name was unintentionally
omitted from the list of names of those going . ·

•

THREE SECTIONS

I I •
/ '

THE SNAKE POPULATION Is something this year, apparently.
OVer the weekend a tree fell onto the driveway of Mrs. Goldie
Fridley, Union Ave., who was visiting her son-in~aw and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. George Wagner and family in Colwnbus.
Mrs. Fridley's son, Larry, and two of his friends began to
clear up the area around the fallen tree when snakes began
moving from aU directioos. They killed eight or nine small snakes ·
but several others got away. As was the case at the Carl Moore
home in Pomeroy recently the mother was never lor•ted. This
batch was also believed to have been copperheads.

•

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

ROBERT SCO'IT DURST, 4, UNDERWENT open heart
surgery a) Children's Hospital in Columbus Wednesday and would
like to hear from residents about now. He Is the son of Mr. and _
Mrs. Roher! Durst o! Athens and the grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin Hood of Pomeroy and' Robert Durst of Portland. Robert
has a brother, Jason, born last August.

I

'

1Technicolorl

Since 1872

Farm Products Still Free

NOW YOU KNOW
The shortest gestation period
of any mammal is the Virgil)ian
Utility President Named
COLUMBUS (UP! )- Arthur opossum which is 12 days.
G. Green has beeri elected
FROSH LOSE
president and chief executive
officer of the Columbus &amp; Meigs High freshman playing
Southern Ohio Electric Co., at Jackson Thw-sday lost 14 to 0.
succeeding
retiring
J .' In the first half Jackson scored
Lawrence McNealey, a native in a 10 yd. run and in the second
of Gallipolis, effective Nov. 30. half again on a 40 yd. reverse .
Meigs staged several drives in
the second half, but couldn't
score. The next Meigs game will
be Oct. 15 with Wahama at
Meigs._
Tonight &amp; Saturday
October 8-9
WILD RIDERS ·

&amp;rving Meigs County

(Cootinued from page 1)
· ---when he announced his new economic policy in August ,"
Guggenheim said. "We don't know as yet what the exact per
botUe tax charge will he. Federal officials are working this out."
He said persons buying imported liquor next month will pay !he
tax in addition to the regular coot of the item.

I

. ..

Saturday Nights Til

News ... in BriefS

Reaching More

VOL VI NO. j7

Elberfelds In Pomeroy Are
Open Both Friday and

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMI'ITED - Elsie Pooler,
Pomeroy; Jimmy Spangler ,
Rutland; Debora Holthouse ,
Pomeroy ; Thw-ston Stone, Jr. ,
Pomeroy; Lisa Gillen, New
Haven.
DISC HARGED ~ Maxine
Dugan, John Fry, Cheryl
Hysell, Gene Thompson, Gail
Shaffer, Bess Sanborn, Sarah
Congo, Fannie Sovel, Allen
Oiler , Raymond Thompson,
Cheryl Hall.

Your invited Guest

Contlnutd mostly c.loudy with
chance of showers northeast
Sunday and. partly · cloudy
elsewhere. Cool with the highest
in the SOs. Partly cloudy and
cool Sunday night and MondAy.
Low Saturday night upper 3~
and lower 40s,

Reigning

late Saturday afternoon :
That the price war began on Thw-sday .
GALLIPOLIS - Debbie Condee,
That it could last indefinitely.
senior, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
And that they were selling more Condee, 434 Lariat Drive, Gallipolis, was
gasoline than ever with business booming. ctowned Gailia Academy High School's
26th Homecoming Queen prior to the
GAHS-Wellston football game on
Memorial Field here Friday night.
Miss Condee, sponsored by the Varsity
G Club, received the coveted homecominC
queen cr 0wn trophy and traditional kiss
from ~ohn Day, student body president.
Jay, · Cremeans, vice president of the
GALUPOUS - Property valued at student body, presented the queen flowera.
over $520 was taken in a burglary Friday
AUendants were Debbie Saunders,
night at the Ellen Richards home in sponsored by the Tri-Hi·Y Club, and Nancy
Thw-man.
Adams, sponsored by the Key Club. Both
Mrs. Richards told GalUs County were presented trophies by Cremeans.
sheriff's deputies she left her home at ·6: 30
Seventeen senior girls so~ht the 1971
p.m. and returned at 3 a.m. The home had homecoming crown. Others participating
been entered by going through the back were Judy Hammond, Beth Mackenzie,
door.
Christi Martin, linda Jeffers, Jeri Fife,
Intruders ransacked the house and Janie Stowers, Joyce Holley, Carol
tore a cloth off a pool table. Missing were Folden, Claire Markley, Nancy Walker,
record alhwns, recorda, a watch, radio, Pam Romaine, Margi Bryan, Christl
diamond rosary and miscellaneous items. King and Mary Angell.
·Miss Condee, a college prep major, ill
a varsity cheerleader, and a member of
the GAHS choir, Futw-e Nurses of
Americ~, Tri-Hi-Y Club, and a Gallia
Script salesman . She reigned over
NEW YORK (UP!) - New York City's Saturday night's homecoming dance at
consumer affairs commissioner charged Galli a Academy.
Friday's ceremonle~ were witnessed
Satw-day that Florida tOmato growers are
selling the public green tomatoes treated by approximately 3,000 fans. Activities
began when the GAHS marching band,
with a chemical "to tw-n them red."
Commissioner Bess Myerson, in a under the direction of Charles Rowe,
statement submitted to the U. S. Depart- marched to mid-field and formed a huge
ment of Agricultw-e, also said American GA in honor of the 1971 candidates.
The candidates were introduced by
consumers are forced to buy the Florida
Mrs.
Anne Fischer, GAHS ~ocal music
tomatoes becauSe of a "bizarre ruling"
forbidding the sale of "delicious higher director.
Prior to the ceremony, the candidates
quality" tomatoes from Mexico.
and
their escorts were paraded around the
"The ruling uses the arliiice of size
discrimination to keep Mexican tomatoes gridiron in convertibles.
The halftime show featw-ed two fine
off the American market," she charged.
The ruling, s~e noted, sets a minimwn size performances by the Wellston and
for tomatoes .- just over two and a half Gallipolls marching bands.
The 114-piece Golden Rocket band,
inches in diameter - which is slightly
larger than the standard size of the under the direction of Dane Heitzman, now
in his 23rd year at Wellston, dedicated ita
Mexican tomatoes.
"In the last two winters, U. S. tomato halftime show to a fellow band member,
prices have risen 40 pet. faster than Greg Pugh, who is a pa.tient in the Holzer
produce prices generally As a result of this Medical Center.
The Wellstonians, led by "Golden
hi unTc ruling. Consequently, consumers
are fed Florida tomatoes whicli are picked Girl" Sheree Walbw-n, head majorette,
Hrecn an(( gusst•d with -ethylene lCJ turn presented a precision show ·with the
· · , IC(Jntinued 'on .page .2)
them red," Mi '" Myerson said .

POMEROY -Twenty-two pupils who
have been attending schools in the Meigs
Local School District have been notified by
letter that they live in the Eastern Local
School District and should be attending
schools in that disfrlcJ.
.
Letters were handed the pupils by
Meigs Local Supt. George Hargraves who
said that the matter arose after several
pupils' families had moved from the Meigs
Local District into the Eastern District
and their children later were determined
still to be attending Meigs Local Schools.
. The pupils thereupon were instructed
ID attend Eastern Local Schools.
However, the incidents brought out
that some students - 22 - living already
In the Eastern District were attending the
Meigs District Schools.
In some instances, at least, these
famllies had heen sending their children to
Pomeroy and Salisbury schools through
several generations before consolidation
Into Meigs Local.
The letters to the students indicated
that they are to attend schools in the
Eastern Dlslrlct since they apparently do
reside in that district's boundaries,
1DIIess they are released by the Eastern
Board, or unless they pay tuition to continue attending Meigs Local Schools.
Supt. Hargraves, John Riebel,
superintendent of the Eastern District,
and Meigs County .Supt. Robert Bowen
have reviewed the matter and expect to
work out a solution.
However, Riebel pointed out that no
decision has been made by the Eastern
Local Board on the matter. A study has
been made by the school officials of ~
and voting records and records of the
boards of education.
Some of the parents believe that at
some past time an agreement was made

which permitted Eastern District students
to go to the schools now making up the
Meigs Dislrlct but nothing of a written
na lure has been found.
Apparently such an agreement was
.oral, officials state.

latest group of 22 were found to be attending schools outside of the district in
which they live.

According to the Hargraves letter to
the 22 students, if the students are not
released, and do decide to pay tuition, they
While State Foundation money in- also will have to provide their own
volved is a factor in the situation, because transportation .
Parents of the children involved
school districts are having financial
problems, Riebel said the big problem is to already have met with the Eastern Board
be consistent and fair wall involved, since and will meet with the Meigs Local Board
some students earlier were instructed to at 7 p.m. Tuesday preceding the board's
attend Eastern District Schools before the regular meeting .

Clinic to Offer
Help to Amputees
POMEROY - The physical
therapists at Veterans Memorial
Hospital, in conjunction with a
prosthetist, are organizing a free
amputee clinic.
This clhdc will be open to any
person with an amputation who would
coll!Jider ohtalnlng au artificial Ium, or
to anyone who bas an artHicial Umb and
would like to he evaluated.
Interested persons should call the
hospital at 992-2104, extension 58, as
soon as possible.

CHARUE BROWN'S FRIEND, Linus, may choose the pumpkin patch of Mrs.
Eldon Weeks, Athens Road, when he does his annual watch for The Great Pumpkin
llliB year. Mrs. Weeks shows one of her pumpkins which grew from a dozen seeds.
The seeds, known as "Big Mac" variety, were purchased by the Weeks' granddaughter, Mary Beth Weeks, 6, of Reynoldsburg who thought her grandparents
ought to include pumpkins in their garden. The largest taken from the patch so far
weighed M pounds! No one has tried to cook the big pumpkins from the Weeks'
garden but they are being used for pre-Halloween decorations.

..............·.· ·.·.·&lt;,·.··::·:·:·:···• .·...·.·.·.·.·.·.·.•.•.•.·· ··· ·.·.·.··.·.·.·.

Pop Tunes
Pace Show

Burglars Ransack

'

JACKSON - A program prepared by
student director Harry Guenther, a senior
at Ohio University, was presented as the
halftime show of the Meigs High School
Band in Jackson Friday nights.
Moving in files across the field,
playing "Waiting for the Robert E. Lee,"
the hand moved into a split formation
marching routine to the pop !une, "Walk
On By." Swinging into "What the World
Needs Now," the band formed the word
"Love" with Julie Hutchison the featured
twirler.
A block formation and the third pop
tune, "Close to You," backed the entire
majorette line coached by Miss Gloria
Buck in a fire baton routine . Making up the
majorette corps ·are Sherry King, Jenny
Chapman, Leta Floyd, Karen Price, Jill
Harris, Milisa Rizer, Brenda Taylor, Julie
Hutchison and Sonja Ohlinger .
Flagbearers are Darla and Marla
Neutzling.
Music for the three pop song presentations was arrangeil by Director David
Bowen. The band moved off field to the
fight song.
Next Saturday morning the Meigs
. Band will be playing at the Bob Evans
farm festival in Gallia County.

House in Thunnan

Tomatoes Getting
The Red Treatment

C OF C TO .MEET
POMEROY - The Pomeroy Chamber
of Commerce will meefMonday at noon at
Bowers Restaw-ant. ,

.

.

Q~ HOMECOMING

QUEEN AND ATl'ENDANTS-:- Miss Debbie Candee,

center, was crowned 1971 Homecoming Queen prior to the GAHS·Wellston football
game Friday night Attendants are Debbie Saunders, left, and Nancy Adams,
right. ·
·
·

FEW ABSENTEES
. GALLII'OLIS - A spokesman for the
Gallia County Board of Elections said
Saturday only a few persons have voted
absentee ballots in llie Nov. 2 General
Election. Absentee voting began last
Monday and continues through Ot;t. _l!ll,
Gallia County voters will decide school
board races, vUiage contests and township
trllstee races. Se~eral tax levies will also
be decided.
·

�'

S-Tile Sunday Timet, -Sentbiei,Sunday ,Oct. 10.1971
q

2"- The sundl&gt;v ~mes -SPntlnel,Sunday,Ocl.

j

13 Draw Fines in Court

New Queen

POMEROY
Thirteen
defendants l}'lre fined and five
others forfeffed bonds in Meigs
County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter-were, Carl D. Askew;
Gallipolis, Rt. 2, $15 and costs,
speeding; Carol A. Waltz,
AUtens, $10 and costs, passing
on yellow line: Donald E.
GuinUter, Pomeroy, $1~ and
. costs, Utree days confinement,
license suspended for six

months wlUt restricted driving
privileges, driving while in·
toxicated; Jim M. Wickersham,
Racine, Rt. 2, $150 and costs,
Utree days confinement, license
suspended for six months,
driving while intoxicated; Hurl
Westfall, Galllpolis, $5 and
costs, no corrective lenses;
James H. Crace, Jr., Vinton, $10
and costs, excessive speed;
Wllllam P. Gutierrez, Pomeroy,
Rt. 4, $5 and costs, permitting

Injuries Not ·Serious

RECORD KICK
BOSTON (UPI) - A record
52-yard field goal by Larry
Berridge in the first quarter
proved out as the winning points
Saturday for Boston College's
fourth straight, a 23-7 victory
over Villanova.

GALLIPOLIS - John D.
Harris, 21, Rt. 2, suffered rplnOr
Injuries in a single car accident
at 12:10 a.m. Saturday on Rt.
588, Utree and five tenths miles
west of bere.
. AccDI'IIlni! to Ute Gallia-Meigs
Post State Highway Patrol,
Harris lost control of his car,
ran over an embankment and
rolled over. Tbere was severe
damage to his car. No citation
was Issued.
Agoat was killed when struck
by a car on Rt. 35, one and Utree
Iantha miles east ct Rio Grande.

.
CYSTIC FIBROSIS FUND DRIVE- Lori Robinson, left, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Wilbur Robinson, Alfred, donated her dollar Saturday morning to Sherry
Marshall, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Marshall, Hemlock Grove. Sherry, a
victim of the disease aided the Eight and Forty Meigs County Salon 710 Saturday
morniug with its annual fund drive.

Green Succeeding McNealey

The animal owned by Bob
Evans ran into Ute path of a car
operated by Lester F. Stover,
21, Rt. 2, VInton. There was
moderate damage io Stover's
car.
.
A final accident was fir.
wstigated on Mill Creek Rd.,
two and nine tenthnnlles norUt
of Rt. 7, where vehicles driven
by Rulli Mlller, 58, and James
McQuaid, 63, both of Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, collided on a
hillcrest. There was moderate
damage to both cars. No
charges were flied.

person to ride on outside of car;
Maynard E. Hurd, Nelsonville,
$25 and cosf.'l, $15 suspended,
overload; John R. Hurd,
NelSonville, $177 and costs, $57
suspended, overload; John L.
Fisher, Chesapeake, Rt. 2; $20
and cosf.'l, speeding; Randall K.
Hall, Middleport, $10 and costs,
falbrre to register motor
vehicle; Alfred· Stitt and EUtel
M. Stitt, Racine,.Rt. 2, $100and
costs each, hunting license
suspended for three years,
illwninating deer.
Forfeiting bonds were Elva

No One Injured
A two csr accident in which
no injuries or arrests were
reported was investigated by
the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department Friday at 5:55p.m.
on SR 7. ·
Thomas E. White, 18, Long
Bottom, Wilt! apparenUy attempting to make a left turn off
SR 7 on to county Rd. 36 when a
car driven byOrlie M. Lambert,
Minersville, struck the White
vehlcle in the rear. Tbere were
light damages to both vehicles.

MARRIAGE LICENSE
POMEROY '
David
JonaUtan Dailey, 19, Portland,
Rt. 1, and Deborah Lynn
Hauber, 17, Long Bottom; J.esse
Morris, 36, Racine, and Dorothy
Jean Patterson, 'll, Racine.

115 CARS SOLD
POMEROY
Meigs
County Automoblle Dealers sold
115 new vehicles and ·117 used
vehicles during September
according to Nellie Brown,
deputy of Ute Meigs County
Clerk of Courf.'l. NeW' vehicles
sold were five motorcycles, 24
trailers, 20 trucks and 66 cars.
Used vehicles sold were two
motorcycles, five trailers, 21
trailers and 89 cars.

Tonlglrt

Oct. 10
DOUBLE FEATURE
FIVE EASY PIECES
Jack Nicholson
COLOR (R)
PLUS
YOU CAN'T
WIN 'EM ALL
Tony Curtis
Charles Bronson
COLOR

ROBERT GRUESEK

--:

J. L. MeNI!lALEY
elected Assistant Treasurer,
Assistant Secretary in 1948 and
Controller in 1950. Elected Vice
President and Controller in
1961, he became' a Director on
March 5, 1969 and in April, 1969,
became a member of the
Execulive Committee. On April
28, 1970, Green was elected
Execulive Vice President.
Grueser attended the
University of Cincinna11 and
Ohio State University. Named

ARTHUR GREEN
Assistant to Ute President in
1950, Grueser was elected Vice
President-Distribution and
Service in 1956.

:

I

1

I

1
1

IZTH STRAIGHT WIN
HANOVER, N. H. (UP!) Quarterback Bill Pollock and
reserve fullback Steve Stetson
each scored a touchdown
Saturday to lea"d Dartmouth to
its 12Ut win in succession, a 19-3
victory over Penn .

Puql•$~ro e~tr~

Vturv Pu~t · l~ ' n! "

Q~lo

Sun dty b, ll•t

C.ALLIPOL t DAllY UtiiUtjE
Ill T ~.ra 'v' . Gtlll polto , Okia, d•J \.

I

If;
1

11\ Covrr St , Pomtror 0 , dllf I
I Pur.lil~ld '""' •n~olly twtnlrl~ Uttllt I

I St t\irur EMtred llljW:1111d cl"' mtU inQ

.• mtntr 11 PQmll'fO¥ . O~ l o. Pent Oltltt .

I
I

I

....

TERMS OF SU I!S(IiiiPTI O N
llv uHitr Ot ll y tna ~unan. ~ ptr
~.

MA IL IUilbCR I PTI OH RATES

I

Tht Gt lll polll TrltHHif in OhiO tn&lt;l Wnt
v"llm••· ont rnr 'n oo 1•• moniM 11 .
I lhrn m onth! 1.4 SQ : tlsewntrt . ont yur
1 Sl l. • •• monl~s 11 , !1\rU monlhl UQO
Tht D• •'! Sl'n!lntl , ont l'llr l l t .oa . • I•
I m onlhs
11 S. l~rtt m!)&lt;l!~l $4 SO

I

Ho

Un•lflt

l'ren

tnltrn , !iontl II

11

1
I
\

I
I

1

1•

f
1
I

1 CluSOY ely tnl l !l~ 10 l~t ~II lor ~ub l ictiiDn
all nt wt d loptiCI'Itl trtdlltd 11 lh lo
I otne••ptptr
t nd 1110 mt IOctl nt •• I

I ~ ub t ishrd

1

htrr ln

.~------------------~

f»r •,

~

~-~ ~

.

'

'

KAREN WILLIAMS, afmh!!!l!n fram Cahnnhla,wu- rt the lint do!IUI'tlat Rio Grande
Biood Donor Day last week. A total of 83 units rt blood were collected during Ute supplemental

. ,. ,~HI?V( SJARHl, ~-~

stop d the Gallla County Bloodmobile Program. Rio's Donor Day was sponsored by the Class
of 1974 and the Vlllage Cotincil.

5 Nights

NOT OPEN
Tue..Uy
October 15-n

Fri~ thru

.

Oct. 1Oth thru 14th

7:30 NIGHTLY
SPECIAL MUSIC NIGHTLY

REV. PAUL W. HAWKS PRE-ACHING
.....

.

SPONSORED BY THE FOLLOWING GALLIA COUNTY UNITED METHODIST CHURCHES

REV. PAUL W HAWKS
1

.

"

.

Luna Luckey
HIUJARD- Mrs. George W.
(Luna) Luckey, 85, a native of
Ute Cheshire· Community, died
Friday in the Riverside
Hospital in Columbus.
She was Ute daughter of Ute
late Aaron and Lore Thomas.
Survivors include her husband,
George; four sisters, lda, Grace
and Rulli Thomas, all of Rio
Grande; Mrs. Ann Long, Rio
Grande; two brothers, John
Thomas of Apple Grove, W. Va .,
and Donald Thomas, Quincy,
m.; Utree nieces, and three
nephews.
Funeral services will be at 10
a:m. Monday at Hilliard. Burial
will he in Gravel Hill Cemetery
at Cheshire at I p.m. Monday .

Edwin Mayo
GALLIPOLIS
Edwin
Mayo, 74, a resident of the Kerr
community, died at 9 a.m .
Saturday at his home. He had
been in failing health the past

Hokus Pokus: 3 StoogK ·

Starting Sunday, ·Oct. lOth

'

..

PT. PLEASANT- Woodrow
Wilson Hudson, 50, Southside
dairyman, expired unex·
pectedly · around 12:30 aJD.
Saturday at his residence from
an apparent heart attack.
Funer~l services will be held .
r.,onday ·at 2 p.m., from the
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home
and interment will follow in the
Suncrest Cemetery. The Rev.
Fred D. McCallister will offidate. Friends may call at Ute
funeral home after 2 p.m.,
. today.
Mr. Hudson was born Feb. 10,
1921, in Mason County, a son of
Richard D. Hudson, of Point
Pleasant, and the late Viola
Hayes Hudson. He spent his
entire life.in Mason County and
was a member of Ute Harmony
Baptist Church at Southside.
Other survivors include his
widow, Mary Bush Hudson ;
four sons, Jack, of Point
Pleasant; Woodrow Wilson, Jr.,
of Southside; Michael Joe and
Mark Allen Hudson at home:
one sister, Mrs. Chella Olvina
· Lisle{){ Point Pleasant, and two
grandchildren.

II

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO ...

'

~

·..:.

Tonighlthru Tue..Uy
October tO . 12
THE OWL AND
THE PUSSYCAT
iTechnlcolorl
Barbara Slrlesand
Geo. Segal
•
R"
FeatureHt:

Publl~~fd tvtrv •n~dlf tvtn lnv t HtPI I
$at~r0t¥ SKOfHJ (lUI P0S!191 Ptla I! •

c.''''P"'''l!'1Eo~ ....
·~6J1
OAILY SENT INEL

..

MEIGS 1H£Al'Rf~

r--------------- ----·I
I
SUNDAY
1
:
TIMES-SENTINEL
~

Centenary, Rio Grande and R~\~~:l~. United Methodist Church, Bidwell, Porter, Vinton, and
Westerman United Methodist C
Grace United Methodlsi C~urch, Christ and Ohio Chapel
Unlled Methodist Church, Addison,
Kamiuga, Kyyer an~ Wesley Chapel United Methodist
Church, Bet~esda, Patriot,,and Walnut
Mothodlst Church.

.

Woodrow Hudson

... ·

Wagner, Marietta, $27.50,
failure to drive on right half of
roadway;
Walter
Kln'g,
Pomeroy, RD, $100, tesistlpg
arrest, $25, intoxication; Dwain
E. McKendree, Barboursville,
W. Va., and Ochel J. Chllders,
Columbus,
$27.50 each,
speed! ng; Robert Riffle,
Racine, RD, $25, intoxication.

GRACE UN IT ED
METHODIST CHURCH

,.

~

... 'i :"...

r-----------------~---~-----~

! Area Deaths ! ! · HOSPITAL NEWS
I

...

(Continued from page l )
following nu"lbers, Big Rock Special, Hey
Jude, and I Got Rhythm.
The · Blue Devil band, led by drwn
major Steve Ue, presented a show
featuring several songs from the current
Gospel Rock movement.
The program opened with Hand In
Hand as the musicians conducted a
precision drill routine.
Amazing Grace was , pres~nted as a
concert feature . During this presentation,
the GAHS majorettes did a routine which
featured the use of flags .
·
Next came He 's Got the Whole World In
His Hands, with the band doing another
dance routine.
Drum Major Lee then presented a lirebaton routine to the popular song, Knock
'l'hr_~e Times.
The school alma mater and light song
concluded halftime activities. ·

COLUMBUS - The Board rt
Directors of Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Cool·
pany announced today Ute
forthcoming retirement of J.
Lawrence McNealey effective
November 30, 1971. Havinc
reached the mandatory
retirement age on November 16,
1971, McNealey will continue to
serve as Chairman of Ute
Board.
The Board also announced the
election of Arthur G. Green u
President and Chief Executive
Officer while Robert J. Grueser
was elected Executive Vlce
President, effective Dec. 1,
1971.
McNealey, a na live of
Gallipolis, has served Ute
Company since 1923. He was
•lected Vice President of
Operations and a Director in
1954; in 1961, Execulive Vice
President, President in 1966 and
Chairman of the Board in 1969.
Green, a native of Coluptbus,
was graduated from The Ohio
State University with a
Bachelor of Science degree in
Business Administration and
Accounting in 1933. He joined
the Company the following
year, and became Chief Accountant in 1941. In 1946, he was

on Friday

r---------------·----------,

""

Vehicles Damaged

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours :i-4 and U p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Elmer
Skinner, Gallipolis, a daughter
and Mr. and Mrs. Billy Bruce
Stevens, Apple Grove, a
daughter.
Discharges
Alfred Dotson , Carrie Farley,
Harvey Hall, Christopher
Harrison, Deborah Hunnell, Mr.
Albert Kuhn, Mrs. Grace Lucas,
Vivian Malone, Stephanie
McClelland, Mrs. Jack Neal,
Henry Nut!, Mrs. E. Dale
Simpson, June Watts, Heather
Webb, Woodrow Wilson, Mrs.
Edgar Wolfe, Mrs. Daniel
Workman, Neil Kool, Vickie
Ewing and Joseph Rose.

l

Diane Roush, West Collimbia;
Mrs. Monty Bass, Point
Pleasant.
DISCHARGES: Carl Rair·
den, ·Leslie Jeffers, Mrs. Evelyn
Rawson, Paula Jean Monroe,
David Hill, Frank Cape)Jart,
Mrs. Harley Bass, William
Patterson , Rhond~ Hill, Mrs.
Verlin Stevens, Eugene Staats,
Mrs . Homer Bland and Traci
Wolfingbarger.

year.
A native of Gallia County, he
was born March 23, 1879 in
Springfield Twp., to John R. and
Madelaine Smith Mayo of Kerr.
He married Kathryn Gutherie
on Oct. 24, 1922 who survives, as
do these children, Mrs. Juanita
Howard, Cincinnati; Mrs .
Pauline Smith, Spokane,
Wash .; Robert Mayo, Cincinnati; Lawrence Mayo,
Veterans Memoriamospltal
Columbus, and Earl and Ivan
ADMITTED - Fannie Sovel,
Mayo, Bidwell; two sisters,
Pomeroy; Pauline Deren·
Mrs. Wiona. Cordell and Mrs.
berger, Pomeroy; Joyce Bing,
Lena Sullivan of Columbus.
Middleport; Bertha Conde,
He was a veteran of World
Pomeroy; Pearl Ash, Pomeroy;
War II and a member of the
Gordon Caldwell, Tuppers
Provid~nce BapUst Church.
Plains; Roma Beal, Portland.
Funeral services will be at 2
DISCHARGED Ruby-----~-_..::._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
p.m. Monday from the
Mossman, · Karen Wines,
EXPANSION PROJECT ANNOUNCED - This ar·
ON USS INTREPID
Providence Baptist Church wiUt
Franklin Triplett, Donald PORTLAND - Navy Petty
SURGE REPULSED
chi teet's drawing of the First Baptist Church of Gallipolis
burial following in Ute church
CAMBRIDGE,
Mass.
(UP()
Pierce.
shows how the church will look following a $2ll0,000 expansion
Officer Third Class Emerson R.
cemetery. Friends may call at
Halfbacks
Ted
deMars
and remodeling project. The old parsonage presently located
Johnson, son of Mr . and Mrs.
Miller's Home for Funerals
plunged
one
yard
for
one
touch·
to the right of Ute existing structure on Third Ave., will be
PLEASANT VALLEY
Emerson C. Johnson of Route I,
after 4 p.m. today.
down
and
scampered
28
yards"
CLAREY
MEETS
AIDES
razed to make room for an 8,500 square foot addition .
ADMISSIONS: Lori Brown,
Portland, is aboard the antiThe body will lie in state at
for
another
Saturday
to
lead
MANILA
(UP!)
The
Existing facili ties will he completely remodeled. Carter and
the church one hour prior to the Letart; Mrs. P. R. Clevinger, commander-in-chief of the U. S. submarine warfare aircraft Harvard to a 21-19 victory ov~r
Point
Pleasant;
Harriett
Evans will serve as general contractor lor the project.
carrier USS Jnlcepid which
services.
Columbia
as
the
Crimson
Pacific
Fleet,
Adin.
Bernard
A.
Hannwn, MI. Alto ; Mrs. Glen
participated in the NATO Strike
William B. Frampton, Huntington, is the architect. Work is
defense
repulsed
a
fourth·
Clarey,
met
Saturday
·witlr
his
Logan, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Fleet Exercise Royal Knight in
expected to begin within Ure next few weeks .
M8ude , Waugh
quarter surge by the Lions.
David Cremeans, Rutland; top Pacific commanders.
the Eastern Atlantic.
GALLIPOLIS - Maude
Waugh, 91, a resident of
Gallipolis since 1948 and forGIVE YOUR BUDGET A BREAK AND TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE THREE BIG DAYS OF SAVINGS
merly of the Swan Creek area,
died around I :30 p.m., Saturday
at the Houston Nursing Home in
Hamden.
In failing health several
years, she was born May 13,
1880, in Meigs County, daughter
of the late George and Sarah
Brown Richie.
She married Wilbur C. Waugh
on Jan. 13, 1900. He preceded
her in death on Jrrly 2, 1947.
Surviving are these children,
Mrs. Miriatn Sawn, Tucson.
Ariz .; W. Glenn Waugh,
Columbus, and Ralph R.
Waugh, Rio Grande; two
grandchildren and three great·
grandchildren. Twelve brothers
and Sisters preceded her in
death.
RUGGED, FAST ACTION
She was a member of the Mt.
SMALL,
ATHLETIC-GRIP. SOLES
Zion "Baptist Church at Swan
AVERAGE,
TALL,
Creek.
SPORT OXfORD
EX. TALL
Funeral services will be held
I p.m .. Tuesday at the WaughHalley-Wood· Funeral Home.
with Rev . Charles Lusher of·
ficiating . Burial will be in
Mound Hill Cemetery. Friends
Men's ond boys' white w/
may call at the funeral home
blad stripe vinyl upper.
between 2-4 and 7-9 p.m .. on
Deop cushionin9 insole.
Monday .
I

4~!

AT MOST MUI.PHY STOR&amp;S

\

\.·/1
lJ)

Mrs. Dark Was

POMEROY
Three
vehicles were damaged and
one driver cited . to mayor's
court as Ute resrrlt of an ac·
elden! on West Malo St., at
GA.LlJPOlJS - Mrs. Jean
4:35 p.m. Friday. "
Clark, city schools healUt nurse,
Pomeroy pollee said an attended . Thursday's District
eastbound car driven by
Health Conference held at the
Archie Rose, 22, Long Bot· MeUtodist Church in Jackson.
tom, struck Ute rear of a
E. H. Plummer, Ohio Valley
second car driven by James Health Services Foundation,
Stewart, Middleport. Tbe and Grant Drennen, Mid.{)hlo
Stewart car was Utrown Into Health Planning Federation
the rear of a tblrd car driven official, were in charge of Ute
by Ronald Durst, 51, all-day program.
Pomeroy. The Stewart car
Topics discussed were
was a tolalloss. The oUter two overview of comprehensive
vehicles received medium healtlr planning, the health
damages. Rose was cited to situation in southern Ohio, and
niayor's court on assured what is being done in this area,
clear distance charges.
. family planning, emergency
:~::~::::::~::::;:;::~:=:=:~:::::::::::::~:=~:::::~:~::::::::::::::· medical services, and tbe role
of lay persons in comprehensive
health planning. Speech,
hearing and vision programs
were also discussed.

at Conference

'.· &gt;'-'.....,, :;.;.

OU O OWN.

100% STRETCH NYLON

COLORFUL NEW "liiERTY"
IASKETBALL TYPE SHOES

BRA &amp; BIKINI

•···
a Bop·
lport O•lord•

494

YOUTHS'

11-2

REO.
$1,&amp;9

F1bric uppen

PANTY HOSE
REGULAR 99c

IOOo;o' stretch nylon mesh
for snug fit. Seamless,

Perfect with the new fashions.
One site fih all. Pastels, dark
tones and fashion..stripes .

UD

.....,_
.............

J37

nude heel. Sizes for
he;ghts 5' to 5'10" ond
wo:ght 100 to 155 lb•.

11....,

~.
·~ih

Rtd and
tDnQUe. R.d rubber
suction 101.. Comforl•bA. cwthion ln-

,or.,.

ble Raggedy Ann
'

DOLL

TWIN SPEAKERS GIVE BEAUTIFUL "ON THE SPOT" SOUND

AM/FM TABLE RADIO
Instant on solid state. Built in AFC to pre·
vent FM drift. Bass and treble tone control.
Walnut finish cabinet.

Capital, 14-7

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Hall ·
back Mike Taormina scampered
ten yards in the fourth period
for a score to give Heidelberg
a 14-7 Ohio Conference win over
Capital Saturday.
The winning score came after
the Student Princes had tied
the game on a 25-yard touch·
down run by Gary McKillip af·
ter he intercepted a pass from
Capital quarterback Charlie
Hess.
Hess began the scoring in the
third'period on a four-yard run
around right end.
Steve Dunlap had intercept·
ed Hess in the first half and
ran 75 yards to Capital's 15
where the Crusadears held and
the teams battled to a score·
less tie at halftime.

PIONEERS NIP HIRAM
MARIETTA, Ohio (UPI)
Steve Morris passed for three
touchdowns and Chuck Bigley
kicked a 40.yard field goal as·
·Marietta edged Hiram 24-23
Saturday.

PITT WINS THRILLER
· PITTSBURGH (UPI) - Dave
Havern, the smallest man on
the field , threw a six·yard
touchdown pass to enq Leslie
Block with 27 seconds
remaining Saturday to give Pitt
COLGATE UPSET
a heart-stopping 36.J5 victory
WORCESTER, Mass. (.UPI) over Navy .
_ Sophomore quarterback
· Mickey Connolly threw Urree ANNUAL REED AWARD
CHICAGO (UPI)- The Big
tOuchdown passes Saturday and
confused the defense with his Ten Conference said Friday it
razzle dazzle style to spearhead has established an annual$1,000
Holy Cross to a 28-14 upset win student award in memory of its
late commissioner, William R. .
over favored Colgate.
Reed. The award will be
presented each year to a Big
Ten student sports writer,
JINX CON'I'INUES
CADETS BOW, 42.0
COLLEGE PARK, Md. (UPI)
UNIVERSITY PARK , Pa. ·
_ Quarterback Bob Woodruff
threw for one touchdown and (UP!) - Penn State, turned
running
backs
Roger back inside the Army 23-yard
Praetorius
and
Marty line the first five times it had
Jahuszkuewicz ran for a touch· the ball, exploded for four
down each as Syracuse topped touchdowns in the third quarter
Maryland 21·13 in the - three of them by Lydell
Orangemen's seventh win in a Mitchell - (o bury the Cadels
42-0 S.lurday.
•row over the Terps.

PAIR

whltt st•rs on

Princes Upset

WILMINGTON WINS
DEFIANCE, Ohio (UPI)
Frank Pirozzolo plunged over
with 39 seconds left to give
Wilmington a )().6 win over
Defiance in the Hoosier·
Buckeye Conference game
Saturday.

cAL#A!Jff.l

$

SAVE $1 .24 MATCHING
PANTS &amp; SHIRTS

NO·IRON
·wORK SETS

s

lovable Raqgedy Ann ;1

JIY2" high. Red woolen hair
wide eyes (safety ./oded ,j'
Cotton dreu.

MATCHED
SET

CASH, C.HAAQE, LAY·AWAY

REGULAR $8.24 SET
REG. $3.97 SHIRTS
REG. $4.27 PANTS
Rugged blend of po~ ·
ester/ cotton treate
for easy soil release. This
durable carefree fabric
needs no ironing, Won't
shrin.. Shirts are tailored •
w;th b;g flap poclets, long
sleevev Penh-permanent
crease. Spruee green, olivewood, grey.

SOFT AND ABSORBENT!
lOX OF 10 DAYTIME

PAMPERS

3 WAYS TO BUY
CASH • CHARGE· lAYAWAY

REGULAR $1.19
PANTS: 21-44

SHIRTS: t4V.·17

I

JUH SAY

"CHARGE IT"

Proteds baby with eleven ltyers of sanit•ry eellulo•• covered by a
wot.,.r,roolah;eld. Com·
forteb t o~nd wor• sev;ng. JO disposable d;,.
pe11 per bor:

SET
Cltoose Sitrro, Melody or Upa;deisy patterns. Sets include eight
clinntr pl1tts, ·cups, saucers, bread/butter pletes, cereal bow/1.
21-oz. 1erving bowl, ;r.,mer, su9ar with cover. 2-yr. guarantee.

AT MURPHYS

FOR MO~E CONVENIENT SHOPPING-"CHARGE IT" AT MURPHY'S

I.

•

j

1

l

�'

S-Tile Sunday Timet, -Sentbiei,Sunday ,Oct. 10.1971
q

2"- The sundl&gt;v ~mes -SPntlnel,Sunday,Ocl.

j

13 Draw Fines in Court

New Queen

POMEROY
Thirteen
defendants l}'lre fined and five
others forfeffed bonds in Meigs
County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter-were, Carl D. Askew;
Gallipolis, Rt. 2, $15 and costs,
speeding; Carol A. Waltz,
AUtens, $10 and costs, passing
on yellow line: Donald E.
GuinUter, Pomeroy, $1~ and
. costs, Utree days confinement,
license suspended for six

months wlUt restricted driving
privileges, driving while in·
toxicated; Jim M. Wickersham,
Racine, Rt. 2, $150 and costs,
Utree days confinement, license
suspended for six months,
driving while intoxicated; Hurl
Westfall, Galllpolis, $5 and
costs, no corrective lenses;
James H. Crace, Jr., Vinton, $10
and costs, excessive speed;
Wllllam P. Gutierrez, Pomeroy,
Rt. 4, $5 and costs, permitting

Injuries Not ·Serious

RECORD KICK
BOSTON (UPI) - A record
52-yard field goal by Larry
Berridge in the first quarter
proved out as the winning points
Saturday for Boston College's
fourth straight, a 23-7 victory
over Villanova.

GALLIPOLIS - John D.
Harris, 21, Rt. 2, suffered rplnOr
Injuries in a single car accident
at 12:10 a.m. Saturday on Rt.
588, Utree and five tenths miles
west of bere.
. AccDI'IIlni! to Ute Gallia-Meigs
Post State Highway Patrol,
Harris lost control of his car,
ran over an embankment and
rolled over. Tbere was severe
damage to his car. No citation
was Issued.
Agoat was killed when struck
by a car on Rt. 35, one and Utree
Iantha miles east ct Rio Grande.

.
CYSTIC FIBROSIS FUND DRIVE- Lori Robinson, left, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Wilbur Robinson, Alfred, donated her dollar Saturday morning to Sherry
Marshall, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Marshall, Hemlock Grove. Sherry, a
victim of the disease aided the Eight and Forty Meigs County Salon 710 Saturday
morniug with its annual fund drive.

Green Succeeding McNealey

The animal owned by Bob
Evans ran into Ute path of a car
operated by Lester F. Stover,
21, Rt. 2, VInton. There was
moderate damage io Stover's
car.
.
A final accident was fir.
wstigated on Mill Creek Rd.,
two and nine tenthnnlles norUt
of Rt. 7, where vehicles driven
by Rulli Mlller, 58, and James
McQuaid, 63, both of Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, collided on a
hillcrest. There was moderate
damage to both cars. No
charges were flied.

person to ride on outside of car;
Maynard E. Hurd, Nelsonville,
$25 and cosf.'l, $15 suspended,
overload; John R. Hurd,
NelSonville, $177 and costs, $57
suspended, overload; John L.
Fisher, Chesapeake, Rt. 2; $20
and cosf.'l, speeding; Randall K.
Hall, Middleport, $10 and costs,
falbrre to register motor
vehicle; Alfred· Stitt and EUtel
M. Stitt, Racine,.Rt. 2, $100and
costs each, hunting license
suspended for three years,
illwninating deer.
Forfeiting bonds were Elva

No One Injured
A two csr accident in which
no injuries or arrests were
reported was investigated by
the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department Friday at 5:55p.m.
on SR 7. ·
Thomas E. White, 18, Long
Bottom, Wilt! apparenUy attempting to make a left turn off
SR 7 on to county Rd. 36 when a
car driven byOrlie M. Lambert,
Minersville, struck the White
vehlcle in the rear. Tbere were
light damages to both vehicles.

MARRIAGE LICENSE
POMEROY '
David
JonaUtan Dailey, 19, Portland,
Rt. 1, and Deborah Lynn
Hauber, 17, Long Bottom; J.esse
Morris, 36, Racine, and Dorothy
Jean Patterson, 'll, Racine.

115 CARS SOLD
POMEROY
Meigs
County Automoblle Dealers sold
115 new vehicles and ·117 used
vehicles during September
according to Nellie Brown,
deputy of Ute Meigs County
Clerk of Courf.'l. NeW' vehicles
sold were five motorcycles, 24
trailers, 20 trucks and 66 cars.
Used vehicles sold were two
motorcycles, five trailers, 21
trailers and 89 cars.

Tonlglrt

Oct. 10
DOUBLE FEATURE
FIVE EASY PIECES
Jack Nicholson
COLOR (R)
PLUS
YOU CAN'T
WIN 'EM ALL
Tony Curtis
Charles Bronson
COLOR

ROBERT GRUESEK

--:

J. L. MeNI!lALEY
elected Assistant Treasurer,
Assistant Secretary in 1948 and
Controller in 1950. Elected Vice
President and Controller in
1961, he became' a Director on
March 5, 1969 and in April, 1969,
became a member of the
Execulive Committee. On April
28, 1970, Green was elected
Execulive Vice President.
Grueser attended the
University of Cincinna11 and
Ohio State University. Named

ARTHUR GREEN
Assistant to Ute President in
1950, Grueser was elected Vice
President-Distribution and
Service in 1956.

:

I

1

I

1
1

IZTH STRAIGHT WIN
HANOVER, N. H. (UP!) Quarterback Bill Pollock and
reserve fullback Steve Stetson
each scored a touchdown
Saturday to lea"d Dartmouth to
its 12Ut win in succession, a 19-3
victory over Penn .

Puql•$~ro e~tr~

Vturv Pu~t · l~ ' n! "

Q~lo

Sun dty b, ll•t

C.ALLIPOL t DAllY UtiiUtjE
Ill T ~.ra 'v' . Gtlll polto , Okia, d•J \.

I

If;
1

11\ Covrr St , Pomtror 0 , dllf I
I Pur.lil~ld '""' •n~olly twtnlrl~ Uttllt I

I St t\irur EMtred llljW:1111d cl"' mtU inQ

.• mtntr 11 PQmll'fO¥ . O~ l o. Pent Oltltt .

I
I

I

....

TERMS OF SU I!S(IiiiPTI O N
llv uHitr Ot ll y tna ~unan. ~ ptr
~.

MA IL IUilbCR I PTI OH RATES

I

Tht Gt lll polll TrltHHif in OhiO tn&lt;l Wnt
v"llm••· ont rnr 'n oo 1•• moniM 11 .
I lhrn m onth! 1.4 SQ : tlsewntrt . ont yur
1 Sl l. • •• monl~s 11 , !1\rU monlhl UQO
Tht D• •'! Sl'n!lntl , ont l'llr l l t .oa . • I•
I m onlhs
11 S. l~rtt m!)&lt;l!~l $4 SO

I

Ho

Un•lflt

l'ren

tnltrn , !iontl II

11

1
I
\

I
I

1

1•

f
1
I

1 CluSOY ely tnl l !l~ 10 l~t ~II lor ~ub l ictiiDn
all nt wt d loptiCI'Itl trtdlltd 11 lh lo
I otne••ptptr
t nd 1110 mt IOctl nt •• I

I ~ ub t ishrd

1

htrr ln

.~------------------~

f»r •,

~

~-~ ~

.

'

'

KAREN WILLIAMS, afmh!!!l!n fram Cahnnhla,wu- rt the lint do!IUI'tlat Rio Grande
Biood Donor Day last week. A total of 83 units rt blood were collected during Ute supplemental

. ,. ,~HI?V( SJARHl, ~-~

stop d the Gallla County Bloodmobile Program. Rio's Donor Day was sponsored by the Class
of 1974 and the Vlllage Cotincil.

5 Nights

NOT OPEN
Tue..Uy
October 15-n

Fri~ thru

.

Oct. 1Oth thru 14th

7:30 NIGHTLY
SPECIAL MUSIC NIGHTLY

REV. PAUL W. HAWKS PRE-ACHING
.....

.

SPONSORED BY THE FOLLOWING GALLIA COUNTY UNITED METHODIST CHURCHES

REV. PAUL W HAWKS
1

.

"

.

Luna Luckey
HIUJARD- Mrs. George W.
(Luna) Luckey, 85, a native of
Ute Cheshire· Community, died
Friday in the Riverside
Hospital in Columbus.
She was Ute daughter of Ute
late Aaron and Lore Thomas.
Survivors include her husband,
George; four sisters, lda, Grace
and Rulli Thomas, all of Rio
Grande; Mrs. Ann Long, Rio
Grande; two brothers, John
Thomas of Apple Grove, W. Va .,
and Donald Thomas, Quincy,
m.; Utree nieces, and three
nephews.
Funeral services will be at 10
a:m. Monday at Hilliard. Burial
will he in Gravel Hill Cemetery
at Cheshire at I p.m. Monday .

Edwin Mayo
GALLIPOLIS
Edwin
Mayo, 74, a resident of the Kerr
community, died at 9 a.m .
Saturday at his home. He had
been in failing health the past

Hokus Pokus: 3 StoogK ·

Starting Sunday, ·Oct. lOth

'

..

PT. PLEASANT- Woodrow
Wilson Hudson, 50, Southside
dairyman, expired unex·
pectedly · around 12:30 aJD.
Saturday at his residence from
an apparent heart attack.
Funer~l services will be held .
r.,onday ·at 2 p.m., from the
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home
and interment will follow in the
Suncrest Cemetery. The Rev.
Fred D. McCallister will offidate. Friends may call at Ute
funeral home after 2 p.m.,
. today.
Mr. Hudson was born Feb. 10,
1921, in Mason County, a son of
Richard D. Hudson, of Point
Pleasant, and the late Viola
Hayes Hudson. He spent his
entire life.in Mason County and
was a member of Ute Harmony
Baptist Church at Southside.
Other survivors include his
widow, Mary Bush Hudson ;
four sons, Jack, of Point
Pleasant; Woodrow Wilson, Jr.,
of Southside; Michael Joe and
Mark Allen Hudson at home:
one sister, Mrs. Chella Olvina
· Lisle{){ Point Pleasant, and two
grandchildren.

II

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO ...

'

~

·..:.

Tonighlthru Tue..Uy
October tO . 12
THE OWL AND
THE PUSSYCAT
iTechnlcolorl
Barbara Slrlesand
Geo. Segal
•
R"
FeatureHt:

Publl~~fd tvtrv •n~dlf tvtn lnv t HtPI I
$at~r0t¥ SKOfHJ (lUI P0S!191 Ptla I! •

c.''''P"'''l!'1Eo~ ....
·~6J1
OAILY SENT INEL

..

MEIGS 1H£Al'Rf~

r--------------- ----·I
I
SUNDAY
1
:
TIMES-SENTINEL
~

Centenary, Rio Grande and R~\~~:l~. United Methodist Church, Bidwell, Porter, Vinton, and
Westerman United Methodist C
Grace United Methodlsi C~urch, Christ and Ohio Chapel
Unlled Methodist Church, Addison,
Kamiuga, Kyyer an~ Wesley Chapel United Methodist
Church, Bet~esda, Patriot,,and Walnut
Mothodlst Church.

.

Woodrow Hudson

... ·

Wagner, Marietta, $27.50,
failure to drive on right half of
roadway;
Walter
Kln'g,
Pomeroy, RD, $100, tesistlpg
arrest, $25, intoxication; Dwain
E. McKendree, Barboursville,
W. Va., and Ochel J. Chllders,
Columbus,
$27.50 each,
speed! ng; Robert Riffle,
Racine, RD, $25, intoxication.

GRACE UN IT ED
METHODIST CHURCH

,.

~

... 'i :"...

r-----------------~---~-----~

! Area Deaths ! ! · HOSPITAL NEWS
I

...

(Continued from page l )
following nu"lbers, Big Rock Special, Hey
Jude, and I Got Rhythm.
The · Blue Devil band, led by drwn
major Steve Ue, presented a show
featuring several songs from the current
Gospel Rock movement.
The program opened with Hand In
Hand as the musicians conducted a
precision drill routine.
Amazing Grace was , pres~nted as a
concert feature . During this presentation,
the GAHS majorettes did a routine which
featured the use of flags .
·
Next came He 's Got the Whole World In
His Hands, with the band doing another
dance routine.
Drum Major Lee then presented a lirebaton routine to the popular song, Knock
'l'hr_~e Times.
The school alma mater and light song
concluded halftime activities. ·

COLUMBUS - The Board rt
Directors of Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Cool·
pany announced today Ute
forthcoming retirement of J.
Lawrence McNealey effective
November 30, 1971. Havinc
reached the mandatory
retirement age on November 16,
1971, McNealey will continue to
serve as Chairman of Ute
Board.
The Board also announced the
election of Arthur G. Green u
President and Chief Executive
Officer while Robert J. Grueser
was elected Executive Vlce
President, effective Dec. 1,
1971.
McNealey, a na live of
Gallipolis, has served Ute
Company since 1923. He was
•lected Vice President of
Operations and a Director in
1954; in 1961, Execulive Vice
President, President in 1966 and
Chairman of the Board in 1969.
Green, a native of Coluptbus,
was graduated from The Ohio
State University with a
Bachelor of Science degree in
Business Administration and
Accounting in 1933. He joined
the Company the following
year, and became Chief Accountant in 1941. In 1946, he was

on Friday

r---------------·----------,

""

Vehicles Damaged

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours :i-4 and U p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Elmer
Skinner, Gallipolis, a daughter
and Mr. and Mrs. Billy Bruce
Stevens, Apple Grove, a
daughter.
Discharges
Alfred Dotson , Carrie Farley,
Harvey Hall, Christopher
Harrison, Deborah Hunnell, Mr.
Albert Kuhn, Mrs. Grace Lucas,
Vivian Malone, Stephanie
McClelland, Mrs. Jack Neal,
Henry Nut!, Mrs. E. Dale
Simpson, June Watts, Heather
Webb, Woodrow Wilson, Mrs.
Edgar Wolfe, Mrs. Daniel
Workman, Neil Kool, Vickie
Ewing and Joseph Rose.

l

Diane Roush, West Collimbia;
Mrs. Monty Bass, Point
Pleasant.
DISCHARGES: Carl Rair·
den, ·Leslie Jeffers, Mrs. Evelyn
Rawson, Paula Jean Monroe,
David Hill, Frank Cape)Jart,
Mrs. Harley Bass, William
Patterson , Rhond~ Hill, Mrs.
Verlin Stevens, Eugene Staats,
Mrs . Homer Bland and Traci
Wolfingbarger.

year.
A native of Gallia County, he
was born March 23, 1879 in
Springfield Twp., to John R. and
Madelaine Smith Mayo of Kerr.
He married Kathryn Gutherie
on Oct. 24, 1922 who survives, as
do these children, Mrs. Juanita
Howard, Cincinnati; Mrs .
Pauline Smith, Spokane,
Wash .; Robert Mayo, Cincinnati; Lawrence Mayo,
Veterans Memoriamospltal
Columbus, and Earl and Ivan
ADMITTED - Fannie Sovel,
Mayo, Bidwell; two sisters,
Pomeroy; Pauline Deren·
Mrs. Wiona. Cordell and Mrs.
berger, Pomeroy; Joyce Bing,
Lena Sullivan of Columbus.
Middleport; Bertha Conde,
He was a veteran of World
Pomeroy; Pearl Ash, Pomeroy;
War II and a member of the
Gordon Caldwell, Tuppers
Provid~nce BapUst Church.
Plains; Roma Beal, Portland.
Funeral services will be at 2
DISCHARGED Ruby-----~-_..::._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
p.m. Monday from the
Mossman, · Karen Wines,
EXPANSION PROJECT ANNOUNCED - This ar·
ON USS INTREPID
Providence Baptist Church wiUt
Franklin Triplett, Donald PORTLAND - Navy Petty
SURGE REPULSED
chi teet's drawing of the First Baptist Church of Gallipolis
burial following in Ute church
CAMBRIDGE,
Mass.
(UP()
Pierce.
shows how the church will look following a $2ll0,000 expansion
Officer Third Class Emerson R.
cemetery. Friends may call at
Halfbacks
Ted
deMars
and remodeling project. The old parsonage presently located
Johnson, son of Mr . and Mrs.
Miller's Home for Funerals
plunged
one
yard
for
one
touch·
to the right of Ute existing structure on Third Ave., will be
PLEASANT VALLEY
Emerson C. Johnson of Route I,
after 4 p.m. today.
down
and
scampered
28
yards"
CLAREY
MEETS
AIDES
razed to make room for an 8,500 square foot addition .
ADMISSIONS: Lori Brown,
Portland, is aboard the antiThe body will lie in state at
for
another
Saturday
to
lead
MANILA
(UP!)
The
Existing facili ties will he completely remodeled. Carter and
the church one hour prior to the Letart; Mrs. P. R. Clevinger, commander-in-chief of the U. S. submarine warfare aircraft Harvard to a 21-19 victory ov~r
Point
Pleasant;
Harriett
Evans will serve as general contractor lor the project.
carrier USS Jnlcepid which
services.
Columbia
as
the
Crimson
Pacific
Fleet,
Adin.
Bernard
A.
Hannwn, MI. Alto ; Mrs. Glen
participated in the NATO Strike
William B. Frampton, Huntington, is the architect. Work is
defense
repulsed
a
fourth·
Clarey,
met
Saturday
·witlr
his
Logan, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Fleet Exercise Royal Knight in
expected to begin within Ure next few weeks .
M8ude , Waugh
quarter surge by the Lions.
David Cremeans, Rutland; top Pacific commanders.
the Eastern Atlantic.
GALLIPOLIS - Maude
Waugh, 91, a resident of
Gallipolis since 1948 and forGIVE YOUR BUDGET A BREAK AND TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE THREE BIG DAYS OF SAVINGS
merly of the Swan Creek area,
died around I :30 p.m., Saturday
at the Houston Nursing Home in
Hamden.
In failing health several
years, she was born May 13,
1880, in Meigs County, daughter
of the late George and Sarah
Brown Richie.
She married Wilbur C. Waugh
on Jan. 13, 1900. He preceded
her in death on Jrrly 2, 1947.
Surviving are these children,
Mrs. Miriatn Sawn, Tucson.
Ariz .; W. Glenn Waugh,
Columbus, and Ralph R.
Waugh, Rio Grande; two
grandchildren and three great·
grandchildren. Twelve brothers
and Sisters preceded her in
death.
RUGGED, FAST ACTION
She was a member of the Mt.
SMALL,
ATHLETIC-GRIP. SOLES
Zion "Baptist Church at Swan
AVERAGE,
TALL,
Creek.
SPORT OXfORD
EX. TALL
Funeral services will be held
I p.m .. Tuesday at the WaughHalley-Wood· Funeral Home.
with Rev . Charles Lusher of·
ficiating . Burial will be in
Mound Hill Cemetery. Friends
Men's ond boys' white w/
may call at the funeral home
blad stripe vinyl upper.
between 2-4 and 7-9 p.m .. on
Deop cushionin9 insole.
Monday .
I

4~!

AT MOST MUI.PHY STOR&amp;S

\

\.·/1
lJ)

Mrs. Dark Was

POMEROY
Three
vehicles were damaged and
one driver cited . to mayor's
court as Ute resrrlt of an ac·
elden! on West Malo St., at
GA.LlJPOlJS - Mrs. Jean
4:35 p.m. Friday. "
Clark, city schools healUt nurse,
Pomeroy pollee said an attended . Thursday's District
eastbound car driven by
Health Conference held at the
Archie Rose, 22, Long Bot· MeUtodist Church in Jackson.
tom, struck Ute rear of a
E. H. Plummer, Ohio Valley
second car driven by James Health Services Foundation,
Stewart, Middleport. Tbe and Grant Drennen, Mid.{)hlo
Stewart car was Utrown Into Health Planning Federation
the rear of a tblrd car driven official, were in charge of Ute
by Ronald Durst, 51, all-day program.
Pomeroy. The Stewart car
Topics discussed were
was a tolalloss. The oUter two overview of comprehensive
vehicles received medium healtlr planning, the health
damages. Rose was cited to situation in southern Ohio, and
niayor's court on assured what is being done in this area,
clear distance charges.
. family planning, emergency
:~::~::::::~::::;:;::~:=:=:~:::::::::::::~:=~:::::~:~::::::::::::::· medical services, and tbe role
of lay persons in comprehensive
health planning. Speech,
hearing and vision programs
were also discussed.

at Conference

'.· &gt;'-'.....,, :;.;.

OU O OWN.

100% STRETCH NYLON

COLORFUL NEW "liiERTY"
IASKETBALL TYPE SHOES

BRA &amp; BIKINI

•···
a Bop·
lport O•lord•

494

YOUTHS'

11-2

REO.
$1,&amp;9

F1bric uppen

PANTY HOSE
REGULAR 99c

IOOo;o' stretch nylon mesh
for snug fit. Seamless,

Perfect with the new fashions.
One site fih all. Pastels, dark
tones and fashion..stripes .

UD

.....,_
.............

J37

nude heel. Sizes for
he;ghts 5' to 5'10" ond
wo:ght 100 to 155 lb•.

11....,

~.
·~ih

Rtd and
tDnQUe. R.d rubber
suction 101.. Comforl•bA. cwthion ln-

,or.,.

ble Raggedy Ann
'

DOLL

TWIN SPEAKERS GIVE BEAUTIFUL "ON THE SPOT" SOUND

AM/FM TABLE RADIO
Instant on solid state. Built in AFC to pre·
vent FM drift. Bass and treble tone control.
Walnut finish cabinet.

Capital, 14-7

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Hall ·
back Mike Taormina scampered
ten yards in the fourth period
for a score to give Heidelberg
a 14-7 Ohio Conference win over
Capital Saturday.
The winning score came after
the Student Princes had tied
the game on a 25-yard touch·
down run by Gary McKillip af·
ter he intercepted a pass from
Capital quarterback Charlie
Hess.
Hess began the scoring in the
third'period on a four-yard run
around right end.
Steve Dunlap had intercept·
ed Hess in the first half and
ran 75 yards to Capital's 15
where the Crusadears held and
the teams battled to a score·
less tie at halftime.

PIONEERS NIP HIRAM
MARIETTA, Ohio (UPI)
Steve Morris passed for three
touchdowns and Chuck Bigley
kicked a 40.yard field goal as·
·Marietta edged Hiram 24-23
Saturday.

PITT WINS THRILLER
· PITTSBURGH (UPI) - Dave
Havern, the smallest man on
the field , threw a six·yard
touchdown pass to enq Leslie
Block with 27 seconds
remaining Saturday to give Pitt
COLGATE UPSET
a heart-stopping 36.J5 victory
WORCESTER, Mass. (.UPI) over Navy .
_ Sophomore quarterback
· Mickey Connolly threw Urree ANNUAL REED AWARD
CHICAGO (UPI)- The Big
tOuchdown passes Saturday and
confused the defense with his Ten Conference said Friday it
razzle dazzle style to spearhead has established an annual$1,000
Holy Cross to a 28-14 upset win student award in memory of its
late commissioner, William R. .
over favored Colgate.
Reed. The award will be
presented each year to a Big
Ten student sports writer,
JINX CON'I'INUES
CADETS BOW, 42.0
COLLEGE PARK, Md. (UPI)
UNIVERSITY PARK , Pa. ·
_ Quarterback Bob Woodruff
threw for one touchdown and (UP!) - Penn State, turned
running
backs
Roger back inside the Army 23-yard
Praetorius
and
Marty line the first five times it had
Jahuszkuewicz ran for a touch· the ball, exploded for four
down each as Syracuse topped touchdowns in the third quarter
Maryland 21·13 in the - three of them by Lydell
Orangemen's seventh win in a Mitchell - (o bury the Cadels
42-0 S.lurday.
•row over the Terps.

PAIR

whltt st•rs on

Princes Upset

WILMINGTON WINS
DEFIANCE, Ohio (UPI)
Frank Pirozzolo plunged over
with 39 seconds left to give
Wilmington a )().6 win over
Defiance in the Hoosier·
Buckeye Conference game
Saturday.

cAL#A!Jff.l

$

SAVE $1 .24 MATCHING
PANTS &amp; SHIRTS

NO·IRON
·wORK SETS

s

lovable Raqgedy Ann ;1

JIY2" high. Red woolen hair
wide eyes (safety ./oded ,j'
Cotton dreu.

MATCHED
SET

CASH, C.HAAQE, LAY·AWAY

REGULAR $8.24 SET
REG. $3.97 SHIRTS
REG. $4.27 PANTS
Rugged blend of po~ ·
ester/ cotton treate
for easy soil release. This
durable carefree fabric
needs no ironing, Won't
shrin.. Shirts are tailored •
w;th b;g flap poclets, long
sleevev Penh-permanent
crease. Spruee green, olivewood, grey.

SOFT AND ABSORBENT!
lOX OF 10 DAYTIME

PAMPERS

3 WAYS TO BUY
CASH • CHARGE· lAYAWAY

REGULAR $1.19
PANTS: 21-44

SHIRTS: t4V.·17

I

JUH SAY

"CHARGE IT"

Proteds baby with eleven ltyers of sanit•ry eellulo•• covered by a
wot.,.r,roolah;eld. Com·
forteb t o~nd wor• sev;ng. JO disposable d;,.
pe11 per bor:

SET
Cltoose Sitrro, Melody or Upa;deisy patterns. Sets include eight
clinntr pl1tts, ·cups, saucers, bread/butter pletes, cereal bow/1.
21-oz. 1erving bowl, ;r.,mer, su9ar with cover. 2-yr. guarantee.

AT MURPHYS

FOR MO~E CONVENIENT SHOPPING-"CHARGE IT" AT MURPHY'S

I.

•

j

1

l

�'"

.

•
- -- -1

Brownell Hosts

4- The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 10, 1971

.,

Kanauga WSCS

POLLY'S . POINTERS
Peeve: Soda Straws ·

KANAUGA - The Ka'n auga
WSCS met recently at the home
Short .
of Mrs. Audrey Brownell . The
.leader, Mrs. Florence Allen,
By I'OLLY CRAMER
opened the meeting using the
theme. of Faith. Roll call was
answered by naming a scripture verse beginning with the
DEAR POLLY-After washing my thermal-lined
letter "0" representing the
draperies accordi ng to instructions, the backing
(which resem bles rubber) stuck together in several
month of October.
places
and when pulled apart the lining peeled off
Scripture readin gs we1·e
the
material,
leaving large holes. Can any reader
taken from the l)ook of Mark ,
suggest a way of permanently patching this lining
9:23-29. A poem "Faith" was
ma terial'-KATHY H .
read by Mrs. Clyde Shamblin.
Other readings were given by ·
DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with soda straws that
..Evelyn Rothgeb, Mrs. Carl
are
too short and slip down in the bottle as you drink .
Roush and Mrs. John Raike .
They should be at least an inch longer.-MRS. F . W. L.
The Bible study was taken
DEAR POLLY - Sherry wanted to know what she could
from the second chapter of
do
with leftover carpe t tiles. A friend of mine created a
Colossians . Benediction was
ulletin
board by attaching a rec tangle made of such
b
given by Mrs. Burkle Rife. The
tiles to a wail in her daughter's bedroom . Felt cutouts
birthday of Mrs. Nessler was
glued to one corner to indicate the user's special interest
celebrated. The group made 67
would add to its looks. A coffee pot or cup and saucer for
sick calls.
one to go in the kitchen, mod flower s in a girl's room
and a boat or shapes of athletic equipment in a boy's
Refreshments were served
room
are just a few suggeslions .-EDNA
and the hostess was assisted by
her two granddaughters, Cindy
DEAR POLLY and Sherry- We used leftover carpet
tiles to cover the stair steps going down to our basement.
and Sherry.
- MAGDALE NE
DEAR POLLY- Sherry might be interested to know
that we used our leftover carpel tiles along with some
carpet tape to cover the back end. of our station wagon .
It is easy to clean as we just pull out the whole thing,
vacuum and put back. This is not only attractive but a
lot more comfortable for the children .-JACKfE
DEAR POLLY- I suggesf that Sherry uses her leftover carpet tiles to line the silver drawer in her buffet.
Silver will stay in place and all can be seen at a glance.
- LILLIAN
DEAR POLLY - Often a salt shaker is left fr om a
broken pair of salt and peppers but do not throw it away .
Fill with three-fourths salt and one-fourth pepper, shake
up and set on the back of the siove . This is very con·
venient for seasoning meats, vegetables and such and
one is saved the troubl e of grabbing for two shakers.- ·
MRS. F . N.

A Bit Ton

A thought for todaY; .
Gennan philosopher Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche said,
"In revenge and in !we womail
is lJll're barbaroua than man."

. --·

'·

I

··~
I

.LI

Since 1859

;h .. ..

~

\I

I

~

Guardteed
To Satisfy..
Or Mone Back
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Donald Thaler, right, and Mrs.
Eugene Gloss, left, are piclured tagging worli which will be
auctioned at the Bob Evans Farm Festival.

COCA
COLA

An Sale To Be Held
GALLIPOLIS - THE MASSES OF FLOWERS surrounding the Bible, in the Garden of
Dev~tions help to display the Locd's Prayer featured on the pages of the open book.

At The Farm Festival
GALI.IPOI.I S - Several
ladies of the French Art Colony
worked tagging p1ctures for the
Bob Evans Farm Festival
whit h will be held at Rio
Grande on Oct. 15, 16 and 17.
The painting being auctioned
off on Sunday, Oct. 17, at 2 p.m.
will be in a variety of ma terials,
oils, tole paintings, watercolors,
etthings, and a macrame wall
hanging.
Over 50 pieces of original art
work done by members of the
French Art Colony will be
auctioned.
Bill Mills, the fund raismg
and projects chairman, and
Mrs. Janies Walter, auctwn
chairman, w1sh to recognize
t:wse who have helped on the
project. The proceeds will go to
the Capital fund drive .
Mrs . Donald Thaler and
Peggy Evans. exhib1ts cochairmen,
Mrs.
Ronald
Calhoun, Mrs. Keith Sheets,
hostess chairman, Stan Evans,
who IS in charge of the auc-

THIS IS A PICTURE OF Christ and Mary at the well, in
the Garden of EverlasUng -Life. The flowers are in every
color.

... ..._. •

auction.

•'

•

'

.·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~:~!~:

•

"

.....

·seen and Heard

::::::::::::::;:;:;:;.;:;:;:::::::::;:;:::::::::;:::::::::~::::f-~6~

GA LLIPOUS - County
Recorder Evalee Myers attended the National Emblem
Club Convention recently in
New Orleans, La . Mrs . Myers,
president · of the Gallipolis
Emblem Club, represented her
chapter.
Gallia County Clerk of Courts
Mal!&gt;j ori e Rinehart and her
deput ies, Mrs . Louise Burger,
Mrs . Conn ie Barnes , Mrs .
Evelyn J effers and Miss
Jeanette Polcyn attended the
Second
Dis trict
Clerks
Association meeting last week
at Ironton.

8

Mighty Geyser
.Yellowstone N a t i on a I
l'ark's Old Faithful geyser
erupts an average of every
64.5 minutes and discharges
10,000 to 12,000 gallons of
water in 2'h to 5 minutes,
according to . Encyclopaedia
Britannica.

tio neering, and Mrs. Gene
Wetherholt.
Members of the Junior
Women 's Club Fine Arts
Committee assisting with the
preparations are , Mrs . William
Thomas, Mrs. James .Yocum,
Mrs. Fred Stokes, and Mrs.
John Carty . Bill Mills will be
interviewed by Mrs . Paul
Wagner on WJEH , Tuesday at
10:30 a.m., concerning the

•

today· s FUNNY

160l
BOmES

89~

PLUS

...
QUILT
SHOW
--.....
.
••
ENTRY BLANK

Mr. and Mrs. Karl Heinke

I

,

.

GALLIPOLIS'- A STATUE OF CHRIST STANDS

land, flowers at His feet.

GALLIPOLIS - Memory,
sadness and sorrow aren't the
grow?
'
A-1 n s t ead of drawing only lliings which are found in a
DAN THOMAS
s u s t e n a n c e thro ugh its cemetery. Beauty is ·also there,
AND SON
roots, it synthesizes food especially in the Ohio Valley
"Sen•i"? rov ,;,. ce 1934"
fr om nut rients absorbed Memory Gardens . This 11-year
(., l1 poli•, Oh io
from the water .
old cemetery located on Neigh·
borhood road commands the
world to look and see the beauty
which it displays.
.
Three gardens located in the
cemetery are blazing masses of
colors as 20 new varieties of
Monday . Tuesday &amp; Wednesday
mums stretch their heads to the
Oct. 11 - 12 . 13
sun displaying a rainbow of
Monday 11 A.M. To 7 P.M.
color.
Tuesday &amp; Wednesday 9:30 to 4 P.M.
The Garden of Everlasting
Lunch 1 To 2 P.M.
Life, featuring a scene of Christ
and Mary at the well, is
surrounded with many colors of
flowers now in full bloom. The
Garden of Devotions, showing

Q-H ow does sea weed

3 BIG DAYS

the Bible and the Lord's Prayer,
and the Christus Garden
featuring Christ in the center of
three liers of flowers, also are
very much alive with flowers.
The cemetery is open to
everyone to take pictures or just

Today'•
Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Sunday, Oct. 10, the
283rd day of 1971.
The moon is between its full
phase and last quarter.
The morning star is Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter .
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Libra.

GALLIPOLIS - Cathy Ann father , the bride wore a long- Fred Erfurt.
Suiter became the bride of Karl sleeved formal length gown of
A reception was held at the
Laurence Heioke in First ivory guipure lace . A sash of Gallipolis Shrine Club im·
Presbyterian Church
of grosgrain encircled the shirred mediately foll owing
the
Gallipolis on Saturday, Sept. 25. -quilted skirt at the waist. The ceremony . The bride's table
The bride is the daughter of headpiece was a triagonal scarf was centered with a three tiered
Mr. and Mrs. A. Kimball Suiter, of silk illusion veiling trimm :d wedding cake, hurricane
• 281 Jackson Pike, and the with the guipure lace. She candles, and ivy . Serving were
br\liegroom is the son of Dr. and ctrries two white fugl mums Mrs. Aven Lusk, Mrs. Robert
Mta. e!arence Heinke of with ivory streamers.
Richards,
Mrs . Donald
Belley . Rev. Glen Hueholt and The maid of honor was Miss Robinson, Mrs. Leo Mossman,
Rev. Fred M. Rosin, brother-in· ~dy Suiter, sister of the bride. Mrs. Miles Epling, Mrs . Bill Joe
law of the bridegroom per- B desmaids were Miss Susan Evans, and Mrs. George W.
formed the double ring ark, Miss Ann Bennett and Slicer, Jr.
ceremony .
Mrs. Thomas Stempert. The . Attending the guest book was
Miss Catherine Hayward, attendants were brown cr~).ll' Miss Karen Leamon.
organist, played "Reformation long sleeves blouses with
Chorale,"
" Aria ,"
and gathered formallength skirts in
"Fragments from an Etude. " shades of autwnn browns and SELECTED FOR SORORITY
Mrs. Ann Fischer, organist, persinomon in vertical striped GALLIPOLIS - Teodora B.
played "Et in Terra Pax, " challis print. They carried two Bastiani, 101 Bastiani Drive, is
"Color My World,'; with Kathy gold fugi mwns with ivory ·one of 351 women students who
Fischer , flute soloist, "An· streamers.
have been pledged to a sorority
tiphon," and "Since You 've
Dennis Hufstader served as at Miami University, Oxford.
Asked," Sandy Suiter, soloist. best man. Ushers were Bruce She is in the Delta Gamma
Given in marriage by her McCiaskie, James Cole, and Sorority .

NAME - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

GUARD over the whole cemetery. It looks down over the

ADDRESS ----------- - - - - -- - -

Display A Rainbow Of Color

PHONE - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - Q- WI! at country claims

the world's first double-deck

tunnel?

A-J~pa n . The tunnel connects Honshu and Kyusha.
with one level for vehicles
and one for pedestrians.

Br ing or mail entry blank to Chamber of Commerce Of. ,
fice . Include price If desire to sell. Bring quilt to Chamber
ol Commerce office by 9: 00A.M. Sal., Oct. 16.
Additional blanks available at participating stores of
Gallipolis Retail Merchants.

drive through .
This is the only perpetual care
type cemetery in Gallia County.
It was established in 1960 by
Jac k Clarion who owns a
number of such cemeteries.
Albert Keller, manager, was
tra nsferred here from Athens.

American actress Helen
Hayes was born Oct. 10, 1900.
On this day in history :
In 1845 the U.S. Naval
Academy was formally opened
at Fort Severen, Annapolis, Md.
In 1911 Chinese revolutiona·
ries overthrew the Manchu
dynasty.
In 1963about 3,000 persons
were drowned when a dam
busrst in northern Italy.

Mrs. Kevin Hines

I Wish to Display a Quill in the Quilt Show.

'

Ohio Valley Memory Gardens

St., Clenland, Ohio -44113.

Double-Ring Ceremony
Unites Suiter-Heinke

CITY PARK, GALLIPOLIS
•

each origi11ol "f11My" wsed . 5Md gag1

to: Tadoy's FUNNY, 1200 West Tl11rd

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16th
9:00 A.M.

I .

Good c.h.oie!
3 cycles - NORMAL,
GENTLE, SUPER SOAK
• 2 washing speeds • 3
water temp selections • 2
load-size water levels •
Magic·Mix• lint filter •
Super SURGILATOR 0
agitator:

$199

95

While Only

Now! Cut prices on

One Touch Sewing
and a Pacesetter cabinet, too. One
· of the newest Touch &amp; Sew•
zig-zag machines. One touch
switches from straight to
zig-zag .7 stretch stitches,
buttonholer. Singer exclusive
Push-Button Bobbin!

get a beautiful

Reg. J379.95 . NOW '299.95

8''x10"

onlv8

living Color
Portrait

• Pluo 50¢

Film Fee

fini,~ed ~utti~o£~

Limit- one

~ pec i of

felt cldivcry-

ScJti':..f~;i r.1icn."

per chil d .

Open 'Tit 8 p.m. Mon. &amp; Fri. Nights
Simplicity, McCalls, Butterlck, Vogue Patterns
2 Complete Floors of Fabrics&amp; Notions
We Do Custom Dress Making
Singer Sales &amp;Service

co•n1~o•J~ ~t r•titc.

LOWER

G. C. MURPHY STORE

APPRO)OI!D II,NGI R mAl l R

' A f1111:lemark ol THE SINGE A COMPANY

----

58 C"urt Street

,

Games were played and
· prizes were won by Mrs. John
Gilbert, Mrs. Melvin Gilbert
and Mrs. Lawrence Evans.
Thuse attending were Mrs.
Kerr Gooch, Mrs. Betty Cook
and Christie, Mrs. Cathy Nolan,
Robin and Rose Williams, Mrs.

COME ON OVER TO

CARPE·T·LAND

While, Avocado,
Harvest Gold,
Copper .
Colors $5.00 Extra

446,9255

G;tlli POlis

Her flowers were miniature
coral roses. The mother of lhe
bridegroom wore a floor-length
beige embroidered gown witli
an orchid corsage.
Miss Sherry Leak Russell was
her sister's maid of honor.
Bridesmaids
were
the
bridegroom's sister, Mr.s .
To.mn;y Lee_ Howard , the
bnde s cousm: M1ss Pa~la
Ramey, Gall1pohs; M1ss
Brenda Spradlm, M1ss Conme
Argus and Mrs. Gerald R?ach.
Susan and Sandra Petrie of
Gallipolis, the .bride's cousins,
were junwr br1desma1ds.
Gerald Roach served as best
man . The ushers were Robin
Priday, M~rtin Komives, David
Garner, M1chael G1ehl and the
bridegroom's brother, Kraig
Martin Hines.
The
newlyweds
are
honeymooning in Europe. Mrs.
Hines is. a seni.or. at Ohio State
UmverSlly maJormg m foreign
languages. He is a graduage in
physical education and will
enter graduate school this fall .

FAVORITE BEVERAGES

Visit The

j~akt

il1nppr

GALLI

OHIO

1

LUXURIOUS

MINK
TRIM
WINTER

COATS
$

•

Stanley Wood, Mr•. Lawrence
Evans, Mrs. Melvin Gilbert, .
Mrs. John Gilb~rl and
daughter, Mrs. Fannie Jon~s.
Mrs. Ina Webster, Mrs. Ray
Heaberlin, Mrs . Howard
Hatcher, Mrs. Mick Morgan
and Rodney and Mrs. John R.
Morgan.
Sending gifts were David
Altizer family, Mrs . Paul
Burnette, Mrs. Landon Bur·
nette, Miss Unda Bostic, Mrs.
James Williams and Mrs. Ed
Slagle.

Where The Happy Ones Are

Our mink
will do more

'

•Tmk.

ENJOY THE THRILL OF A WONDERFUL NEW CARPET.

. ''

SPECIAL HAPPY TIME PRICES THAT

l,....,.,.,.,.,.,.__.
FREN·CH CITY FABRIC SHOPPE

in !Odiant bfa tk

white -end living cciGr.

Bonus quo1ity ' 1Gua1Cin1C£d

While, Avocado ,
Harvest Gold ..
Colors $5.00 Extra

bargain prices!

MANY SPECIAL PRiaS
ON FALL FABRICS

COLUMBUS - Miss Lana
Joy Russell, daughter of Mr .
and Mrs. Jack H. Russell, 313
Jackson Street, Columbus, and
Kevin Howard Hines, son of
Mrs. Jack C. Biddle, 801 Joyful
Street, and Howard Hines, 4lt
Buena Vista Ave., Colwnbus,
exchanged vows in a double
ring candlelight ceremony on
Sept. 18at 7:30p.m. in the First
Congregational Church,
Columbus, with Rev. Chalmers
officiating.
Miss Russell is the grand·
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Helsel
Russell, Gallipolis, and Mrs.
Clarence Pettie, Rio Grande.
The bride wore an ivory
empire gown of silk peau. The
long sleeves and bodice were
covered with re-embroidered
alencon lace , trimmed with
pearls and sequins. A chapel
train attached to an alencon
lace cap covered ·the train of the
gown. Both were designed by
Priscilla of Boston. ·
The mother of the bride wore
a silk coral, floor length gown.

RIO GRANDE - A bridal
shower honoring Mrs. Rodney
Cook, the former Charla Gooch,
was held recently at the home of
Mrs. Dan Morgan in Rio
Grande.

Matching dryers available now -

t; Babies- chifcfren- CJ&lt;h•fir.- ~·~•'Ft- 1 S JJ~c:iul
of t:'Oc h perscn ~ ~ r,g l y o~" dy ll8 ~:, p iLJ!: 50 ¢ fi lm 1:CiJ,
Groups $1.00 per pe1~ on, pi"" one 50¢ ..film f~c.

t: Select from

$21995

Be.st c.h.oic.e.
"cycles with special cool·
down tor Permanent
Press fabrics • 2 washing
speeds • EXTRA SMALL
load setting • 5 water
temp selectio ns • 6 loadsize water levels • Efficient MAGIC CLEAN°
Self·.cleaning lint filter •
Bleach and fabric , soft·
ener dispensers • Super
SURGILATOR0 agitator.

Russell-Hines
Solemnize Vows

" Shave Tails"
Mules once played an important part in the U.S.
Army. Second lieutenants
were called ''shave tails"
after the bumptious new
mules that had their tails
shaved · to distinguish them
from the others .

Mrs. Cook Honored
With Bridal Shower

B!ttU c.koic.e.
3 cycles with special coo~
down for Permanent
Press fabrics • 2 washing
speeds • 5 water temp
selections • 2 load-size
water levels • Magic-Mix•
filter traps lint • Super
SURGILATOR ~ agitator.

eFOOTLONGS
eFRENCH FRIES
eALL YOUR

Todofl fUNNY will poy SI.OO lor

for you than a
10, 000 coat.

1

ARE SURE TO MAKE YOU SMILE

·5~
WILL HOLD
YOUR CHOICE
IN OUR
lAY-AWAY

Pamper yourself in the luxury of mink.
Stevens fam ous hard finished "Topaz"
fabricS styled and hand detailed in the
most meticulous way . Topped with
larg e natural mink weddingband
co ll ar, satin lined. guaranteed for 2
years. Colors : brown, mint. wine and
camel. Sizes B to 18.

KOSCOT- Oil of Mink - The Closest Thing to
Nature's Own Skin Oils

.

Our Cosmetics Will Pamper Your Skin Like
the $10,000 Coat Pampers Your Ego.

We will measure your home Free of Charge and show you
samples of our fine carpet right in .the comfort of your home.
Call us right now and set up an appointment for your Free
Estimate. 446-1641.
'842
••••
Phone 446-1405
C.allipofl•

Touch-a-Mink Boutique
Ann Sauvage, Syracuse, Ohio

/

"The Store with More
Gallipolis

'

•

'.

�'"

.

•
- -- -1

Brownell Hosts

4- The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 10, 1971

.,

Kanauga WSCS

POLLY'S . POINTERS
Peeve: Soda Straws ·

KANAUGA - The Ka'n auga
WSCS met recently at the home
Short .
of Mrs. Audrey Brownell . The
.leader, Mrs. Florence Allen,
By I'OLLY CRAMER
opened the meeting using the
theme. of Faith. Roll call was
answered by naming a scripture verse beginning with the
DEAR POLLY-After washing my thermal-lined
letter "0" representing the
draperies accordi ng to instructions, the backing
(which resem bles rubber) stuck together in several
month of October.
places
and when pulled apart the lining peeled off
Scripture readin gs we1·e
the
material,
leaving large holes. Can any reader
taken from the l)ook of Mark ,
suggest a way of permanently patching this lining
9:23-29. A poem "Faith" was
ma terial'-KATHY H .
read by Mrs. Clyde Shamblin.
Other readings were given by ·
DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with soda straws that
..Evelyn Rothgeb, Mrs. Carl
are
too short and slip down in the bottle as you drink .
Roush and Mrs. John Raike .
They should be at least an inch longer.-MRS. F . W. L.
The Bible study was taken
DEAR POLLY - Sherry wanted to know what she could
from the second chapter of
do
with leftover carpe t tiles. A friend of mine created a
Colossians . Benediction was
ulletin
board by attaching a rec tangle made of such
b
given by Mrs. Burkle Rife. The
tiles to a wail in her daughter's bedroom . Felt cutouts
birthday of Mrs. Nessler was
glued to one corner to indicate the user's special interest
celebrated. The group made 67
would add to its looks. A coffee pot or cup and saucer for
sick calls.
one to go in the kitchen, mod flower s in a girl's room
and a boat or shapes of athletic equipment in a boy's
Refreshments were served
room
are just a few suggeslions .-EDNA
and the hostess was assisted by
her two granddaughters, Cindy
DEAR POLLY and Sherry- We used leftover carpet
tiles to cover the stair steps going down to our basement.
and Sherry.
- MAGDALE NE
DEAR POLLY- Sherry might be interested to know
that we used our leftover carpel tiles along with some
carpet tape to cover the back end. of our station wagon .
It is easy to clean as we just pull out the whole thing,
vacuum and put back. This is not only attractive but a
lot more comfortable for the children .-JACKfE
DEAR POLLY- I suggesf that Sherry uses her leftover carpet tiles to line the silver drawer in her buffet.
Silver will stay in place and all can be seen at a glance.
- LILLIAN
DEAR POLLY - Often a salt shaker is left fr om a
broken pair of salt and peppers but do not throw it away .
Fill with three-fourths salt and one-fourth pepper, shake
up and set on the back of the siove . This is very con·
venient for seasoning meats, vegetables and such and
one is saved the troubl e of grabbing for two shakers.- ·
MRS. F . N.

A Bit Ton

A thought for todaY; .
Gennan philosopher Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche said,
"In revenge and in !we womail
is lJll're barbaroua than man."

. --·

'·

I

··~
I

.LI

Since 1859

;h .. ..

~

\I

I

~

Guardteed
To Satisfy..
Or Mone Back
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Donald Thaler, right, and Mrs.
Eugene Gloss, left, are piclured tagging worli which will be
auctioned at the Bob Evans Farm Festival.

COCA
COLA

An Sale To Be Held
GALLIPOLIS - THE MASSES OF FLOWERS surrounding the Bible, in the Garden of
Dev~tions help to display the Locd's Prayer featured on the pages of the open book.

At The Farm Festival
GALI.IPOI.I S - Several
ladies of the French Art Colony
worked tagging p1ctures for the
Bob Evans Farm Festival
whit h will be held at Rio
Grande on Oct. 15, 16 and 17.
The painting being auctioned
off on Sunday, Oct. 17, at 2 p.m.
will be in a variety of ma terials,
oils, tole paintings, watercolors,
etthings, and a macrame wall
hanging.
Over 50 pieces of original art
work done by members of the
French Art Colony will be
auctioned.
Bill Mills, the fund raismg
and projects chairman, and
Mrs. Janies Walter, auctwn
chairman, w1sh to recognize
t:wse who have helped on the
project. The proceeds will go to
the Capital fund drive .
Mrs . Donald Thaler and
Peggy Evans. exhib1ts cochairmen,
Mrs.
Ronald
Calhoun, Mrs. Keith Sheets,
hostess chairman, Stan Evans,
who IS in charge of the auc-

THIS IS A PICTURE OF Christ and Mary at the well, in
the Garden of EverlasUng -Life. The flowers are in every
color.

... ..._. •

auction.

•'

•

'

.·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~:~!~:

•

"

.....

·seen and Heard

::::::::::::::;:;:;:;.;:;:;:::::::::;:;:::::::::;:::::::::~::::f-~6~

GA LLIPOUS - County
Recorder Evalee Myers attended the National Emblem
Club Convention recently in
New Orleans, La . Mrs . Myers,
president · of the Gallipolis
Emblem Club, represented her
chapter.
Gallia County Clerk of Courts
Mal!&gt;j ori e Rinehart and her
deput ies, Mrs . Louise Burger,
Mrs . Conn ie Barnes , Mrs .
Evelyn J effers and Miss
Jeanette Polcyn attended the
Second
Dis trict
Clerks
Association meeting last week
at Ironton.

8

Mighty Geyser
.Yellowstone N a t i on a I
l'ark's Old Faithful geyser
erupts an average of every
64.5 minutes and discharges
10,000 to 12,000 gallons of
water in 2'h to 5 minutes,
according to . Encyclopaedia
Britannica.

tio neering, and Mrs. Gene
Wetherholt.
Members of the Junior
Women 's Club Fine Arts
Committee assisting with the
preparations are , Mrs . William
Thomas, Mrs. James .Yocum,
Mrs. Fred Stokes, and Mrs.
John Carty . Bill Mills will be
interviewed by Mrs . Paul
Wagner on WJEH , Tuesday at
10:30 a.m., concerning the

•

today· s FUNNY

160l
BOmES

89~

PLUS

...
QUILT
SHOW
--.....
.
••
ENTRY BLANK

Mr. and Mrs. Karl Heinke

I

,

.

GALLIPOLIS'- A STATUE OF CHRIST STANDS

land, flowers at His feet.

GALLIPOLIS - Memory,
sadness and sorrow aren't the
grow?
'
A-1 n s t ead of drawing only lliings which are found in a
DAN THOMAS
s u s t e n a n c e thro ugh its cemetery. Beauty is ·also there,
AND SON
roots, it synthesizes food especially in the Ohio Valley
"Sen•i"? rov ,;,. ce 1934"
fr om nut rients absorbed Memory Gardens . This 11-year
(., l1 poli•, Oh io
from the water .
old cemetery located on Neigh·
borhood road commands the
world to look and see the beauty
which it displays.
.
Three gardens located in the
cemetery are blazing masses of
colors as 20 new varieties of
Monday . Tuesday &amp; Wednesday
mums stretch their heads to the
Oct. 11 - 12 . 13
sun displaying a rainbow of
Monday 11 A.M. To 7 P.M.
color.
Tuesday &amp; Wednesday 9:30 to 4 P.M.
The Garden of Everlasting
Lunch 1 To 2 P.M.
Life, featuring a scene of Christ
and Mary at the well, is
surrounded with many colors of
flowers now in full bloom. The
Garden of Devotions, showing

Q-H ow does sea weed

3 BIG DAYS

the Bible and the Lord's Prayer,
and the Christus Garden
featuring Christ in the center of
three liers of flowers, also are
very much alive with flowers.
The cemetery is open to
everyone to take pictures or just

Today'•
Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Sunday, Oct. 10, the
283rd day of 1971.
The moon is between its full
phase and last quarter.
The morning star is Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter .
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Libra.

GALLIPOLIS - Cathy Ann father , the bride wore a long- Fred Erfurt.
Suiter became the bride of Karl sleeved formal length gown of
A reception was held at the
Laurence Heioke in First ivory guipure lace . A sash of Gallipolis Shrine Club im·
Presbyterian Church
of grosgrain encircled the shirred mediately foll owing
the
Gallipolis on Saturday, Sept. 25. -quilted skirt at the waist. The ceremony . The bride's table
The bride is the daughter of headpiece was a triagonal scarf was centered with a three tiered
Mr. and Mrs. A. Kimball Suiter, of silk illusion veiling trimm :d wedding cake, hurricane
• 281 Jackson Pike, and the with the guipure lace. She candles, and ivy . Serving were
br\liegroom is the son of Dr. and ctrries two white fugl mums Mrs. Aven Lusk, Mrs. Robert
Mta. e!arence Heinke of with ivory streamers.
Richards,
Mrs . Donald
Belley . Rev. Glen Hueholt and The maid of honor was Miss Robinson, Mrs. Leo Mossman,
Rev. Fred M. Rosin, brother-in· ~dy Suiter, sister of the bride. Mrs. Miles Epling, Mrs . Bill Joe
law of the bridegroom per- B desmaids were Miss Susan Evans, and Mrs. George W.
formed the double ring ark, Miss Ann Bennett and Slicer, Jr.
ceremony .
Mrs. Thomas Stempert. The . Attending the guest book was
Miss Catherine Hayward, attendants were brown cr~).ll' Miss Karen Leamon.
organist, played "Reformation long sleeves blouses with
Chorale,"
" Aria ,"
and gathered formallength skirts in
"Fragments from an Etude. " shades of autwnn browns and SELECTED FOR SORORITY
Mrs. Ann Fischer, organist, persinomon in vertical striped GALLIPOLIS - Teodora B.
played "Et in Terra Pax, " challis print. They carried two Bastiani, 101 Bastiani Drive, is
"Color My World,'; with Kathy gold fugi mwns with ivory ·one of 351 women students who
Fischer , flute soloist, "An· streamers.
have been pledged to a sorority
tiphon," and "Since You 've
Dennis Hufstader served as at Miami University, Oxford.
Asked," Sandy Suiter, soloist. best man. Ushers were Bruce She is in the Delta Gamma
Given in marriage by her McCiaskie, James Cole, and Sorority .

NAME - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

GUARD over the whole cemetery. It looks down over the

ADDRESS ----------- - - - - -- - -

Display A Rainbow Of Color

PHONE - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - Q- WI! at country claims

the world's first double-deck

tunnel?

A-J~pa n . The tunnel connects Honshu and Kyusha.
with one level for vehicles
and one for pedestrians.

Br ing or mail entry blank to Chamber of Commerce Of. ,
fice . Include price If desire to sell. Bring quilt to Chamber
ol Commerce office by 9: 00A.M. Sal., Oct. 16.
Additional blanks available at participating stores of
Gallipolis Retail Merchants.

drive through .
This is the only perpetual care
type cemetery in Gallia County.
It was established in 1960 by
Jac k Clarion who owns a
number of such cemeteries.
Albert Keller, manager, was
tra nsferred here from Athens.

American actress Helen
Hayes was born Oct. 10, 1900.
On this day in history :
In 1845 the U.S. Naval
Academy was formally opened
at Fort Severen, Annapolis, Md.
In 1911 Chinese revolutiona·
ries overthrew the Manchu
dynasty.
In 1963about 3,000 persons
were drowned when a dam
busrst in northern Italy.

Mrs. Kevin Hines

I Wish to Display a Quill in the Quilt Show.

'

Ohio Valley Memory Gardens

St., Clenland, Ohio -44113.

Double-Ring Ceremony
Unites Suiter-Heinke

CITY PARK, GALLIPOLIS
•

each origi11ol "f11My" wsed . 5Md gag1

to: Tadoy's FUNNY, 1200 West Tl11rd

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16th
9:00 A.M.

I .

Good c.h.oie!
3 cycles - NORMAL,
GENTLE, SUPER SOAK
• 2 washing speeds • 3
water temp selections • 2
load-size water levels •
Magic·Mix• lint filter •
Super SURGILATOR 0
agitator:

$199

95

While Only

Now! Cut prices on

One Touch Sewing
and a Pacesetter cabinet, too. One
· of the newest Touch &amp; Sew•
zig-zag machines. One touch
switches from straight to
zig-zag .7 stretch stitches,
buttonholer. Singer exclusive
Push-Button Bobbin!

get a beautiful

Reg. J379.95 . NOW '299.95

8''x10"

onlv8

living Color
Portrait

• Pluo 50¢

Film Fee

fini,~ed ~utti~o£~

Limit- one

~ pec i of

felt cldivcry-

ScJti':..f~;i r.1icn."

per chil d .

Open 'Tit 8 p.m. Mon. &amp; Fri. Nights
Simplicity, McCalls, Butterlck, Vogue Patterns
2 Complete Floors of Fabrics&amp; Notions
We Do Custom Dress Making
Singer Sales &amp;Service

co•n1~o•J~ ~t r•titc.

LOWER

G. C. MURPHY STORE

APPRO)OI!D II,NGI R mAl l R

' A f1111:lemark ol THE SINGE A COMPANY

----

58 C"urt Street

,

Games were played and
· prizes were won by Mrs. John
Gilbert, Mrs. Melvin Gilbert
and Mrs. Lawrence Evans.
Thuse attending were Mrs.
Kerr Gooch, Mrs. Betty Cook
and Christie, Mrs. Cathy Nolan,
Robin and Rose Williams, Mrs.

COME ON OVER TO

CARPE·T·LAND

While, Avocado,
Harvest Gold,
Copper .
Colors $5.00 Extra

446,9255

G;tlli POlis

Her flowers were miniature
coral roses. The mother of lhe
bridegroom wore a floor-length
beige embroidered gown witli
an orchid corsage.
Miss Sherry Leak Russell was
her sister's maid of honor.
Bridesmaids
were
the
bridegroom's sister, Mr.s .
To.mn;y Lee_ Howard , the
bnde s cousm: M1ss Pa~la
Ramey, Gall1pohs; M1ss
Brenda Spradlm, M1ss Conme
Argus and Mrs. Gerald R?ach.
Susan and Sandra Petrie of
Gallipolis, the .bride's cousins,
were junwr br1desma1ds.
Gerald Roach served as best
man . The ushers were Robin
Priday, M~rtin Komives, David
Garner, M1chael G1ehl and the
bridegroom's brother, Kraig
Martin Hines.
The
newlyweds
are
honeymooning in Europe. Mrs.
Hines is. a seni.or. at Ohio State
UmverSlly maJormg m foreign
languages. He is a graduage in
physical education and will
enter graduate school this fall .

FAVORITE BEVERAGES

Visit The

j~akt

il1nppr

GALLI

OHIO

1

LUXURIOUS

MINK
TRIM
WINTER

COATS
$

•

Stanley Wood, Mr•. Lawrence
Evans, Mrs. Melvin Gilbert, .
Mrs. John Gilb~rl and
daughter, Mrs. Fannie Jon~s.
Mrs. Ina Webster, Mrs. Ray
Heaberlin, Mrs . Howard
Hatcher, Mrs. Mick Morgan
and Rodney and Mrs. John R.
Morgan.
Sending gifts were David
Altizer family, Mrs . Paul
Burnette, Mrs. Landon Bur·
nette, Miss Unda Bostic, Mrs.
James Williams and Mrs. Ed
Slagle.

Where The Happy Ones Are

Our mink
will do more

'

•Tmk.

ENJOY THE THRILL OF A WONDERFUL NEW CARPET.

. ''

SPECIAL HAPPY TIME PRICES THAT

l,....,.,.,.,.,.,.__.
FREN·CH CITY FABRIC SHOPPE

in !Odiant bfa tk

white -end living cciGr.

Bonus quo1ity ' 1Gua1Cin1C£d

While, Avocado ,
Harvest Gold ..
Colors $5.00 Extra

bargain prices!

MANY SPECIAL PRiaS
ON FALL FABRICS

COLUMBUS - Miss Lana
Joy Russell, daughter of Mr .
and Mrs. Jack H. Russell, 313
Jackson Street, Columbus, and
Kevin Howard Hines, son of
Mrs. Jack C. Biddle, 801 Joyful
Street, and Howard Hines, 4lt
Buena Vista Ave., Colwnbus,
exchanged vows in a double
ring candlelight ceremony on
Sept. 18at 7:30p.m. in the First
Congregational Church,
Columbus, with Rev. Chalmers
officiating.
Miss Russell is the grand·
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Helsel
Russell, Gallipolis, and Mrs.
Clarence Pettie, Rio Grande.
The bride wore an ivory
empire gown of silk peau. The
long sleeves and bodice were
covered with re-embroidered
alencon lace , trimmed with
pearls and sequins. A chapel
train attached to an alencon
lace cap covered ·the train of the
gown. Both were designed by
Priscilla of Boston. ·
The mother of the bride wore
a silk coral, floor length gown.

RIO GRANDE - A bridal
shower honoring Mrs. Rodney
Cook, the former Charla Gooch,
was held recently at the home of
Mrs. Dan Morgan in Rio
Grande.

Matching dryers available now -

t; Babies- chifcfren- CJ&lt;h•fir.- ~·~•'Ft- 1 S JJ~c:iul
of t:'Oc h perscn ~ ~ r,g l y o~" dy ll8 ~:, p iLJ!: 50 ¢ fi lm 1:CiJ,
Groups $1.00 per pe1~ on, pi"" one 50¢ ..film f~c.

t: Select from

$21995

Be.st c.h.oic.e.
"cycles with special cool·
down tor Permanent
Press fabrics • 2 washing
speeds • EXTRA SMALL
load setting • 5 water
temp selectio ns • 6 loadsize water levels • Efficient MAGIC CLEAN°
Self·.cleaning lint filter •
Bleach and fabric , soft·
ener dispensers • Super
SURGILATOR0 agitator.

Russell-Hines
Solemnize Vows

" Shave Tails"
Mules once played an important part in the U.S.
Army. Second lieutenants
were called ''shave tails"
after the bumptious new
mules that had their tails
shaved · to distinguish them
from the others .

Mrs. Cook Honored
With Bridal Shower

B!ttU c.koic.e.
3 cycles with special coo~
down for Permanent
Press fabrics • 2 washing
speeds • 5 water temp
selections • 2 load-size
water levels • Magic-Mix•
filter traps lint • Super
SURGILATOR ~ agitator.

eFOOTLONGS
eFRENCH FRIES
eALL YOUR

Todofl fUNNY will poy SI.OO lor

for you than a
10, 000 coat.

1

ARE SURE TO MAKE YOU SMILE

·5~
WILL HOLD
YOUR CHOICE
IN OUR
lAY-AWAY

Pamper yourself in the luxury of mink.
Stevens fam ous hard finished "Topaz"
fabricS styled and hand detailed in the
most meticulous way . Topped with
larg e natural mink weddingband
co ll ar, satin lined. guaranteed for 2
years. Colors : brown, mint. wine and
camel. Sizes B to 18.

KOSCOT- Oil of Mink - The Closest Thing to
Nature's Own Skin Oils

.

Our Cosmetics Will Pamper Your Skin Like
the $10,000 Coat Pampers Your Ego.

We will measure your home Free of Charge and show you
samples of our fine carpet right in .the comfort of your home.
Call us right now and set up an appointment for your Free
Estimate. 446-1641.
'842
••••
Phone 446-1405
C.allipofl•

Touch-a-Mink Boutique
Ann Sauvage, Syracuse, Ohio

/

"The Store with More
Gallipolis

'

•

'.

�•

·'

6- The Sunday Times -Scnti!l&lt;'l, Sunday, ()('t. 10, 1971

Julia Craift Honored

~

BIDWE~~LLY ~~~:Bidwell
Umted Mf lhodlst C'hurch Will

~

hold a "Rallj• Day" cele bration
on' Sunday: Oct. li. Sunda y
school Will begin at 9 a.m. wtl h
preaching services at 10 a.m. A
potluck dinner will be sen ·ed at
'12 noon and a songfesl w1ll be
held ~~ 1:30 p.m. The public is
curmaJ,Jy invited to attend. ·

~

'~
I

'~

~
I

~
~

~
~
~

•
,.'I

Sunday

I

''
I

~

'~
I

''

'II
'
•
(

I
I

;

l

•

'•
l
'
•'

'·'ic \ 1 I'·''!'"

'

'.,,'

11\e

'

S-Man. Army

I

~~··•~ a fortune ,., M"'"'C"" qo,d

''I

'.

•I
•''

Sto rr ng P&lt;&gt;ter G• Jve-s,
James Dalv, Bud S r P nC P r

:

CARTOON ·

.'

COLO\\

'fhmln•

.

·

With Bridal Showe·r

GALLIPOLI S - Miss Julia Linda Crart, Donna Sanders,
.-\ nn Craft was honored with a Nan cy . James, Geraldine
bridal showe r Oel. 5at 7: 30p .m. Burcham, Ann Saunders,
al the Ohio Cha pel' Methodist Dolores Fisher., Aldeth While,
Church 10 the 'rellowship room. . Linda Shaver, Lula Johnson,
Mrs. Kev in Dennis, Mrs. Susan Mary Jo Shaver , Virginia
Russell, Mrs . Ravmond Willis Fisher Jewe ll Ro binson,
. and Mrs. Alfred Va. llance gave Norm;;' Holley, Clara Gilmore,
the shower in honor of Miss Freda Felker, Elaine Baker,
Crart. bride..,lect of Paul E;d- Evelyn Jeffers , Mary Call ,
wa rd Butler, Jr .
·
Bertha Martin, Laura Jean
The bnde's table was covered Crart, Nancy Stewart, Florenee
w1th a whi te polyester cloth Willis . Mildred A. Evans,
edged wi th lace. This was Elizabeth
Butler,
Ruth
. flanked by Silver candlesticks Elizabeth Butler, Louise Bush,
with lighted mint green candles. Jane Bush Norvell, Helen Bush,
The gifl table carried out the Mildred Bush, Melva Mitchell,
color scheme with mint green· Alice Bush, Virginia Swain,
streamers and double white Cindy Gilmore and Kim .
wedding bells . The cake was
Those sending gifts were Sue
covered with miniature green Ann Bostic, Aleta Woods, Alma
bells. Refreshments of nuts, Fowler, Linda Sheets, Mrs.
min ts, coffee and punch were Charles Carter , Bernadi ne
serve•.! with the cake .
Gilmore, Golda Burleson,
Games were won by Nancy Janice Cornell , Midge Evans,
James and Bonn ie Mitchell. The Eloise Mills, Virginia Bane,
door prize was the centerpiece Frances Maddie, Sadie Bush,
from the table which was won Vada Morrison, ·Judy Burcham,
by Geraldi ne Bw-cham.
Anna Gibson, Gusta Johnson
Miss Craf t opened gi rts and Glenn Thompson.
brought by, Bonn ie Mitchell,
Clara Craft, Geraldine Craft,
Donna Craft, Laura Baker ,
Ruth Ann Evans, Ge rtrude
· Evans , Catherine Matthews,
Col ene Rice. Paul a Butler ,

Coming
Events

Tonight Thru
Wednesday

watt Dlsilef

-

~

I

\

-·
OOi'nJONES sanDY DUNCAN
Jlli FLYNN rony ROOERIS
:iamesGREGORY
""IQI
Disney Short
Bongo

'

Population P.erspective
Resident Honored Theme for Gra_
ce Guild
Wije Of Former

GALLIPOLIS - The name of
Mrs. Kay Winters, wife of a'
former Gallia countian, Earl D.
Winters, has been placed on the
Jist of ''Leader~ of American
Elementary
· Education, 1971."
1
A teacher at Spring ield
Elementary School of Pleasant
Valley , Pa ., Mrs . Winters
graduated from Beaver College
and has done graduate work at
· Wheelock College in Boston and
Lehigh University in All entown,
Pa.
HerWho
name
was listed
"Who's
in College,
.. 1958in,

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. William
B. Thomas was gues t spea ker
when the Grace Guild met at the
church Monday night. Her topic
was "Population Perspec t'1ve."
She stated that much niust be
done to aid in this problem. "We
must use ihe land to better
advantage, support politica l
action and aid in eliminating
. wa ter an d
pollution of the arr,
land."
- open ed w1'th
The meeting was
prayer by Mrs. Silas Hamilton
and " Outstanding Young who then conducted a short
Women of America," 1967.
business
session.
AnA published author, she has nouncement that the shelled
cedontribuleld j art,icles h to pecans will be available this
ucationa ourna s sue as
"Tbe Instructor " "The Grade year was made.
School Teacher:" and "NEA
Committees named we_re
Journal." Many of her {'oems "~usic, Mrs. Garland Caud1ll ,
have been published in the Mrs. Hoke !Wbmso~ ; Program,
children •s magazines " Child Mrs. Aldeth Robmson, 1Y)rs.
Ufe" and "Highlights," and in Claude Miller,_ Mrs . T. A.
textbooks by Ginn and Com- Thomas, Mrs. S1las Hamilton;
Cards and Flowers, Mrs. Harry
pany .
Dr. and Mrs. Winters and Hamilton, Mrs . Howard Harddaughter, Linda Lee, are way.
Ways and means , Mrs.
presently living in Quakertown,
Pa.

Mr. and Mrs. Ricky Evans

CROWN CITY - Miss Dorthy
Louise Watson, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs . Harold Watson ,
Gallipolis, and Rickey Allen
Evans, son of Mrs. Elizabeth
and the late Waller Evans,
Crown City, were united in holy
matrimony at the Bailey Chapel
on Aug. 14, in an open church
wedding. Rev . Jerry L. Massie,
brother-in-law of the bride ,
officia ted at the double ring
ceremony.
A half-hour of pre-nuptial
music was given by Mrs .
Brenda Williams, Crown City,
and vocalist Miss Dottie
Esque, Gallipolis.
The bride wore a gown of
white sa tin brocade and
crushed net veil which were
made by her aun t, Mrs . Vera
Dillon, Lion ville, Ohio. She
carried a bouquet of white
carnations.
The bride chose Miss Jessie
Myers, Gallipolis, to be her
maid of honor. Tom Sims,
A CREATIVE writers workshop Eureka, served as best man.
wi ll be held in the Library
basement a t 7:30. Bring
manusc ript for discussion. For Salem BYF Met
information call 446-0530 or 4464646.
SALEM - The Salem BYF
GALLIPOLIS Order of Eastern met Oct. 3 opening' the meeting
Star will hold election of of- with three songs and an offering
ficers, 7:30p .m.
being collected. The group will
lour Halley's Nursing Home in
TUESDAY
PEMBROKE Club will meet Gallipolis at 2 p.m. toda y.
with Mrs. George Bush, at 8 They discussed hav ing a
spaghetti supper and a program
p.m.
FRENCH CITY Ga rd en Club of the Devils Rainbow was
will meet with Mrs. Harley given. Refr eshments were
George, at 7:30 p.m. Members, served followed by adjournment.
please bring arrangement.
RIO GRANDE Calvary Baptist
Auxiliary will meet at the
church, 7:30p.m.

The Classic Is Back!

WEDNESDAY
HOM EMAKERS Coun cil is
going to Columbus for a lour of
the Ohio Historical Center. Call
Mrs. Hoke Robinson, 446-3506
for information.

u ... ;H

The usherettes were Miss Carol
Dillon, Linnville, and Miss Nola
Goodman,
Columbus .
Registering guests was Miss
Debbie Harrison, Gallipolis.
A reception was held at the
home of the bride's parents
following the ceremony.
Serving at the bride's table
were Mrs . Donna Haner,
Jackson, and Mrs. Vera Dillon,
Lionville.
The bride and groom are both
1970 graduates of Hannan Trace
High School.
Mr. Evans is presently serving in the United States Air
Force and is stationed in
Blytheville, Ark .

. The m'eeting closed with a
lovely devotion by Mrs. Claude
Miller. She 'said, "Don't teach
our children prayers but teach
them lo pray!"
A plant can live withou t
roots and leaves . Lichens,
for example, have no true
roots, stems or leaves.

CLINU

take a
•
course 1n
comfort
..-·

... ..·..

STOCK UP NOW ON A
NAME BRAND

"~~·· '
·' ·~·

0

';,
-

$1.37

.

. ..~~
.....~ ,.
~

.

'

0

~

~

i

Bastianis Have
Mr. and Mrs. Alan (formerly
Jill Bastiani) DeMarchi, 157
Harter Ave., Cincinnati, announce the birth of a son name{!
Christopher Alan on Sept. 25 at
Christ Hospital. The baby was
welcomed home by a four-year
old sister.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence
Bastiani , 101 Bastiani Drive,
Gallipolis .
· The paternal grandparent is
Mrs. Anthony DeMarchi,
Brecksville, Ohio.

lhelelhe bolly shops IOitlhll

328 SecOIId ~" -

Gallifl()lis, 0.

Mon .. Tues., Wed., Sot. 9-l
Thur . 9-12, Fri. 9-8 P.M.

It~ I, ,

'I

'

•

'

44

LISTERINE
MOUTHWASH
LARGE 32 OZ SIZE

Hell's C an yo n, plunges
7,900 feet from Devil Moun- .
lain down to the S n a k e
River, between Oregon and
Idaho.

'

19
REG. $1.98
BUY NOW

Budget!

CAN
LIMIT 1
PER PERSON

,.
,.o"•0~~

•''

-

NO SERVICE
CHARGE

.

COUPON

.IVORY
LIQUID

ll

29~

OZ.

WITH
COUPON

I

EXTRA LARGE
CREST

REG. PRICE 57'
lONE PER COUPON. ONE COUPON PER P

OCT
.•.
:ll:th:::::::
~--------.I
L

EXPIRES

TOOTHPASTE

~-----;~;---

2 FOR

1. CARTON OF 6- 12 Ol BOTTLES

39.
1:--------------------.1
1

99~

ONE PER
PERSON

I
I

, WITH COUPON

EXPIRES OCT•...;;,1~ltlihll_~~llllll~~

...

SPUR GREEN.. OR RUSSET
SUNDAY, MONDAY ONLY .

1 QUAKER STATE
I MOTOR
Ql
I OIL
I
I

LIMIT 6 QT.
WITH COUPUN
ONE rnuPON PER PERSON
EXPIRES OCT. 11th
L

.I

-------------1---------------·
I
' S.T.P•
I
II
I
I

LIMIT ONE
TO APERSON

'

-- -------EXPIRES OCl 11th

12-6

'

RAKES

A ••• •

OPEN

BY NETTLECRAFT

'

COUPON

ONE CQUPON PER PERSON
ONE BOX PER COUPON

RECLINERS

METAL
LEAf.. .

,. WITH
,. THIS

291 WITHOUT COUPON .

NOW I ONLY A FEW

~auY

GROCERY

CUTRITE
WAX
PAPER

SUNDAY

YES, WE HAVE
PLUMBING SUPPLIES
ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES
PANELING MOLDINGS
PLYWOOD
CEILING PANELS
INSULATION
AUTOMOTIVE
TOOLS OF ALL KINDS.

f.,

:

TRAINING t OMPLETED '
GALLIPOLIS - Keith H.
Hankins '"" completed basic
lJ·ainin.; al Fori Dis. N. J. His
address is 300-48-3871 A-1-:1, II .
Pulk. I.a. i l459, Plal &lt;•••n 2 fur
th11 S(; \.V Iw wish to wl' ite tu him .

TRASH

SAW

••

I

METAL

POWER

Elders Honored
With A Party
GALLIPOLIS - The Paint
Creek Regu lar Baptist Sunday
school will entertain members
of its home extension department and senior citizens of the
community with a young at
hea-rt. . party today al 3 p.m . in
!he fellowship room at the
church. Mrs. Thomas Dunsmore and Mrs. Hurl ~ogan are
c·H:hairmen of arrangements.

20 GAL

61,4 INCH

A New &amp;andson

-

7' COUPON

GALLON

NORTHUP Missionary Society
will meet with Mrs. Marjorie
Spriegel at I p.m.
YE OLDE Village Garden Club
"'"'""' will meet at the home of Mrs.
, f;;;=:;:~~ Charles Allman, 315 LeGrande,
7:30p.m.

You've been wa it ing for i I ... now it' s her e wi th all
e nice li ttl e touches you cr ave. like an incredibly
ich bl end of v.oot and nylon frieze. marvelousl y
tatteri ng r ag lan sleeves. cri sp no tch co ll ar and
generous pat ch pockets. A look Ia live in : Wine.
Petit e &amp; womens sizes.

DOW
PERMANENT

ANTI-FREEZE

A Sharp Way To
Shave Your

THURSDAY
HARRIS Grange will meet 7:30
p.m. at the Gran ge Hall .
Rodney Grange will be guests
and a joint elec tion of officers
will be held prior to a potluck
lunch.

SUND:A Y • MONDAY .ONLY

THE

Watson-Evans United

SUNDAY
THE REDEEMERS will
present a gospel sing at the
Ch urch of God on Jackson Pike
at the youth service at 6:30p.m.
and at the evoning worship
Sunday , October 10 - Art service at 7:30p.m.
Appreciation, 3 p.m., Slides and A HYMN SING will be held at
Poplar Ridge Church at 2 p. m.
narration.
October 15, 16. 17 - Auction
REV. ODELL Bush will be
1 Bob
Eva ns Farm Day
preaching at the Bailey Chapel
Festival 1 and Fren ch Art at 7:30p.m.
Colony Auction.
Sunday, October 17 - MONDAY
Demonstration or Gra phic Arts . THE WASHINGTON School
Sunday, October 24 - Art PTA will meet 7 p. m. in tl1e
Apprec ia ti on - slides and school ca feteria . Jonathan
narration.
Louden will present a program.
Sunday, October 31- Parent- Free sitter service will be
Child Workshop, 3 p.m.
provided by the Civil Air Patrol.
All events are at River by, 530
THE MORGAN Center Home
First Ave ., Gallipolis . Ri verby
Mission will meet at the Eno
is open every Saturday and
Grange hall on Monday from 10
Sunday, 1 p.m. lo 5 p.m .
a.m. till 2 p.m. They will have
Everyone is welcome . There is
used clothin g to give to anyone
no admi ssion charge.
needing them.

Monroe Gatewood ; Mr
Charles Sm1'th •, Mrs. Holls1·s·
Queen, Mrs. Howard 1. Neal ;
Callin~. Mrs. T. A. Thomas,
Mrs. Lester Roush, Mrs, John
'O'Dell, Mrs. John Dobbins,
Mrs. Louis Preston ; Publicity,
Mrs. Lester L. Roush.
A special 'committee for
Projects was named. It includes
Mrs. Harold Swindler, Mrs.
Everett McMahon, . Mrs .
Florence Wickline, Mrs. Frank .
Childers, Mrs. Silas Hamilton .
Hostesses for the dinner were
Mrs . August Arnold, Mrs .
Charles Smith, . Mrs . Silas
Hal!lilton, - Mrs.
Aldeth
Robinson, Mrs. Gladys Sowers.

OIL TREATMENT 59~ WITH
COUPON
ONE COUPON PER PERSON
ONE CAN PER IU:RSON
EXPIRES OCl 11th .

.

CHECKING ACCOUNT
., I

412-414 Second Av e.

, GullipolJ S, Oh io

.. ; '

!n

" \T J.d

NO MINIMUM BALANCE REQUIRED

'THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAs"

PEARL &amp; LOCUST -STREETS
'

•
.,

MIDDLEPORT, ()HIO
•
'

�•

·'

6- The Sunday Times -Scnti!l&lt;'l, Sunday, ()('t. 10, 1971

Julia Craift Honored

~

BIDWE~~LLY ~~~:Bidwell
Umted Mf lhodlst C'hurch Will

~

hold a "Rallj• Day" cele bration
on' Sunday: Oct. li. Sunda y
school Will begin at 9 a.m. wtl h
preaching services at 10 a.m. A
potluck dinner will be sen ·ed at
'12 noon and a songfesl w1ll be
held ~~ 1:30 p.m. The public is
curmaJ,Jy invited to attend. ·

~

'~
I

'~

~
I

~
~

~
~
~

•
,.'I

Sunday

I

''
I

~

'~
I

''

'II
'
•
(

I
I

;

l

•

'•
l
'
•'

'·'ic \ 1 I'·''!'"

'

'.,,'

11\e

'

S-Man. Army

I

~~··•~ a fortune ,., M"'"'C"" qo,d

''I

'.

•I
•''

Sto rr ng P&lt;&gt;ter G• Jve-s,
James Dalv, Bud S r P nC P r

:

CARTOON ·

.'

COLO\\

'fhmln•

.

·

With Bridal Showe·r

GALLIPOLI S - Miss Julia Linda Crart, Donna Sanders,
.-\ nn Craft was honored with a Nan cy . James, Geraldine
bridal showe r Oel. 5at 7: 30p .m. Burcham, Ann Saunders,
al the Ohio Cha pel' Methodist Dolores Fisher., Aldeth While,
Church 10 the 'rellowship room. . Linda Shaver, Lula Johnson,
Mrs. Kev in Dennis, Mrs. Susan Mary Jo Shaver , Virginia
Russell, Mrs . Ravmond Willis Fisher Jewe ll Ro binson,
. and Mrs. Alfred Va. llance gave Norm;;' Holley, Clara Gilmore,
the shower in honor of Miss Freda Felker, Elaine Baker,
Crart. bride..,lect of Paul E;d- Evelyn Jeffers , Mary Call ,
wa rd Butler, Jr .
·
Bertha Martin, Laura Jean
The bnde's table was covered Crart, Nancy Stewart, Florenee
w1th a whi te polyester cloth Willis . Mildred A. Evans,
edged wi th lace. This was Elizabeth
Butler,
Ruth
. flanked by Silver candlesticks Elizabeth Butler, Louise Bush,
with lighted mint green candles. Jane Bush Norvell, Helen Bush,
The gifl table carried out the Mildred Bush, Melva Mitchell,
color scheme with mint green· Alice Bush, Virginia Swain,
streamers and double white Cindy Gilmore and Kim .
wedding bells . The cake was
Those sending gifts were Sue
covered with miniature green Ann Bostic, Aleta Woods, Alma
bells. Refreshments of nuts, Fowler, Linda Sheets, Mrs.
min ts, coffee and punch were Charles Carter , Bernadi ne
serve•.! with the cake .
Gilmore, Golda Burleson,
Games were won by Nancy Janice Cornell , Midge Evans,
James and Bonn ie Mitchell. The Eloise Mills, Virginia Bane,
door prize was the centerpiece Frances Maddie, Sadie Bush,
from the table which was won Vada Morrison, ·Judy Burcham,
by Geraldi ne Bw-cham.
Anna Gibson, Gusta Johnson
Miss Craf t opened gi rts and Glenn Thompson.
brought by, Bonn ie Mitchell,
Clara Craft, Geraldine Craft,
Donna Craft, Laura Baker ,
Ruth Ann Evans, Ge rtrude
· Evans , Catherine Matthews,
Col ene Rice. Paul a Butler ,

Coming
Events

Tonight Thru
Wednesday

watt Dlsilef

-

~

I

\

-·
OOi'nJONES sanDY DUNCAN
Jlli FLYNN rony ROOERIS
:iamesGREGORY
""IQI
Disney Short
Bongo

'

Population P.erspective
Resident Honored Theme for Gra_
ce Guild
Wije Of Former

GALLIPOLIS - The name of
Mrs. Kay Winters, wife of a'
former Gallia countian, Earl D.
Winters, has been placed on the
Jist of ''Leader~ of American
Elementary
· Education, 1971."
1
A teacher at Spring ield
Elementary School of Pleasant
Valley , Pa ., Mrs . Winters
graduated from Beaver College
and has done graduate work at
· Wheelock College in Boston and
Lehigh University in All entown,
Pa.
HerWho
name
was listed
"Who's
in College,
.. 1958in,

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. William
B. Thomas was gues t spea ker
when the Grace Guild met at the
church Monday night. Her topic
was "Population Perspec t'1ve."
She stated that much niust be
done to aid in this problem. "We
must use ihe land to better
advantage, support politica l
action and aid in eliminating
. wa ter an d
pollution of the arr,
land."
- open ed w1'th
The meeting was
prayer by Mrs. Silas Hamilton
and " Outstanding Young who then conducted a short
Women of America," 1967.
business
session.
AnA published author, she has nouncement that the shelled
cedontribuleld j art,icles h to pecans will be available this
ucationa ourna s sue as
"Tbe Instructor " "The Grade year was made.
School Teacher:" and "NEA
Committees named we_re
Journal." Many of her {'oems "~usic, Mrs. Garland Caud1ll ,
have been published in the Mrs. Hoke !Wbmso~ ; Program,
children •s magazines " Child Mrs. Aldeth Robmson, 1Y)rs.
Ufe" and "Highlights," and in Claude Miller,_ Mrs . T. A.
textbooks by Ginn and Com- Thomas, Mrs. S1las Hamilton;
Cards and Flowers, Mrs. Harry
pany .
Dr. and Mrs. Winters and Hamilton, Mrs . Howard Harddaughter, Linda Lee, are way.
Ways and means , Mrs.
presently living in Quakertown,
Pa.

Mr. and Mrs. Ricky Evans

CROWN CITY - Miss Dorthy
Louise Watson, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs . Harold Watson ,
Gallipolis, and Rickey Allen
Evans, son of Mrs. Elizabeth
and the late Waller Evans,
Crown City, were united in holy
matrimony at the Bailey Chapel
on Aug. 14, in an open church
wedding. Rev . Jerry L. Massie,
brother-in-law of the bride ,
officia ted at the double ring
ceremony.
A half-hour of pre-nuptial
music was given by Mrs .
Brenda Williams, Crown City,
and vocalist Miss Dottie
Esque, Gallipolis.
The bride wore a gown of
white sa tin brocade and
crushed net veil which were
made by her aun t, Mrs . Vera
Dillon, Lion ville, Ohio. She
carried a bouquet of white
carnations.
The bride chose Miss Jessie
Myers, Gallipolis, to be her
maid of honor. Tom Sims,
A CREATIVE writers workshop Eureka, served as best man.
wi ll be held in the Library
basement a t 7:30. Bring
manusc ript for discussion. For Salem BYF Met
information call 446-0530 or 4464646.
SALEM - The Salem BYF
GALLIPOLIS Order of Eastern met Oct. 3 opening' the meeting
Star will hold election of of- with three songs and an offering
ficers, 7:30p .m.
being collected. The group will
lour Halley's Nursing Home in
TUESDAY
PEMBROKE Club will meet Gallipolis at 2 p.m. toda y.
with Mrs. George Bush, at 8 They discussed hav ing a
spaghetti supper and a program
p.m.
FRENCH CITY Ga rd en Club of the Devils Rainbow was
will meet with Mrs. Harley given. Refr eshments were
George, at 7:30 p.m. Members, served followed by adjournment.
please bring arrangement.
RIO GRANDE Calvary Baptist
Auxiliary will meet at the
church, 7:30p.m.

The Classic Is Back!

WEDNESDAY
HOM EMAKERS Coun cil is
going to Columbus for a lour of
the Ohio Historical Center. Call
Mrs. Hoke Robinson, 446-3506
for information.

u ... ;H

The usherettes were Miss Carol
Dillon, Linnville, and Miss Nola
Goodman,
Columbus .
Registering guests was Miss
Debbie Harrison, Gallipolis.
A reception was held at the
home of the bride's parents
following the ceremony.
Serving at the bride's table
were Mrs . Donna Haner,
Jackson, and Mrs. Vera Dillon,
Lionville.
The bride and groom are both
1970 graduates of Hannan Trace
High School.
Mr. Evans is presently serving in the United States Air
Force and is stationed in
Blytheville, Ark .

. The m'eeting closed with a
lovely devotion by Mrs. Claude
Miller. She 'said, "Don't teach
our children prayers but teach
them lo pray!"
A plant can live withou t
roots and leaves . Lichens,
for example, have no true
roots, stems or leaves.

CLINU

take a
•
course 1n
comfort
..-·

... ..·..

STOCK UP NOW ON A
NAME BRAND

"~~·· '
·' ·~·

0

';,
-

$1.37

.

. ..~~
.....~ ,.
~

.

'

0

~

~

i

Bastianis Have
Mr. and Mrs. Alan (formerly
Jill Bastiani) DeMarchi, 157
Harter Ave., Cincinnati, announce the birth of a son name{!
Christopher Alan on Sept. 25 at
Christ Hospital. The baby was
welcomed home by a four-year
old sister.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence
Bastiani , 101 Bastiani Drive,
Gallipolis .
· The paternal grandparent is
Mrs. Anthony DeMarchi,
Brecksville, Ohio.

lhelelhe bolly shops IOitlhll

328 SecOIId ~" -

Gallifl()lis, 0.

Mon .. Tues., Wed., Sot. 9-l
Thur . 9-12, Fri. 9-8 P.M.

It~ I, ,

'I

'

•

'

44

LISTERINE
MOUTHWASH
LARGE 32 OZ SIZE

Hell's C an yo n, plunges
7,900 feet from Devil Moun- .
lain down to the S n a k e
River, between Oregon and
Idaho.

'

19
REG. $1.98
BUY NOW

Budget!

CAN
LIMIT 1
PER PERSON

,.
,.o"•0~~

•''

-

NO SERVICE
CHARGE

.

COUPON

.IVORY
LIQUID

ll

29~

OZ.

WITH
COUPON

I

EXTRA LARGE
CREST

REG. PRICE 57'
lONE PER COUPON. ONE COUPON PER P

OCT
.•.
:ll:th:::::::
~--------.I
L

EXPIRES

TOOTHPASTE

~-----;~;---

2 FOR

1. CARTON OF 6- 12 Ol BOTTLES

39.
1:--------------------.1
1

99~

ONE PER
PERSON

I
I

, WITH COUPON

EXPIRES OCT•...;;,1~ltlihll_~~llllll~~

...

SPUR GREEN.. OR RUSSET
SUNDAY, MONDAY ONLY .

1 QUAKER STATE
I MOTOR
Ql
I OIL
I
I

LIMIT 6 QT.
WITH COUPUN
ONE rnuPON PER PERSON
EXPIRES OCT. 11th
L

.I

-------------1---------------·
I
' S.T.P•
I
II
I
I

LIMIT ONE
TO APERSON

'

-- -------EXPIRES OCl 11th

12-6

'

RAKES

A ••• •

OPEN

BY NETTLECRAFT

'

COUPON

ONE CQUPON PER PERSON
ONE BOX PER COUPON

RECLINERS

METAL
LEAf.. .

,. WITH
,. THIS

291 WITHOUT COUPON .

NOW I ONLY A FEW

~auY

GROCERY

CUTRITE
WAX
PAPER

SUNDAY

YES, WE HAVE
PLUMBING SUPPLIES
ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES
PANELING MOLDINGS
PLYWOOD
CEILING PANELS
INSULATION
AUTOMOTIVE
TOOLS OF ALL KINDS.

f.,

:

TRAINING t OMPLETED '
GALLIPOLIS - Keith H.
Hankins '"" completed basic
lJ·ainin.; al Fori Dis. N. J. His
address is 300-48-3871 A-1-:1, II .
Pulk. I.a. i l459, Plal &lt;•••n 2 fur
th11 S(; \.V Iw wish to wl' ite tu him .

TRASH

SAW

••

I

METAL

POWER

Elders Honored
With A Party
GALLIPOLIS - The Paint
Creek Regu lar Baptist Sunday
school will entertain members
of its home extension department and senior citizens of the
community with a young at
hea-rt. . party today al 3 p.m . in
!he fellowship room at the
church. Mrs. Thomas Dunsmore and Mrs. Hurl ~ogan are
c·H:hairmen of arrangements.

20 GAL

61,4 INCH

A New &amp;andson

-

7' COUPON

GALLON

NORTHUP Missionary Society
will meet with Mrs. Marjorie
Spriegel at I p.m.
YE OLDE Village Garden Club
"'"'""' will meet at the home of Mrs.
, f;;;=:;:~~ Charles Allman, 315 LeGrande,
7:30p.m.

You've been wa it ing for i I ... now it' s her e wi th all
e nice li ttl e touches you cr ave. like an incredibly
ich bl end of v.oot and nylon frieze. marvelousl y
tatteri ng r ag lan sleeves. cri sp no tch co ll ar and
generous pat ch pockets. A look Ia live in : Wine.
Petit e &amp; womens sizes.

DOW
PERMANENT

ANTI-FREEZE

A Sharp Way To
Shave Your

THURSDAY
HARRIS Grange will meet 7:30
p.m. at the Gran ge Hall .
Rodney Grange will be guests
and a joint elec tion of officers
will be held prior to a potluck
lunch.

SUND:A Y • MONDAY .ONLY

THE

Watson-Evans United

SUNDAY
THE REDEEMERS will
present a gospel sing at the
Ch urch of God on Jackson Pike
at the youth service at 6:30p.m.
and at the evoning worship
Sunday , October 10 - Art service at 7:30p.m.
Appreciation, 3 p.m., Slides and A HYMN SING will be held at
Poplar Ridge Church at 2 p. m.
narration.
October 15, 16. 17 - Auction
REV. ODELL Bush will be
1 Bob
Eva ns Farm Day
preaching at the Bailey Chapel
Festival 1 and Fren ch Art at 7:30p.m.
Colony Auction.
Sunday, October 17 - MONDAY
Demonstration or Gra phic Arts . THE WASHINGTON School
Sunday, October 24 - Art PTA will meet 7 p. m. in tl1e
Apprec ia ti on - slides and school ca feteria . Jonathan
narration.
Louden will present a program.
Sunday, October 31- Parent- Free sitter service will be
Child Workshop, 3 p.m.
provided by the Civil Air Patrol.
All events are at River by, 530
THE MORGAN Center Home
First Ave ., Gallipolis . Ri verby
Mission will meet at the Eno
is open every Saturday and
Grange hall on Monday from 10
Sunday, 1 p.m. lo 5 p.m .
a.m. till 2 p.m. They will have
Everyone is welcome . There is
used clothin g to give to anyone
no admi ssion charge.
needing them.

Monroe Gatewood ; Mr
Charles Sm1'th •, Mrs. Holls1·s·
Queen, Mrs. Howard 1. Neal ;
Callin~. Mrs. T. A. Thomas,
Mrs. Lester Roush, Mrs, John
'O'Dell, Mrs. John Dobbins,
Mrs. Louis Preston ; Publicity,
Mrs. Lester L. Roush.
A special 'committee for
Projects was named. It includes
Mrs. Harold Swindler, Mrs.
Everett McMahon, . Mrs .
Florence Wickline, Mrs. Frank .
Childers, Mrs. Silas Hamilton .
Hostesses for the dinner were
Mrs . August Arnold, Mrs .
Charles Smith, . Mrs . Silas
Hal!lilton, - Mrs.
Aldeth
Robinson, Mrs. Gladys Sowers.

OIL TREATMENT 59~ WITH
COUPON
ONE COUPON PER PERSON
ONE CAN PER IU:RSON
EXPIRES OCl 11th .

.

CHECKING ACCOUNT
., I

412-414 Second Av e.

, GullipolJ S, Oh io

.. ; '

!n

" \T J.d

NO MINIMUM BALANCE REQUIRED

'THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAs"

PEARL &amp; LOCUST -STREETS
'

•
.,

MIDDLEPORT, ()HIO
•
'

�I

I

.... .

8- The SUnday Times· Sentl..,l, SUnday ,Oct. 10, 1971

.,

Ferrell-Cozart·Votvs Augu~t 29
-1·. '

·'

POMEROY ,., 'l'he can· seed pearls and sequins. She Mrs. Ferrell wore . a beige
dlelight wedding ceremony of carried a bouquet of pink polyester d~ess trimmed in
Miss Terrie Lynn Ferrell ·and sweetheart roses and daisies. brown with brown accessories . .'
Mr. Timothy Grant Cozart was . Miss Linda Holbrook of New She had a corsage of white
10 event of Aug . 29, 3:30p.m. at Ha\len, W.Va . served as maid carnations . .
the Asbury United Methodist of honor lor her aunt. She was in
Mrs. Cozart was in a green
Omrch, Syracuse.
· a yeilow cre(le polyester gown ensemble with white acThe bride is the daughter of and ca'rrifd a bouquet of vari- cessories and wore a carnation
Mr. and Mrs.Damon R. Ferrell , colored
daisies .
The corsage also.
Syracuse, and the bridegroom bridesll'aids were Miss Roberta
A reception honoring the
is the son of Mr . and Mrs. Cozart, Gulfport, Miss ., sister of couple was held in the church
Robert R. Cozart of Gulfport, the groom, who wore orange ; social ro om immediately
Miss., formerly of Portland .
Miss June Couch, Syracuse, in following the ceremony . The
The Rev. Forest Donley and peach; Miss Luci Kasavic of bride's table featured a four
\l'e Rev . Wendell Stutler of- Cleveland in blue ; and Miss tiered cake with angel and bell
ficiated at the double ring Sheryl Ruzeaka, Columbus in tier separators, topped with a
ceremony which was performed pink. They all carried daisy miniature bride and groom.
before an altar decorated with bouquets.
. Yellow
tapers
and
'•
I
pillar vases of daisies and
Miss Lori Adams of Racine, arrangements of daisies and
gladioli and a semi-circular daughter of Mr. and Mrs . Roger roses completed the table
\ '1?'
•
candelabra.
Adams,was the flower girl. She setting.
Music was provided by Mrs. wore a green dress of similar
Miss Vickie Couch, cousin of
Roy Jenki~s of St. Mary's, W. design to those worn by the the bride, and Miss Kathy
Va. and included music from other attendants. Master Francis, Syracuse, registered
Love Story and selections by Robert Parker of Marietta, son the guests. Presiding at the
The Carpenters. Mrs. James of Mr . and Mrs. Robert Parker, table were Mrs. Karl Kloes,
Pape of Syracuse sang "The was the ringbearer. He carried Miss Mary Ferrell, cousin of the
Lord's Prayer" and "Savior the rings on a white satin pillow bride, Miss Patricia Crooks,
Like a Shepherd Lead Us."
with white lace trim.
and Miss Barbara Crooks.
Given in marriage by her Mr. Ronald C. Cozart,
The bride changed into a
father, the bride was attired in a Columbus, uncle of the groom, beige polyester jumpsuit with
white crepe polyester gown was best man, and the ushers black sandals for a trip to
I
with chiffon sleeves. It was were Mr . Edward Cozart, Columbus.
fashioned with an empire waist. Racine, also an uncle, and Mr.
The couple reside at 2470 N.
The bride's veil of illusion fell James La\\Tence, Portland.
High St., Apt. 3-C, .Columbus.
from a crown cap accented with
For her daughter's wedding, The new Mrs. Cozart is a
junior at Ohio State majoring in
elementary education and
psychology . She is affiliated
with
Kappa Phi Epsilon, served
were
discussed.
It
was
noted
POMEROY - A parish
retreat to begin tonight and that a recent rummage sale was on the Apathy magazine staff,
continue through Friday was a success. Bake sales ·were and is a member of the student
announced Thursday night by scheduled for Oct. 23 and 24 government on campus.
" a 1968 graduate of
Mr . Cozart,
the Catholic Women's Club of after each Mass.
Southern
Local,
attended West
The
next
meeting
was
set
for
the . Sacred Heart Catholic
Nov. 4 with Mrs . Alice Point from which he received ·
Church .
'The Rev. Fr. Edward Tar- Freeman, . Mrs. Kathryn an honorable discharge. and
diss, C.S.S.R ., redemptorist Neutzling, Mrs . David Goodwin Ohio State University. He
missionary, will conduct retreat and Mrs. Jean Ables to be completed a course in computer Crooks and daughters, Mr. and
services at 7 p.m. each night at hostesses. Miss Katie Grueser technology in Colur_obus, and is Mrs. Jack Whittle, all of
Miss Veneta
the church. Religious articles won the traveling prize . employed at the Ohio National Columbus;
Stanley,
Mr.
and Mrs. Don
will be on sale during the Refreshments were served by Bank.
Out-of-town guests at the Wharton and family, Mr. and
•·etreat sessions. The meetings Mrs. Dorothy Gloeckner, Mrs.
Charles Gloeckner, Mrs. Roger wedding were Jonnie Sue Linn, Mrs. Gerald Manning, Mr. and
are open to the public.
.. Plans for the annual bazaar to Kovalchik, and Mrs. Kenneth Diana Cohen, Joe !gal, Marlene Mrs. Harold Caudill and sons,
Cohen, Mr . and Mrs. John all of Mansfield; Ralph Carbone
· be held on Nov. II at the church McCullough.

.!

!f

'

Parish Begins Week Retreat

·Social
Calendar

.1-'l'heSundayTimes-Sentinel,Sun~y,Ocl. IO, 1971 '

DA'R.Programs

SUNDAY
RUTLAND CHURCH of
Christ, 142nd home·coming
Sunday, Oct.IO; services at 9:30
a. m., basket dinner at noon;
afternoon services at · 2, John
Wyatt, speaker. Special
singing. Everyone welcome.
WHITE SHRINE Friday S
p.m. Potluck dinner.
MONDAY
W.S.C.S. HEATH Methodist
Church, Middleport, Program
entitled "Divided by Race."
7:30 Monday night. Mrs. Beulah
Hayes, Mrs. ·E. M. Wood and
Miss Nellie Zirkle to serve.
LETART FALLS PTA, Oct.
~ n, Monday, 7:30 p. m. Final
plans to be made for Oct. 23
. jitney supper .
MEIGS PLEASURE Riders
Club Monday home of Mrs.
Nancy Collins, 304·Spring Ave.,
Pomeroy, 7:30 p. m. Bring
Information on nutrition - fDC
horses.
MEIGS CHAPTER 53, DAV,·
Monday 7:30p.m. at post home,
Butternut Ave. All members
urged to attend. Refreshments.
RIVERVIEW PTA Monday
evening, 7:30 at the school.
Riverview 4-H Club will present
the program.
TUESDAY
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter , Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 p.m.
Tuesday, Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social room. Mrs. Judy Werry
and Miss Marilyn Swan,
hostesses. New pledges are not
to attend.
FILM OF Eastern-Kyger
of Canton; Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Jenkins, St. Marys, W.Va.; Mr. Creek game Tuesday Night at
and Mrs . Cecil McLean, the Movies, Eastern High
Parkersburg ; Mr. and Mrs. School 8 p.m. Everyone
Refreshments.
William Nichols of Cleveland; welcome.
·SYRACUSE
PTA
Tuesday
Mrs . Madeline Stutler, Ironton .
Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth 7:30 p.m. Representative of
Holbrook, Marty and Brett, T.B. &amp; Health Association will
New Haven, W. Va .; Mike be guest speaker. Final plans
Young, Pomeroy; Mike &amp;.lith, for Halloween Carnival will be
Mount Sterling ; Miss Loiana made.
EASTERN BAND Boosters
Rhodes, Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Parker and Kelly , Marietta; Tuesday at the high school, 8 to
Mrs . Lar.ry Fitch, Belpre; Mr . 9:30p. m. All interested persons
and Mrs . Howard K. Parker and urged to •!tend.
Howie, Morgan, La .; Mr. and
WEDNESDAY
Mrs . Paul Cozart, Steubenville; MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Mr. and Mrs. David D. Ferrell, Gardeners Club, at 8 p.m .
David and Traci of Huntsville, Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Ala. ; Mrs. Edna Summerfield, John Werner.
Long Bottom; Mrs. Clarence
MASKED HALLOWEEN
Lawrence and daughter,
Party
Wednesday at , HE;Illloc]\
Portland.

l

POMEROY - Installation of
new officers highlighted a
meeting of the Pomeroy Garden
Club Monday night at the home
of Mrs. Harvey Van Vranken.
-Installed by Mrs . Robert
Kuhn, Meigs County contact
chairman in a candlelight
cerfnony were Mrs. Clair
Karf, president; Mrs. Walter
GrtJSer, vice president; Mrs.
Vranken,
Harvey ·van
s.Jcretary; and Mrs. J. 0 .
Roedel, treJsurer.
Mrs. Van Vranken, outgoing
president, presented each of the
retiring officers, Mrs. Howard
Nolan, Mrs. Roy Bel:zing, Mrs.
Roedel, and Mrs. Kuhn, a
corsage.
The fall meeting of Region 11
to be held in Gallipolis was
discussed. Plans were also
made to participate in the

r-

county flower show and
arrangements were made to
supply cookies and a pie.
Members were reminded to
give articles for the country fair
to be staged at the .Athens
Mental Health Center . New
program
bo oks
were
distributed . The annual
Christmas
dinner
was
discussed .
" Plants versus Pollution "
was the program topic by Mrs.
Bet:zing. She noted that plants
provide all the food humans eat
and all animals including
people are guests of the plant
kingdom, either directly or
indirectly. She said the six
major pollutants emitted by
industry and gasoline powered
vehicles are sulphur dioxide,
fluoride , chloride and chlorine,

oxone, P.A.N., and ethylene .
Mrs. Van Vranken gave
devotions from the Upper Room
using scripture from Psalm 37
and John 14, a poem entitled
"Today" and prayer. Members
gave their favorite season in
response to roll call.
Mrs. Tracy Whaley was co-

hostess for the meeting. A
dessert course was served.
Attending were those named
and Mrs. Edward Baer, Mrs.
Harold Brown , Miss Lydia
Ebersbach, Mrs . Richard
Jones, Mrs. J . W. McMurray,
and Mrs. Martha Williams, a
new member.

janet Sue Lietwiler
To Wed Ronald Baker

t

$50 less.

:;:; ribbon wirmers, across the nation.
::::
For the long, cold days of this
W: winter she plans to make two in the
:::~ flOjY~rbasketpattern. Tbesequllts take
;:;:: \ 9,000 pteces of combed cottons and
:;:;: hylons. "Theorderscomeinfasterthan
::: I can complete them", she says. Mrs.
:;;~ Minor says that women from over Ohio
..
;:;:; and We~t Virginia have contacted her
:::: for the flower basket pattern, and then
:;:;: have returned for instruction on putting
:;~ it together.

....,
.

u:

,' ,,

early Meigs County which Mrs. Minor's
grandfather helped compile.
Alieady abe has started her winter
feeding program for the birds. When
the temperature drops to zero abe
warms the bird feed. ''Tbey react quite
differenUy with the warm feed and it's
more rewarding for me than juat
tossing out a handful of cold seed," she
commented.

birds.
A blue ribbon ~jnner with her
houseplants, floral arrangements .a~
specimens in flower shows around the
county, Mrs. Minor is active with the
Star Garden Club of Dexter. She attends Sunday School at the Christian
Church there, and works part-time at
the Dexter Post Office as relieffor Mrs.
Nina Macomber, postmaster.
A source of real enjoyment for Mr .
and Mrs. Minor, both Meigs County

Party Committees Named

------Register For A-------,

POMEROY - Committees
for a card party to be staged on
Oct. 21 at the Pomeroy
American Legion hall at 8 p.m.
have been announced.
Afeature of the party will be-a
style revue of clothing from
lola's Dress Shop of teen
fashions, apparel for young

5250

FREE
E ORIAL

CORRECTION

At our tent display near the West Fair :1 Ave. entrance.

...

,, .... ~,l

'63 T-BIRD '595

,

.

ON DISPLAY AT THE LANCASTER FAIR

Auto . trans ., electric windows, air conditioning .

See Ray Riggs or AI Zeigler.

. . . or REGISTER IN OUR SHOWROOM AT

RIGGS BROS., INC.

LOGAN-POMEROY. VINTON or CIRCLEVILLE.

985-4100

•

••• JUST REGISTER!
\If''"'·:: : ';::~::::::,::: :~~: ;:,::,::::::'::::~:::: ;~:::::;i~n '
..
',:·.:,1,

: :it:o:t

o:1.:::::': ::·.:; o::

fairfield County display . . . or ot our logan-Pomeroy-Vinton and Circleville locations ... coli

:;:

uscdo 11ect and we'll se nd
to ur
orfbur nish free transportation to
1
1
1
an rom on.y o our oca 1ons ... or, srmp y mo• us ne coupon e 1ow.

ii

ot~r represent~tive1 y~l ht~me -

SALE PLANNED
MIDDLEPORT - A rummage sale will be held in the
Fry building, Mill St., Mid·
dleport, beginning at 9 a.m.
each day from Wednesday
through Saturday. Proceeds
will go to the building fund of
the Free Will Baptist Church.
REVIVAL PLANNED
COOLVILLE- A revival will
be held at the Grace Brethren
Church each evening this week
beginning at 7:30p.m. The Rev.
"Suck" Summers is the
evangelist. Special music each
evening. Everyone is welcome
to attend.

No purchaM n.ce.-y and no need to be present at drawing to win.

women, and garments for the
mature woman. Refreshments
will be served during the
evening and game prizes will be
awarded. Posters for the event
will be made by the junior
auxiliary members.
On committees are Mrs .
Loretta Tiemeyer, Mrs. Roy
Reuter, Mrs. Paul Casci, Mrs.
Russell Moore, Mrs. Robert
Couch, Mrs. Kenneth Harris,
Mrs. Catherine Welsh, tables;
Mrs. Harry Davis, cards and
pads; Mrs. Olin Knapp, Mrs.
Davis, Mrs. Jack Carsey, Mrs.
Edith Fox, Mrs. J. M. Thornton,
and Mrs. Grace Pratt, favors
and door prizes .
Mrs. 0. A. Martin, publicity;
Mrs. George Hackett, Sr. and
Mrs. Ernest Powell, tickets;
Mrs. Gerald Wildermuth, ticket
sale; Mrs. Thornton, Mrs. Ellen
Couch, and Mrs. Ben Neutzling,
cookies; Mrs. Gladys Cummings, Miss Erma Smith, and
Mrs . Lloyd Wright, coffee.
Tickets are available ·from any
member of the auxiliary.

RETURN TO FLORIDA
MIDDLEPORT Mrs.
Elizabeth Davis
Fisher
returned to Clearwater, Fla.
Thursday following a visit here
with her aunt, Mrs. C. M.
Hennesy. She expects to dispose
of her property'l t\' Florida and
return to' Middleport to live.

Ha ndsome compac112•

(d18g.) portable b/ w
TV with Instant Play in
walnut and black trim .

Model 111P47. You rs for
the Real Sale Spe&lt; ial

Lovely-Lifelike
Artificial

Fall Arrangements
To, Brighten Your
Home
To Cheer Someone Ill.

Dudley's Aorist .
Serving: Gallipolis,

Price of just

The young of a kangaroo
'is known as a joey.

$88~· ·

Katie crow

•.•

1

• · "·

.~ i
'·

:

.~ ""1

'

.,
,,

~

r~

~: ~:

'. ~
~ :·

_.

$ -.

'·

::i
~~
"'

~:iii and
~:!~~~
q~~l~de~~~
a~~~~o
y=~
Iron~~
a~~~~
!~~~
:/:e~o~
has sold her quilts, many blue she and her husband can enjoy the

Special Value.

Striking Spanish style
console stereo with 4
speakers and oak veneer
fin ish. Vou'lllove th e
listening ... and the

.;

:;:ne:~~:r!:h~:n ~v~;llec:e ::~ . =~~~~~~:~tyha~~!~~

' :.',::!.:.:_.:·.

Episc&lt;J!l81 Church, Sewickley . . .- - - - - - - - .

Located on SR 7
Chester, o.

'•

A huge collection of blooming a~
non-blooming houseplants are at-.
tractively displayed at the Minor home.
A · large tank holds Mrs. Minor's
tropical fish, many of which she raise!! ·
as gifts lor friends.
She makes regUlar visits to the
Pomeroy Public Library for her
res ding material a~ says abe Is
fascinated with the early history of

*

't·

.
..•
,;

~~\\~

MRS. MINOR

;~\

natives, are their three grandchildren.
Married at Rutland in 1928, the two
have resided on their Dexter farm
(inactive for many years now due to
Mr. Minor's illness) since 1930.
They have a daughter, Mrs.
Geraldine Bratton, and a son, Jack
Minor, both of Cheshire.
Time never hangs heavy .on Mrs.
Minor's hands. She just doesn't believe
in it!

~::

:;:;
::;:
::::

::l

i~ · ;
''·
~

.::f
..

:j~ ._
!i~

;~;L= = = = = = = = = = = =:= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =:= = = = = = = = = =:=:=:= = =:= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =:= = = =:= = = = = ~= = = = = = = =:=:= = = = = = = = =:=:=:= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =: :;: :;: = =~= ~= =:= = = =~: : : = ~= =:=:~f:

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Uetwiler,
Sewickley, Pa., announce the engagement of their daughter,
Jane Sue, to Ronald Glerm Baker of Canton, Ohlo. Miss
Lietwiler is the granddaughter of Mrs. Eva Lietwiler, 234
West Main St., Pomeroy.
Jane is a graduate of Ohio University, Athens, and is
currently employed as a home economist with Borden, Inc.,
Columbus. Her fiance, also an alumnus of Ohlo University, ia
working on his master's degree In business administration at
Ohio State University.
The wedding is planned for December 4th at St. Stephen's
Grange hall 8 p.m . Spon;
sored
by
Hemlock
Grange
and
Woodmen
Lodge . Country store and
fishing pond will be featured .
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
Uons Club Wednesday at noon
at United Methodist Church.
Program to be announced.
POMEROY CHAPTER, No .
80, RAM, stated meeting
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at
Pomoerov &gt;Masc,&gt;lc T~nlple

Personality Profile

'*

Janet Sue lietwiler

REAL SAVINGS

Pomeroy, Middleport
&amp; Mason Co., w. Va.

BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
MIDDLEPORT - The lOth
birthday of Steve Manley was
observed recently with a family
·party. The celebration took
place at the home of his parents,
the Rev. and Mrs. Odell
Manley , who served ice cream,
cake, chips and pop. They were
joined by Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Manley and daughter, Crystal.
Gifts were presented to Steve.

PRESERVE TOURED
RUTLAND- Eight members
of the Rutland Garden Club
toured Wahkeena Nature
Preserve near Lancaster
Tuesday. Going were Mrs. Roy
Snowden, Mrs. C. 0. Chapman,
Mrs. Robert Canaday, Mrs.
Harvey Erlewine, Mrs. Victor
Nelson, Mrs. Paul Winn, Mrs. C.
E. Bishop, and Mrs. Oleva
Cottrill .

New soft leather infants
shoes by Robin Hood

The
Robin
Hood
meets
all
requirements for your child's first
step.

THE SHOE BOX
Where Shoes are Sensibly Priced
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

$65 less.
Instant Play, AfC/ CM
and two 4• speakers are
among the mar~y quality
features on thi s 2r

POMEROY - Through the efforts of Pat Edwards and Dorma
Grolu1e, physical therapists at Veterans·Memorial Hospital, and
in conjunction with a prosthetist are organizing a free amputee
clinic.
The free service will be offered to all amputees interested in
obtaining an artificial limb and would like to be "evaluated."
Interested persons are asked to call the hospital at 99:1r2104,
extension ii8, as soon as possible.

EXCELLENT SELECTION OF FAMOUS NAME BRANDS

(diag.) Super Brite color

TV. It has hand some ..
Mediterranean styling
off the price tag !

Mo&lt;l el 13ll388.

ARROW AND SHAPELY SHIRTS

$50 less.
Admiral 23" (diag.) Super
Brite color console TV
in walnut finish with
~ on temporary styling.
Has Instant Play,AFC1 CM
and a $50-off price tag!

JOCKEY UNDERWEAR
The Copelin is in the finest polis~ed gray granite. This memorial is the co'mp.anion type engraved
with flowers around the winged name plates. It has a polished open vase which will accept
flowers in all seasons.

Model #3ll381.

FAIR
SPECIAL

WILLOUGHBY HILL IS NOT satisfied that the antique bottle
that Janet Morris has is ~arly baby bottle. He insists it is a
blirometer and even dragged o~t all catalogs to prove his point.
But Janet still thinks Dr. Burner is right, that it is an old baby
bottle. A barometer o-&lt; oh boy .

REGULAR

SPECIAL

PURITAN
HANLON SHIRTS
AND SWEATERS

'35 D..

'20
Delivered to yo,ur
·~)&gt;;~

cemetery lot.

This beautiful companion memorial

~--------- · COUPON----------

$60 less.
Early American styled
mapl_
l! fmish 23" (diig.)
Adm11at Super Brite
colo r TV with Instant

Play , AFC aod two 4"
spl!akm . Buy it r1'5W and
save $60! Mooellllll35.

IF YOU ARE UNABLE TO COME TO THE FAIR
- VISIT OUR . SHOWROOM OR DISP~A Y
LOTS, WRITE OR MAIL THIS CONVENIENT
COUPON FOR INFORMATION ABOUT "THE
COPELIN SPECIAL" OR ANY OF OUR LARGE
SELECTION OF OTHER BEAUTIFUL ME·
MORIALS .. . MANY OF 'WHICH ARE NEW
ADDITIONS.

$70 less.
Special Value.
AOmiral lB' (diag.) b/ w
portable with stand and
big-sounds· J. 3"

spea kl!rs m walnut with
black trim. Model

ICI897P. Agreat Real
Sale buy at just

$11995*

Abig beautiful 25'
(diag.) Admiral Solarcolor
console TV in
Mediterranean styled
oak ~eneers, with Instant

Play, AfC/ CM and a
beautiful $70-off price.
Model15l5253.

$20,1ess.
This 16' ' (diag.) portable
in walnut with brown
back and handle has a
price that's already small.
But now you can save $20
more durin1the Admiral

They r11 Observe 50th Anniversary

Real Sale.
Modeiii6P267.

Harold Blackston, Pomeroy,
and Mr. and Mrs. Leo Smith,
Berrien Springs, Mich. They
have seven grandchildren . Mr.
and Mrs. Grueser have resided
in the same horne all lheir
ruarried lifr·.

M:tDDLEPORT, OHIO

CHOOSE FROM
THE lAitGISl
SIUCTIOII
IN SOUTHEASTERN
OHIO ...

elarrt Guil4
eRully Rtd

• Stone Eternal
•Rock •I Aees
•Georgia M.,ble
noull' -·v otliersl

~- -

You're contemporary but not.hip.
You like today's designs but not
the psychedelic. How to liberate
your own impeccable wardrobe?
Che&lt;k these out and

FOR HIM

-witlfl)ecan finish and $65

MR. AND MRS. WEBSTER HODGE, Laurel St., Pomeroy,
have returned home following a 4,000 mile trip to Roswell, N. M.
The Hodges lived.in Roswell in 1962 while Mr. Hodge was working
at a missile site.
They visited friends there and toured the Carlsbad Caverns in
White City, N. M. They went down in the Caverns 750 feet by
elevator and had lunch in' a restaurant underground.
The prize of their trip was the purchase of a beautiful grandfather clock of solid black which they bought at a factory in
!'4issouri.

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
William ,Gr.ueser will quietly
observe their 50th ·wi!"dding
anniversary Wednesday, Oct.
13, at their Rock Springs home.
The children of Mr. and Mrs.
Grueser are Mr. and Mrs .

Washington, D. C. which takes
up one city block and thr.ee
buildings, Memorial Hall,
Constitution Hall, and the
Administration Building. These
are managed, she said, by the
J&gt;resident General of the DAR
and II officers.
She urged attendance by
some membersof the chapter at
the Continental Congress in
April. Follow.ing her talk, Mrs.
Hagan was presented a gift by
Mrs. J. Edward Foster on
behaH of the chapter.
Mrs. Emerson Jones, national
defense chairman gave a report
on e;~rly American History ajld
concluded with the comment
that communistic social
revolution is undermining our

,•,.

•

were Mrs. Clarence Hill who
DEXTER - Pleasant Mrs. Gerald
Influence and support for the accompanied the s~aker, Miss :&lt; Minor fi~s that keeping busy and
proposed museum in Pomeroy Nelle Bing, Mrs. June Ashley,
involved with others is the best
:~.:
was urged. Members responded and Mrs. W. 0. lies.
:;~: medicine for worries and apto roll call by relating why they
::.~.; prehensions of what tomorrow will
. bring.
are DAR members.
HALLOWEEN TIME
·):·
Mrs. Guy Neighler was acting
POMEROY - The Hemlock ;:;::
"Today is the tomorrow we worried
chaplain for the opening ritual, Grange and the Modern
about yesterday," she said, and went on
and Mrs . 0 . P. Klein was at the Woodman will sponsor a ·:&lt;· to fell about her numerous interests a~
plano for the national anthem. community Halloween party
hobbies, most of which are done at
The treasurer's report was Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
given by Mrs. Nancy Reed, and Grange hall. Everyone is asked :.: .,:,.: .
it was noted that the new to wear masks. Prizes will be .: multiple sclerosis.
program books will be out. by awarded for costuming . ,.
Growing flowers for arrangements
November. Mrs. Foster read Featured will be a country store ~::: and vegetables for canning, r~·
. /
thtl President General's and fish pond. Refreshments
tropical fish, quilting, bird wa · ,
and reading, are among her h bies.
message .
will be served. Serving on the
About three years ago sbe was
Mrs. Lochary, Mrs. Dor committee are Leo Story, Alice
Schaefer, and Mrs. Dwight Stockton, Helen Quivey, Jan @ featured with her quilts in the "WonMilhoan served a salad course. Bet:zing, Shelia Hawk, Brian :::: derful World of Ohio" and since that
Rose arrangements decorated White and Ethel Hart . :::: lime says she has had enjoyable
the home and table. Guests Everyone is welcome to attend. :·:· correspondence from New York to

Be Sure To Attend The Fairfield County

tag !
Modei 1KS643.

TO SET THE RECORD ~RA!GHT: A review of the mi~utes
of Thursday's County Commissioners meeting has confirmed that
Herbert While did not oppose the "Proposed Annexation of
Property'' by Racine Village.
For the record, White has stated he is in favor of any additions
that are adequately f~ded, properly planned, and publicly ap·
)X'oved. ,

:~

'.

$50~ off price

MMMMMMM - Good. It's apple butter time again at·
Enterprise United Methodist Church. Saturday the first batch of
wtter was made with a second bawh to be made next Saturday.
Those wishing to place an order may do so by calling Mrs. Ralph
Spencer at 992-2447 or Eldon WeekS at 99:1r2784. It is $1 a quart or
60cents a pint. Orders may be picked up Monday, Oct. 11 and 18th.

II

of the national headquarters .in country tOday.

She described research as her
l!rstlove and talked of her interes! In genealogy. Mrs. Hagan
has charge of four distHcts with
19 counUes and 14 chapters and
is a member of the Gallipolis
Chllpter.
Speaking of the work of the
DAR, she said that annually.
$250,000 is given flir education.
She commented on the vastness

'.

3rd ANNUAL AD MIRA~ REAL

~- ~--------~. ~---~

Katie's Korner sy

POMEROY - The national
and state DAR programs were
dticuued ~ by Mrs. Rbbert
Hagan,' Huntiniton, Southeast
District Director of the
. Daughters , of the American
Revolution, when abe spoke at a
·:&amp;=~~~~~~afteritoon of the
Meigs Chapter
at the home of Mrs. Patrick
Uichary.

Mr. and Mrs. Timothy G. Cozart

Mrs. Kuhn .is Installed ·President

•
Explained

~{::::=~::::~::::::~~=*.:::::::~~~~:::::;:~:::;:::~:;:::::~:~:::;:~::;:::;::::::: ;::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:•:::::::::::::;:::::::=~::: ~::~:~:tr.~:::::~=~=~~m~t@f.®f@lllfWIMitiiiWI:fiiWI:f!M

t Logan Monument Company, Pomeroy, Ohio
I
:

0 Pltc~~ ~nd m~ FREE bookleh ~hawing memorials
printed in lull color with sizes ond prices listed.
0 Kindt~ hove on cvthorite1 logon Monument Co.
representative call at my home.
0 Please send nie details about Mouso!evms wittlout
obligation.
0 Please send detoits on 'The Josper' Special .

"'m• ~------- -------------Street or Route - - - - - - - - -- - - --- - - City or Town - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - -

------------------------~
Convenient Creditlerms Available-We Carry Our Own A((ounts

Lo an Monument Co., InC:
POMEROY, OHIO
Meigs c;ounty'Display Yard Near

Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
LEO L VAUGHN~ MGR.
Phone 992-2588

"

something
newf .
or
~om orrow

Gallia County Display Yard
JAMES 0. BUSH,
MANAGER
Phone 388-8603

CATALINA
PENDLETON
JANTZEN
BETIY ROSE
SHAPELY
HOBNOBBER
BERKSHIRE
CITY SCENE
PARKSHIRE

DRESS SLACKS &amp; JEANS
'

HUBBARD SlACKS
STETSON AND ADAMS HAT
RAINFAIR ALL WEAniER
COATS
..
B.V.D. UNDERWEAR
SUITS AND SPORT COATS

BY CURLIE, WARREN SEWELL,
HUBBARD AND PENN STATE

VINTON, OHIO ·

OPEN EVENINGS and SUNDAYS BY APPOINTMENT
J
'

Pll:ElWAY • P. J.'s
LfVI • PERM PRESS

ad

FOR HER

JACKETS BY:
RUGBY, COOPER, ~
PETERS AND NARRAGANSETt

A.EX·KNIT
BRAS &amp; GIRDLES
.

.

MOJUD

HOSE

MEEKER

HANDBAGS

MEN'S AND WOMEN'S

WGGAGE
BY
AIRWAY ·AND SAMSONITE

BAHR CLOTHIERS
Midd

.. '

·· - -

�I

I

.... .

8- The SUnday Times· Sentl..,l, SUnday ,Oct. 10, 1971

.,

Ferrell-Cozart·Votvs Augu~t 29
-1·. '

·'

POMEROY ,., 'l'he can· seed pearls and sequins. She Mrs. Ferrell wore . a beige
dlelight wedding ceremony of carried a bouquet of pink polyester d~ess trimmed in
Miss Terrie Lynn Ferrell ·and sweetheart roses and daisies. brown with brown accessories . .'
Mr. Timothy Grant Cozart was . Miss Linda Holbrook of New She had a corsage of white
10 event of Aug . 29, 3:30p.m. at Ha\len, W.Va . served as maid carnations . .
the Asbury United Methodist of honor lor her aunt. She was in
Mrs. Cozart was in a green
Omrch, Syracuse.
· a yeilow cre(le polyester gown ensemble with white acThe bride is the daughter of and ca'rrifd a bouquet of vari- cessories and wore a carnation
Mr. and Mrs.Damon R. Ferrell , colored
daisies .
The corsage also.
Syracuse, and the bridegroom bridesll'aids were Miss Roberta
A reception honoring the
is the son of Mr . and Mrs. Cozart, Gulfport, Miss ., sister of couple was held in the church
Robert R. Cozart of Gulfport, the groom, who wore orange ; social ro om immediately
Miss., formerly of Portland .
Miss June Couch, Syracuse, in following the ceremony . The
The Rev. Forest Donley and peach; Miss Luci Kasavic of bride's table featured a four
\l'e Rev . Wendell Stutler of- Cleveland in blue ; and Miss tiered cake with angel and bell
ficiated at the double ring Sheryl Ruzeaka, Columbus in tier separators, topped with a
ceremony which was performed pink. They all carried daisy miniature bride and groom.
before an altar decorated with bouquets.
. Yellow
tapers
and
'•
I
pillar vases of daisies and
Miss Lori Adams of Racine, arrangements of daisies and
gladioli and a semi-circular daughter of Mr. and Mrs . Roger roses completed the table
\ '1?'
•
candelabra.
Adams,was the flower girl. She setting.
Music was provided by Mrs. wore a green dress of similar
Miss Vickie Couch, cousin of
Roy Jenki~s of St. Mary's, W. design to those worn by the the bride, and Miss Kathy
Va. and included music from other attendants. Master Francis, Syracuse, registered
Love Story and selections by Robert Parker of Marietta, son the guests. Presiding at the
The Carpenters. Mrs. James of Mr . and Mrs. Robert Parker, table were Mrs. Karl Kloes,
Pape of Syracuse sang "The was the ringbearer. He carried Miss Mary Ferrell, cousin of the
Lord's Prayer" and "Savior the rings on a white satin pillow bride, Miss Patricia Crooks,
Like a Shepherd Lead Us."
with white lace trim.
and Miss Barbara Crooks.
Given in marriage by her Mr. Ronald C. Cozart,
The bride changed into a
father, the bride was attired in a Columbus, uncle of the groom, beige polyester jumpsuit with
white crepe polyester gown was best man, and the ushers black sandals for a trip to
I
with chiffon sleeves. It was were Mr . Edward Cozart, Columbus.
fashioned with an empire waist. Racine, also an uncle, and Mr.
The couple reside at 2470 N.
The bride's veil of illusion fell James La\\Tence, Portland.
High St., Apt. 3-C, .Columbus.
from a crown cap accented with
For her daughter's wedding, The new Mrs. Cozart is a
junior at Ohio State majoring in
elementary education and
psychology . She is affiliated
with
Kappa Phi Epsilon, served
were
discussed.
It
was
noted
POMEROY - A parish
retreat to begin tonight and that a recent rummage sale was on the Apathy magazine staff,
continue through Friday was a success. Bake sales ·were and is a member of the student
announced Thursday night by scheduled for Oct. 23 and 24 government on campus.
" a 1968 graduate of
Mr . Cozart,
the Catholic Women's Club of after each Mass.
Southern
Local,
attended West
The
next
meeting
was
set
for
the . Sacred Heart Catholic
Nov. 4 with Mrs . Alice Point from which he received ·
Church .
'The Rev. Fr. Edward Tar- Freeman, . Mrs. Kathryn an honorable discharge. and
diss, C.S.S.R ., redemptorist Neutzling, Mrs . David Goodwin Ohio State University. He
missionary, will conduct retreat and Mrs. Jean Ables to be completed a course in computer Crooks and daughters, Mr. and
services at 7 p.m. each night at hostesses. Miss Katie Grueser technology in Colur_obus, and is Mrs. Jack Whittle, all of
Miss Veneta
the church. Religious articles won the traveling prize . employed at the Ohio National Columbus;
Stanley,
Mr.
and Mrs. Don
will be on sale during the Refreshments were served by Bank.
Out-of-town guests at the Wharton and family, Mr. and
•·etreat sessions. The meetings Mrs. Dorothy Gloeckner, Mrs.
Charles Gloeckner, Mrs. Roger wedding were Jonnie Sue Linn, Mrs. Gerald Manning, Mr. and
are open to the public.
.. Plans for the annual bazaar to Kovalchik, and Mrs. Kenneth Diana Cohen, Joe !gal, Marlene Mrs. Harold Caudill and sons,
Cohen, Mr . and Mrs. John all of Mansfield; Ralph Carbone
· be held on Nov. II at the church McCullough.

.!

!f

'

Parish Begins Week Retreat

·Social
Calendar

.1-'l'heSundayTimes-Sentinel,Sun~y,Ocl. IO, 1971 '

DA'R.Programs

SUNDAY
RUTLAND CHURCH of
Christ, 142nd home·coming
Sunday, Oct.IO; services at 9:30
a. m., basket dinner at noon;
afternoon services at · 2, John
Wyatt, speaker. Special
singing. Everyone welcome.
WHITE SHRINE Friday S
p.m. Potluck dinner.
MONDAY
W.S.C.S. HEATH Methodist
Church, Middleport, Program
entitled "Divided by Race."
7:30 Monday night. Mrs. Beulah
Hayes, Mrs. ·E. M. Wood and
Miss Nellie Zirkle to serve.
LETART FALLS PTA, Oct.
~ n, Monday, 7:30 p. m. Final
plans to be made for Oct. 23
. jitney supper .
MEIGS PLEASURE Riders
Club Monday home of Mrs.
Nancy Collins, 304·Spring Ave.,
Pomeroy, 7:30 p. m. Bring
Information on nutrition - fDC
horses.
MEIGS CHAPTER 53, DAV,·
Monday 7:30p.m. at post home,
Butternut Ave. All members
urged to attend. Refreshments.
RIVERVIEW PTA Monday
evening, 7:30 at the school.
Riverview 4-H Club will present
the program.
TUESDAY
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter , Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 p.m.
Tuesday, Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
social room. Mrs. Judy Werry
and Miss Marilyn Swan,
hostesses. New pledges are not
to attend.
FILM OF Eastern-Kyger
of Canton; Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Jenkins, St. Marys, W.Va.; Mr. Creek game Tuesday Night at
and Mrs . Cecil McLean, the Movies, Eastern High
Parkersburg ; Mr. and Mrs. School 8 p.m. Everyone
Refreshments.
William Nichols of Cleveland; welcome.
·SYRACUSE
PTA
Tuesday
Mrs . Madeline Stutler, Ironton .
Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth 7:30 p.m. Representative of
Holbrook, Marty and Brett, T.B. &amp; Health Association will
New Haven, W. Va .; Mike be guest speaker. Final plans
Young, Pomeroy; Mike &amp;.lith, for Halloween Carnival will be
Mount Sterling ; Miss Loiana made.
EASTERN BAND Boosters
Rhodes, Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Parker and Kelly , Marietta; Tuesday at the high school, 8 to
Mrs . Lar.ry Fitch, Belpre; Mr . 9:30p. m. All interested persons
and Mrs . Howard K. Parker and urged to •!tend.
Howie, Morgan, La .; Mr. and
WEDNESDAY
Mrs . Paul Cozart, Steubenville; MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Mr. and Mrs. David D. Ferrell, Gardeners Club, at 8 p.m .
David and Traci of Huntsville, Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Ala. ; Mrs. Edna Summerfield, John Werner.
Long Bottom; Mrs. Clarence
MASKED HALLOWEEN
Lawrence and daughter,
Party
Wednesday at , HE;Illloc]\
Portland.

l

POMEROY - Installation of
new officers highlighted a
meeting of the Pomeroy Garden
Club Monday night at the home
of Mrs. Harvey Van Vranken.
-Installed by Mrs . Robert
Kuhn, Meigs County contact
chairman in a candlelight
cerfnony were Mrs. Clair
Karf, president; Mrs. Walter
GrtJSer, vice president; Mrs.
Vranken,
Harvey ·van
s.Jcretary; and Mrs. J. 0 .
Roedel, treJsurer.
Mrs. Van Vranken, outgoing
president, presented each of the
retiring officers, Mrs. Howard
Nolan, Mrs. Roy Bel:zing, Mrs.
Roedel, and Mrs. Kuhn, a
corsage.
The fall meeting of Region 11
to be held in Gallipolis was
discussed. Plans were also
made to participate in the

r-

county flower show and
arrangements were made to
supply cookies and a pie.
Members were reminded to
give articles for the country fair
to be staged at the .Athens
Mental Health Center . New
program
bo oks
were
distributed . The annual
Christmas
dinner
was
discussed .
" Plants versus Pollution "
was the program topic by Mrs.
Bet:zing. She noted that plants
provide all the food humans eat
and all animals including
people are guests of the plant
kingdom, either directly or
indirectly. She said the six
major pollutants emitted by
industry and gasoline powered
vehicles are sulphur dioxide,
fluoride , chloride and chlorine,

oxone, P.A.N., and ethylene .
Mrs. Van Vranken gave
devotions from the Upper Room
using scripture from Psalm 37
and John 14, a poem entitled
"Today" and prayer. Members
gave their favorite season in
response to roll call.
Mrs. Tracy Whaley was co-

hostess for the meeting. A
dessert course was served.
Attending were those named
and Mrs. Edward Baer, Mrs.
Harold Brown , Miss Lydia
Ebersbach, Mrs . Richard
Jones, Mrs. J . W. McMurray,
and Mrs. Martha Williams, a
new member.

janet Sue Lietwiler
To Wed Ronald Baker

t

$50 less.

:;:; ribbon wirmers, across the nation.
::::
For the long, cold days of this
W: winter she plans to make two in the
:::~ flOjY~rbasketpattern. Tbesequllts take
;:;:: \ 9,000 pteces of combed cottons and
:;:;: hylons. "Theorderscomeinfasterthan
::: I can complete them", she says. Mrs.
:;;~ Minor says that women from over Ohio
..
;:;:; and We~t Virginia have contacted her
:::: for the flower basket pattern, and then
:;:;: have returned for instruction on putting
:;~ it together.

....,
.

u:

,' ,,

early Meigs County which Mrs. Minor's
grandfather helped compile.
Alieady abe has started her winter
feeding program for the birds. When
the temperature drops to zero abe
warms the bird feed. ''Tbey react quite
differenUy with the warm feed and it's
more rewarding for me than juat
tossing out a handful of cold seed," she
commented.

birds.
A blue ribbon ~jnner with her
houseplants, floral arrangements .a~
specimens in flower shows around the
county, Mrs. Minor is active with the
Star Garden Club of Dexter. She attends Sunday School at the Christian
Church there, and works part-time at
the Dexter Post Office as relieffor Mrs.
Nina Macomber, postmaster.
A source of real enjoyment for Mr .
and Mrs. Minor, both Meigs County

Party Committees Named

------Register For A-------,

POMEROY - Committees
for a card party to be staged on
Oct. 21 at the Pomeroy
American Legion hall at 8 p.m.
have been announced.
Afeature of the party will be-a
style revue of clothing from
lola's Dress Shop of teen
fashions, apparel for young

5250

FREE
E ORIAL

CORRECTION

At our tent display near the West Fair :1 Ave. entrance.

...

,, .... ~,l

'63 T-BIRD '595

,

.

ON DISPLAY AT THE LANCASTER FAIR

Auto . trans ., electric windows, air conditioning .

See Ray Riggs or AI Zeigler.

. . . or REGISTER IN OUR SHOWROOM AT

RIGGS BROS., INC.

LOGAN-POMEROY. VINTON or CIRCLEVILLE.

985-4100

•

••• JUST REGISTER!
\If''"'·:: : ';::~::::::,::: :~~: ;:,::,::::::'::::~:::: ;~:::::;i~n '
..
',:·.:,1,

: :it:o:t

o:1.:::::': ::·.:; o::

fairfield County display . . . or ot our logan-Pomeroy-Vinton and Circleville locations ... coli

:;:

uscdo 11ect and we'll se nd
to ur
orfbur nish free transportation to
1
1
1
an rom on.y o our oca 1ons ... or, srmp y mo• us ne coupon e 1ow.

ii

ot~r represent~tive1 y~l ht~me -

SALE PLANNED
MIDDLEPORT - A rummage sale will be held in the
Fry building, Mill St., Mid·
dleport, beginning at 9 a.m.
each day from Wednesday
through Saturday. Proceeds
will go to the building fund of
the Free Will Baptist Church.
REVIVAL PLANNED
COOLVILLE- A revival will
be held at the Grace Brethren
Church each evening this week
beginning at 7:30p.m. The Rev.
"Suck" Summers is the
evangelist. Special music each
evening. Everyone is welcome
to attend.

No purchaM n.ce.-y and no need to be present at drawing to win.

women, and garments for the
mature woman. Refreshments
will be served during the
evening and game prizes will be
awarded. Posters for the event
will be made by the junior
auxiliary members.
On committees are Mrs .
Loretta Tiemeyer, Mrs. Roy
Reuter, Mrs. Paul Casci, Mrs.
Russell Moore, Mrs. Robert
Couch, Mrs. Kenneth Harris,
Mrs. Catherine Welsh, tables;
Mrs. Harry Davis, cards and
pads; Mrs. Olin Knapp, Mrs.
Davis, Mrs. Jack Carsey, Mrs.
Edith Fox, Mrs. J. M. Thornton,
and Mrs. Grace Pratt, favors
and door prizes .
Mrs. 0. A. Martin, publicity;
Mrs. George Hackett, Sr. and
Mrs. Ernest Powell, tickets;
Mrs. Gerald Wildermuth, ticket
sale; Mrs. Thornton, Mrs. Ellen
Couch, and Mrs. Ben Neutzling,
cookies; Mrs. Gladys Cummings, Miss Erma Smith, and
Mrs . Lloyd Wright, coffee.
Tickets are available ·from any
member of the auxiliary.

RETURN TO FLORIDA
MIDDLEPORT Mrs.
Elizabeth Davis
Fisher
returned to Clearwater, Fla.
Thursday following a visit here
with her aunt, Mrs. C. M.
Hennesy. She expects to dispose
of her property'l t\' Florida and
return to' Middleport to live.

Ha ndsome compac112•

(d18g.) portable b/ w
TV with Instant Play in
walnut and black trim .

Model 111P47. You rs for
the Real Sale Spe&lt; ial

Lovely-Lifelike
Artificial

Fall Arrangements
To, Brighten Your
Home
To Cheer Someone Ill.

Dudley's Aorist .
Serving: Gallipolis,

Price of just

The young of a kangaroo
'is known as a joey.

$88~· ·

Katie crow

•.•

1

• · "·

.~ i
'·

:

.~ ""1

'

.,
,,

~

r~

~: ~:

'. ~
~ :·

_.

$ -.

'·

::i
~~
"'

~:iii and
~:!~~~
q~~l~de~~~
a~~~~o
y=~
Iron~~
a~~~~
!~~~
:/:e~o~
has sold her quilts, many blue she and her husband can enjoy the

Special Value.

Striking Spanish style
console stereo with 4
speakers and oak veneer
fin ish. Vou'lllove th e
listening ... and the

.;

:;:ne:~~:r!:h~:n ~v~;llec:e ::~ . =~~~~~~:~tyha~~!~~

' :.',::!.:.:_.:·.

Episc&lt;J!l81 Church, Sewickley . . .- - - - - - - - .

Located on SR 7
Chester, o.

'•

A huge collection of blooming a~
non-blooming houseplants are at-.
tractively displayed at the Minor home.
A · large tank holds Mrs. Minor's
tropical fish, many of which she raise!! ·
as gifts lor friends.
She makes regUlar visits to the
Pomeroy Public Library for her
res ding material a~ says abe Is
fascinated with the early history of

*

't·

.
..•
,;

~~\\~

MRS. MINOR

;~\

natives, are their three grandchildren.
Married at Rutland in 1928, the two
have resided on their Dexter farm
(inactive for many years now due to
Mr. Minor's illness) since 1930.
They have a daughter, Mrs.
Geraldine Bratton, and a son, Jack
Minor, both of Cheshire.
Time never hangs heavy .on Mrs.
Minor's hands. She just doesn't believe
in it!

~::

:;:;
::;:
::::

::l

i~ · ;
''·
~

.::f
..

:j~ ._
!i~

;~;L= = = = = = = = = = = =:= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =:= = = = = = = = = =:=:=:= = =:= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =:= = = =:= = = = = ~= = = = = = = =:=:= = = = = = = = =:=:=:= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =: :;: :;: = =~= ~= =:= = = =~: : : = ~= =:=:~f:

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Uetwiler,
Sewickley, Pa., announce the engagement of their daughter,
Jane Sue, to Ronald Glerm Baker of Canton, Ohlo. Miss
Lietwiler is the granddaughter of Mrs. Eva Lietwiler, 234
West Main St., Pomeroy.
Jane is a graduate of Ohio University, Athens, and is
currently employed as a home economist with Borden, Inc.,
Columbus. Her fiance, also an alumnus of Ohlo University, ia
working on his master's degree In business administration at
Ohio State University.
The wedding is planned for December 4th at St. Stephen's
Grange hall 8 p.m . Spon;
sored
by
Hemlock
Grange
and
Woodmen
Lodge . Country store and
fishing pond will be featured .
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
Uons Club Wednesday at noon
at United Methodist Church.
Program to be announced.
POMEROY CHAPTER, No .
80, RAM, stated meeting
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at
Pomoerov &gt;Masc,&gt;lc T~nlple

Personality Profile

'*

Janet Sue lietwiler

REAL SAVINGS

Pomeroy, Middleport
&amp; Mason Co., w. Va.

BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
MIDDLEPORT - The lOth
birthday of Steve Manley was
observed recently with a family
·party. The celebration took
place at the home of his parents,
the Rev. and Mrs. Odell
Manley , who served ice cream,
cake, chips and pop. They were
joined by Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Manley and daughter, Crystal.
Gifts were presented to Steve.

PRESERVE TOURED
RUTLAND- Eight members
of the Rutland Garden Club
toured Wahkeena Nature
Preserve near Lancaster
Tuesday. Going were Mrs. Roy
Snowden, Mrs. C. 0. Chapman,
Mrs. Robert Canaday, Mrs.
Harvey Erlewine, Mrs. Victor
Nelson, Mrs. Paul Winn, Mrs. C.
E. Bishop, and Mrs. Oleva
Cottrill .

New soft leather infants
shoes by Robin Hood

The
Robin
Hood
meets
all
requirements for your child's first
step.

THE SHOE BOX
Where Shoes are Sensibly Priced
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

$65 less.
Instant Play, AfC/ CM
and two 4• speakers are
among the mar~y quality
features on thi s 2r

POMEROY - Through the efforts of Pat Edwards and Dorma
Grolu1e, physical therapists at Veterans·Memorial Hospital, and
in conjunction with a prosthetist are organizing a free amputee
clinic.
The free service will be offered to all amputees interested in
obtaining an artificial limb and would like to be "evaluated."
Interested persons are asked to call the hospital at 99:1r2104,
extension ii8, as soon as possible.

EXCELLENT SELECTION OF FAMOUS NAME BRANDS

(diag.) Super Brite color

TV. It has hand some ..
Mediterranean styling
off the price tag !

Mo&lt;l el 13ll388.

ARROW AND SHAPELY SHIRTS

$50 less.
Admiral 23" (diag.) Super
Brite color console TV
in walnut finish with
~ on temporary styling.
Has Instant Play,AFC1 CM
and a $50-off price tag!

JOCKEY UNDERWEAR
The Copelin is in the finest polis~ed gray granite. This memorial is the co'mp.anion type engraved
with flowers around the winged name plates. It has a polished open vase which will accept
flowers in all seasons.

Model #3ll381.

FAIR
SPECIAL

WILLOUGHBY HILL IS NOT satisfied that the antique bottle
that Janet Morris has is ~arly baby bottle. He insists it is a
blirometer and even dragged o~t all catalogs to prove his point.
But Janet still thinks Dr. Burner is right, that it is an old baby
bottle. A barometer o-&lt; oh boy .

REGULAR

SPECIAL

PURITAN
HANLON SHIRTS
AND SWEATERS

'35 D..

'20
Delivered to yo,ur
·~)&gt;;~

cemetery lot.

This beautiful companion memorial

~--------- · COUPON----------

$60 less.
Early American styled
mapl_
l! fmish 23" (diig.)
Adm11at Super Brite
colo r TV with Instant

Play , AFC aod two 4"
spl!akm . Buy it r1'5W and
save $60! Mooellllll35.

IF YOU ARE UNABLE TO COME TO THE FAIR
- VISIT OUR . SHOWROOM OR DISP~A Y
LOTS, WRITE OR MAIL THIS CONVENIENT
COUPON FOR INFORMATION ABOUT "THE
COPELIN SPECIAL" OR ANY OF OUR LARGE
SELECTION OF OTHER BEAUTIFUL ME·
MORIALS .. . MANY OF 'WHICH ARE NEW
ADDITIONS.

$70 less.
Special Value.
AOmiral lB' (diag.) b/ w
portable with stand and
big-sounds· J. 3"

spea kl!rs m walnut with
black trim. Model

ICI897P. Agreat Real
Sale buy at just

$11995*

Abig beautiful 25'
(diag.) Admiral Solarcolor
console TV in
Mediterranean styled
oak ~eneers, with Instant

Play, AfC/ CM and a
beautiful $70-off price.
Model15l5253.

$20,1ess.
This 16' ' (diag.) portable
in walnut with brown
back and handle has a
price that's already small.
But now you can save $20
more durin1the Admiral

They r11 Observe 50th Anniversary

Real Sale.
Modeiii6P267.

Harold Blackston, Pomeroy,
and Mr. and Mrs. Leo Smith,
Berrien Springs, Mich. They
have seven grandchildren . Mr.
and Mrs. Grueser have resided
in the same horne all lheir
ruarried lifr·.

M:tDDLEPORT, OHIO

CHOOSE FROM
THE lAitGISl
SIUCTIOII
IN SOUTHEASTERN
OHIO ...

elarrt Guil4
eRully Rtd

• Stone Eternal
•Rock •I Aees
•Georgia M.,ble
noull' -·v otliersl

~- -

You're contemporary but not.hip.
You like today's designs but not
the psychedelic. How to liberate
your own impeccable wardrobe?
Che&lt;k these out and

FOR HIM

-witlfl)ecan finish and $65

MR. AND MRS. WEBSTER HODGE, Laurel St., Pomeroy,
have returned home following a 4,000 mile trip to Roswell, N. M.
The Hodges lived.in Roswell in 1962 while Mr. Hodge was working
at a missile site.
They visited friends there and toured the Carlsbad Caverns in
White City, N. M. They went down in the Caverns 750 feet by
elevator and had lunch in' a restaurant underground.
The prize of their trip was the purchase of a beautiful grandfather clock of solid black which they bought at a factory in
!'4issouri.

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
William ,Gr.ueser will quietly
observe their 50th ·wi!"dding
anniversary Wednesday, Oct.
13, at their Rock Springs home.
The children of Mr. and Mrs.
Grueser are Mr. and Mrs .

Washington, D. C. which takes
up one city block and thr.ee
buildings, Memorial Hall,
Constitution Hall, and the
Administration Building. These
are managed, she said, by the
J&gt;resident General of the DAR
and II officers.
She urged attendance by
some membersof the chapter at
the Continental Congress in
April. Follow.ing her talk, Mrs.
Hagan was presented a gift by
Mrs. J. Edward Foster on
behaH of the chapter.
Mrs. Emerson Jones, national
defense chairman gave a report
on e;~rly American History ajld
concluded with the comment
that communistic social
revolution is undermining our

,•,.

•

were Mrs. Clarence Hill who
DEXTER - Pleasant Mrs. Gerald
Influence and support for the accompanied the s~aker, Miss :&lt; Minor fi~s that keeping busy and
proposed museum in Pomeroy Nelle Bing, Mrs. June Ashley,
involved with others is the best
:~.:
was urged. Members responded and Mrs. W. 0. lies.
:;~: medicine for worries and apto roll call by relating why they
::.~.; prehensions of what tomorrow will
. bring.
are DAR members.
HALLOWEEN TIME
·):·
Mrs. Guy Neighler was acting
POMEROY - The Hemlock ;:;::
"Today is the tomorrow we worried
chaplain for the opening ritual, Grange and the Modern
about yesterday," she said, and went on
and Mrs . 0 . P. Klein was at the Woodman will sponsor a ·:&lt;· to fell about her numerous interests a~
plano for the national anthem. community Halloween party
hobbies, most of which are done at
The treasurer's report was Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
given by Mrs. Nancy Reed, and Grange hall. Everyone is asked :.: .,:,.: .
it was noted that the new to wear masks. Prizes will be .: multiple sclerosis.
program books will be out. by awarded for costuming . ,.
Growing flowers for arrangements
November. Mrs. Foster read Featured will be a country store ~::: and vegetables for canning, r~·
. /
thtl President General's and fish pond. Refreshments
tropical fish, quilting, bird wa · ,
and reading, are among her h bies.
message .
will be served. Serving on the
About three years ago sbe was
Mrs. Lochary, Mrs. Dor committee are Leo Story, Alice
Schaefer, and Mrs. Dwight Stockton, Helen Quivey, Jan @ featured with her quilts in the "WonMilhoan served a salad course. Bet:zing, Shelia Hawk, Brian :::: derful World of Ohio" and since that
Rose arrangements decorated White and Ethel Hart . :::: lime says she has had enjoyable
the home and table. Guests Everyone is welcome to attend. :·:· correspondence from New York to

Be Sure To Attend The Fairfield County

tag !
Modei 1KS643.

TO SET THE RECORD ~RA!GHT: A review of the mi~utes
of Thursday's County Commissioners meeting has confirmed that
Herbert While did not oppose the "Proposed Annexation of
Property'' by Racine Village.
For the record, White has stated he is in favor of any additions
that are adequately f~ded, properly planned, and publicly ap·
)X'oved. ,

:~

'.

$50~ off price

MMMMMMM - Good. It's apple butter time again at·
Enterprise United Methodist Church. Saturday the first batch of
wtter was made with a second bawh to be made next Saturday.
Those wishing to place an order may do so by calling Mrs. Ralph
Spencer at 992-2447 or Eldon WeekS at 99:1r2784. It is $1 a quart or
60cents a pint. Orders may be picked up Monday, Oct. 11 and 18th.

II

of the national headquarters .in country tOday.

She described research as her
l!rstlove and talked of her interes! In genealogy. Mrs. Hagan
has charge of four distHcts with
19 counUes and 14 chapters and
is a member of the Gallipolis
Chllpter.
Speaking of the work of the
DAR, she said that annually.
$250,000 is given flir education.
She commented on the vastness

'.

3rd ANNUAL AD MIRA~ REAL

~- ~--------~. ~---~

Katie's Korner sy

POMEROY - The national
and state DAR programs were
dticuued ~ by Mrs. Rbbert
Hagan,' Huntiniton, Southeast
District Director of the
. Daughters , of the American
Revolution, when abe spoke at a
·:&amp;=~~~~~~afteritoon of the
Meigs Chapter
at the home of Mrs. Patrick
Uichary.

Mr. and Mrs. Timothy G. Cozart

Mrs. Kuhn .is Installed ·President

•
Explained

~{::::=~::::~::::::~~=*.:::::::~~~~:::::;:~:::;:::~:;:::::~:~:::;:~::;:::;::::::: ;::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:•:::::::::::::;:::::::=~::: ~::~:~:tr.~:::::~=~=~~m~t@f.®f@lllfWIMitiiiWI:fiiWI:f!M

t Logan Monument Company, Pomeroy, Ohio
I
:

0 Pltc~~ ~nd m~ FREE bookleh ~hawing memorials
printed in lull color with sizes ond prices listed.
0 Kindt~ hove on cvthorite1 logon Monument Co.
representative call at my home.
0 Please send nie details about Mouso!evms wittlout
obligation.
0 Please send detoits on 'The Josper' Special .

"'m• ~------- -------------Street or Route - - - - - - - - -- - - --- - - City or Town - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - -

------------------------~
Convenient Creditlerms Available-We Carry Our Own A((ounts

Lo an Monument Co., InC:
POMEROY, OHIO
Meigs c;ounty'Display Yard Near

Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
LEO L VAUGHN~ MGR.
Phone 992-2588

"

something
newf .
or
~om orrow

Gallia County Display Yard
JAMES 0. BUSH,
MANAGER
Phone 388-8603

CATALINA
PENDLETON
JANTZEN
BETIY ROSE
SHAPELY
HOBNOBBER
BERKSHIRE
CITY SCENE
PARKSHIRE

DRESS SLACKS &amp; JEANS
'

HUBBARD SlACKS
STETSON AND ADAMS HAT
RAINFAIR ALL WEAniER
COATS
..
B.V.D. UNDERWEAR
SUITS AND SPORT COATS

BY CURLIE, WARREN SEWELL,
HUBBARD AND PENN STATE

VINTON, OHIO ·

OPEN EVENINGS and SUNDAYS BY APPOINTMENT
J
'

Pll:ElWAY • P. J.'s
LfVI • PERM PRESS

ad

FOR HER

JACKETS BY:
RUGBY, COOPER, ~
PETERS AND NARRAGANSETt

A.EX·KNIT
BRAS &amp; GIRDLES
.

.

MOJUD

HOSE

MEEKER

HANDBAGS

MEN'S AND WOMEN'S

WGGAGE
BY
AIRWAY ·AND SAMSONITE

BAHR CLOTHIERS
Midd

.. '

·· - -

�,.

'

. '

'

.'

10 - TbeSundayTimes-Senllnei,Sunday,oct.IO, 1971

Retired

Teache~s

•
POMEROY ....: Nine members
of the Meigs County Chapter of
th e Ohio Retired Teac hers
Associ.ation attended the
Southeastern District· meeting

Wednesday at Burr Oak Lodge.
Going from here were Miss
Lucille Smith, president of the
local chapter, Chester : Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Gibbs, Pomeroy;

Meet .at Burr Oak Lodge
Apatriotic theme was carried
out at the meeting attended by
18 members of the Ohio Retired
Teachers AssOciation. Jackson
and Meigs Counties had charge
of registration which was
followed by a luncheon and
program.
Mrs. Kathryn McCall ,
Southeast Director, of Portsmouth had charge of the
program . The colors were
presented by Robert Chute,
scoutmaster of Troop 255 of
Perry County. Robert Fleming,
president, of Youngstown, gave
greetings and solicited the
cooperation of members wi'th
the Ohio legislators.

Mrs. Nan Moore, Mrs. Ruth
Eul er , Mrs. Mary Hughes,
Middleport ; Mrs. Geneva.
Joachim , Belpre; Mrs. Rachel
McBride, and Mrs. Gladys
Hayman , Syracuse .

Regional Meeting in Gallipolis
POMEROY - Mrs . Jack E.
AnewaIt of Kettering will be the
featured speaker at the fall
meeting of Region II, Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs to
be held on Oct. 30 at the
Washington Elementary School
in Gallipolis.
Mrs . Anewalt will talk and
demonstrate on the topic
"Design with Emphasis on
Creativity." She is a student
and certified teacher of
Japanese fl ower arranging and
a member of the arrangers'
guild studying under Bob
Thomas, an accredited judge of
the· American Daffodil Society.

Mrs. Anewalt is also an ac·
credited OAGC judge .
Mrs, Joe Bolin of Rutland,
new regional director, will have
charge of the afternoon session .
The French City Garden Club
will host the meeting wi th a
coffee hour and regis tration
from 9 to LOa.m. with a 50 cent
fee. Mrs. John Reese, re tiring
regional director , will call the
meeting to order, and the new
regional officers will be in·
stalled before the luncheon at
••

be sent to Mrs. Reese, 22
Portsmouth Road , Gallipolis,
by Oct. 25. The luncheon is $1.50.

~ .\

MRS. ANEWALT

•

•

will have a show at the
Charles ton House. Send $1
registration fee to Mrs. Keefer ,
Courthouse Annex, Poi nt
Pleasant.
. Mrs. Gene Jewell, Letart.
reported on the Story Hour held
every Tuesday morning at the
New Haven Library for preschool children. She said that if
any club wants to help with
refreshments on special days
such as Christmas, Easter,
Halloween, they should contact
Mrs. Paul Powe':, librarian at
the New Haven Librarv .
During the business ·meeting
than k you notes were
acknowledged fr om Rita
Garland and Brent Clark.
Vickie Keefer acqua inted
those attending with the lessons
for this year and longer, starting with the January lesson.

The club members discussed
programs for 1972 and it was
decided to build a club library
and to donate a new book to the
library.
Halloween arrangements on
POMEROY - Due to the display at the · meeting were
observance of Columbus Day
Monday, the bookmobile will
not be operating until Tuesd~y.
the schedule for which follows:
Syracuse , 9-10 :30 ; Racine,
12: 30-3; Wagner's, 3:15-3 :30;
Harden 's, 4-4 :30; Rizer's, 4:455:30: Forest Run , 5:45 . 6:45:
Minersville , 7-7:30; Naomi,
7:4541 :15.
T-hursday, Friday and
Saturday the bookmobile staff
will be in Cleveland to attend
the OLA Conference.

Eddy 's Schedule

HOMECOMING SET
MORNING STAR - The
annual Homecoming of the
Morning Star United Methodist
Church will be held Sunday,
Oct. 17 beginning at 9:30 a.m.
with th e worship service ..
Sunday school will be at 10:30
a.m. with a basket dinner at
noon . The arternoon program h
at I :30 p.m. featuri ng the
Bissell Brothers wi ti1 special
sin ging. The Rev. Mar tha
Mattner extends an invitation l.o
all to attend .

'

SUPER MARKETS

ARMOUR*STAR • U.S.D.A. GRADED CHOICE
U~ S~ Govt~
,

.MAE AND. EARL YOUNG OF Olester Road have a Ulac buBh
that things It's spring.
Oh, lhat it were I
Tile bush Is blooming and the fragrance Is enough to engage
the most noo-rcmanUc with envious reflectloo on those lazy
cr~, hazy days of summer which passed aU too quickly.
'
But the beauty of faD Is with us. Again this year we are enjoying Audrey Belzlng's gold and purple mums wbifh line the
sidewalk ne11r the Pomeroy Elementary School.
BUSY MAKING apple butter this past week have been the
men and women of the Enterprise Unlbld Methodist Oturch.
Again this year they ezpecttomake abi!Ut 1,400quarts.

'NO WONDER SO MANY PEOPLE died so young in years
gone by If the doctor's ''prescriptloo" was anything like one given
by Dr. James Beatty of Buffalo, W. Va. in 1850 to the grand·
parenll of Mrs. Agnes Hill.
Mrs. Hill fow11i this ''prescription" for an undetermined
aUment in the poswsillllS of her grandfather.
''You will give an-injection every hour with a tablespoon full
of ccmmoo salt and a Uttle lard dissolved in lhree gills of warril
water. Give one of the gills every lour hours until the bowels are
fully opened. U the pain coot!nues in the stomach, a blister should
be applied and'perhapa It would be of use to bathe the feet with
warm water am take a little blood from the arm. After the
medicine begins to operate a Uttle wann quid with some salt in It
will promote Ita operation."
AgiU,Mrs.Hill tells \18, equals ~'• pint. Tile quid referred to is
chewing tobacco.
.
She also provided liB with a photostat copy of one of her
grandfather's deli! and credit pages in account with Dr. Beatty.
Medicine and advice was usually $1. Medicine without advice was
only 25 .cenla. Anight vWt lravellhg four miles was $3, while a day
vWt was mly $2. In September 1800, lhe famUy saw the doctor ·
eight limes and including lhe medicine he supplled the total cost
was $17.19.
Dr. Beatiy, it WBB interesting to note, was paid with potatoes
at SO cents a bll8hel, butter at IOcenta a pound, apples at IB centa a
bushel, 10. pounds ol beef at 3 cents a pound f.r a total of $3.12
(Imagine tbatl) apples at 12~ c:.lla t.•ahel, and 'UI iD cub.

USDA

CHOICE

I

••

I

I

I

I

I

EVERYDAY LOW PRICES
SUPERMARKET 2
HOMOGENIZED . ~
gallons
MILK

'

tM

Casualties

Produced in

Puff Game

'

J.

FOR BIG DIS(;OUNT SAVTNC~S!
137 Pint Stree1
G.llipoll•, Ohio

SOUND RIPE

BANANAS

••

WE RESERVE THE AICHTTO L.IMITQUANTITIES ON AI.L ITEMS IN THIS AD. PRICE5 EFFECTIVE THII:U SAT.,
OCT. I• • It1l AT THIS STORE ONLY . NONE SOLD TO DEALER~ .

THOROFARE

ICE
CREAM

Airlines in Ticket War

ALL FLAVORS- 1/2 Gal. Pkg.

WASHINGTON (UPI) Airline industry sources say a
~orth Atlantic air fare war
could be a bonanza for
passengers and economic

RICHTEX

Judges Sitting

SHORTENING

FRAGRANT FLORAL SW:ANS are attractive, ineJPeDillve to
make and just rlgbtf.r bollday bauare.r party game prizes.
A Lallgi!Ville reader sent 118 directiOns on how ID make the
atlractive swans which are real quickies. Tiley can be made in
about 15 minutes, she says.
Tile materials needed are one oval bar of sweet«nelling
soap, 2pleces of ocange netting (appro:dmately 101141nches cut
in an oval or triangle shape) I rub~r bam, black felt for two
small eyes, ~pro of ribbon (any type), I artificial orange
Dower, 1 piece of three inch bump chenUie at least 14inches long,
and a piece ol fi!le string cr wire for attaching the IIWBn neck to
the body.
Take the two pieces q! netting and place together. Put soap in
center and gslher the ends together - pulling the netting to one
end ol the soap bar.
_
Secure the nettlng at the back of the bar with a rubbel' band.
Puff out the netting to form the swan's taU. Attach the artificial
Dower around the rubber band with the Dower facing the front.
Talie the rlbboo and tie a bow around the rubbel' band and Dower
wire.
Take the piece of chenille and bem It in half. Twist bottom
ends together am twist in lbemlddle. Pinch the top part together,
lhen separate the chenllle slightly to form the swan's head and
neck. Bend the head part forward. Attach cbenllle to netting with
string or wire. Cut out two sniau eyes from felt and glue on the
sides of lhe head.

3-lb. Can

IJALIA • ~ •Shag. Made of
3 COLORED KODEL YARN

STATE FARE
SLICED

WHITE BREAD

for

1-lb. 4-oz. Loaves

12 fl. width. 1 and '14''
high pile. 24 C•lon .

1972 FORD or MERCURY
SI'RINtl AC'I'IOII

COLLECT A SET OF FOUR I

Country Inn

CRISPS
A~PLE

MUSTANG, TORINO, MAVERICK, MONT£00.

WHEN YOU BUY

What are thes ~ BEST BUYS? They're our BEST SELLERS • , .
CARPETS many of your friends have bought, love, brag
· about . If this werl! an e lection year, you might say they':"'
"THE PEOPLES CHOICE". So see them. You'll . agree (as
thousands have) that no other carpets can give· you so much
beauty, service, comfort ... for so liHie .
CONVENIENT
CREDIT TERMS
· Enjoy your carpel wh ile
you pay for it.

I

.

BONELESS RUMP ROAST

judge d by the hospitality
committee with Mrs . Hart
taking first, Mrs. Russell
Cullums, second, and Mrs.
Richard Collins, third.
Devotions were presented by
Miss Rosalie Story and the
opening thought was given by
Mrs . Collins. Mrs . George
Ziegler gave the secretary's
report, and Mrs. Glen Lee the
treasurer's report. , ..
"Growing Your Own Shrubs
for Cutting " was tHe program
topic given by Mr.s. Clarence
Story . "Winter Care of Roses"
was the ti tle of Mrs. Lee's
paper.
A game was won by Mrs.
Mina Hart. The hostess served
refreshments.

'•,

AFUNNY THING HAPPENED to Mary Martin an.Ufyrtle
Walker as they took in lhesightaofWapakonetala.stweek.
They drove ooto Arms~ong Ave., talking aU the wblle about
the as~onaul Seeing a woman sweeping leaves along the curb,
Mary am Myrtle decided to inquire as to where the as~onaut's
parenla Uved.
You guessed it, The woman sweeping the leaves was NeD's
mother who was dellghbld to pass the time of day chatting about
her aon.

Inspected

FREESHOP AT HOME SERVICE
Na obligation.
(; llll

·FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT

BIZ

BLUEBERRY
RASPBERRY

ZEST SOA

2·1b. 6-oz. Pkg.

5.6-oz. Bar

10·0Z.
Pkg.

NORMANDIE ... scu!Ptured
12~ 5 "··
10001
JO KODEL ' Wldt
0

Florol d•slgn , Vtl•tl pllt.
14 Colon. Double
jutt back.

sa 49
•

&amp;9c

MR. CLEAN
LIQUID CLEANE~
1·0• . ·
8-oz . Bottle

99e

FOLGER'S
COFFEE
1·1b.
Can

SQ. YO.

95c

MIDDL£PORT, 0.

992·5321

Q-How !onu did the

·!

.

WASHINGTON (UPI) Three federal judges hearing a
test of the legall ty of Preslden t
Nixon's wage-price freeze have
been told the freeze Is
"government by fiat" ad·
ministered by "faceless individuals in the presidential

coterie."

Spanish·Americat~

War last?

A-Tnree months . it~d ~2
. davs. ' '
,

Road·

POMEROY, OHIO
r

99H346

Women Treated For Jniun'es
'J
Mrs. Thomas. Damages were
estimated by police to be $90.
There was no citation.
Got a tough job?
How about a tough
boot to match? New
Durables sole and heel
are oil proof. Top grain
leather that's highly water
and acid resistant. Sweatproof insole. Steel shank
support built in .Lightweight - but a bear tor
wear! Step into a pair
today and see. If it's
Wolverine"', it's built
tor action.
17.95 to 26.95

COMPLETES BASIC
GALLIPOLIS
Army
Private Charles T. Riley, 17, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Wise,
541 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis,
recently completed eight weeks
of basic training at the U. S.
Army Training Center , Armor,
Ft. Knox, Ky. He is a 1971
graduate of GAHS.

Complete
selection
of
Wolverine
oxfords,
shoes and
boots

Jf'!uit a wonderful way to say

Merry Christmas
TO YOUR FAVORITE .PEOPLE!

. . tit&amp;

whatever tbe' sc,tion-tbere 's • WmriM*Iillot to m8 tcll it
Widths A, B. C,

·o; E,

EEE

Now! Js
. the time to
arrange for your
Christmas Gift Portrait Sitting. ·

,r"--. -- .-- -,

• If I have to go ',
-.&lt;take me to The•
'Shop
... , I

- __

Quick S.rvlct
Govern men! lnsptd"' ··
Cut
Your Sptciticttlona

Dale Little

Your Life" book to Mrs. Louis Reibel at the conclusion of the
program. Sbe was assisted in its preparation by Miss Enna
Smith, left.

11

"custom meat cutting"

Ptea,anl knige

MRS. BEN NEUTZLING, right, presented the ''This Is

suicide for some already ·
financiaUy ailing carriers.
But other observers say the
threatened battle won't last
long and that bargain hunters
had better move fast )lecause....J
·
government pressure probably
~ll~force . the competing PT. PLEASANT _ Two
a~ s to Sign a truce.
persons were treated at
F b :arLufiSthanexpected to begin Pleasant VaUey Hospilal as the
88.• a scheduled result of a rear-end collision
e ·1
West Germ~n aullne, goes Friday at l1 :20 a.m. at !Gth
through with tis plan to offer a Street and Viand
special $210 rolllldtrip fare be- MyrUe Hoffm~ 64 Letart
tween New York and West complained of a n..;k i~jury and
Germany .
Norma Jean Thomas, 34,
Not to . be undercut, some Route I, Point Pleasant, was
charter .mlines .have pro~ treated lor shock at the local
to proVIde slmilar roundtrips hospital. Both were released
lor $135..The low~st scheduled following treatment.
:~~ow m e(fect 18 $3l2 for the City Police said Clarence D.
g ·
Hoffman, 70, Letart had
Q-What intoxicating bev· stopped In a line of traffi~ when
erage is made from the sap his vehicle was struck from the
of the jaggery palm?
·.
b
A-A rumlike drink called rear Y one being driven by

Attorney Albert Gore made
the argument Friday in behalf
of
the
ISO,OOO.member
Amalgamated Meat Cutters uarrack.
and Butcher Workmen of North
America, which wants the court
ID declare the freeze illegal.
The 1111ion argument that lhe
freeze is unconstitutional
contends Congress lacked the
authority to grant Nixon power.
to conl!'ol wages, prices and
rents under the Economic
StabUlzatlon Act.

Th·e _Shop

'

'

On Meatcutters'
Freeze Appeal

.-

· BASIC COMPLETED
POMEROY - ArmY Private
Edward .F. Smith, 20, whose
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elmo F.
Smith, and wile, Janet, live on
Route 2, ha's completed eight
weeks of basic training at 'the U.
S. Army ,Training Center, Ar·
mor, Ft. Knox, Ky. Pvt. Smith,
a 1969 graduate of Meigs High
School, received an ~l!le's
degree In 1971 from Tri-Co1111ty
Technical Institute, Nelsonville ..

Calomel 1 Purge1
Is Dangerous

POMEROY - Complete
surprise waa registered by Mrs.
Louis Reibel Friday night when
Mrs. Ben Neulzllng sle)llled to
the microphone and announced:
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. was not true. The mercury
"'l'bls Is Your Ufe, Frances."
merely prevented the nor- ·
Tile scene waa Trinity Oturch
Dear Dr. Lamb-! re mem· mal bacterial action in the
where appro:rlmately 100
ber when people used to take bowel that turns bile piga dose of c a I om e I in the ment from green to brown .
relatives, friends am neighbors
spring
to "clean out their
bad gathered to honer Mrs,
In its day of glory I am
system."
I don't hear that sure lhat if a medical colReibel who, ~!rating her 84th
being used now What could umnist had tried to help peohlrtblay Ocl 22, Is in her 52nd ·
one take that would serve ple by g i v i n ~ them these
ye~ of,teaching in the Trinity
the same purpose?
facts on calomel he would
&amp;mday School.
Dear Reader- Your q ues- have received a barrage of
Tile Happy Harvesters Class
tion prompts me -to observe letters similar to some l have
of which Ml:s. Reibel has been
that slowly knowledge does received on current fads. It
teacher ftr about 30 years
liberate man from f o o 1i s h is i n d e e d.-encouraging to
•
hosted the ''Tills II Your Life"
notions held fervently to be take note of the passing of
an obsolete and dangerous
beneficial for one's health .
program am a reception whlcb
followed, A nice, Miss Mary
In the first pl~c e there is fa ntasy·.
•
no need to "clean out the
Virginia Reibel, presented her
Dr. Lamb-How does
system
." Ideas of this sort theDear
aunt wilh an orchid corsage.
body
enough blood
originate from the primitive sugar if onegetleaves
Mrs. Dale Smith on behalf of
every
•
association of .e x c rem e n t bit of sweets from out
his
diet'~
the Happy Harvesters Class
with evil and ridding oneself
gave a check for $50 to the
\
•
Dear Reader'-Fruits, vege·
of it is tantamount to elimi·
building fund in ber honor.
nating evil. The system is tables and cereals contain
best left alone and treated · carbohydrates. Eating these
Mother cbeCk also designated
with
a good healthy normal fre sh or cooked w it h out
fer the bulldlng fund In Mrs.
diet
and
adequate exerci se . sweets p r ovides carbohyReibel's hmor wBB presented
Secondly, calomel is a po- drate. Any starch , such as
by Mrs, W. H, Perrin for the
tential poi son . It is a mer· in a potato, is acted upon by
Friendly Cltcle.
· cury .salt, and when it work s enzymes to convert its food
Roy Mayer, superintendent of
as expected it prevents the value to glucose, the sugar
norm a I absorption of salt the body uses for fuel. Fats,
the Sunday School, and Mr, and
and
water from the intestine. extra protein and food eleMrs. Arthur S~auss both gave
'I'
he
accumulated material ments not used for fat stores
Dowers to the honored church
results in catharsis. If every- or building tissue are conwoman. At the conclusion of the
thing doesn •t go as expected verted to glucose for energy.
program, Mrs. Neutzllng
a considerable am o u n t of
If you eat no carbohyrresenbld the ''Tills Is Your
mercury can be absorbed drates yo ur body chemistry
from the intestine leading to will become slightly unbal'
Ufe" book to Mrs. Reibel.
mercury poisoning .. With all anced causing the ktdneys to
The traditional revue of the
the
current interest in mer- eliminate excess amounts of
early years ol the hmored guest
cury
poi s o n i n g from our water-leading to dehydrawere related by Mrs, Neulzling
waterways , this needs no tion .. When bread or other
who noted lha t she was born at
THIS IS YOUR LIFE- Mrs. Louis Reibel, seated with ber husband and holding her great· further comment.
carbohydrates are added to
lAng Hollow the tenui child of
A common misconception the diet again the fluid ·is regranddaughter, Sara Eli2abeth Thomas, was surroumed by relatives and friends during a
Jolm am Mary Gruesel', her
"This Is Your Life" program at Trinity Church Friday night. The event marked her 84th birth- was that the greenish stools tained . This is why you lose
education in a one-room school
passed after taking calomel weight on a low carbohydrate
dar and her 5211d ~ear as a Sunday Sc~ool teacher. Here with ber are Miss NeUe J. ·Bing, a close was
evidence that calomel diet, but it is water loss and
house there and later at Rock
netghbor; Mrs. Wi111am Thomas, Gallipolis, a granddaughter; Carl Baker of Gallipolis and his was increasing the amount returns quickly when one re,springs, and her seams~ess
wife, Marcella, daughter o~ the Retbels, ~d Mrs. Lena Huber, longtime a~ close friend, , of bile and emptying the body turns to a proper diet.
and tallcrlng work in Pcmeroy.
(NEWSPAPER ENTER.PRISf 4.~51" I
standing
front, 1tor; and Miss Mary FranciS, a gram niece, am Mrs . Linda Mayer, back row. of th1s b1hous substance . Thi s
Humorous incidents of her
MAYSE AT KNOll.
cour~ .!llld.marrlaj! ID Louis .
GALLIPOLIS
Army
Reibel, their first apartment gave a tribute in original verse
Private Larry F. Mayse, 18, son
located near the Epple Grocery for the faithfulness, the
of Mr. and Mrs. Frank E.
oo E. Main St., and the birth of generosity, the spiritual
Mayse
, Route I, Gallipolis, has
their two daughters, Marcella, guidance and the love e:rtended
completed eight weeks of basic
who attemed the affair with her by the gracious Mrs. Reibel in
training at the U. S. Army
husband Carl "Baker of her church activities. Mrs,
Training Center, Armor, Ft.
Gallipolis, and Dorothy of Mayer sang "My Task."
Knox, Ky.
w h o s e Pink and purple was the color
C o 1u m b u s ,
coogratulationa were cooveyed scheme used in the receptloo
Sandy Nicholson
was
in a letter, were included in the table decorations. Pink tapers
reported also transported in a
life sketch.
in aUver holders Oanked an
Present also were the Bakers' arrangement of asters. Mrs,
MASON - Six Wahama High private car to the same
daughter, Frances Lou Tbcmas Lawrence Leonard and Miss
School girls were in area hospital, but other infonnation
and her small daughter, Sara Mary Virginia Reibel presided
hospitals instead of completing concerning her was not
Elizabeth, who ia Mrs, Reibel's at the punch am coffee. Fancv
the last quarter of a Powder available.
Diana Roush of West
only great-granddaughter. assqrted cookies were served.
Puff game being played at
Floyd George Baker, grandsoo
Besides Mrs. Leonard and
Bachtel Field between junior Columbia was admitted to
of the Relbels, · recently Mrs, Reibel, other nieces and
Pleasant VaUey Hospital for
and seniors Friday night.
relurned from Vlelnam and was nephews attending were
Rebecca Ohlinger, 17, and observation and is said to be in
unable to attend the ob- Lawrence Leonard, Mr. and
Rebecca Paugh, 16, both of New "good" condition · today.
servance.
Mrs. Clarence Grueser, Mrs.
Haven were transferred in a Carolyn Hughes of Mason was
Among the others recognized Lewis Grueser, Mr. and Mrs.
Pomeroy Emergency Squad to treated at Holzer Medical
were Mrs. Lena Huber , Wi111am Grueser, Enuna G.
Veterans Memorial Hospital in Center and released. The latter
longtime friend; Miss Mary Broderick, Catherine Grueser,
Pomeroy where they were two were transferred in the
Francis, a teacher in the Meigs Mr. and Mrs. Mark Grueser,
Mason Rescue Squad amtreated and released.
Local School Dlslrlct who was Mr . and Mrs. Herman A.
Diana White, 16, of New bulance according to James
aaslsted financiaUy in gaining Grueser, Allen Grueser and his
Haven was taken by private car Lavender, rescue squad chief.
her education by the generous family, Irene Tom, Rutb
Details involving the girls'
to the same hospital and treated
couple; Miss NeUe Bing, a close Francis, Mary Catherine
injuries were not learned.
and released.
neighbor, and Mlss Linda Francis, Richard Grueser,
Mayer who described Mrs. Jessie Grueser, Charles R,
Reibel as her "ad~ted grand- Grueser, and Mr. am Mrs.
mother."
Jewell Curtis, aU local, and Mr.
In conclusion, Mrs. Neulzling and Mrs. Carl L. Denison,
Wadsworlh.

· POMEROY- "People are Hke sta~ glass windows. They
glow am sparkle when it's sunny .am bright, but when the sun
goes down their lrue be4uty Is revealed only If there Is a Ugh!
from•within." Ain't It the truth! .
...
Pays to remember sometimes that happiness Is a state of
mind.

'

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB .

Frances ·Reibel Totally Surprised

Community
Corner By Charlene Hoeflich

ROUN'D
STEAK lb.

DAUGHTER BORN
POMEROY - Airman and
Mrs. David Michael are announ cing the birth of their first
child, a daughter , Tracy Lynn .
The six pound 14 ounce baby
was born on Sept. 19 at the
Quonse t Point R.I. Naval Base
Hospital. Mrs. Michael is the
fo rmer Ruth Ward of Langsville.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ward,
Langsville, and the paternal
grandparents are Mr . and Mrs.
Oliver Michael of Pomeroy .
Mrs. Alice Ward of Lfngsville is
th e
maternal
greatgra ndmother, and Mrs. W. W.
Bennett of Memphis, Tenn . the
paternal great·grandmother .
VISIT INTENDED
MIDDLE PORT - Mrs. Nan
Moore and Miss Mildred
Hawley left Friday for Johnson
City , Tenn . for a visit with the
Rev. and Mrs. Fred I. Gardner.

--

·

OPEN 9 A.M. T09 P.M. MONDAYTHRU SATUR-DAY

Plantings Planned
POMEROY - Civic plantings
were planned during a recent
meeting of the Walk-In Garden
Club at the home o f
rs.z ck
Hart.
Club members 1f ssed a
rock garden for the Meigs
Co unt y fai rgrounds and
arranged to plant bulbs in the
Bedford-Darwin community.
Mrs . Richard Collins was appointed chairman for garden
therapy work .

"~•• ( tl

252 THIRD AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

POMEROY - "Transition Initiated into the Chapter
from Analysis to Action " was were Viola Gettles, Margaret
the ,program topic at a recent Benson, Helen Anderson and
meeting of the Alpha Omicron Harriet Woods. They were each
Chapter of Delta Kappa presented a red rose . Edith
Gamma held at the Coach Hoffman presided at the
House in Wellston .
business meeting.
Elizabeth Lantz was chair- Autumn fl owers and leaves
man of the program with Mrs. decorated the tables for a steak
Margaret Parsons . and Mrs. dinner. Favors were donatlod by
Geneva Nolan of Meigs County Wellston businessmen , and
and Flora belle Funk and , each member was presented a
Rachel Warn er presenting polished native stone paper·
aspects of the program on "our weight made by Anna Maude
heritage, our present state of Fehrman.
change, and our hopes for the Attending from Meigs County
future."
were Margaret Parsons ,
Some of their conclusions Geneva Nolan, Theodosia
were discipline starts the day Frecker, Betsy Horky, Nellie
the child is born , we must learn Vale, Roberta Wilson, Rosalie
to use our leisure time well, Story, Mary Virginia Rebiel,
action can come by law , by Vilma Pikkoja, Anna Turner,
society or by freedom of choice Martha Husted, Dorothy
based on values, and be alert, Woodard, Geneva Joachim, and
not fearful.
Virginia Covert.

noon.
Prepaid reservations are to

devotionals and Mrs . Malcolm
Saunders gave the secre tary 's
report. Mrs. Fox reported that
$311.85 was earned at the Mason
Coun ty Fair Booth.
The Council voted to prepare
and serve food at the 4-H
Achievement Day. November
19. Mrs. George Carson was
appointed chairman and others
on the committee are Bonnie
Waldie and Lois Austin .
The Council also voted to
serve the 4-H Leaders training
meeting early in December.
Vickie Keefer, Homemakers
Agent ,
remind ed
the
homemakers of the Family Life
Conference scheduled ·for Qc.
Iober 12 and 13th at Cedar
Lakes, and the Homemakers
Craft Camp, November lOth
and lith. She reported that on
November 3, Simplicity Pattern

Finan cial · aid to retired
teachers
through
the
O.E.A. Virginia ·Gay Fund was
discussed by Mildred Baver.
Legislative obje ctives were
explained by Eugene Molenaur,
Toledo, Area 5 representative.
_ Jackson County members led
in singing of patriotic songs
with a history of "Yankee
Doodle Dandy ," the "Star
Spangled Banner," and "God
Bless America ." .
Robert G. Heft of Lancaster,
designer of the 50 star flag, told
how he designed the flag a~~ U.
S. History project with its value
being rated one-half million
dollars.

Change is Discussed

Name Homemaker Committees
PT. PLEASANT - Commi ttees were appointed by
Ma son Coun ty Hom emakers
president , Mrs. Howard
Garland , when the group met
Tuesday at the Courthouse
Annex . Mrs. Dave O'Neal as
appointed chairman of the
Charleston area meeting which
will be held in Mason County
next year .
.Others appointed to serve are
Mrs. Wayne Hart, Mrs. Gene
Jewell , Mrs. George Carson ,
Mrs. Manford Bowles , Mrs.
Jean Henderson, Mrs. Virginia
Voight and Mrs. Gus Douglass .
Mrs . Garland appointed
committees earlier this year so
nawes can be placed in the
yearbook . Miss Hattie Jordan,
Point Pleasant, was appointed
Parliamentarian and Mrs.
Harold Lewis, West Colwnbia,
historian .
Spring Luncheon Committee:
Mrs. John Kelsey . Mrs. Bonnie
Waldie and Mrs. Vernon Clifton.
Achievement Day : Mrs.
Edwin Winter, Mrs. Ronald
Rickard and Mrs. Freddie
Thabet.
Fair Committee : Mrs .
Laurene Lewis, Mrs. Ray Fox
and Mrs. Roy Friend.
Several persons were named
to Projects for Independent
Study , Citizenship , Cultural
Arts, Family Life , Health ,
International Relations, Safety,
Yearbook and Memorial Book
Committee.
At the opening of the meeting
Mrs. Ra y Fox presented the

I I

This will assure you giving us sufficient time to do our very best far you .
-It's later than you think! May we suggest that you call or come in for an ·.
appointment ... TODA Yl

r

GROVER'S STUDIO
Phone 992-2475
155 N..Second Ave.

Middleport

MIDDLE OF UPPER BLOCK, POMEROY
Open All Day Thursdays
' Open Fri. Night Til9

�,.

'

. '

'

.'

10 - TbeSundayTimes-Senllnei,Sunday,oct.IO, 1971

Retired

Teache~s

•
POMEROY ....: Nine members
of the Meigs County Chapter of
th e Ohio Retired Teac hers
Associ.ation attended the
Southeastern District· meeting

Wednesday at Burr Oak Lodge.
Going from here were Miss
Lucille Smith, president of the
local chapter, Chester : Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Gibbs, Pomeroy;

Meet .at Burr Oak Lodge
Apatriotic theme was carried
out at the meeting attended by
18 members of the Ohio Retired
Teachers AssOciation. Jackson
and Meigs Counties had charge
of registration which was
followed by a luncheon and
program.
Mrs. Kathryn McCall ,
Southeast Director, of Portsmouth had charge of the
program . The colors were
presented by Robert Chute,
scoutmaster of Troop 255 of
Perry County. Robert Fleming,
president, of Youngstown, gave
greetings and solicited the
cooperation of members wi'th
the Ohio legislators.

Mrs. Nan Moore, Mrs. Ruth
Eul er , Mrs. Mary Hughes,
Middleport ; Mrs. Geneva.
Joachim , Belpre; Mrs. Rachel
McBride, and Mrs. Gladys
Hayman , Syracuse .

Regional Meeting in Gallipolis
POMEROY - Mrs . Jack E.
AnewaIt of Kettering will be the
featured speaker at the fall
meeting of Region II, Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs to
be held on Oct. 30 at the
Washington Elementary School
in Gallipolis.
Mrs . Anewalt will talk and
demonstrate on the topic
"Design with Emphasis on
Creativity." She is a student
and certified teacher of
Japanese fl ower arranging and
a member of the arrangers'
guild studying under Bob
Thomas, an accredited judge of
the· American Daffodil Society.

Mrs. Anewalt is also an ac·
credited OAGC judge .
Mrs, Joe Bolin of Rutland,
new regional director, will have
charge of the afternoon session .
The French City Garden Club
will host the meeting wi th a
coffee hour and regis tration
from 9 to LOa.m. with a 50 cent
fee. Mrs. John Reese, re tiring
regional director , will call the
meeting to order, and the new
regional officers will be in·
stalled before the luncheon at
••

be sent to Mrs. Reese, 22
Portsmouth Road , Gallipolis,
by Oct. 25. The luncheon is $1.50.

~ .\

MRS. ANEWALT

•

•

will have a show at the
Charles ton House. Send $1
registration fee to Mrs. Keefer ,
Courthouse Annex, Poi nt
Pleasant.
. Mrs. Gene Jewell, Letart.
reported on the Story Hour held
every Tuesday morning at the
New Haven Library for preschool children. She said that if
any club wants to help with
refreshments on special days
such as Christmas, Easter,
Halloween, they should contact
Mrs. Paul Powe':, librarian at
the New Haven Librarv .
During the business ·meeting
than k you notes were
acknowledged fr om Rita
Garland and Brent Clark.
Vickie Keefer acqua inted
those attending with the lessons
for this year and longer, starting with the January lesson.

The club members discussed
programs for 1972 and it was
decided to build a club library
and to donate a new book to the
library.
Halloween arrangements on
POMEROY - Due to the display at the · meeting were
observance of Columbus Day
Monday, the bookmobile will
not be operating until Tuesd~y.
the schedule for which follows:
Syracuse , 9-10 :30 ; Racine,
12: 30-3; Wagner's, 3:15-3 :30;
Harden 's, 4-4 :30; Rizer's, 4:455:30: Forest Run , 5:45 . 6:45:
Minersville , 7-7:30; Naomi,
7:4541 :15.
T-hursday, Friday and
Saturday the bookmobile staff
will be in Cleveland to attend
the OLA Conference.

Eddy 's Schedule

HOMECOMING SET
MORNING STAR - The
annual Homecoming of the
Morning Star United Methodist
Church will be held Sunday,
Oct. 17 beginning at 9:30 a.m.
with th e worship service ..
Sunday school will be at 10:30
a.m. with a basket dinner at
noon . The arternoon program h
at I :30 p.m. featuri ng the
Bissell Brothers wi ti1 special
sin ging. The Rev. Mar tha
Mattner extends an invitation l.o
all to attend .

'

SUPER MARKETS

ARMOUR*STAR • U.S.D.A. GRADED CHOICE
U~ S~ Govt~
,

.MAE AND. EARL YOUNG OF Olester Road have a Ulac buBh
that things It's spring.
Oh, lhat it were I
Tile bush Is blooming and the fragrance Is enough to engage
the most noo-rcmanUc with envious reflectloo on those lazy
cr~, hazy days of summer which passed aU too quickly.
'
But the beauty of faD Is with us. Again this year we are enjoying Audrey Belzlng's gold and purple mums wbifh line the
sidewalk ne11r the Pomeroy Elementary School.
BUSY MAKING apple butter this past week have been the
men and women of the Enterprise Unlbld Methodist Oturch.
Again this year they ezpecttomake abi!Ut 1,400quarts.

'NO WONDER SO MANY PEOPLE died so young in years
gone by If the doctor's ''prescriptloo" was anything like one given
by Dr. James Beatty of Buffalo, W. Va. in 1850 to the grand·
parenll of Mrs. Agnes Hill.
Mrs. Hill fow11i this ''prescription" for an undetermined
aUment in the poswsillllS of her grandfather.
''You will give an-injection every hour with a tablespoon full
of ccmmoo salt and a Uttle lard dissolved in lhree gills of warril
water. Give one of the gills every lour hours until the bowels are
fully opened. U the pain coot!nues in the stomach, a blister should
be applied and'perhapa It would be of use to bathe the feet with
warm water am take a little blood from the arm. After the
medicine begins to operate a Uttle wann quid with some salt in It
will promote Ita operation."
AgiU,Mrs.Hill tells \18, equals ~'• pint. Tile quid referred to is
chewing tobacco.
.
She also provided liB with a photostat copy of one of her
grandfather's deli! and credit pages in account with Dr. Beatty.
Medicine and advice was usually $1. Medicine without advice was
only 25 .cenla. Anight vWt lravellhg four miles was $3, while a day
vWt was mly $2. In September 1800, lhe famUy saw the doctor ·
eight limes and including lhe medicine he supplled the total cost
was $17.19.
Dr. Beatiy, it WBB interesting to note, was paid with potatoes
at SO cents a bll8hel, butter at IOcenta a pound, apples at IB centa a
bushel, 10. pounds ol beef at 3 cents a pound f.r a total of $3.12
(Imagine tbatl) apples at 12~ c:.lla t.•ahel, and 'UI iD cub.

USDA

CHOICE

I

••

I

I

I

I

I

EVERYDAY LOW PRICES
SUPERMARKET 2
HOMOGENIZED . ~
gallons
MILK

'

tM

Casualties

Produced in

Puff Game

'

J.

FOR BIG DIS(;OUNT SAVTNC~S!
137 Pint Stree1
G.llipoll•, Ohio

SOUND RIPE

BANANAS

••

WE RESERVE THE AICHTTO L.IMITQUANTITIES ON AI.L ITEMS IN THIS AD. PRICE5 EFFECTIVE THII:U SAT.,
OCT. I• • It1l AT THIS STORE ONLY . NONE SOLD TO DEALER~ .

THOROFARE

ICE
CREAM

Airlines in Ticket War

ALL FLAVORS- 1/2 Gal. Pkg.

WASHINGTON (UPI) Airline industry sources say a
~orth Atlantic air fare war
could be a bonanza for
passengers and economic

RICHTEX

Judges Sitting

SHORTENING

FRAGRANT FLORAL SW:ANS are attractive, ineJPeDillve to
make and just rlgbtf.r bollday bauare.r party game prizes.
A Lallgi!Ville reader sent 118 directiOns on how ID make the
atlractive swans which are real quickies. Tiley can be made in
about 15 minutes, she says.
Tile materials needed are one oval bar of sweet«nelling
soap, 2pleces of ocange netting (appro:dmately 101141nches cut
in an oval or triangle shape) I rub~r bam, black felt for two
small eyes, ~pro of ribbon (any type), I artificial orange
Dower, 1 piece of three inch bump chenUie at least 14inches long,
and a piece ol fi!le string cr wire for attaching the IIWBn neck to
the body.
Take the two pieces q! netting and place together. Put soap in
center and gslher the ends together - pulling the netting to one
end ol the soap bar.
_
Secure the nettlng at the back of the bar with a rubbel' band.
Puff out the netting to form the swan's taU. Attach the artificial
Dower around the rubber band with the Dower facing the front.
Talie the rlbboo and tie a bow around the rubbel' band and Dower
wire.
Take the piece of chenille and bem It in half. Twist bottom
ends together am twist in lbemlddle. Pinch the top part together,
lhen separate the chenllle slightly to form the swan's head and
neck. Bend the head part forward. Attach cbenllle to netting with
string or wire. Cut out two sniau eyes from felt and glue on the
sides of lhe head.

3-lb. Can

IJALIA • ~ •Shag. Made of
3 COLORED KODEL YARN

STATE FARE
SLICED

WHITE BREAD

for

1-lb. 4-oz. Loaves

12 fl. width. 1 and '14''
high pile. 24 C•lon .

1972 FORD or MERCURY
SI'RINtl AC'I'IOII

COLLECT A SET OF FOUR I

Country Inn

CRISPS
A~PLE

MUSTANG, TORINO, MAVERICK, MONT£00.

WHEN YOU BUY

What are thes ~ BEST BUYS? They're our BEST SELLERS • , .
CARPETS many of your friends have bought, love, brag
· about . If this werl! an e lection year, you might say they':"'
"THE PEOPLES CHOICE". So see them. You'll . agree (as
thousands have) that no other carpets can give· you so much
beauty, service, comfort ... for so liHie .
CONVENIENT
CREDIT TERMS
· Enjoy your carpel wh ile
you pay for it.

I

.

BONELESS RUMP ROAST

judge d by the hospitality
committee with Mrs . Hart
taking first, Mrs. Russell
Cullums, second, and Mrs.
Richard Collins, third.
Devotions were presented by
Miss Rosalie Story and the
opening thought was given by
Mrs . Collins. Mrs . George
Ziegler gave the secretary's
report, and Mrs. Glen Lee the
treasurer's report. , ..
"Growing Your Own Shrubs
for Cutting " was tHe program
topic given by Mr.s. Clarence
Story . "Winter Care of Roses"
was the ti tle of Mrs. Lee's
paper.
A game was won by Mrs.
Mina Hart. The hostess served
refreshments.

'•,

AFUNNY THING HAPPENED to Mary Martin an.Ufyrtle
Walker as they took in lhesightaofWapakonetala.stweek.
They drove ooto Arms~ong Ave., talking aU the wblle about
the as~onaul Seeing a woman sweeping leaves along the curb,
Mary am Myrtle decided to inquire as to where the as~onaut's
parenla Uved.
You guessed it, The woman sweeping the leaves was NeD's
mother who was dellghbld to pass the time of day chatting about
her aon.

Inspected

FREESHOP AT HOME SERVICE
Na obligation.
(; llll

·FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT

BIZ

BLUEBERRY
RASPBERRY

ZEST SOA

2·1b. 6-oz. Pkg.

5.6-oz. Bar

10·0Z.
Pkg.

NORMANDIE ... scu!Ptured
12~ 5 "··
10001
JO KODEL ' Wldt
0

Florol d•slgn , Vtl•tl pllt.
14 Colon. Double
jutt back.

sa 49
•

&amp;9c

MR. CLEAN
LIQUID CLEANE~
1·0• . ·
8-oz . Bottle

99e

FOLGER'S
COFFEE
1·1b.
Can

SQ. YO.

95c

MIDDL£PORT, 0.

992·5321

Q-How !onu did the

·!

.

WASHINGTON (UPI) Three federal judges hearing a
test of the legall ty of Preslden t
Nixon's wage-price freeze have
been told the freeze Is
"government by fiat" ad·
ministered by "faceless individuals in the presidential

coterie."

Spanish·Americat~

War last?

A-Tnree months . it~d ~2
. davs. ' '
,

Road·

POMEROY, OHIO
r

99H346

Women Treated For Jniun'es
'J
Mrs. Thomas. Damages were
estimated by police to be $90.
There was no citation.
Got a tough job?
How about a tough
boot to match? New
Durables sole and heel
are oil proof. Top grain
leather that's highly water
and acid resistant. Sweatproof insole. Steel shank
support built in .Lightweight - but a bear tor
wear! Step into a pair
today and see. If it's
Wolverine"', it's built
tor action.
17.95 to 26.95

COMPLETES BASIC
GALLIPOLIS
Army
Private Charles T. Riley, 17, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Wise,
541 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis,
recently completed eight weeks
of basic training at the U. S.
Army Training Center , Armor,
Ft. Knox, Ky. He is a 1971
graduate of GAHS.

Complete
selection
of
Wolverine
oxfords,
shoes and
boots

Jf'!uit a wonderful way to say

Merry Christmas
TO YOUR FAVORITE .PEOPLE!

. . tit&amp;

whatever tbe' sc,tion-tbere 's • WmriM*Iillot to m8 tcll it
Widths A, B. C,

·o; E,

EEE

Now! Js
. the time to
arrange for your
Christmas Gift Portrait Sitting. ·

,r"--. -- .-- -,

• If I have to go ',
-.&lt;take me to The•
'Shop
... , I

- __

Quick S.rvlct
Govern men! lnsptd"' ··
Cut
Your Sptciticttlona

Dale Little

Your Life" book to Mrs. Louis Reibel at the conclusion of the
program. Sbe was assisted in its preparation by Miss Enna
Smith, left.

11

"custom meat cutting"

Ptea,anl knige

MRS. BEN NEUTZLING, right, presented the ''This Is

suicide for some already ·
financiaUy ailing carriers.
But other observers say the
threatened battle won't last
long and that bargain hunters
had better move fast )lecause....J
·
government pressure probably
~ll~force . the competing PT. PLEASANT _ Two
a~ s to Sign a truce.
persons were treated at
F b :arLufiSthanexpected to begin Pleasant VaUey Hospilal as the
88.• a scheduled result of a rear-end collision
e ·1
West Germ~n aullne, goes Friday at l1 :20 a.m. at !Gth
through with tis plan to offer a Street and Viand
special $210 rolllldtrip fare be- MyrUe Hoffm~ 64 Letart
tween New York and West complained of a n..;k i~jury and
Germany .
Norma Jean Thomas, 34,
Not to . be undercut, some Route I, Point Pleasant, was
charter .mlines .have pro~ treated lor shock at the local
to proVIde slmilar roundtrips hospital. Both were released
lor $135..The low~st scheduled following treatment.
:~~ow m e(fect 18 $3l2 for the City Police said Clarence D.
g ·
Hoffman, 70, Letart had
Q-What intoxicating bev· stopped In a line of traffi~ when
erage is made from the sap his vehicle was struck from the
of the jaggery palm?
·.
b
A-A rumlike drink called rear Y one being driven by

Attorney Albert Gore made
the argument Friday in behalf
of
the
ISO,OOO.member
Amalgamated Meat Cutters uarrack.
and Butcher Workmen of North
America, which wants the court
ID declare the freeze illegal.
The 1111ion argument that lhe
freeze is unconstitutional
contends Congress lacked the
authority to grant Nixon power.
to conl!'ol wages, prices and
rents under the Economic
StabUlzatlon Act.

Th·e _Shop

'

'

On Meatcutters'
Freeze Appeal

.-

· BASIC COMPLETED
POMEROY - ArmY Private
Edward .F. Smith, 20, whose
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elmo F.
Smith, and wile, Janet, live on
Route 2, ha's completed eight
weeks of basic training at 'the U.
S. Army ,Training Center, Ar·
mor, Ft. Knox, Ky. Pvt. Smith,
a 1969 graduate of Meigs High
School, received an ~l!le's
degree In 1971 from Tri-Co1111ty
Technical Institute, Nelsonville ..

Calomel 1 Purge1
Is Dangerous

POMEROY - Complete
surprise waa registered by Mrs.
Louis Reibel Friday night when
Mrs. Ben Neulzllng sle)llled to
the microphone and announced:
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. was not true. The mercury
"'l'bls Is Your Ufe, Frances."
merely prevented the nor- ·
Tile scene waa Trinity Oturch
Dear Dr. Lamb-! re mem· mal bacterial action in the
where appro:rlmately 100
ber when people used to take bowel that turns bile piga dose of c a I om e I in the ment from green to brown .
relatives, friends am neighbors
spring
to "clean out their
bad gathered to honer Mrs,
In its day of glory I am
system."
I don't hear that sure lhat if a medical colReibel who, ~!rating her 84th
being used now What could umnist had tried to help peohlrtblay Ocl 22, Is in her 52nd ·
one take that would serve ple by g i v i n ~ them these
ye~ of,teaching in the Trinity
the same purpose?
facts on calomel he would
&amp;mday School.
Dear Reader- Your q ues- have received a barrage of
Tile Happy Harvesters Class
tion prompts me -to observe letters similar to some l have
of which Ml:s. Reibel has been
that slowly knowledge does received on current fads. It
teacher ftr about 30 years
liberate man from f o o 1i s h is i n d e e d.-encouraging to
•
hosted the ''Tills II Your Life"
notions held fervently to be take note of the passing of
an obsolete and dangerous
beneficial for one's health .
program am a reception whlcb
followed, A nice, Miss Mary
In the first pl~c e there is fa ntasy·.
•
no need to "clean out the
Virginia Reibel, presented her
Dr. Lamb-How does
system
." Ideas of this sort theDear
aunt wilh an orchid corsage.
body
enough blood
originate from the primitive sugar if onegetleaves
Mrs. Dale Smith on behalf of
every
•
association of .e x c rem e n t bit of sweets from out
his
diet'~
the Happy Harvesters Class
with evil and ridding oneself
gave a check for $50 to the
\
•
Dear Reader'-Fruits, vege·
of it is tantamount to elimi·
building fund in ber honor.
nating evil. The system is tables and cereals contain
best left alone and treated · carbohydrates. Eating these
Mother cbeCk also designated
with
a good healthy normal fre sh or cooked w it h out
fer the bulldlng fund In Mrs.
diet
and
adequate exerci se . sweets p r ovides carbohyReibel's hmor wBB presented
Secondly, calomel is a po- drate. Any starch , such as
by Mrs, W. H, Perrin for the
tential poi son . It is a mer· in a potato, is acted upon by
Friendly Cltcle.
· cury .salt, and when it work s enzymes to convert its food
Roy Mayer, superintendent of
as expected it prevents the value to glucose, the sugar
norm a I absorption of salt the body uses for fuel. Fats,
the Sunday School, and Mr, and
and
water from the intestine. extra protein and food eleMrs. Arthur S~auss both gave
'I'
he
accumulated material ments not used for fat stores
Dowers to the honored church
results in catharsis. If every- or building tissue are conwoman. At the conclusion of the
thing doesn •t go as expected verted to glucose for energy.
program, Mrs. Neutzllng
a considerable am o u n t of
If you eat no carbohyrresenbld the ''Tills Is Your
mercury can be absorbed drates yo ur body chemistry
from the intestine leading to will become slightly unbal'
Ufe" book to Mrs. Reibel.
mercury poisoning .. With all anced causing the ktdneys to
The traditional revue of the
the
current interest in mer- eliminate excess amounts of
early years ol the hmored guest
cury
poi s o n i n g from our water-leading to dehydrawere related by Mrs, Neulzling
waterways , this needs no tion .. When bread or other
who noted lha t she was born at
THIS IS YOUR LIFE- Mrs. Louis Reibel, seated with ber husband and holding her great· further comment.
carbohydrates are added to
lAng Hollow the tenui child of
A common misconception the diet again the fluid ·is regranddaughter, Sara Eli2abeth Thomas, was surroumed by relatives and friends during a
Jolm am Mary Gruesel', her
"This Is Your Life" program at Trinity Church Friday night. The event marked her 84th birth- was that the greenish stools tained . This is why you lose
education in a one-room school
passed after taking calomel weight on a low carbohydrate
dar and her 5211d ~ear as a Sunday Sc~ool teacher. Here with ber are Miss NeUe J. ·Bing, a close was
evidence that calomel diet, but it is water loss and
house there and later at Rock
netghbor; Mrs. Wi111am Thomas, Gallipolis, a granddaughter; Carl Baker of Gallipolis and his was increasing the amount returns quickly when one re,springs, and her seams~ess
wife, Marcella, daughter o~ the Retbels, ~d Mrs. Lena Huber, longtime a~ close friend, , of bile and emptying the body turns to a proper diet.
and tallcrlng work in Pcmeroy.
(NEWSPAPER ENTER.PRISf 4.~51" I
standing
front, 1tor; and Miss Mary FranciS, a gram niece, am Mrs . Linda Mayer, back row. of th1s b1hous substance . Thi s
Humorous incidents of her
MAYSE AT KNOll.
cour~ .!llld.marrlaj! ID Louis .
GALLIPOLIS
Army
Reibel, their first apartment gave a tribute in original verse
Private Larry F. Mayse, 18, son
located near the Epple Grocery for the faithfulness, the
of Mr. and Mrs. Frank E.
oo E. Main St., and the birth of generosity, the spiritual
Mayse
, Route I, Gallipolis, has
their two daughters, Marcella, guidance and the love e:rtended
completed eight weeks of basic
who attemed the affair with her by the gracious Mrs. Reibel in
training at the U. S. Army
husband Carl "Baker of her church activities. Mrs,
Training Center, Armor, Ft.
Gallipolis, and Dorothy of Mayer sang "My Task."
Knox, Ky.
w h o s e Pink and purple was the color
C o 1u m b u s ,
coogratulationa were cooveyed scheme used in the receptloo
Sandy Nicholson
was
in a letter, were included in the table decorations. Pink tapers
reported also transported in a
life sketch.
in aUver holders Oanked an
Present also were the Bakers' arrangement of asters. Mrs,
MASON - Six Wahama High private car to the same
daughter, Frances Lou Tbcmas Lawrence Leonard and Miss
School girls were in area hospital, but other infonnation
and her small daughter, Sara Mary Virginia Reibel presided
hospitals instead of completing concerning her was not
Elizabeth, who ia Mrs, Reibel's at the punch am coffee. Fancv
the last quarter of a Powder available.
Diana Roush of West
only great-granddaughter. assqrted cookies were served.
Puff game being played at
Floyd George Baker, grandsoo
Besides Mrs. Leonard and
Bachtel Field between junior Columbia was admitted to
of the Relbels, · recently Mrs, Reibel, other nieces and
Pleasant VaUey Hospital for
and seniors Friday night.
relurned from Vlelnam and was nephews attending were
Rebecca Ohlinger, 17, and observation and is said to be in
unable to attend the ob- Lawrence Leonard, Mr. and
Rebecca Paugh, 16, both of New "good" condition · today.
servance.
Mrs. Clarence Grueser, Mrs.
Haven were transferred in a Carolyn Hughes of Mason was
Among the others recognized Lewis Grueser, Mr. and Mrs.
Pomeroy Emergency Squad to treated at Holzer Medical
were Mrs. Lena Huber , Wi111am Grueser, Enuna G.
Veterans Memorial Hospital in Center and released. The latter
longtime friend; Miss Mary Broderick, Catherine Grueser,
Pomeroy where they were two were transferred in the
Francis, a teacher in the Meigs Mr. and Mrs. Mark Grueser,
Mason Rescue Squad amtreated and released.
Local School Dlslrlct who was Mr . and Mrs. Herman A.
Diana White, 16, of New bulance according to James
aaslsted financiaUy in gaining Grueser, Allen Grueser and his
Haven was taken by private car Lavender, rescue squad chief.
her education by the generous family, Irene Tom, Rutb
Details involving the girls'
to the same hospital and treated
couple; Miss NeUe Bing, a close Francis, Mary Catherine
injuries were not learned.
and released.
neighbor, and Mlss Linda Francis, Richard Grueser,
Mayer who described Mrs. Jessie Grueser, Charles R,
Reibel as her "ad~ted grand- Grueser, and Mr. am Mrs.
mother."
Jewell Curtis, aU local, and Mr.
In conclusion, Mrs. Neulzling and Mrs. Carl L. Denison,
Wadsworlh.

· POMEROY- "People are Hke sta~ glass windows. They
glow am sparkle when it's sunny .am bright, but when the sun
goes down their lrue be4uty Is revealed only If there Is a Ugh!
from•within." Ain't It the truth! .
...
Pays to remember sometimes that happiness Is a state of
mind.

'

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB .

Frances ·Reibel Totally Surprised

Community
Corner By Charlene Hoeflich

ROUN'D
STEAK lb.

DAUGHTER BORN
POMEROY - Airman and
Mrs. David Michael are announ cing the birth of their first
child, a daughter , Tracy Lynn .
The six pound 14 ounce baby
was born on Sept. 19 at the
Quonse t Point R.I. Naval Base
Hospital. Mrs. Michael is the
fo rmer Ruth Ward of Langsville.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ward,
Langsville, and the paternal
grandparents are Mr . and Mrs.
Oliver Michael of Pomeroy .
Mrs. Alice Ward of Lfngsville is
th e
maternal
greatgra ndmother, and Mrs. W. W.
Bennett of Memphis, Tenn . the
paternal great·grandmother .
VISIT INTENDED
MIDDLE PORT - Mrs. Nan
Moore and Miss Mildred
Hawley left Friday for Johnson
City , Tenn . for a visit with the
Rev. and Mrs. Fred I. Gardner.

--

·

OPEN 9 A.M. T09 P.M. MONDAYTHRU SATUR-DAY

Plantings Planned
POMEROY - Civic plantings
were planned during a recent
meeting of the Walk-In Garden
Club at the home o f
rs.z ck
Hart.
Club members 1f ssed a
rock garden for the Meigs
Co unt y fai rgrounds and
arranged to plant bulbs in the
Bedford-Darwin community.
Mrs . Richard Collins was appointed chairman for garden
therapy work .

"~•• ( tl

252 THIRD AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

POMEROY - "Transition Initiated into the Chapter
from Analysis to Action " was were Viola Gettles, Margaret
the ,program topic at a recent Benson, Helen Anderson and
meeting of the Alpha Omicron Harriet Woods. They were each
Chapter of Delta Kappa presented a red rose . Edith
Gamma held at the Coach Hoffman presided at the
House in Wellston .
business meeting.
Elizabeth Lantz was chair- Autumn fl owers and leaves
man of the program with Mrs. decorated the tables for a steak
Margaret Parsons . and Mrs. dinner. Favors were donatlod by
Geneva Nolan of Meigs County Wellston businessmen , and
and Flora belle Funk and , each member was presented a
Rachel Warn er presenting polished native stone paper·
aspects of the program on "our weight made by Anna Maude
heritage, our present state of Fehrman.
change, and our hopes for the Attending from Meigs County
future."
were Margaret Parsons ,
Some of their conclusions Geneva Nolan, Theodosia
were discipline starts the day Frecker, Betsy Horky, Nellie
the child is born , we must learn Vale, Roberta Wilson, Rosalie
to use our leisure time well, Story, Mary Virginia Rebiel,
action can come by law , by Vilma Pikkoja, Anna Turner,
society or by freedom of choice Martha Husted, Dorothy
based on values, and be alert, Woodard, Geneva Joachim, and
not fearful.
Virginia Covert.

noon.
Prepaid reservations are to

devotionals and Mrs . Malcolm
Saunders gave the secre tary 's
report. Mrs. Fox reported that
$311.85 was earned at the Mason
Coun ty Fair Booth.
The Council voted to prepare
and serve food at the 4-H
Achievement Day. November
19. Mrs. George Carson was
appointed chairman and others
on the committee are Bonnie
Waldie and Lois Austin .
The Council also voted to
serve the 4-H Leaders training
meeting early in December.
Vickie Keefer, Homemakers
Agent ,
remind ed
the
homemakers of the Family Life
Conference scheduled ·for Qc.
Iober 12 and 13th at Cedar
Lakes, and the Homemakers
Craft Camp, November lOth
and lith. She reported that on
November 3, Simplicity Pattern

Finan cial · aid to retired
teachers
through
the
O.E.A. Virginia ·Gay Fund was
discussed by Mildred Baver.
Legislative obje ctives were
explained by Eugene Molenaur,
Toledo, Area 5 representative.
_ Jackson County members led
in singing of patriotic songs
with a history of "Yankee
Doodle Dandy ," the "Star
Spangled Banner," and "God
Bless America ." .
Robert G. Heft of Lancaster,
designer of the 50 star flag, told
how he designed the flag a~~ U.
S. History project with its value
being rated one-half million
dollars.

Change is Discussed

Name Homemaker Committees
PT. PLEASANT - Commi ttees were appointed by
Ma son Coun ty Hom emakers
president , Mrs. Howard
Garland , when the group met
Tuesday at the Courthouse
Annex . Mrs. Dave O'Neal as
appointed chairman of the
Charleston area meeting which
will be held in Mason County
next year .
.Others appointed to serve are
Mrs. Wayne Hart, Mrs. Gene
Jewell , Mrs. George Carson ,
Mrs. Manford Bowles , Mrs.
Jean Henderson, Mrs. Virginia
Voight and Mrs. Gus Douglass .
Mrs . Garland appointed
committees earlier this year so
nawes can be placed in the
yearbook . Miss Hattie Jordan,
Point Pleasant, was appointed
Parliamentarian and Mrs.
Harold Lewis, West Colwnbia,
historian .
Spring Luncheon Committee:
Mrs. John Kelsey . Mrs. Bonnie
Waldie and Mrs. Vernon Clifton.
Achievement Day : Mrs.
Edwin Winter, Mrs. Ronald
Rickard and Mrs. Freddie
Thabet.
Fair Committee : Mrs .
Laurene Lewis, Mrs. Ray Fox
and Mrs. Roy Friend.
Several persons were named
to Projects for Independent
Study , Citizenship , Cultural
Arts, Family Life , Health ,
International Relations, Safety,
Yearbook and Memorial Book
Committee.
At the opening of the meeting
Mrs. Ra y Fox presented the

I I

This will assure you giving us sufficient time to do our very best far you .
-It's later than you think! May we suggest that you call or come in for an ·.
appointment ... TODA Yl

r

GROVER'S STUDIO
Phone 992-2475
155 N..Second Ave.

Middleport

MIDDLE OF UPPER BLOCK, POMEROY
Open All Day Thursdays
' Open Fri. Night Til9

�\

.'

'
"
"
FRENCH CITY BUILDERS SUPPLY

12-The SundayTil'lles·SenUnel,Sunday,Oct.IO, 1971

-~0~~~

{)'-'- \f\~

AI''''
.·:'

., ..

'

-~

.-.

'II~Jt
Y7J

J

Boa Constrictor

Part of
•

'

Becomes Pet

Highway
.

BIDWELL - Samuel Morris, proximately :;o foot-long infant
in another time and place, goas) is planned ·next year .
Already residing at the
should have become a wild
animal trainer or sliperin· Morris place in a variety of
cages and pens are pheasants,
tendent,of a wildlife refuge.
Since he is an employe of the coons, squirrels, groundhogs, a
Chris Craft plant in Gallipolis. fox, and several species of duck.
"I just like animals, I guess,"
he has settled for keeping a
of Morris said. In this he is joined
growing
assortment
American and African animals, by his family. "Joyce even
among them a young female 611.! helps me build their pens," he
said.
ft. long boa constrictor.
This boa is his second. The
Morris, who resides wit!J his
wife, the former Joyce Miller, ffrst was a male, but unable to
on an acre and a half of land in tame it satisfactorily, Morris
this rural community of Gallia sold him and the female was
County, has succeeded in ordered. It arrived about four
taming the boa . To breed her, months ago when only a
· he has ordered a male which "baby," costing $20. Morris
also will come from Africa . A orctered both boas through a
blessed boa event ( •P·. (Continued on page 14)

Enclosed

CELEBRATE
On October 17, 17~0 the old French City was
established. And now, in conjunction with this
founding
French City Builders Supply, located
on First Avenue in the old French City, are
celebrating their grand opening the week of
October 11th through the 16th, with a Founders

Day Sale, commemorating the 181st anniversary
of the old French City. There wi II be many prizes
along with special "discount prices; during the
grand opening and Founders Day celebration at ·
French City Builders Supply in Gallipolis.

•

BY REMOTE STUDIO• .

REG. PRICE

4x7
COLONIAL LUAN
PACESmER MEDIUM

4xl

3.88
54.99
'5.25
'5.20
5

ALMOND WOOD

4xl
CA_PEWOOD HAZELNUT

4x8

LODGEWOOD YOSEMITE
4xl LIONITE
WHITE GOLD FLECK

4xl

'6.30
'6.75

GOLDEN FLEECE

SAVE NOW
$ $

s

.,

Landmark School Decision

•439

Andrews

'4''
'4''

.:,=~:.'·~

.

CEILING TILE

•s••

Reg.

~:. ~:[ . ~;:~B~~an':~ w~!a~~~il~

Promises
Broken

FURRING STRIPS
..
AND
WHITE PINE
MOLDING
REDUCED!
,

Doors 0
Pen

Harris' Veep

Would Get New

Cabinet Power

U.S. Air Helps

Fend Off Enemy

lEVER OUT OF DATE·IARBAIIS!

LIGHT FIXTURES

Self Rim 33x22

ALL FIXTURES
ARE REDUCED!

NOW

STAINLESS STEEL:!o ... •24"
AVOCADO .... ~:.~s ........~~~. •1795
32x21

HERE ARE A FEW

EXAMPLES

32x21

GOLO.;~::s -~~~.•1795

HARVEST
WHITE. .."WAS
s2us
32xl1

.... ~~~.; '1595

APPLIANCES

Antique Brass

CHANDELIER ..... ~22 10
Brass

.

HALL LIGHT. ........ .$}99
Flourescent

FAVORS .

KITCHEN LIGHT....~ 80
Bedroom

FOR ALL THE FAMILY!

$2

LIGHT.:................... 21

by Waste· King Universal
Reg. 241.70

ELECTRIC RANGE ......... 519995
RANGE HOOD ................. $2995
•

Reg. 37.80

Reg. 242.75

.

DISHWASHER .................519995

''CASH AND CARR-Y.''

....-.-f~RENCH

CITY BUILDERS.._.....
-.......-------su
PPL
750 1st AVE.
'

·GALUPO.LIS. OHIO

Attacks

Teachers

S.n

GOLDEN WEB ....................~~: 261hc 21 Y2~
PLAIN WHITE ....................~.~: 15¥2' 12Y2~

MATCHING PREFINISHED TRIM, NAILS,
PUnY STICKS AND
ADHESIVE AT SALE
PRICES I

SINKS

•

etliner
0 Detroit Field

•3••

'5''
CASH &amp; CARRY SPECIALS

PARKWAY BIRCH
,.

•

•277

4xl

4xJ

10 Sheets-Colonial Walnut Paneling
Black &amp; Decker Jig Saw
Disposal
Chandelier
s gal. Dutch Standard Exterior
Latex or Oil
S-1 gal. Prizes Dutch Standard Wall
Charm Interior Latex
1 Mystery Prize
Drawing-4:00 p.m. Saturday, Oct.
16, 1971
Do not ·have to be present to win.

SALE PRICE

•2••

Tro ubie

DOOR PRIZES!

I

•

DESCRIPTION

UN m

HAVE ABRAID OlD TilE·

W.J.E.H. WILL BROADCAST
FROM HERE 5 DAYS 11:00 TO 11a30
'

ADDISON - What may first
appear to be a major land
dispute to fhe ordinar7
passerby here Is not that at all.
Local residents and passing
motorists have become curious
over the. recent erection of a
cable around a square lot which
encloses the little and old Ad·
dlson Post Office Building.
For 19 years Mrs. Freda
NO FREE RANGE HERE - Out West free range Is
Henson, Addison postmaster, .- - - - - - - - where you find it which is about everywhere. But in Gallia
operated her fourth class ' post
office in the little building prior
County, even all ,the highways aren't public domain where a
to retiring three months ago.
part of the Bulsville-Addison rosd has been fenced off by its
She sold the building and land to
new owner, Mrs. Vivian Taylor .
Mrs. Vivian Taylor, owner of a
·
lot and trailer home nearby.
Mrs. Taylor, through her
Attorney Warren F. Sheets,
asked the Ohio Dep~rtment of WASHINGTON (UP!)~
Highways and Gallla County Secretary of State William P.
Highway Department to ROllerS has cautioned foreign
determine the exact boundaries ministers that the United States
of her purchase: According to might be forced by Congress to . _:;,VO::.:L=-._:;,VIc__N....:O..;..
• ..:..37'---_ _ _ _ _ _S_U_N_DA_Y..;.,,_O_CT_O_BE_R_l_O.;,..,_19_7_l_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ PA_G_E_l..:_3
the legal descnption, 11 was reduce its financial con.
learned the property extended lributions to the United Nations
onto the .pavement that ~as if Nationalist China is expelled,
formerly a part of the Bulavllle· state Department officials
Addison Rd .
acknowledged Sallldday.
According to the deed, the The officials emphasized that
property calls for 108.6 feet Rotleril, in private conversa·
frontage along and toward the lions in the past week at New
center of Rt. 7.
York, did not raise the
The lot has been surveyed by possibility as a threat but rather
both the county and state high- as a congressional problem
way depa~tments. As 1t turns facing the administration.
out, Mrs. Taylor, by cabling off General Assembly debate
the land, is just reclaiming what starlsOci. IBon the China issue.
righUy belo~g~ to her.
.
ROllers is lobbying for votes for
In explammg the umque an American resolution
situation, Mrs. Henson said the proposed to seat conununisl :;:,:::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:,:;:;:;:,:;:,:::;:::::;:::::;:::::l:::: DETROIT (UPI)-A ''very
the stewardess. The gurunan
BOA CONSTRICTOR, 6'h feet long, is the pet of Samuel
county highway department China and give it.a seat on the
nervous" hijacker put a cocked ordered the captain to fly Morris of Bidwell. This one will give birth to approximately
first graveled its road in front of security Council, while
pistol to the head of a frightened directly to Havana.
:;o foot-long baby boas next spring.
the Post Office, then eventually retaining General assembly
stewardess Sstuday and or- The flight was Eastern's 953,
blacktopped the area. She did membership for the Nationalist
CLEVELAND (UPI) - MarUn Essex, slate
dered an Eastern Airlines jet which had been scheduled to go
not object to the county's ac- regime on Taiwan.
superinteodenl of schools, said Sstarday the decision by
with 46 persons on board flown to Miami and San Juan, P.R.
tions on her property because it Rogers was reported to have
Protection of
·and carried a crew of seven.
a tlu:ee-judge federal paoel in PeDD8ylvaDia ordering
to Havana.
served as a good parking area called attention to a growing
Lucas said the hijacker ap·
II was the second time the
that slate Co provide free pubUc educaUonto all mentally
for post office patrons.
feel!ng in Congress that U.S.
Mines Obtained
·.. re1Brded chllclren Is a "landmark decision of great ··:· pilot, Capt. William E. Buch- peared "to be very nervous, and
The new post office, now moral and financial support for
so we decided to follow his in.
NEW PHILADELPHIA,
occupied by John Lee, another the United Nations should be
coosequenee."
structions."
Ohio
(UPI) - Teo owners of
"I mull study tbe decisioo, bot II would appear that
of an Eastern Electra prop-jet
nearby neighbor, is a mobile "r.-amined" if the Nation&amp;·
The
plane,
a
Boeing
727,
left
non-union
strip
mine
home. It is Ioicated just a few llstsareexpelled,asprovidedin .. it will result In a massive reorganlzaUon in the concept
Detroit Metropolitan Airport at operations In this area late
~.l.~
of
services
to
tbe
mentally
retarded,"
Ellses
said.
~
.
!
.
:
·
:
.
·
that
was
hijacked
to
Havana
in
feet from the old one .
a resolution sponsored by
July, 1967 - the second U. S. 10:34 a.m., EDT with the
8
Mrs. Taylor says a new Communist Alabania.
@
He said he e:q~ected a group lo file slmllarsult In :::: plane ever ordered to the gunman sealed outside the Friday obtained ao Injunction
permanent fence has been State Department officials ,.,. Oblo or tbe legislature could revise tbe present pubUc ,, Cari~B!l island.
• ,: • 1• cockpit, holding the g1111 tu·,th!l . to prohibit "any furtber
or~e&lt;l. and will be installed said they expected )he china !~
school code In accordance wl'lt tbe,1'111lDJ. ~t P,Rient in j;!; saturday's hijacker gave stewardess' head. The Fel!eral haralsment"·at the mines by
around the lot. The fence not vote to be ''very, very, very ;:;:: Oblo, cbildren with tbe IQ's oluader SG are provided free ~; Eastern ticket clerks the name Aeronuatics Administration members of the United Mine
only will set off the lot but will close."
!;l edueaUm in scbooluu by county boards of retardation 'i!l "R. Johnson," similar to an said the plane landed in Havana Workers Union.
COLUMBUS ( UPI )-The
Several of the mines were
also serve as a protective shield As many as 30 of the United :~\ which are affiliated with the stale board of mental :;!l alias that psychologist Barbara at I :23 p.m. EDT.
Ohio Education Association's
subjected to vandalism last
for the new trailer ho!l)es Nations' 131 member natiOil!l :;;;: bygiene, not the state school board, Essex said.
:~\ Pllskow used in an attempt to
threat to call a statewide
An Eastern spokesman said
behind It.
have yet to decide how they will .it.;-;·:·;~·;.:·:·:·:-:·:~·=~·:::::·:·:::·:::·:·:·:~·:·::;;;;:::::::::~=:•:::::;:;:;:;:;;;;;:::•::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::·::::::•:=:•:=:•:t~· hijack anot~r airliner from the name of the stewardess was week shortly after tbe UMW teacher strike is an attempt "to
·........ " .... · · .. · .. · ........... · ........ .. .. ·· .. · .... · .. ... ... · · here two weeks ago,
struck the nation's soft coal blackmail the Ohio legislature
vote, officials said.
not immediately known.
Industry at midnight Sept. 30.
Rogers has met 69 foreign
into enacting unreasonable
The man had fit the
The
mine workers are also
ministers attemding the
psychological profile of a
The hijacker was described asking for $250,000 In taxes, " Republican State
General Assembly and plans to
Chairman JohnS. Andrews said
potential hijacker and was as a white man, age 'l:l to 29, 6- damages.
confer with about 20 more next
Friday night.
about to be stopped for further foot-1, weighing 200 pounds.
week.
Andrews, who addressed the
identification when he pulled
The gunman had not had a
Ohio Federation of Republican
the gun, an Eastern spokesman
Women's Organizations, said
reservation on the flight, but
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Gov. Milton J. Shapp said the said.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
purchased
a
ticket
at
the
airport
such a statewide walkout would
The door to a fuller life through decision will · "end the ware·
Wayne County Sheriff Wil·
U.S. Coast Guard has reported
WASHINGTON (UP!) public education has swung housing of the mentally retard· liam Lucas said 39 of a planned shorUy before takeoff, Lucas
backfire.
that the owners of the Delta The African swine fever
"The people of Ohio are upset
90 passengers had boarded the said.
open for Pennsylvania's 100,000 ed in institutions."
Queen did not complete 15 of fright of 1971 has largely retarded children.
Lucas said the name listed on
with the education system
The governor said that under plane when the man pulled a
more than 50 promised safety abated, but the memory
because it is not doing the job."
Under a landmark federal the old system of education for .38 caliber pistol, walked on, the ticket was believed to be an
improvements to allow the lingers on.
Andrews said.
court decree ihat is expected to the retarded in special schools, and put the pistol to the head of alias.
stern wheeler passenger craft
The information that comes break down harriers for retard· 30 per cent of the state's
The GOP leader said the OEA
to continue to work the Ohio out of Cuba - at least that
endorsed Gov. John J. Gilligan
ed children in all states, the retarded children were living
and Mississippi rivers.
which reaches the United Commonwealth of Pennsylvania idle lives, receiving no educa·
WASHINGTON (UPI )- Sen. when he was a gubernatorial
Congress has granted the States
Is skimpy, will begin free education and lion or training.
Fred R. Harris said Ssturday candidate on a promise of $800
Delta Queen an exemption American agriculture men
that if he is elected President, million in new tax money.
training for aU retarded child·
from federal safety at sea laws say, but it appears the Cuban ren, not just those who adapt The old system allowed local
he will make the vice president
"Now in their frustration at
if certain protective measures outbreak of African swine comfortably to special . pro- school districts to decide which
a man of ureal importance" by being unable to get all they
were taken.
fever has been contained for grams now in operation. Many retarded children were edu~ata·
putting him in charge of a want, the OEA threatens the
The Coast Guard, in a report weeks now. Yet tbe fear that of the retarded children will bie and to exclude those
major government department. cruelist of all things - a strike
to Rep. William J. Keating, R· this first outbreak of the attend regular classes with deemed unfit.
The Oklahoma Democrat, an that would deny any education
SAIGON (UP!) -south Viet. besieged for more than a week
Cincinnati, said some of the disease in the' Western normal children.
A two-member hoard was namese Rangers and armor and relieved last Monday with announced candidate for his to the young people of this
promises that have not been Hemisphere would spread to
party's presidential nomination state," Andrews said.
The court decree was signed established to decide just how battled thousands of North heavy Communist losses.
kept included:
the United Slates bas brought by state officials Friday to get the new program going Vielllamese troops for more Military sources said a next year, said in an interview
Andrews said the educators
- To eliminate wood or use about some changes in U. S. · following a suit brought by the under guidelines laid down by
than eight hours Ssturday near battalion of Sooth Vietnamese that he would appoint his should turn lts in teres! from
fireproof paint on the exposed procedu,res at ports of eotry.
Pennsylvania Association ..fo~ . the court. .
a besieged firebase in south· Rangers, elements of the 3rd running mate.tohead whatever gaining record salary increases
wood in the boiler room.
Retarded Children (PARCI
eastern Cambodia. Military Armored Task J!'orce and cabinet department was best to educa tiona! reform.
- Add another emergency
"We hear a lot from the OEA
under the Fourteenth Amend· Under the court-ordered sys· sources said they killed 197 airborne reinforcements Iough! suited for the vice president's
exit from the boiler room.
"particular
talents."
about
the need for tax reform,"
ment's due process clause.
tern, the state education Communists with the aid of on the government side against
- Fireproof the dining room.
TWO KILLED
Harris, who is retiring from he said, "but we hear nothing
Mrs. Patricia Clapp of department is required to plan heavy allied air and artillery an estimated regirnenHbout
- Replace wooden galley MARYSVILLE, Ohio (UP!)
the
Senate to make his race, is about the need for educational
Pittsburgh, PARC chairman, an individualized program for strikes.
3,000 men-of the North Vietna.
doors with steel.
- Deibert Van Dale, 38, hailed the rUling by a three- each child after identifying and The battle broke out about mese 5th Division.
running on what he calls a reform.
- Add fire alarm and control Marysville and Russell Bowers,
"Over half of the young peojudge federal panel here as "a evaluating the retarded within three miles east ·of the Cam· The fighting there seemed to "populist" campaign, seeking
station and equipment.
34, Akron, were killed Ssturday landmark decision which we
the riext 90 days. Parents will bodian plantation l&lt;&gt;wn of Krek belie statements from South the support of a coalition of ple graduating from high school
Even if ali the promised irn· when their car skidded and
are informed will be the basis have the right to appeal the and within a mile Qf the Vietnamese commanders and women, blacks , Chicanos, do not go to college, yet they are
provements are completed, the slammed into n National Guard
for other similar civil action state's decision 0n a program perimeter of Camp Alpha, an official spokesmen who have American Indians, the rural forced by the educational
Coast Guard will not be satis· truck. The occupants of the
poor and workers. He . is a system to accept a college.
elsewhere in the country."
for their child.
ouUying base that had been (Continued on page 14 )
fled 'l}'ith the ship.
guard truck were not injured.
former chairman of the oriented curriculum thfonghout
Democratic National Com· their elementary and secondary
years,, he said.
mittee .
Money itself will not solve
education's problems in the 20th
Pennsylvania in
century, Andrews said, but the
whole system must be review·
. -Gilligsn threw a record $9.1 billion budget and an un.
with Republican legislative leaders - the kind of con·
Movies Highlight
By LEE LEONARD
ed.
precedented 1 to Bper cent personal income tax in front of the
slrucUve negotiating that produces' settlements. ·
"Unfortunately, our
MIDDLEPORT - Rotarian
legislature last March and told lawmakers: "The choice is
Any talks have been stilted and non.prnductive, with the
COLUMBUS (UP!) - During last year's election cam·
Charles Simons showed home· education system is basically
yours, you must decide." When they decided against it, he
governor leaving it up to the Republicans.
:~~~tgn, many political observers were wUUng to bet that the
taken movies of Pennsylvania the same as it was 100 years
failed to bargain or offer any counleriJroposals until prac·
Too Formal
ovinner of the gubernatorial race would be a one-term
camp facilities and scenic ago," he said. "It's time it was
Ucally foroed to do so by tbe Republican-eon trolled General
"In all the talks we've had, !don't think he's ever called me
places in the same state Friday brought into the 20th century.
10vernor.
Assembly.
anything but Mr. Speaker," said House Speaker Charles F.
"It's time the educators qqi\
Now tJU,y are sure of it.
night to members of the Mid·
Plan May Backfire
Kurfess, R·Bowling Green, whose friends call him "Chuck."
dleport-Pomeroy Rotary club at blaming their problems on the
- The governor, after accusing GOP legislators of hatching
"He'd do a lot better if he used a little honey and not so
Heath United Methodist taxpayers, and start clesnlng
Ohio Politics
their own tax propoeals "in Statehouse cloak rooms" without
much vinegar," said Senate President Pro Tempore Theo.
their own house," he said.
Church.
--~dore M. Gray, R-Piqua .
fair public hearings, produced and directed behind closed
The Rev . Simons, pastor of
Some feel the governor has his sights set on higher office,
doors a legislative reapportionment plan designed to purge
In shor~ the governor might be doing better by accepting
the First Baptist Church here, is
hut that's not the reason. The ''Goodby Gilligan" bumper
. the General Assembly of his foes and turn control over to his
half a loaf, and by avoiding actions which alienate members a native of Philadelphia.
KISSINGER'S PILOT
stickers have started to sprout, but that could happen to
friends in just one year .It may yet backfire.
·
of l)is own party,
President Charles
E.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Col.
anyone, Even an "income tax" label could be shed through
Even last week, he puilred some fuel on the fire by vetoing
Blakeslee presided following Ralph Albertazzie, President
proper pubUc relations.
bipartisan legislation to take control of the Emergency
"I never saw anybody deliberately try so hard to make old
tlie dinner served by ladies of Nixon's personal pilot, will fly
Board out of the hands of theexecutiy~ branch.
friends into new enemies,:' said one Democratic senator who
tl)e church.
presidential adviser Henry A.
The underlying reason for ascribing one-term status to
lli
1967,
Raymond
p·,
Shafer
was
inaugurated
governor
of
described the reapportionment p~n as ''political myopia ,
Kissinger to Peking later this
TWO MURDERED
Gov. John J. Gi!Ugsn observers· say, is that while nothing
Pennsylvania with control of one legislative chamber. He
There were even sortie who said Gilligan was trying to
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Ssn· month. Albertazzieis a native of
hils been accomplished during his nine months in office, he
proposed a I to 3 per cent income tax, the stale's first , and
· handpick next year's legislature to suit his own views by
dura Lee Janney, 26, and Paul West Virginia , and Nixon made
has taken the position of a man bobbing for .apples with his
wou)d not accept less.
tailoring districts for fresh Democratic faces at the expense
F. lannarino , 30·, both of the announcement to an,
mouth full.
_
Foilr years later there was no income lax, Shafer had des·
of incumbents.
· .
Columbus, were' found shot to audience at Elkins, W. va·.,
. They cite these ~o e~amples, and others, to back up the
If Gilligan apportionment tactics have been heavy-ha,nded
troyed constructive relationship with his party's legislative
death in her apartment Friday. The pilot told newsmen ·
view point tha_t the governor is slowly l!!'agg~ng himself
his tax-budget attitude could be described as aloof.
leaders, and he went back to being a private citizen. Similar
Ssturday, police . said. Police the presidential jeUiner will be
across an unbridgeable chasm, even from n\~mbers of his
handwriting is starting to appear on the walls or. the Ohio
The governor has n~er shown any desire to roil up his
said they were . questioni.ng a the first Air)ericon airplane in
i-n ru•rtv hv rP.aching for the moon:
.,....,•• •nd o@t' down to !ilformal face-tO-face bar2ainin11
Statehouse.
China since 1948.
susoeCt. · ·

'Goodbye Gilligan' Stickers.Showing in Ohio

•

�\

.'

'
"
"
FRENCH CITY BUILDERS SUPPLY

12-The SundayTil'lles·SenUnel,Sunday,Oct.IO, 1971

-~0~~~

{)'-'- \f\~

AI''''
.·:'

., ..

'

-~

.-.

'II~Jt
Y7J

J

Boa Constrictor

Part of
•

'

Becomes Pet

Highway
.

BIDWELL - Samuel Morris, proximately :;o foot-long infant
in another time and place, goas) is planned ·next year .
Already residing at the
should have become a wild
animal trainer or sliperin· Morris place in a variety of
cages and pens are pheasants,
tendent,of a wildlife refuge.
Since he is an employe of the coons, squirrels, groundhogs, a
Chris Craft plant in Gallipolis. fox, and several species of duck.
"I just like animals, I guess,"
he has settled for keeping a
of Morris said. In this he is joined
growing
assortment
American and African animals, by his family. "Joyce even
among them a young female 611.! helps me build their pens," he
said.
ft. long boa constrictor.
This boa is his second. The
Morris, who resides wit!J his
wife, the former Joyce Miller, ffrst was a male, but unable to
on an acre and a half of land in tame it satisfactorily, Morris
this rural community of Gallia sold him and the female was
County, has succeeded in ordered. It arrived about four
taming the boa . To breed her, months ago when only a
· he has ordered a male which "baby," costing $20. Morris
also will come from Africa . A orctered both boas through a
blessed boa event ( •P·. (Continued on page 14)

Enclosed

CELEBRATE
On October 17, 17~0 the old French City was
established. And now, in conjunction with this
founding
French City Builders Supply, located
on First Avenue in the old French City, are
celebrating their grand opening the week of
October 11th through the 16th, with a Founders

Day Sale, commemorating the 181st anniversary
of the old French City. There wi II be many prizes
along with special "discount prices; during the
grand opening and Founders Day celebration at ·
French City Builders Supply in Gallipolis.

•

BY REMOTE STUDIO• .

REG. PRICE

4x7
COLONIAL LUAN
PACESmER MEDIUM

4xl

3.88
54.99
'5.25
'5.20
5

ALMOND WOOD

4xl
CA_PEWOOD HAZELNUT

4x8

LODGEWOOD YOSEMITE
4xl LIONITE
WHITE GOLD FLECK

4xl

'6.30
'6.75

GOLDEN FLEECE

SAVE NOW
$ $

s

.,

Landmark School Decision

•439

Andrews

'4''
'4''

.:,=~:.'·~

.

CEILING TILE

•s••

Reg.

~:. ~:[ . ~;:~B~~an':~ w~!a~~~il~

Promises
Broken

FURRING STRIPS
..
AND
WHITE PINE
MOLDING
REDUCED!
,

Doors 0
Pen

Harris' Veep

Would Get New

Cabinet Power

U.S. Air Helps

Fend Off Enemy

lEVER OUT OF DATE·IARBAIIS!

LIGHT FIXTURES

Self Rim 33x22

ALL FIXTURES
ARE REDUCED!

NOW

STAINLESS STEEL:!o ... •24"
AVOCADO .... ~:.~s ........~~~. •1795
32x21

HERE ARE A FEW

EXAMPLES

32x21

GOLO.;~::s -~~~.•1795

HARVEST
WHITE. .."WAS
s2us
32xl1

.... ~~~.; '1595

APPLIANCES

Antique Brass

CHANDELIER ..... ~22 10
Brass

.

HALL LIGHT. ........ .$}99
Flourescent

FAVORS .

KITCHEN LIGHT....~ 80
Bedroom

FOR ALL THE FAMILY!

$2

LIGHT.:................... 21

by Waste· King Universal
Reg. 241.70

ELECTRIC RANGE ......... 519995
RANGE HOOD ................. $2995
•

Reg. 37.80

Reg. 242.75

.

DISHWASHER .................519995

''CASH AND CARR-Y.''

....-.-f~RENCH

CITY BUILDERS.._.....
-.......-------su
PPL
750 1st AVE.
'

·GALUPO.LIS. OHIO

Attacks

Teachers

S.n

GOLDEN WEB ....................~~: 261hc 21 Y2~
PLAIN WHITE ....................~.~: 15¥2' 12Y2~

MATCHING PREFINISHED TRIM, NAILS,
PUnY STICKS AND
ADHESIVE AT SALE
PRICES I

SINKS

•

etliner
0 Detroit Field

•3••

'5''
CASH &amp; CARRY SPECIALS

PARKWAY BIRCH
,.

•

•277

4xl

4xJ

10 Sheets-Colonial Walnut Paneling
Black &amp; Decker Jig Saw
Disposal
Chandelier
s gal. Dutch Standard Exterior
Latex or Oil
S-1 gal. Prizes Dutch Standard Wall
Charm Interior Latex
1 Mystery Prize
Drawing-4:00 p.m. Saturday, Oct.
16, 1971
Do not ·have to be present to win.

SALE PRICE

•2••

Tro ubie

DOOR PRIZES!

I

•

DESCRIPTION

UN m

HAVE ABRAID OlD TilE·

W.J.E.H. WILL BROADCAST
FROM HERE 5 DAYS 11:00 TO 11a30
'

ADDISON - What may first
appear to be a major land
dispute to fhe ordinar7
passerby here Is not that at all.
Local residents and passing
motorists have become curious
over the. recent erection of a
cable around a square lot which
encloses the little and old Ad·
dlson Post Office Building.
For 19 years Mrs. Freda
NO FREE RANGE HERE - Out West free range Is
Henson, Addison postmaster, .- - - - - - - - where you find it which is about everywhere. But in Gallia
operated her fourth class ' post
office in the little building prior
County, even all ,the highways aren't public domain where a
to retiring three months ago.
part of the Bulsville-Addison rosd has been fenced off by its
She sold the building and land to
new owner, Mrs. Vivian Taylor .
Mrs. Vivian Taylor, owner of a
·
lot and trailer home nearby.
Mrs. Taylor, through her
Attorney Warren F. Sheets,
asked the Ohio Dep~rtment of WASHINGTON (UP!)~
Highways and Gallla County Secretary of State William P.
Highway Department to ROllerS has cautioned foreign
determine the exact boundaries ministers that the United States
of her purchase: According to might be forced by Congress to . _:;,VO::.:L=-._:;,VIc__N....:O..;..
• ..:..37'---_ _ _ _ _ _S_U_N_DA_Y..;.,,_O_CT_O_BE_R_l_O.;,..,_19_7_l_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ PA_G_E_l..:_3
the legal descnption, 11 was reduce its financial con.
learned the property extended lributions to the United Nations
onto the .pavement that ~as if Nationalist China is expelled,
formerly a part of the Bulavllle· state Department officials
Addison Rd .
acknowledged Sallldday.
According to the deed, the The officials emphasized that
property calls for 108.6 feet Rotleril, in private conversa·
frontage along and toward the lions in the past week at New
center of Rt. 7.
York, did not raise the
The lot has been surveyed by possibility as a threat but rather
both the county and state high- as a congressional problem
way depa~tments. As 1t turns facing the administration.
out, Mrs. Taylor, by cabling off General Assembly debate
the land, is just reclaiming what starlsOci. IBon the China issue.
righUy belo~g~ to her.
.
ROllers is lobbying for votes for
In explammg the umque an American resolution
situation, Mrs. Henson said the proposed to seat conununisl :;:,:::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:,:;:;:;:,:;:,:::;:::::;:::::;:::::l:::: DETROIT (UPI)-A ''very
the stewardess. The gurunan
BOA CONSTRICTOR, 6'h feet long, is the pet of Samuel
county highway department China and give it.a seat on the
nervous" hijacker put a cocked ordered the captain to fly Morris of Bidwell. This one will give birth to approximately
first graveled its road in front of security Council, while
pistol to the head of a frightened directly to Havana.
:;o foot-long baby boas next spring.
the Post Office, then eventually retaining General assembly
stewardess Sstuday and or- The flight was Eastern's 953,
blacktopped the area. She did membership for the Nationalist
CLEVELAND (UPI) - MarUn Essex, slate
dered an Eastern Airlines jet which had been scheduled to go
not object to the county's ac- regime on Taiwan.
superinteodenl of schools, said Sstarday the decision by
with 46 persons on board flown to Miami and San Juan, P.R.
tions on her property because it Rogers was reported to have
Protection of
·and carried a crew of seven.
a tlu:ee-judge federal paoel in PeDD8ylvaDia ordering
to Havana.
served as a good parking area called attention to a growing
Lucas said the hijacker ap·
II was the second time the
that slate Co provide free pubUc educaUonto all mentally
for post office patrons.
feel!ng in Congress that U.S.
Mines Obtained
·.. re1Brded chllclren Is a "landmark decision of great ··:· pilot, Capt. William E. Buch- peared "to be very nervous, and
The new post office, now moral and financial support for
so we decided to follow his in.
NEW PHILADELPHIA,
occupied by John Lee, another the United Nations should be
coosequenee."
structions."
Ohio
(UPI) - Teo owners of
"I mull study tbe decisioo, bot II would appear that
of an Eastern Electra prop-jet
nearby neighbor, is a mobile "r.-amined" if the Nation&amp;·
The
plane,
a
Boeing
727,
left
non-union
strip
mine
home. It is Ioicated just a few llstsareexpelled,asprovidedin .. it will result In a massive reorganlzaUon in the concept
Detroit Metropolitan Airport at operations In this area late
~.l.~
of
services
to
tbe
mentally
retarded,"
Ellses
said.
~
.
!
.
:
·
:
.
·
that
was
hijacked
to
Havana
in
feet from the old one .
a resolution sponsored by
July, 1967 - the second U. S. 10:34 a.m., EDT with the
8
Mrs. Taylor says a new Communist Alabania.
@
He said he e:q~ected a group lo file slmllarsult In :::: plane ever ordered to the gunman sealed outside the Friday obtained ao Injunction
permanent fence has been State Department officials ,.,. Oblo or tbe legislature could revise tbe present pubUc ,, Cari~B!l island.
• ,: • 1• cockpit, holding the g1111 tu·,th!l . to prohibit "any furtber
or~e&lt;l. and will be installed said they expected )he china !~
school code In accordance wl'lt tbe,1'111lDJ. ~t P,Rient in j;!; saturday's hijacker gave stewardess' head. The Fel!eral haralsment"·at the mines by
around the lot. The fence not vote to be ''very, very, very ;:;:: Oblo, cbildren with tbe IQ's oluader SG are provided free ~; Eastern ticket clerks the name Aeronuatics Administration members of the United Mine
only will set off the lot but will close."
!;l edueaUm in scbooluu by county boards of retardation 'i!l "R. Johnson," similar to an said the plane landed in Havana Workers Union.
COLUMBUS ( UPI )-The
Several of the mines were
also serve as a protective shield As many as 30 of the United :~\ which are affiliated with the stale board of mental :;!l alias that psychologist Barbara at I :23 p.m. EDT.
Ohio Education Association's
subjected to vandalism last
for the new trailer ho!l)es Nations' 131 member natiOil!l :;;;: bygiene, not the state school board, Essex said.
:~\ Pllskow used in an attempt to
threat to call a statewide
An Eastern spokesman said
behind It.
have yet to decide how they will .it.;-;·:·;~·;.:·:·:·:-:·:~·=~·:::::·:·:::·:::·:·:·:~·:·::;;;;:::::::::~=:•:::::;:;:;:;:;;;;;:::•::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::·::::::•:=:•:=:•:t~· hijack anot~r airliner from the name of the stewardess was week shortly after tbe UMW teacher strike is an attempt "to
·........ " .... · · .. · .. · ........... · ........ .. .. ·· .. · .... · .. ... ... · · here two weeks ago,
struck the nation's soft coal blackmail the Ohio legislature
vote, officials said.
not immediately known.
Industry at midnight Sept. 30.
Rogers has met 69 foreign
into enacting unreasonable
The man had fit the
The
mine workers are also
ministers attemding the
psychological profile of a
The hijacker was described asking for $250,000 In taxes, " Republican State
General Assembly and plans to
Chairman JohnS. Andrews said
potential hijacker and was as a white man, age 'l:l to 29, 6- damages.
confer with about 20 more next
Friday night.
about to be stopped for further foot-1, weighing 200 pounds.
week.
Andrews, who addressed the
identification when he pulled
The gunman had not had a
Ohio Federation of Republican
the gun, an Eastern spokesman
Women's Organizations, said
reservation on the flight, but
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Gov. Milton J. Shapp said the said.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
purchased
a
ticket
at
the
airport
such a statewide walkout would
The door to a fuller life through decision will · "end the ware·
Wayne County Sheriff Wil·
U.S. Coast Guard has reported
WASHINGTON (UP!) public education has swung housing of the mentally retard· liam Lucas said 39 of a planned shorUy before takeoff, Lucas
backfire.
that the owners of the Delta The African swine fever
"The people of Ohio are upset
90 passengers had boarded the said.
open for Pennsylvania's 100,000 ed in institutions."
Queen did not complete 15 of fright of 1971 has largely retarded children.
Lucas said the name listed on
with the education system
The governor said that under plane when the man pulled a
more than 50 promised safety abated, but the memory
because it is not doing the job."
Under a landmark federal the old system of education for .38 caliber pistol, walked on, the ticket was believed to be an
improvements to allow the lingers on.
Andrews said.
court decree ihat is expected to the retarded in special schools, and put the pistol to the head of alias.
stern wheeler passenger craft
The information that comes break down harriers for retard· 30 per cent of the state's
The GOP leader said the OEA
to continue to work the Ohio out of Cuba - at least that
endorsed Gov. John J. Gilligan
ed children in all states, the retarded children were living
and Mississippi rivers.
which reaches the United Commonwealth of Pennsylvania idle lives, receiving no educa·
WASHINGTON (UPI )- Sen. when he was a gubernatorial
Congress has granted the States
Is skimpy, will begin free education and lion or training.
Fred R. Harris said Ssturday candidate on a promise of $800
Delta Queen an exemption American agriculture men
that if he is elected President, million in new tax money.
training for aU retarded child·
from federal safety at sea laws say, but it appears the Cuban ren, not just those who adapt The old system allowed local
he will make the vice president
"Now in their frustration at
if certain protective measures outbreak of African swine comfortably to special . pro- school districts to decide which
a man of ureal importance" by being unable to get all they
were taken.
fever has been contained for grams now in operation. Many retarded children were edu~ata·
putting him in charge of a want, the OEA threatens the
The Coast Guard, in a report weeks now. Yet tbe fear that of the retarded children will bie and to exclude those
major government department. cruelist of all things - a strike
to Rep. William J. Keating, R· this first outbreak of the attend regular classes with deemed unfit.
The Oklahoma Democrat, an that would deny any education
SAIGON (UP!) -south Viet. besieged for more than a week
Cincinnati, said some of the disease in the' Western normal children.
A two-member hoard was namese Rangers and armor and relieved last Monday with announced candidate for his to the young people of this
promises that have not been Hemisphere would spread to
party's presidential nomination state," Andrews said.
The court decree was signed established to decide just how battled thousands of North heavy Communist losses.
kept included:
the United Slates bas brought by state officials Friday to get the new program going Vielllamese troops for more Military sources said a next year, said in an interview
Andrews said the educators
- To eliminate wood or use about some changes in U. S. · following a suit brought by the under guidelines laid down by
than eight hours Ssturday near battalion of Sooth Vietnamese that he would appoint his should turn lts in teres! from
fireproof paint on the exposed procedu,res at ports of eotry.
Pennsylvania Association ..fo~ . the court. .
a besieged firebase in south· Rangers, elements of the 3rd running mate.tohead whatever gaining record salary increases
wood in the boiler room.
Retarded Children (PARCI
eastern Cambodia. Military Armored Task J!'orce and cabinet department was best to educa tiona! reform.
- Add another emergency
"We hear a lot from the OEA
under the Fourteenth Amend· Under the court-ordered sys· sources said they killed 197 airborne reinforcements Iough! suited for the vice president's
exit from the boiler room.
"particular
talents."
about
the need for tax reform,"
ment's due process clause.
tern, the state education Communists with the aid of on the government side against
- Fireproof the dining room.
TWO KILLED
Harris, who is retiring from he said, "but we hear nothing
Mrs. Patricia Clapp of department is required to plan heavy allied air and artillery an estimated regirnenHbout
- Replace wooden galley MARYSVILLE, Ohio (UP!)
the
Senate to make his race, is about the need for educational
Pittsburgh, PARC chairman, an individualized program for strikes.
3,000 men-of the North Vietna.
doors with steel.
- Deibert Van Dale, 38, hailed the rUling by a three- each child after identifying and The battle broke out about mese 5th Division.
running on what he calls a reform.
- Add fire alarm and control Marysville and Russell Bowers,
"Over half of the young peojudge federal panel here as "a evaluating the retarded within three miles east ·of the Cam· The fighting there seemed to "populist" campaign, seeking
station and equipment.
34, Akron, were killed Ssturday landmark decision which we
the riext 90 days. Parents will bodian plantation l&lt;&gt;wn of Krek belie statements from South the support of a coalition of ple graduating from high school
Even if ali the promised irn· when their car skidded and
are informed will be the basis have the right to appeal the and within a mile Qf the Vietnamese commanders and women, blacks , Chicanos, do not go to college, yet they are
provements are completed, the slammed into n National Guard
for other similar civil action state's decision 0n a program perimeter of Camp Alpha, an official spokesmen who have American Indians, the rural forced by the educational
Coast Guard will not be satis· truck. The occupants of the
poor and workers. He . is a system to accept a college.
elsewhere in the country."
for their child.
ouUying base that had been (Continued on page 14 )
fled 'l}'ith the ship.
guard truck were not injured.
former chairman of the oriented curriculum thfonghout
Democratic National Com· their elementary and secondary
years,, he said.
mittee .
Money itself will not solve
education's problems in the 20th
Pennsylvania in
century, Andrews said, but the
whole system must be review·
. -Gilligsn threw a record $9.1 billion budget and an un.
with Republican legislative leaders - the kind of con·
Movies Highlight
By LEE LEONARD
ed.
precedented 1 to Bper cent personal income tax in front of the
slrucUve negotiating that produces' settlements. ·
"Unfortunately, our
MIDDLEPORT - Rotarian
legislature last March and told lawmakers: "The choice is
Any talks have been stilted and non.prnductive, with the
COLUMBUS (UP!) - During last year's election cam·
Charles Simons showed home· education system is basically
yours, you must decide." When they decided against it, he
governor leaving it up to the Republicans.
:~~~tgn, many political observers were wUUng to bet that the
taken movies of Pennsylvania the same as it was 100 years
failed to bargain or offer any counleriJroposals until prac·
Too Formal
ovinner of the gubernatorial race would be a one-term
camp facilities and scenic ago," he said. "It's time it was
Ucally foroed to do so by tbe Republican-eon trolled General
"In all the talks we've had, !don't think he's ever called me
places in the same state Friday brought into the 20th century.
10vernor.
Assembly.
anything but Mr. Speaker," said House Speaker Charles F.
"It's time the educators qqi\
Now tJU,y are sure of it.
night to members of the Mid·
Plan May Backfire
Kurfess, R·Bowling Green, whose friends call him "Chuck."
dleport-Pomeroy Rotary club at blaming their problems on the
- The governor, after accusing GOP legislators of hatching
"He'd do a lot better if he used a little honey and not so
Heath United Methodist taxpayers, and start clesnlng
Ohio Politics
their own tax propoeals "in Statehouse cloak rooms" without
much vinegar," said Senate President Pro Tempore Theo.
their own house," he said.
Church.
--~dore M. Gray, R-Piqua .
fair public hearings, produced and directed behind closed
The Rev . Simons, pastor of
Some feel the governor has his sights set on higher office,
doors a legislative reapportionment plan designed to purge
In shor~ the governor might be doing better by accepting
the First Baptist Church here, is
hut that's not the reason. The ''Goodby Gilligan" bumper
. the General Assembly of his foes and turn control over to his
half a loaf, and by avoiding actions which alienate members a native of Philadelphia.
KISSINGER'S PILOT
stickers have started to sprout, but that could happen to
friends in just one year .It may yet backfire.
·
of l)is own party,
President Charles
E.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Col.
anyone, Even an "income tax" label could be shed through
Even last week, he puilred some fuel on the fire by vetoing
Blakeslee presided following Ralph Albertazzie, President
proper pubUc relations.
bipartisan legislation to take control of the Emergency
"I never saw anybody deliberately try so hard to make old
tlie dinner served by ladies of Nixon's personal pilot, will fly
Board out of the hands of theexecutiy~ branch.
friends into new enemies,:' said one Democratic senator who
tl)e church.
presidential adviser Henry A.
The underlying reason for ascribing one-term status to
lli
1967,
Raymond
p·,
Shafer
was
inaugurated
governor
of
described the reapportionment p~n as ''political myopia ,
Kissinger to Peking later this
TWO MURDERED
Gov. John J. Gi!Ugsn observers· say, is that while nothing
Pennsylvania with control of one legislative chamber. He
There were even sortie who said Gilligan was trying to
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Ssn· month. Albertazzieis a native of
hils been accomplished during his nine months in office, he
proposed a I to 3 per cent income tax, the stale's first , and
· handpick next year's legislature to suit his own views by
dura Lee Janney, 26, and Paul West Virginia , and Nixon made
has taken the position of a man bobbing for .apples with his
wou)d not accept less.
tailoring districts for fresh Democratic faces at the expense
F. lannarino , 30·, both of the announcement to an,
mouth full.
_
Foilr years later there was no income lax, Shafer had des·
of incumbents.
· .
Columbus, were' found shot to audience at Elkins, W. va·.,
. They cite these ~o e~amples, and others, to back up the
If Gilligan apportionment tactics have been heavy-ha,nded
troyed constructive relationship with his party's legislative
death in her apartment Friday. The pilot told newsmen ·
view point tha_t the governor is slowly l!!'agg~ng himself
his tax-budget attitude could be described as aloof.
leaders, and he went back to being a private citizen. Similar
Ssturday, police . said. Police the presidential jeUiner will be
across an unbridgeable chasm, even from n\~mbers of his
handwriting is starting to appear on the walls or. the Ohio
The governor has n~er shown any desire to roil up his
said they were . questioni.ng a the first Air)ericon airplane in
i-n ru•rtv hv rP.aching for the moon:
.,....,•• •nd o@t' down to !ilformal face-tO-face bar2ainin11
Statehouse.
China since 1948.
susoeCt. · ·

'Goodbye Gilligan' Stickers.Showing in Ohio

•

�'..

,,

'
15-TheSundayTirne.J -Sentlnei,Sundlly,Oct.
1Q, 1~1

,

-U.S. Air
(Continued from page 13 )

'

repeatedly said the Communists were beaten and
pulling back from the general
area around Krek and northern
Tay Ninh province, 50 to 85
miles northwest of Saigon.
A . Communist offensive
launched Sept. 25 in that area
thus passed into its third week
. apparently unabated.
Near Saigon, a U.S. Army
staff sergeant who returned
from capuvity Friday after two
years as a Viet Cong prisoner
sat •down at a table in the 24th
Evacuation H!Xlpital at U.S.
ArmY headquarters and ordered hamburgers and ice
cream, spokesmen said.
The sergeant, John C. Sexton
Jr., 23, also called his parents in
Warren, Mich., and ordered up
a "Chris1mas dinner with the
works-sweet potawes, baked
beans, turkey, ham," his father
told newsmen.
But it may be a while before
Sextoo gets away frmm h(Xlpitals. Capt. Robert W. Reed, of
Nampa, Ida., the Army doctor
who is treating him here ,
reported Sexton has lost 50
pounds, suffers from mild
malaria and moderate anemia,
and had his right eye injured
and his right elbow immobilized, possibly by multiple
shrapnel wounds he suffered
during the battle in which he
was captured.

Constrictor
(Continued from page 13)
West Virginia importing house
specializing in such exotic
products.
Two more giant snakes are on
order through the same agency.
One is the male boa, the other a
python which when grown will
be at least 20 feet long . It will
cost $75 .
Morris' boa , though friendly
to him, is not if teased or
bothered by strangers. Not
poisonous, the boa may strike at
a stranger's hand meant to
fondle 'her.
She is fed a rat or a bird about
every 10 days. First the boa
squeezes her dinner to kill it,
then swallows it whole as does
others of her kind in the world's
zoos and wilds of Africa.
Mr . and Mrs. Morris have two
children, a daughter, Senita,
age 4, and a son, Samuel Jr.,
about three weeks.

PROBE DEATH
WNE OAK, Tex. (UP! ) Authorities Saturday were
investigating the death of
Murray Wall, 45, former Boston
Red Sox and Dallas baseball
pitcher, w~o was found dead in ,
a pickup .truck near Lone Oak
Fhrodhay dwtth a bullet wound 10 ·
15
ea ·
·
COMMANDER NAMED
DAYTON , Ohio (UP!) Robert H. Emmons, Cincinnati,
was elected Grand Commander
of the Knights Templar of Ohio
at its annual convention here
this weekend. Enunons succeeds George W. Davidson of
Bellefontaine as head of Ute
organization.

• COLLISION KillS 7
MANILA (UP!) - Six
American women and their
Filipino driver were killed
Friday when a giant U.S. Nayy
truck rolleq onto their small bus
just outside the Subic Bay
Naval Base. The six Americans
all were dependents of U. S. Air
ODDS ARE 3-1
Force personnel stationed at
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!) - Klark Air Force Base 50 miles
The oods against the Baltimore
north of Manila.
Orioles winning the next three
World Series games ~re 3-1, HILL ON WAIVERS
according to line-maker Jimmy
CHICAGO (UP! ) - Sirnmie
"The Greek" Snyder.
Hill, the Chicago Bulls No. 2
The Orioles have won 15 draft choice in 1969, was placed
straight games, the final II of on waivers Friday by the
the American League season, a National Basketball Association
three game playoff sweep of the team . Hill , a forward, had
Oakland A's and Saturday's 5-3 signed as a free agent with the
triumph in the series opener
Bulls.
against Pittsburgh.

Record Fourth Tim~

Tuppers Plains
Society News

vantage to four-up with a
magnificent outward half of 32
- four under par.
Nicklaus' hopes had virtually
gone and when he badly sliced
his drive at the 29th hole to
allow Player to go further
ahead, that was the last nail in
his coffin. He pulled one hole
back with a birdie low- at the
30th but then meekly surrendered his title by three-putting
at the par three 32nd.
Player collected first place
money of $20,400 and N1cklaus
$10,800.

207 PRIZES •$1,000 ~~~~~
$100 5 MORE PRIZES
$500 SECOND
PRIZO
(ALL ABOVE PRIZES

~%'1$-0CTOBE·R
ntr

It*

ti:

Ill

Iii

a

4

your favorite team.

16

THRU

.

••

_ _.,..,..

...

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY; JUST COME IN, OR
WRITE IN, TO REGISTER DURING HARVEST OF
VALUES AT LANDMARK.

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING AT LANDMARK

Celebrate your
happiness with
the · of love.

..

'

COMPARE! MORE FOR YOUR MONEY
ALWAYS
AT LANDMARK

AL East

lhDir fnl'mm· hmn.1• hl'rf&gt; In llw h·

BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
( UPI )...:Toledo punched over
two touchdowns in the second
quarter and stopped five
Bowling Green last half drivers
to get a 24-7 Mid-American
Conference victory Saturday
which extended the Rockets'
win streak to 28, longest in the
nation.
....
A MAC record crowd of 26,
8liO packed the stands :o watch

warm,beautiful
Stadium Blankets to keep you cozy white you watch

~i

I

I

Diamonds
by ArtCarved.

•

15 cu. ft. SIDE-BY·SIOE

Arom antic way lo pay
tribute to your growing ·
love Is to exchange

COMBINATION
20 CU. FT.
UPRIGHT
SPECIAL

at EST

at EST

$24995 $269
Reg. $309

AriCarved diamond-set
wedding rings.

The Unico Duplex 15 is really two appliances
in one cabinet-a lrostless refngerator With a
8.6 cu. ft. capacity and a frostless freezer of
6.4 cu. ft. size that will hold 225 po~nds. Each
section has own door and separate m~ulatton .
Elegant design. , features galore. AdJustable
shelves, glideout crisper, door storage. Also '"
17 19 and 22 cu. ft. Colors: white, coppertone
and avOcado at slightly higher cost. 121-&lt;ll54).
15 cu. ft. available
in white only.

28 Fr.

23 Fr.

REGULARLY $325.00

Come In and choose your
g1ft of love today.

~Carved

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

465°
APPLIANCES .

95

0

5

UNICO

422 Second Ave.
Phone 446-1615
G1tti'potis

ARE PROTECI'ED

BY

WE DELIVER! WE SERVICE!
WE FINANCE!

the battle of the unbeaten between northwestern Ohio archrivals.
After a scoreless opening quarter, Ron Roberts blocked a
Bowling Green punt and John
Saunders ran with the ball into
Ute end zone untouched. Several
minutes later Chuck Ealey ran
27 yards, passed for 13 and 6
yards, and then sneaked over
the goal line for the lasy yard

WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (UP! )
-Quarterback Bernie Galiffa
came off the bench Saturday to
spark West Virginia to a 21point fow-th quarter and a 28-23
victory over William &amp; Mary .
Galilfa , who set out the first
half with a sprained wrist, hit
tight end Nate Stephen~ with a
64-yard touchdown pass with
two minutes and 22 seconds left
in the game to propel the
Mountaineers ahead of the fired
-up William &amp; Mary team that
had led 21-7 at the start of the
fow-th quarter .
Fullback Pete Wood slammed
in for West Virginia touchdowns
of four and six yards and
speedster Kerry Marbury
scored another on a two-yard
run . Frank Nester kicked two
extra points for West Virginia
and Galilfa hit Wood with a

RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande College Redmen Cross
Country team travels to Richmond, Ind. Tuesday for the

WRANGLER~~
DAYf!A
SPfCIAL

$255
Here's a bad weather
tire that gives you the
extra traction for peace
of mind all winter. It has

REG. $279

$159
.

BLUE DENIMS
with the new show-off zipper

REG.

"'

t al l 'em the
jeans for now
because they
boast the show·
off zipper, patch
pockets and
flare legs ...
the newest look
in men's casual
fashions. In easy·
washing blue
cotton denim.
Sizes 30-36 ...

the dlg . Jn' to keep you

goIng when ordinary
snow tires spin and slip

... thanks to a broad.
special ·deslgn tread
that puts more biting

and gripping edges on

the road. The extra
bonuses
are
quiet
runn ing, long wear and

i

soft ride. They're lull

I

four
piles,
white
sidewall or black.

Special

$7

Special
G70-14 Whitewall
Reg. 29. 10
G70-15 Whitewall
Reg . 27.95
G70-14 Blackwall
l~e g . 2-7 .65
G70-l5 Blac kwall

·- fl e~ . ?fi. 30

1

Special

9

$399

?.iularly $9.45
.

· Resularly $4.99

lARGEST
IN .THE AREA .
WINDBREAKERS
VESTS • JACKETS

In blue, olive drab, ?rc&gt;fl~!~·· ·
brown and black; sizes
All sizes In Blq Yank Jeans "
medium,- large and
in bell botto . and flares. come in ind b~owse around
(36 to 50)
Come and c · for yourself. at Landmark. You are

specials!
6.00 /6.50!13
Regularly $22.60
Plu ; 1..76 F.E.T.

'

Sunday's second game here, lo~ contribution to the Qri~!~~ '
example, Rettenmund doesn't
"I just look lor the ball, try to
expect to be playing. He in- hit it somewhere around the
variably makes li~ht of his Own ballpark and get on for Frank,
Boog and Ute rest of the !elias,"
he says.
He's not trying to be coy cr
modest. He means it. That's the
kind of ballplayer Merv Rettenmund ·is.

Sooners In

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
.

Browns Expect

FILMS TO BE SHOWN
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
fltm of tbe Eastem-Kyger
Creek game will be shown
Tuesday night at Eastern
Hlgb School at 8 p.m. The
public is invited to attend.
Refreshments wiD he served.
.,.,.,."".,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,
...
'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·' ······························

Upset Over
,."' "' · .- ·.- ·. T
48 27

75
$24
$2375
$ 50
23 Plus
$2235

Plus 2.72 F.E.T.
Plus 2.84 F.E.T.
2.72 F.E.T.

Plus 2.84 F.E.T.

.

~

... --

-

NEW

WORK CliJTHES.
AND
FOOTWEAR

·PO.MEROY LANDMARK.
· JACK W. CAifSEYI MANAGER
'

.

.,

PH. 992-2181

Serving Meigs, Galli a and Mason Counties
Store Qpen Mon.-Sat. Tii6-·Siation Open 24 Hours
'

Tough Battle
With Steelers
PITTSBURGH (UP! )
Pittsburgh head Coach Chuck
Noll believes "the team whicn
gets the best of it' physically "
.should win Sunday's game be·
tween his",i:'Sieelers and
Cleveland Brqwns .
The usually\ placid Noll has
been grouch\• and more
talkative as his team went
through drills for today 's battle
for sole possession of first place
in the Central Division of the
National League 's American
conference.
"I think it is going to be a real
good, hard hitting football
game, as the Browns appear to
be a physically tougher team
than they were last year," Noll
said.
"We also consider ourselves
that type of team and I think the
outcome will boil down to this the team which gets the best of
it physically should win ," he
said.
·
Pittsburgh completed its
drills with a light workout
Saturday morning and flew to
Cleveland Saturday.

•
yard scamper by Hare and a 26 halfback Gr g Pruitt, who on runs of 5 and 44 yards .. Jim
-yard . field goal by Fred scored three times and fled for Bertelsen got two more Texas
214 yards, offset the brute touchdowns on runs of 3 and 15
Schram.
The Illini, struggling fQr streng th of Texas Saturday in yards in the second half.
Quarterback Eddie Phillips,
respectability, refused to quit carrying the seventh-ranked
against Ohio, which is now 2-0 Sooners to a racehorse 48-27 still not at full strength because
in the Big Ten.
upset over the third-rated of a pulled hamstring muscle,
With eight minutes left, the Longhorns.
came in to replace the injured
Illini, who twice earlier had
Pruitt's dashes in the first Wigginton during the second
been inside the OSU 5 only to half put Oklahoma in command half, but his try at an aerial
see their drive stall, finally and gave them enough attack was consistently spoiled
cracked across when Mike momentum to survive a second by fumbleitis.
The victory left Oklahoma
Navarro-a junior fullback and half sinking spell and give the
the Illinois leading rusher- sooners their first win over with a 4-0 record and set the
of what proved to be the de- faltered on the 17, when held, went in from one yard out.
Texas in five years.
Sooners up for a showdown with
ciding touchdown .
and one on the 20, when fumbled
The Oklahoma junior scored Big Eight foe Colorado next
George Keirn, who added To- Ute ball away.
on runs of 1, 4and 20 yards while week. Texas fell to a 3-1 mark
ledo's extra points, kicked a 29
A Bowling Green pass interSooner quarterback Jack and must fa ce old rival
yard field goal in the third per- ception set the stage for Toledo
Mildren tallied twice from Arkansas next Saturday in
iod, following recovery of a Joe Schwartz to go the final
CHARWTIE, N. C. (UP!) - seven and one yards out and Little Rock .
Bowling Green fumble on its 9. five yards for a touchdown with Frank Forhling took two halfback Roy Bell scored once
Oklahoma gained 433 rushing
The host Falcons finally got 26 seconds left in the game. straight games today to win the on a three-yard run.
against Texas' usually stingy
on the scoreboard by driving Lamport passed four times with second continued singles match
Place kicker John Ca~roll defense, and after Texas' early
68 yards in 12 plays, with Reid out success as the game ended. 3-6, 1-6, 6-1, 6-3 and 8-6 from chipped in three pointers of 26 burst the Sooners effectively
Lamport going the final yard. · Toledo is 5-0 for the season, Romanian Ion Tiriac and gave and 27 yards to run up the shut down the Longhorns '
Two other Bowling Green drives including two league wins.
the Americans a 2-0 lead in the largest scoring total against the version of the wishbone-T triple Tigers· Pin 6-0
best of five series in the Davis Longhorns since the Sooners option attack. It was the most
·w &amp; M c u p challenge competition.
beat Texas 49-20 in 1952.
ground yardage ever gained in Loss On Denison
Tiriac and !lie Nastase were
The Longhorns stayed in the a single game against the
scheduled to team against Stan horse race with Oklahoma for Longhorns.
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (UP! )
Smith and Erik Van Dillen of
- Quarterback Mike Dean ran
pass for a two-point scoring the fourth period and then San Mateo, Calif., in the doubles
five yards for a first-quarter
play after one touchdown .
passed to Wood for a two- match following an exhibition
touchdown as Wittenberg
pointer to make the scor~ 21-15. event.
stopped Denison fH1 Saturday
Quarter back Steve Regan,
Galiffa struck again wilh 4:27 Under rules of the comand slowed the Ohio Conference
coming up with the big plays left · in the game, hitting petition, the Romanian team
rushing leaders.
when the Indians needed them, Stephens with a long pass and could wait two hours after the
The Tigers held Denison's Bill
sent running back Dennis then sending Wood in from the completion of the singles match
Harris to 62 yards and teamCambal in for two of William &amp; seven. Nester's try for the to begin the doubles.
mate Ed Exler to 50. They were
Mary's touchdawns · and full- extra. point was . blocked, the Froehling started the 13th
one-two in the conference in
back Phil Mosser lor the'Oilier' • game' was tlect at 21-all.
game with service and had a 30.
rushing and Harris had been
Mike Dodds kicked three extra
But Galiffa found Stephens 0 lead before Tiriac could make
ranked sixth in the nation.
points. The Indians got their alone on the left sideline and a point. Then Tiriac gave up the
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande College's Ken
Harris and Exler a~counted
other score on a safety in the hit him with a long pass. game when he hit the net on an
Sanders, Jack Finch and Bruce Melton finished
for 112 or their team's 135
final minute of the game .
Stephens raced into the end extended volley.
ground game .
in a dead heat tie for first Saturday to upset the
It looked like William &amp; zone untouched for a 64-yard
University of Louisville 33-22 in a dual cross
Mary-which had been unbeat- touchdown play.
SATURDAY'S COLLEGE
Steelers Activate
country meet.
en in four games-was going to
William &amp; Mary exploded for
FOOTBALL RESULTS
Their time was 21:24, a shade off the course
p~ll off an upset until Galiffa two touchdowns in the third By Unlted Press International
came into the game at the end period after battling the Harvard 21 Columbia 19
record held by Sanders for the four mile race.
Guard For Contest
Holy
Cross
24
Colgate
I4
of the third quarter . He quickly Mountaineers to a 7-7 tie at the
Also placing for Rio were Stacey Osborne,
got the Mountaineers on the half. Mosser scored from the Dar1mouth 19 Penn 3
PITTSBURGH (UP!) - The
seventh, in 22:59, and Dennis Kirk, ninth, in
move, aided by a 65-yard punt six in the first period for the Penn St. 42 Army 0
Pittsburgh Steelers Saturday
23:22.
return by Leon Jenkins.
Indians and Cambal went over Yale 17 Brown 10
injured guard Bruce
activated
The victory, a shocker to the Kentucky team,
Galiffa then sent Marbury in on a pair of two-yard runs in Lehigh 35 Rutgers 14
Van Dyke and announced he
was the second straight dual win in as many
Boston Coli. 23 Villanova 7
from the two with 12:49 left in the third period.
would start Sunday against the
outings for Rio Grande.
Pittsburgh 36 Navy 35
Cleveland Browns in Cleveland.
Next track event here will be the Rio Grande
W. Va. 28 Wm. &amp; Mary 23
Van Dyke missed the last two
Clemson 3 Duke 0
College Invitational cross country meet when
games because of a pulled
Tenn. 10 Ga. Tech 6
athletes from six colleges and 34 high schools
hamstring muscle . The Steelers
Syracuse 21 Maryland 13
waved injured running hack
compete.
Tulane 37 North Carolina 29
Rocky Bleier to make room for
Cornell 19 Princeton 8
Van Dyke, Bleier pulled a groin
Wash. &amp; Jeff. 35 John Car. 30 muscle in practice Wednesday.
Wesleyan 35 Coast Guard 34 "' Auburn 27 So. Miss. 14
Grove City 21 Thiel 14
New Hampshire 24 Maine 14
Toledo 24 Bowling Green 7
.
Delaware 49 Lafayette 0
Purdue 27 Minnesota 13
Earlham Olllege Invitational, posstble
for Cumberland to beat D 'd
B kn 11 8
20
Northwestern 28 Iowa 3
uc e
one of the largest invitational us had this been a dual meet." avt s?n
Ohio
State 24 Illinois 10
meets in Indiana. Following the Rinehart said Utere were 130 Frankltn &amp; Marshall 31 SwarthWisconsin 35 Indiana 29
more 20
Earlham Meet, the Redmen will runners at Taylor.
Wes1minster (Pa.) 34
return home to host the Rio The Redmen finished eighth Boston U. 47 Ma:". 21
1
27
9
Waynesburg 6
Grande Invitational Saturday, in both the Malone Invitational Flortd~ St. . M ss. St.
Rhode Island 34 Vennont 22
and the Ashland Classic earlier Georg1a 38 Mtss. ~
Oct. 16.
The Redmen are coming off a this season. Malone fields a ,,....-----::::;:::::::::::::----------..,
fourth-place finish in the Taylor perennial NAIA District No. 22
Invitational. Thirteen schools championship team, while the
1 SUPER SHEF
from five states ran in the meet, Ashland Classic is one of the
won by Vincennes University most prestigious meets in the
with 40 points. Taylor finished nation .
second and Cumberland third . After the Rio Grande In"We're really happy with our vitational, the Redmen will run
performance at Taylor," said in a scrimmage at West
Dean B. Rinehart, cross Virginia Tech, then compete in
country coach. "We felt, when the All-Ohio Cross-Country
we were in the Kentucky In- Championships at Bowling
tercollegiate Athletic Con- Green.
ference, that Cumberland was
Rio Grande will also run
unbeatable.
against Mt. Vernon and
1 BIG
"But," Pe continued, "with Cedarville and compere in the
· SHEF
sq. yd.
Ken Sanders (3rd), Jack Finch Centre College Invitational
(11th) and Bruce Melton (14th ) before the District No. 22 and
all ahead of Cumberland's first Mid-Ohio Conference chamman, it would have been irn- pionships, set for Nov . 13.
Minimum 20 Sq. Yds.
family Pack
Nylon, ~o1yester. Acrilan, Herculon . Over soo
includes lhese
colors and patterns to select from . Come in
Qualify for High
4 sandwiches
today and make your selection.
and 4 orders
INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPET
of french fries.

Less than two minutes Ia ter
Kei til scored again from two
yards out after Kevin Fletcher
blocked ·an · illinois punt and
Mike Scannell recovered on the
lllini two yard line.
Only four minutes and 51
seconds had elapsed in the

game and Illinois trailed 14-0.
The Illini, now 0-2 in the Big
Ten and 0-5 overall, managed
to score in the second quarter
when quarterback Mike Wells
kicked a 37-yard field goal.
But OSU ran its lead to 24-3
in lhe third quarter on a three-

Take 2-0 Lead

Redmen Upset
Louisville

Rio Runners Journey
To Indiana ·On Oct. 12

WREMEMBER the "W" is silent!

WASHER
SPECIAL

$19

·'

signed a baseball contract with the next day and doesn't kick if
his name isn't in the lineup.
the Orioles."
With righthander Bob
Rettenmund, who wears shoe
black under his eyes when he's Johnson going for the Pirates in
playing ball whelp him againat
the sun's rays, isn't much of a
talker.
He comes to the ball park,
gets his work done, comes back

-

Mountaineers Nip

LONG-TERM WARRANTY!

BIG SMITH BIG YANK

20

1tts

In
Orioles have does create a
problem sometimes, par.ticularly when you have a fellow
like Rettenmund, who is
nominally the frurtlt ou!fielder
leading your club in hitting two
years rurming.
Rettenrnund led the club with
a new figure last year and his
.318 average in 141 games was
the American League's third
highest percentage this past
season.
A graduate of Ball State
University in Indiana, Rettenmund was a running back in
college and was drafted by the
Dallas Cowboys.
"I was a very mediocre one,"
he says, and when they drafted
me I told them I had already

•

T-oledo Makes It 28 Straight

200 MORE PRIZES:

kW

•

reU.ed 21 of the last 22 batters, outfielders for the future,
all except one who reached base correct?
on an error.
"Whadd'ya
mean
the
Rli!inson, at 36, still is a very future?" said Robinson, whose
.fine ballplayer. Avery practical second-inning solo homer
one, too.
started the Orioles on the road
He loo1t1L~t.~t~nmun\l. quite .. back .&amp;fer· the Pitates had
blijecuvely. He looks at tho: clipped Dave McNally for three
stocky right-handed swinger runs in the top of the inning.
from Flint, Mich., and says:
"He can play regularly
"Someone's gonna have wgo anywhere right now. That's why
- whether it's me or someone I think Earl Weaver is the
else. You can't ask a kid with greatest manager I've ever
his proven ability to play every seen. Look what he did this
other day and to keep moving year?Hegotallfourofus(Paul
around 'like he's been. He has w• Blair, Don Buford, Rettenrnund
plsy every day."
' and Robinson) wplay in more
In other words, Frank than 100 games. You think
Robinaon was saying Merv that's easy?"
· Rettenmund certainly would be
Four outfielders with all the
one of the Orioles' three regular ability the ones playing for the

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (UP!)The first time the B.uckeyes
Randy Keith scored two light-- had . Jhe ball sophomore qiiarning quick first ·· period terhack Greg Hare, ·subbigg for
wuchdowns and Ohio State ailing starter Don Lamka,
added 10 more points in the directed a four play drive of 62
second half to give the yards, ending with a one-yard
Buckeyes a 24-10. victory over scoring smash by Keith, also a
winless Illinois Saturday.
sophomore.

IN MERCHANDISE FROM YOUR LANDMARK DEALER)

~

•

.

Put In
BALTIMORE IUP! I
American League club owners
voted Saturday to transfer the
Milwaukee Brewers to the
Eastern Division of the league.
It had been previously
reported that the Chicago While
Sox were slated to move to the
Eastern Division.
The vacancy occurred when
the Washington Senators moved
to Dallas-Fort Worth .
The owners met in Baltimore
Saturday and scheduled
another meeting in Pittsburgh
tentatively on Wednesday .

BALTIMORE (UP!) .,... The
Baltimore Orioles opened the
defense ri their baseball world
champimshlp today by riding
three h(llle runs and the pitchlng of Dave McNally to a 5-3
triumph over the Pittsburgh
Pirates in the first game of the
World Series.
Frank Robinson, Merv
Rettenrnund, and Don Buford
slammed homers for the
American Legion champions with Rettenmund's three-run
blast in the third inning
bringing them from behind.
McNally, giving up only three
unearned runs in the second
inning when the Orioles made
two errors, spun a three-hitter.
He struck out nine betters and

NE)V YORK (UP! )-Black, The failure to achieve equallty
Puerto Rican, Mexican-Ameri- of opportunity for members of
·
Indian Amertca
· 's raeiai an d cultural
can an d Amer1can
students will benefit from a minorities."
new six-year $100 million Ford · DuriJlg a news conference at
Foundation program announced "foundation headquarters· conSaturday.
cerning the announcement bere
McGeorge Bundy, president several black college presidents
of the foundation, said the aid present noted that increasingly
aimed at increasing minority the colleges founded for blacks
opportunities in higher educa- are also enrolling white
tion is not so much a new students.
departure for the foundation as As for the impact of Ford
it is an enlargement of earlier Foundation aid, Dr. Luther
support.
Fosrer, president of Tuskegee
Between 70 and 80 per cent of Institute, in Tuskegee, Ala.,
the foundation 's money lor Ute said "it will give us some
improvement of American high- breathing room." He explained
er education over the next six he meant that the schools will '
.,, ' ...
years will be devoted to Ute be able to do some planning in
program w benefit minorities. other than a crisis situation.
Half of the money will go wa
"It will be a shot in the
· DAYS OF YORE -It's like the old days for Middleport residents who notice tills 1111i0 panel
limited number of private, arm," said Dr. Benjamin . truck used as a delivery vehicle by the Reynolds Dairy Shop which operated there from 1941 to
traditionally black colleges. The Payton, noting that his school,
1961. The vehicle made its last run in 1958. It slill has 1958license tags. The truck is parked on
rest will be awarded to like most black schools, has a
the Reynolds' property at the corner of North Fourth Ave. and Mill St. while a new roof Is being
individual students lor ad- deficit but the size of the
placed on a garage which houses the vehicle. With the truck are Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Reynolds
vanced study.
operating deficit has been
who operated the dairy shop, then a popular gatlterlng place lor young and old in the comBetween 1960 and 1971, the decreasing in recent years.
munity . The building used from time to time as a service station at the intersection is to be torn
foundation awarded $37.2 mil- Payton is president of Benedict
d~ .
lion in grants to 67 colleges and College in Columbia, S.C.
universities founded for black Benedict and Tuskegee are
Americans.
among four black colleges Franklin 31 Trenton Edgewood Cln. Taft 12 Cin. Coourter Tech 8 Princeton 49 Hamilton Toll 6
0
Cln. Aiken 9 Cln . Walnut Hills 8 Milford 22 Mariemont 20
Bundy described the new initially to reap benefits from ve,..,ille 36 Asonla o
Delaware
26
Columbus
Oak Hills 21 Greenhills 8
Westland 0
program as "al'l effort to the new program. The others Covington 22 Northwestern Cin. Moeller 17 Cln. Purcell 0
Hilliard 21 Marysville 0
Lockland 27 Forest Park 6
strengthen the foundation's are Fisk UniverSity in Nash- Clark 0
G
Grove
City 30 Bexley 6
Wyoming 24 North College 15
commitment to the central ville, Tenn., and Hampton t~;. ~~~~~d ~"'1:7~ie~e!~ern Indian Hill 28 Deer Park 13
London 12 Mifflin o
nroblem of American 50fiety: Institute in Hampwn, Va.
Hills 12
Cln. Withrow 311 Cln. Hughes 14 Franklin 41 Olentangy 13

Brewers

By Mrs. Evelyn Brickles
Jack Torrence and son, Gary,
of Namta, Idaho, is spending a
week here with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Roland Torrence .
Other visi IDrs in tbe home were
their son and daughter, Mr .
LEHIGH ROMPS
Paul Torrence and Mr. and
NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J.
Mrs. Ronnie Myers and family (UP! ) - Jack Rizzo scored
al Columbus.
three touchdowns and Don
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Walker Dirro added two more Saturday
and daughter, Ruthie, have in leading Lehigh · to a 35-14
moved from their farm oo East victory over Rutgers.
Shade w their new home they
built here.
TULANE REBOUNDS
Mr. and Mrs. Eldred Grimes
CHAPEL HILL, N. C. (UP!)
and son of Athens were Sunday - Quarterback Mike Walker
guests of Mrs . Neisel tossed four touchdown passes,
Weatherman.
two of them to flanker Steve_
Mr. and Mrs. Hobert Newell Barrios, as Tulane rebounded
of Chester and Mr. and Mrs. from three straight losses to
Wateman White of Keno were defeat previously unbeaten
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and North Carolina 37-29 Saturday.
Mrs. Jessie Newell. It was in
observance of the 88th birthday
of Mr. Jessie Newell. Afternoon Slippery Rock 34
callers were Earnest Weber of ·
Shippensburg 7
Pomeroy R. D. 3, and Thelma Nebraska 36 Missouri 0
Ashworth Of Pomeroy .
Colorado 24 Iowa St. 14
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Brickles Michigan 24 Mich. St. 13
were Sunday dinner guests of Virginia St. 46 Shaw 0
her nephew, Mr. and Mrs. Oklahoma 48 Texa' 27
Clifton Spencer and daughter of
Belpre. Mr. Spencer's parents, Dub lin 22 Hamilton Twp . 16
City 23 Columbus 51 .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Spencer Plain
Charles 22
of Belpre also were dinner Mad ison Plains 20 Greenview 10
51. Marys 20 Kenton 14
guests.
Amanda 42 Pickerington 6
Mr. and Mrs . William Tuttle Millersport
56 Berne Un ion 0
and family of Fairborn spent Centerburg 0 Danville 0 lfiel
the weekend witlt his parents, Highland 54 Columbia 6
Mr. and Mrs. Veri Tuttle . Mr . Cleve. South 20 Cleve. Holy
Name 6
and Mrs. R. C. Gibson of Akron Napoleon 36 Wauseon 14
spent Sunday and Monda y with Upper Sandusky 21 Norwal&lt; 6
Ute TutUes.
Mr. und Mrs. Arthur
Mr. and Mrs. Win Blake were
of Powmouth were ~'
.) )unda y dinner guests of their
overnight guests of her &gt;JOter, daugher, Mr. ·and Mrs . Way
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Walker ' Clark.
"·
and Ruthie.
Work is starred on Ute new
Mr. and Mrs . Russell bridgeoverEastShade between
Mollahan were Sunday guests of Ute ·Pearl Cole and Marvin
her motlter, Mrs. Eva M!XlS of Walker farms .
Ivydale, W. Va. Her mother is Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Tippie
quite ill.
· of Athens, R. D.; were visiting
Gerald Violet attended the Mr . and Mrs. Clarence Nichols
Golden Wedding obser~aonce on Sunday.
Sunday of his sister and . Mr. and Mrs.l;l.ichard Griffin
brother~n-law , Mr . and Mrs. and family have moved from
n...l.,. u ..... t · •.t lhuiP hnrnA in

Ford. . Foundation
Spreads Benefits

FINAL WEEK OF THIS GREAT SALE - All Items On
lANDMARK'S
.r::==:::-.::.:

Player Wins Crown
WENTWORTH , England
(UP!) - South African Gary
Player won the Piccadilly
World Match Play golf
championship for a record
fow-th time Saturday, blitzing
defending champion and
tournament favorite Jack
Nicklaus 5 and 4. Nicklaus was
a prohibitive favorite and
looked to have the 36-hole
match well under control at the
half-way stage when he had a
one-up lead .
Big Jack tamed the 6,997
yards " Burma Road" course in
a brilliant seven-under par 67 best round of the three-day
tournament - and although
Player stayed close to him with
a 68, the betting boys were all
smiles.
Then Player, who eclipsed the
big blond belter 6 and 4 in the
1966 final, hit back in dramatic
fashion. The little South African
recorded four consecutive wins
as they opened the afternoon
round to go from one down to
three up.
Player, plagued by a hook all
week, kept his game well under
control and stretched his ad-

omers

'

H -The Sunday Times - Sonti~l. ~Y, Oct. 10, 1971

..

,Jil

CARPET
SPECI,AL

.95
and up

INCLUDED

$

LEARN TO DRIVE
A SEMI-TRACTOR
TRAilER/

NOT
INCLUDED IN THIS SPECIAL!
WE ALSO HAVE .. .

only

$6_00 ·---·f""'I"·Br'iob•ready in-4-weeks~·- -Join one of the highft\ paying indunrill in the netlon, ·In 1.. thin t
month M can tllch you to drlw • •mi·trtetor trliler tnd l*tlfy
you under d'lllflllllnt of trensportlllon rtguiltlons. F111 nlltionwldl
placament lllilllnct upon graduotlan. For mo11 Jnfor1111ti0n

882 K~n~whl Velily Btnk Bld1.

e ARMSTRONG VINYL Oll~KERJONE

Ev&amp;PY Sunday

e

(ALL DAY)

SEND COUPON OR CALL (30..1 346·1556
---------------------TRI.STATE DRIVER TRAINING

LINOLEUM. 9 &amp; 12 WIDlliS _
ARMSTRONG VINYL CUSHION
FLOOR LINOLEUM

1503

Chlrlnton, W. Ve., 25301

•

Nem•----------~------

_ 332 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

~ and Labor

.

Family Reotaurants

Address: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-:- Phone _ _ __

EASTERN
1\Vt• .

I

'

Licensed by State of Ohio S52
.'

'

\

4

�'..

,,

'
15-TheSundayTirne.J -Sentlnei,Sundlly,Oct.
1Q, 1~1

,

-U.S. Air
(Continued from page 13 )

'

repeatedly said the Communists were beaten and
pulling back from the general
area around Krek and northern
Tay Ninh province, 50 to 85
miles northwest of Saigon.
A . Communist offensive
launched Sept. 25 in that area
thus passed into its third week
. apparently unabated.
Near Saigon, a U.S. Army
staff sergeant who returned
from capuvity Friday after two
years as a Viet Cong prisoner
sat •down at a table in the 24th
Evacuation H!Xlpital at U.S.
ArmY headquarters and ordered hamburgers and ice
cream, spokesmen said.
The sergeant, John C. Sexton
Jr., 23, also called his parents in
Warren, Mich., and ordered up
a "Chris1mas dinner with the
works-sweet potawes, baked
beans, turkey, ham," his father
told newsmen.
But it may be a while before
Sextoo gets away frmm h(Xlpitals. Capt. Robert W. Reed, of
Nampa, Ida., the Army doctor
who is treating him here ,
reported Sexton has lost 50
pounds, suffers from mild
malaria and moderate anemia,
and had his right eye injured
and his right elbow immobilized, possibly by multiple
shrapnel wounds he suffered
during the battle in which he
was captured.

Constrictor
(Continued from page 13)
West Virginia importing house
specializing in such exotic
products.
Two more giant snakes are on
order through the same agency.
One is the male boa, the other a
python which when grown will
be at least 20 feet long . It will
cost $75 .
Morris' boa , though friendly
to him, is not if teased or
bothered by strangers. Not
poisonous, the boa may strike at
a stranger's hand meant to
fondle 'her.
She is fed a rat or a bird about
every 10 days. First the boa
squeezes her dinner to kill it,
then swallows it whole as does
others of her kind in the world's
zoos and wilds of Africa.
Mr . and Mrs. Morris have two
children, a daughter, Senita,
age 4, and a son, Samuel Jr.,
about three weeks.

PROBE DEATH
WNE OAK, Tex. (UP! ) Authorities Saturday were
investigating the death of
Murray Wall, 45, former Boston
Red Sox and Dallas baseball
pitcher, w~o was found dead in ,
a pickup .truck near Lone Oak
Fhrodhay dwtth a bullet wound 10 ·
15
ea ·
·
COMMANDER NAMED
DAYTON , Ohio (UP!) Robert H. Emmons, Cincinnati,
was elected Grand Commander
of the Knights Templar of Ohio
at its annual convention here
this weekend. Enunons succeeds George W. Davidson of
Bellefontaine as head of Ute
organization.

• COLLISION KillS 7
MANILA (UP!) - Six
American women and their
Filipino driver were killed
Friday when a giant U.S. Nayy
truck rolleq onto their small bus
just outside the Subic Bay
Naval Base. The six Americans
all were dependents of U. S. Air
ODDS ARE 3-1
Force personnel stationed at
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!) - Klark Air Force Base 50 miles
The oods against the Baltimore
north of Manila.
Orioles winning the next three
World Series games ~re 3-1, HILL ON WAIVERS
according to line-maker Jimmy
CHICAGO (UP! ) - Sirnmie
"The Greek" Snyder.
Hill, the Chicago Bulls No. 2
The Orioles have won 15 draft choice in 1969, was placed
straight games, the final II of on waivers Friday by the
the American League season, a National Basketball Association
three game playoff sweep of the team . Hill , a forward, had
Oakland A's and Saturday's 5-3 signed as a free agent with the
triumph in the series opener
Bulls.
against Pittsburgh.

Record Fourth Tim~

Tuppers Plains
Society News

vantage to four-up with a
magnificent outward half of 32
- four under par.
Nicklaus' hopes had virtually
gone and when he badly sliced
his drive at the 29th hole to
allow Player to go further
ahead, that was the last nail in
his coffin. He pulled one hole
back with a birdie low- at the
30th but then meekly surrendered his title by three-putting
at the par three 32nd.
Player collected first place
money of $20,400 and N1cklaus
$10,800.

207 PRIZES •$1,000 ~~~~~
$100 5 MORE PRIZES
$500 SECOND
PRIZO
(ALL ABOVE PRIZES

~%'1$-0CTOBE·R
ntr

It*

ti:

Ill

Iii

a

4

your favorite team.

16

THRU

.

••

_ _.,..,..

...

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY; JUST COME IN, OR
WRITE IN, TO REGISTER DURING HARVEST OF
VALUES AT LANDMARK.

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING AT LANDMARK

Celebrate your
happiness with
the · of love.

..

'

COMPARE! MORE FOR YOUR MONEY
ALWAYS
AT LANDMARK

AL East

lhDir fnl'mm· hmn.1• hl'rf&gt; In llw h·

BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
( UPI )...:Toledo punched over
two touchdowns in the second
quarter and stopped five
Bowling Green last half drivers
to get a 24-7 Mid-American
Conference victory Saturday
which extended the Rockets'
win streak to 28, longest in the
nation.
....
A MAC record crowd of 26,
8liO packed the stands :o watch

warm,beautiful
Stadium Blankets to keep you cozy white you watch

~i

I

I

Diamonds
by ArtCarved.

•

15 cu. ft. SIDE-BY·SIOE

Arom antic way lo pay
tribute to your growing ·
love Is to exchange

COMBINATION
20 CU. FT.
UPRIGHT
SPECIAL

at EST

at EST

$24995 $269
Reg. $309

AriCarved diamond-set
wedding rings.

The Unico Duplex 15 is really two appliances
in one cabinet-a lrostless refngerator With a
8.6 cu. ft. capacity and a frostless freezer of
6.4 cu. ft. size that will hold 225 po~nds. Each
section has own door and separate m~ulatton .
Elegant design. , features galore. AdJustable
shelves, glideout crisper, door storage. Also '"
17 19 and 22 cu. ft. Colors: white, coppertone
and avOcado at slightly higher cost. 121-&lt;ll54).
15 cu. ft. available
in white only.

28 Fr.

23 Fr.

REGULARLY $325.00

Come In and choose your
g1ft of love today.

~Carved

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

465°
APPLIANCES .

95

0

5

UNICO

422 Second Ave.
Phone 446-1615
G1tti'potis

ARE PROTECI'ED

BY

WE DELIVER! WE SERVICE!
WE FINANCE!

the battle of the unbeaten between northwestern Ohio archrivals.
After a scoreless opening quarter, Ron Roberts blocked a
Bowling Green punt and John
Saunders ran with the ball into
Ute end zone untouched. Several
minutes later Chuck Ealey ran
27 yards, passed for 13 and 6
yards, and then sneaked over
the goal line for the lasy yard

WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (UP! )
-Quarterback Bernie Galiffa
came off the bench Saturday to
spark West Virginia to a 21point fow-th quarter and a 28-23
victory over William &amp; Mary .
Galilfa , who set out the first
half with a sprained wrist, hit
tight end Nate Stephen~ with a
64-yard touchdown pass with
two minutes and 22 seconds left
in the game to propel the
Mountaineers ahead of the fired
-up William &amp; Mary team that
had led 21-7 at the start of the
fow-th quarter .
Fullback Pete Wood slammed
in for West Virginia touchdowns
of four and six yards and
speedster Kerry Marbury
scored another on a two-yard
run . Frank Nester kicked two
extra points for West Virginia
and Galilfa hit Wood with a

RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande College Redmen Cross
Country team travels to Richmond, Ind. Tuesday for the

WRANGLER~~
DAYf!A
SPfCIAL

$255
Here's a bad weather
tire that gives you the
extra traction for peace
of mind all winter. It has

REG. $279

$159
.

BLUE DENIMS
with the new show-off zipper

REG.

"'

t al l 'em the
jeans for now
because they
boast the show·
off zipper, patch
pockets and
flare legs ...
the newest look
in men's casual
fashions. In easy·
washing blue
cotton denim.
Sizes 30-36 ...

the dlg . Jn' to keep you

goIng when ordinary
snow tires spin and slip

... thanks to a broad.
special ·deslgn tread
that puts more biting

and gripping edges on

the road. The extra
bonuses
are
quiet
runn ing, long wear and

i

soft ride. They're lull

I

four
piles,
white
sidewall or black.

Special

$7

Special
G70-14 Whitewall
Reg. 29. 10
G70-15 Whitewall
Reg . 27.95
G70-14 Blackwall
l~e g . 2-7 .65
G70-l5 Blac kwall

·- fl e~ . ?fi. 30

1

Special

9

$399

?.iularly $9.45
.

· Resularly $4.99

lARGEST
IN .THE AREA .
WINDBREAKERS
VESTS • JACKETS

In blue, olive drab, ?rc&gt;fl~!~·· ·
brown and black; sizes
All sizes In Blq Yank Jeans "
medium,- large and
in bell botto . and flares. come in ind b~owse around
(36 to 50)
Come and c · for yourself. at Landmark. You are

specials!
6.00 /6.50!13
Regularly $22.60
Plu ; 1..76 F.E.T.

'

Sunday's second game here, lo~ contribution to the Qri~!~~ '
example, Rettenmund doesn't
"I just look lor the ball, try to
expect to be playing. He in- hit it somewhere around the
variably makes li~ht of his Own ballpark and get on for Frank,
Boog and Ute rest of the !elias,"
he says.
He's not trying to be coy cr
modest. He means it. That's the
kind of ballplayer Merv Rettenmund ·is.

Sooners In

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
.

Browns Expect

FILMS TO BE SHOWN
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
fltm of tbe Eastem-Kyger
Creek game will be shown
Tuesday night at Eastern
Hlgb School at 8 p.m. The
public is invited to attend.
Refreshments wiD he served.
.,.,.,."".,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,
...
'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·'·' ······························

Upset Over
,."' "' · .- ·.- ·. T
48 27

75
$24
$2375
$ 50
23 Plus
$2235

Plus 2.72 F.E.T.
Plus 2.84 F.E.T.
2.72 F.E.T.

Plus 2.84 F.E.T.

.

~

... --

-

NEW

WORK CliJTHES.
AND
FOOTWEAR

·PO.MEROY LANDMARK.
· JACK W. CAifSEYI MANAGER
'

.

.,

PH. 992-2181

Serving Meigs, Galli a and Mason Counties
Store Qpen Mon.-Sat. Tii6-·Siation Open 24 Hours
'

Tough Battle
With Steelers
PITTSBURGH (UP! )
Pittsburgh head Coach Chuck
Noll believes "the team whicn
gets the best of it' physically "
.should win Sunday's game be·
tween his",i:'Sieelers and
Cleveland Brqwns .
The usually\ placid Noll has
been grouch\• and more
talkative as his team went
through drills for today 's battle
for sole possession of first place
in the Central Division of the
National League 's American
conference.
"I think it is going to be a real
good, hard hitting football
game, as the Browns appear to
be a physically tougher team
than they were last year," Noll
said.
"We also consider ourselves
that type of team and I think the
outcome will boil down to this the team which gets the best of
it physically should win ," he
said.
·
Pittsburgh completed its
drills with a light workout
Saturday morning and flew to
Cleveland Saturday.

•
yard scamper by Hare and a 26 halfback Gr g Pruitt, who on runs of 5 and 44 yards .. Jim
-yard . field goal by Fred scored three times and fled for Bertelsen got two more Texas
214 yards, offset the brute touchdowns on runs of 3 and 15
Schram.
The Illini, struggling fQr streng th of Texas Saturday in yards in the second half.
Quarterback Eddie Phillips,
respectability, refused to quit carrying the seventh-ranked
against Ohio, which is now 2-0 Sooners to a racehorse 48-27 still not at full strength because
in the Big Ten.
upset over the third-rated of a pulled hamstring muscle,
With eight minutes left, the Longhorns.
came in to replace the injured
Illini, who twice earlier had
Pruitt's dashes in the first Wigginton during the second
been inside the OSU 5 only to half put Oklahoma in command half, but his try at an aerial
see their drive stall, finally and gave them enough attack was consistently spoiled
cracked across when Mike momentum to survive a second by fumbleitis.
The victory left Oklahoma
Navarro-a junior fullback and half sinking spell and give the
the Illinois leading rusher- sooners their first win over with a 4-0 record and set the
of what proved to be the de- faltered on the 17, when held, went in from one yard out.
Texas in five years.
Sooners up for a showdown with
ciding touchdown .
and one on the 20, when fumbled
The Oklahoma junior scored Big Eight foe Colorado next
George Keirn, who added To- Ute ball away.
on runs of 1, 4and 20 yards while week. Texas fell to a 3-1 mark
ledo's extra points, kicked a 29
A Bowling Green pass interSooner quarterback Jack and must fa ce old rival
yard field goal in the third per- ception set the stage for Toledo
Mildren tallied twice from Arkansas next Saturday in
iod, following recovery of a Joe Schwartz to go the final
CHARWTIE, N. C. (UP!) - seven and one yards out and Little Rock .
Bowling Green fumble on its 9. five yards for a touchdown with Frank Forhling took two halfback Roy Bell scored once
Oklahoma gained 433 rushing
The host Falcons finally got 26 seconds left in the game. straight games today to win the on a three-yard run.
against Texas' usually stingy
on the scoreboard by driving Lamport passed four times with second continued singles match
Place kicker John Ca~roll defense, and after Texas' early
68 yards in 12 plays, with Reid out success as the game ended. 3-6, 1-6, 6-1, 6-3 and 8-6 from chipped in three pointers of 26 burst the Sooners effectively
Lamport going the final yard. · Toledo is 5-0 for the season, Romanian Ion Tiriac and gave and 27 yards to run up the shut down the Longhorns '
Two other Bowling Green drives including two league wins.
the Americans a 2-0 lead in the largest scoring total against the version of the wishbone-T triple Tigers· Pin 6-0
best of five series in the Davis Longhorns since the Sooners option attack. It was the most
·w &amp; M c u p challenge competition.
beat Texas 49-20 in 1952.
ground yardage ever gained in Loss On Denison
Tiriac and !lie Nastase were
The Longhorns stayed in the a single game against the
scheduled to team against Stan horse race with Oklahoma for Longhorns.
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (UP! )
Smith and Erik Van Dillen of
- Quarterback Mike Dean ran
pass for a two-point scoring the fourth period and then San Mateo, Calif., in the doubles
five yards for a first-quarter
play after one touchdown .
passed to Wood for a two- match following an exhibition
touchdown as Wittenberg
pointer to make the scor~ 21-15. event.
stopped Denison fH1 Saturday
Quarter back Steve Regan,
Galiffa struck again wilh 4:27 Under rules of the comand slowed the Ohio Conference
coming up with the big plays left · in the game, hitting petition, the Romanian team
rushing leaders.
when the Indians needed them, Stephens with a long pass and could wait two hours after the
The Tigers held Denison's Bill
sent running back Dennis then sending Wood in from the completion of the singles match
Harris to 62 yards and teamCambal in for two of William &amp; seven. Nester's try for the to begin the doubles.
mate Ed Exler to 50. They were
Mary's touchdawns · and full- extra. point was . blocked, the Froehling started the 13th
one-two in the conference in
back Phil Mosser lor the'Oilier' • game' was tlect at 21-all.
game with service and had a 30.
rushing and Harris had been
Mike Dodds kicked three extra
But Galiffa found Stephens 0 lead before Tiriac could make
ranked sixth in the nation.
points. The Indians got their alone on the left sideline and a point. Then Tiriac gave up the
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande College's Ken
Harris and Exler a~counted
other score on a safety in the hit him with a long pass. game when he hit the net on an
Sanders, Jack Finch and Bruce Melton finished
for 112 or their team's 135
final minute of the game .
Stephens raced into the end extended volley.
ground game .
in a dead heat tie for first Saturday to upset the
It looked like William &amp; zone untouched for a 64-yard
University of Louisville 33-22 in a dual cross
Mary-which had been unbeat- touchdown play.
SATURDAY'S COLLEGE
Steelers Activate
country meet.
en in four games-was going to
William &amp; Mary exploded for
FOOTBALL RESULTS
Their time was 21:24, a shade off the course
p~ll off an upset until Galiffa two touchdowns in the third By Unlted Press International
came into the game at the end period after battling the Harvard 21 Columbia 19
record held by Sanders for the four mile race.
Guard For Contest
Holy
Cross
24
Colgate
I4
of the third quarter . He quickly Mountaineers to a 7-7 tie at the
Also placing for Rio were Stacey Osborne,
got the Mountaineers on the half. Mosser scored from the Dar1mouth 19 Penn 3
PITTSBURGH (UP!) - The
seventh, in 22:59, and Dennis Kirk, ninth, in
move, aided by a 65-yard punt six in the first period for the Penn St. 42 Army 0
Pittsburgh Steelers Saturday
23:22.
return by Leon Jenkins.
Indians and Cambal went over Yale 17 Brown 10
injured guard Bruce
activated
The victory, a shocker to the Kentucky team,
Galiffa then sent Marbury in on a pair of two-yard runs in Lehigh 35 Rutgers 14
Van Dyke and announced he
was the second straight dual win in as many
Boston Coli. 23 Villanova 7
from the two with 12:49 left in the third period.
would start Sunday against the
outings for Rio Grande.
Pittsburgh 36 Navy 35
Cleveland Browns in Cleveland.
Next track event here will be the Rio Grande
W. Va. 28 Wm. &amp; Mary 23
Van Dyke missed the last two
Clemson 3 Duke 0
College Invitational cross country meet when
games because of a pulled
Tenn. 10 Ga. Tech 6
athletes from six colleges and 34 high schools
hamstring muscle . The Steelers
Syracuse 21 Maryland 13
waved injured running hack
compete.
Tulane 37 North Carolina 29
Rocky Bleier to make room for
Cornell 19 Princeton 8
Van Dyke, Bleier pulled a groin
Wash. &amp; Jeff. 35 John Car. 30 muscle in practice Wednesday.
Wesleyan 35 Coast Guard 34 "' Auburn 27 So. Miss. 14
Grove City 21 Thiel 14
New Hampshire 24 Maine 14
Toledo 24 Bowling Green 7
.
Delaware 49 Lafayette 0
Purdue 27 Minnesota 13
Earlham Olllege Invitational, posstble
for Cumberland to beat D 'd
B kn 11 8
20
Northwestern 28 Iowa 3
uc e
one of the largest invitational us had this been a dual meet." avt s?n
Ohio
State 24 Illinois 10
meets in Indiana. Following the Rinehart said Utere were 130 Frankltn &amp; Marshall 31 SwarthWisconsin 35 Indiana 29
more 20
Earlham Meet, the Redmen will runners at Taylor.
Wes1minster (Pa.) 34
return home to host the Rio The Redmen finished eighth Boston U. 47 Ma:". 21
1
27
9
Waynesburg 6
Grande Invitational Saturday, in both the Malone Invitational Flortd~ St. . M ss. St.
Rhode Island 34 Vennont 22
and the Ashland Classic earlier Georg1a 38 Mtss. ~
Oct. 16.
The Redmen are coming off a this season. Malone fields a ,,....-----::::;:::::::::::::----------..,
fourth-place finish in the Taylor perennial NAIA District No. 22
Invitational. Thirteen schools championship team, while the
1 SUPER SHEF
from five states ran in the meet, Ashland Classic is one of the
won by Vincennes University most prestigious meets in the
with 40 points. Taylor finished nation .
second and Cumberland third . After the Rio Grande In"We're really happy with our vitational, the Redmen will run
performance at Taylor," said in a scrimmage at West
Dean B. Rinehart, cross Virginia Tech, then compete in
country coach. "We felt, when the All-Ohio Cross-Country
we were in the Kentucky In- Championships at Bowling
tercollegiate Athletic Con- Green.
ference, that Cumberland was
Rio Grande will also run
unbeatable.
against Mt. Vernon and
1 BIG
"But," Pe continued, "with Cedarville and compere in the
· SHEF
sq. yd.
Ken Sanders (3rd), Jack Finch Centre College Invitational
(11th) and Bruce Melton (14th ) before the District No. 22 and
all ahead of Cumberland's first Mid-Ohio Conference chamman, it would have been irn- pionships, set for Nov . 13.
Minimum 20 Sq. Yds.
family Pack
Nylon, ~o1yester. Acrilan, Herculon . Over soo
includes lhese
colors and patterns to select from . Come in
Qualify for High
4 sandwiches
today and make your selection.
and 4 orders
INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPET
of french fries.

Less than two minutes Ia ter
Kei til scored again from two
yards out after Kevin Fletcher
blocked ·an · illinois punt and
Mike Scannell recovered on the
lllini two yard line.
Only four minutes and 51
seconds had elapsed in the

game and Illinois trailed 14-0.
The Illini, now 0-2 in the Big
Ten and 0-5 overall, managed
to score in the second quarter
when quarterback Mike Wells
kicked a 37-yard field goal.
But OSU ran its lead to 24-3
in lhe third quarter on a three-

Take 2-0 Lead

Redmen Upset
Louisville

Rio Runners Journey
To Indiana ·On Oct. 12

WREMEMBER the "W" is silent!

WASHER
SPECIAL

$19

·'

signed a baseball contract with the next day and doesn't kick if
his name isn't in the lineup.
the Orioles."
With righthander Bob
Rettenmund, who wears shoe
black under his eyes when he's Johnson going for the Pirates in
playing ball whelp him againat
the sun's rays, isn't much of a
talker.
He comes to the ball park,
gets his work done, comes back

-

Mountaineers Nip

LONG-TERM WARRANTY!

BIG SMITH BIG YANK

20

1tts

In
Orioles have does create a
problem sometimes, par.ticularly when you have a fellow
like Rettenmund, who is
nominally the frurtlt ou!fielder
leading your club in hitting two
years rurming.
Rettenrnund led the club with
a new figure last year and his
.318 average in 141 games was
the American League's third
highest percentage this past
season.
A graduate of Ball State
University in Indiana, Rettenmund was a running back in
college and was drafted by the
Dallas Cowboys.
"I was a very mediocre one,"
he says, and when they drafted
me I told them I had already

•

T-oledo Makes It 28 Straight

200 MORE PRIZES:

kW

•

reU.ed 21 of the last 22 batters, outfielders for the future,
all except one who reached base correct?
on an error.
"Whadd'ya
mean
the
Rli!inson, at 36, still is a very future?" said Robinson, whose
.fine ballplayer. Avery practical second-inning solo homer
one, too.
started the Orioles on the road
He loo1t1L~t.~t~nmun\l. quite .. back .&amp;fer· the Pitates had
blijecuvely. He looks at tho: clipped Dave McNally for three
stocky right-handed swinger runs in the top of the inning.
from Flint, Mich., and says:
"He can play regularly
"Someone's gonna have wgo anywhere right now. That's why
- whether it's me or someone I think Earl Weaver is the
else. You can't ask a kid with greatest manager I've ever
his proven ability to play every seen. Look what he did this
other day and to keep moving year?Hegotallfourofus(Paul
around 'like he's been. He has w• Blair, Don Buford, Rettenrnund
plsy every day."
' and Robinson) wplay in more
In other words, Frank than 100 games. You think
Robinaon was saying Merv that's easy?"
· Rettenmund certainly would be
Four outfielders with all the
one of the Orioles' three regular ability the ones playing for the

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (UP!)The first time the B.uckeyes
Randy Keith scored two light-- had . Jhe ball sophomore qiiarning quick first ·· period terhack Greg Hare, ·subbigg for
wuchdowns and Ohio State ailing starter Don Lamka,
added 10 more points in the directed a four play drive of 62
second half to give the yards, ending with a one-yard
Buckeyes a 24-10. victory over scoring smash by Keith, also a
winless Illinois Saturday.
sophomore.

IN MERCHANDISE FROM YOUR LANDMARK DEALER)

~

•

.

Put In
BALTIMORE IUP! I
American League club owners
voted Saturday to transfer the
Milwaukee Brewers to the
Eastern Division of the league.
It had been previously
reported that the Chicago While
Sox were slated to move to the
Eastern Division.
The vacancy occurred when
the Washington Senators moved
to Dallas-Fort Worth .
The owners met in Baltimore
Saturday and scheduled
another meeting in Pittsburgh
tentatively on Wednesday .

BALTIMORE (UP!) .,... The
Baltimore Orioles opened the
defense ri their baseball world
champimshlp today by riding
three h(llle runs and the pitchlng of Dave McNally to a 5-3
triumph over the Pittsburgh
Pirates in the first game of the
World Series.
Frank Robinson, Merv
Rettenrnund, and Don Buford
slammed homers for the
American Legion champions with Rettenmund's three-run
blast in the third inning
bringing them from behind.
McNally, giving up only three
unearned runs in the second
inning when the Orioles made
two errors, spun a three-hitter.
He struck out nine betters and

NE)V YORK (UP! )-Black, The failure to achieve equallty
Puerto Rican, Mexican-Ameri- of opportunity for members of
·
Indian Amertca
· 's raeiai an d cultural
can an d Amer1can
students will benefit from a minorities."
new six-year $100 million Ford · DuriJlg a news conference at
Foundation program announced "foundation headquarters· conSaturday.
cerning the announcement bere
McGeorge Bundy, president several black college presidents
of the foundation, said the aid present noted that increasingly
aimed at increasing minority the colleges founded for blacks
opportunities in higher educa- are also enrolling white
tion is not so much a new students.
departure for the foundation as As for the impact of Ford
it is an enlargement of earlier Foundation aid, Dr. Luther
support.
Fosrer, president of Tuskegee
Between 70 and 80 per cent of Institute, in Tuskegee, Ala.,
the foundation 's money lor Ute said "it will give us some
improvement of American high- breathing room." He explained
er education over the next six he meant that the schools will '
.,, ' ...
years will be devoted to Ute be able to do some planning in
program w benefit minorities. other than a crisis situation.
Half of the money will go wa
"It will be a shot in the
· DAYS OF YORE -It's like the old days for Middleport residents who notice tills 1111i0 panel
limited number of private, arm," said Dr. Benjamin . truck used as a delivery vehicle by the Reynolds Dairy Shop which operated there from 1941 to
traditionally black colleges. The Payton, noting that his school,
1961. The vehicle made its last run in 1958. It slill has 1958license tags. The truck is parked on
rest will be awarded to like most black schools, has a
the Reynolds' property at the corner of North Fourth Ave. and Mill St. while a new roof Is being
individual students lor ad- deficit but the size of the
placed on a garage which houses the vehicle. With the truck are Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Reynolds
vanced study.
operating deficit has been
who operated the dairy shop, then a popular gatlterlng place lor young and old in the comBetween 1960 and 1971, the decreasing in recent years.
munity . The building used from time to time as a service station at the intersection is to be torn
foundation awarded $37.2 mil- Payton is president of Benedict
d~ .
lion in grants to 67 colleges and College in Columbia, S.C.
universities founded for black Benedict and Tuskegee are
Americans.
among four black colleges Franklin 31 Trenton Edgewood Cln. Taft 12 Cin. Coourter Tech 8 Princeton 49 Hamilton Toll 6
0
Cln. Aiken 9 Cln . Walnut Hills 8 Milford 22 Mariemont 20
Bundy described the new initially to reap benefits from ve,..,ille 36 Asonla o
Delaware
26
Columbus
Oak Hills 21 Greenhills 8
Westland 0
program as "al'l effort to the new program. The others Covington 22 Northwestern Cin. Moeller 17 Cln. Purcell 0
Hilliard 21 Marysville 0
Lockland 27 Forest Park 6
strengthen the foundation's are Fisk UniverSity in Nash- Clark 0
G
Grove
City 30 Bexley 6
Wyoming 24 North College 15
commitment to the central ville, Tenn., and Hampton t~;. ~~~~~d ~"'1:7~ie~e!~ern Indian Hill 28 Deer Park 13
London 12 Mifflin o
nroblem of American 50fiety: Institute in Hampwn, Va.
Hills 12
Cln. Withrow 311 Cln. Hughes 14 Franklin 41 Olentangy 13

Brewers

By Mrs. Evelyn Brickles
Jack Torrence and son, Gary,
of Namta, Idaho, is spending a
week here with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Roland Torrence .
Other visi IDrs in tbe home were
their son and daughter, Mr .
LEHIGH ROMPS
Paul Torrence and Mr. and
NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J.
Mrs. Ronnie Myers and family (UP! ) - Jack Rizzo scored
al Columbus.
three touchdowns and Don
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Walker Dirro added two more Saturday
and daughter, Ruthie, have in leading Lehigh · to a 35-14
moved from their farm oo East victory over Rutgers.
Shade w their new home they
built here.
TULANE REBOUNDS
Mr. and Mrs. Eldred Grimes
CHAPEL HILL, N. C. (UP!)
and son of Athens were Sunday - Quarterback Mike Walker
guests of Mrs . Neisel tossed four touchdown passes,
Weatherman.
two of them to flanker Steve_
Mr. and Mrs. Hobert Newell Barrios, as Tulane rebounded
of Chester and Mr. and Mrs. from three straight losses to
Wateman White of Keno were defeat previously unbeaten
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and North Carolina 37-29 Saturday.
Mrs. Jessie Newell. It was in
observance of the 88th birthday
of Mr. Jessie Newell. Afternoon Slippery Rock 34
callers were Earnest Weber of ·
Shippensburg 7
Pomeroy R. D. 3, and Thelma Nebraska 36 Missouri 0
Ashworth Of Pomeroy .
Colorado 24 Iowa St. 14
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Brickles Michigan 24 Mich. St. 13
were Sunday dinner guests of Virginia St. 46 Shaw 0
her nephew, Mr. and Mrs. Oklahoma 48 Texa' 27
Clifton Spencer and daughter of
Belpre. Mr. Spencer's parents, Dub lin 22 Hamilton Twp . 16
City 23 Columbus 51 .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Spencer Plain
Charles 22
of Belpre also were dinner Mad ison Plains 20 Greenview 10
51. Marys 20 Kenton 14
guests.
Amanda 42 Pickerington 6
Mr. and Mrs . William Tuttle Millersport
56 Berne Un ion 0
and family of Fairborn spent Centerburg 0 Danville 0 lfiel
the weekend witlt his parents, Highland 54 Columbia 6
Mr. and Mrs. Veri Tuttle . Mr . Cleve. South 20 Cleve. Holy
Name 6
and Mrs. R. C. Gibson of Akron Napoleon 36 Wauseon 14
spent Sunday and Monda y with Upper Sandusky 21 Norwal&lt; 6
Ute TutUes.
Mr. und Mrs. Arthur
Mr. and Mrs. Win Blake were
of Powmouth were ~'
.) )unda y dinner guests of their
overnight guests of her &gt;JOter, daugher, Mr. ·and Mrs . Way
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Walker ' Clark.
"·
and Ruthie.
Work is starred on Ute new
Mr. and Mrs . Russell bridgeoverEastShade between
Mollahan were Sunday guests of Ute ·Pearl Cole and Marvin
her motlter, Mrs. Eva M!XlS of Walker farms .
Ivydale, W. Va. Her mother is Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Tippie
quite ill.
· of Athens, R. D.; were visiting
Gerald Violet attended the Mr . and Mrs. Clarence Nichols
Golden Wedding obser~aonce on Sunday.
Sunday of his sister and . Mr. and Mrs.l;l.ichard Griffin
brother~n-law , Mr . and Mrs. and family have moved from
n...l.,. u ..... t · •.t lhuiP hnrnA in

Ford. . Foundation
Spreads Benefits

FINAL WEEK OF THIS GREAT SALE - All Items On
lANDMARK'S
.r::==:::-.::.:

Player Wins Crown
WENTWORTH , England
(UP!) - South African Gary
Player won the Piccadilly
World Match Play golf
championship for a record
fow-th time Saturday, blitzing
defending champion and
tournament favorite Jack
Nicklaus 5 and 4. Nicklaus was
a prohibitive favorite and
looked to have the 36-hole
match well under control at the
half-way stage when he had a
one-up lead .
Big Jack tamed the 6,997
yards " Burma Road" course in
a brilliant seven-under par 67 best round of the three-day
tournament - and although
Player stayed close to him with
a 68, the betting boys were all
smiles.
Then Player, who eclipsed the
big blond belter 6 and 4 in the
1966 final, hit back in dramatic
fashion. The little South African
recorded four consecutive wins
as they opened the afternoon
round to go from one down to
three up.
Player, plagued by a hook all
week, kept his game well under
control and stretched his ad-

omers

'

H -The Sunday Times - Sonti~l. ~Y, Oct. 10, 1971

..

,Jil

CARPET
SPECI,AL

.95
and up

INCLUDED

$

LEARN TO DRIVE
A SEMI-TRACTOR
TRAilER/

NOT
INCLUDED IN THIS SPECIAL!
WE ALSO HAVE .. .

only

$6_00 ·---·f""'I"·Br'iob•ready in-4-weeks~·- -Join one of the highft\ paying indunrill in the netlon, ·In 1.. thin t
month M can tllch you to drlw • •mi·trtetor trliler tnd l*tlfy
you under d'lllflllllnt of trensportlllon rtguiltlons. F111 nlltionwldl
placament lllilllnct upon graduotlan. For mo11 Jnfor1111ti0n

882 K~n~whl Velily Btnk Bld1.

e ARMSTRONG VINYL Oll~KERJONE

Ev&amp;PY Sunday

e

(ALL DAY)

SEND COUPON OR CALL (30..1 346·1556
---------------------TRI.STATE DRIVER TRAINING

LINOLEUM. 9 &amp; 12 WIDlliS _
ARMSTRONG VINYL CUSHION
FLOOR LINOLEUM

1503

Chlrlnton, W. Ve., 25301

•

Nem•----------~------

_ 332 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

~ and Labor

.

Family Reotaurants

Address: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-:- Phone _ _ __

EASTERN
1\Vt• .

I

'

Licensed by State of Ohio S52
.'

'

\

4

�'.

' -.,.

16- Thl Smda7 rI

.

·Snt"

-

1, a..!;ly , ocu•. IJ71

n

Rolls

•

ith

lB
Successful Homecoming

Take Over First

GAU.IPOu's - It was a the GAHS ;o, and returned It to

•

successful homecoming
~lebratioo oo Memorial Field
bore Friday night as Gallipolis
dnJpped Wellstoo 34-8 to take
ooer lllldisputeo:t first place in
the Sootbeastern Ohio Leagu~

Place In League;

5tar!din8s·

Athens Next Foe

Here is a brief play-by-play
of Gallia '.s lliumph over the
· Golden Rockel!

GALLIPOLIS - Coach C L. .1Johnny1 Ecker's
Gallipolis Blue Devils took over undisputed first
place in the Southeastern Ohio Athletic U!ague
football ra ce Friday night following a 34-8 triumph
over v11&gt;itmg Wellston before approximately 3,000
homecom ing fans at ~emorial Field.
While the Blue Devils were taking Wells ton into
camp , fronton. co-leader going into Friday's third
rou nd of SEOAL action . was knocked from the un·
beaten ranks by Logan. 22·19.
~ (J W r;r;rnE:!t th~ f 'JU.l{.h

'JUT

Sl.:ht--d:.J l'.:

ar t,.:r

hl~

rr::marktd
~ Jut

rt &lt;;f;rd~d ttr1·1r

~· J c: t r; r y

part r,f e•:er)
F.d~tr

Dt:V l iS

ht.~d

17th UlMof:CU t JH:

r; ,_·•:r a th n::e·rtar

r~.:n r....J

" Wt ll l!lilr ' ~ par&lt;.d.Jn'5 thf~
rn{:n frr;rn 1JH: ~.I!J s, t*~m mn~ e:t t
Athens FnrJay nJ~ht, ' cr;n-

tJnued

C;AHS

t h ~;:

A t htn ~.

dppdrr:lltly·

rm:nt1Jr
l l)t; k tn~

tt ht(td , !-. turqbled 'JY P.r •.~o· tnlt%
W &lt;:~verly

14.f.i

t1J

rtffl.(:!Jn

1n

cr,ntentHJfl fur tht 1~ 71 h:d~UI.:

thdrn pF!n'ihl p Thf: B ulld(J~ :-.
(jr e 4-1 fJVtrdll , ond 2--1 Jn r:rJn-

ft renc:c pl• y r;AJJS " ;,./J
fJV I:r all, &lt;Jnd J-IJ Jn crm fercm:t:
aclH1n .

GAllS all hut •rapped up
its fifth 1971 vleto ry In th e
firot period Friday ni ght. It

depa rtment, including
pena ltJes . The Gallians were
penahzed nine 1Jmt1! for 105
yards. WHS was penalized six
t1mes frJ"r 90 times.
The E:ckermen chalked up 19
f1 r st df,wn.s and ~rrmtted nine.
GAHS ~ained 245 net yards
rushrng, complett:d 13 of 19
aerials for 129 yards a nd
17 4 tr,tal ya rd s. Wellston
wa s IJmJted to 95 ya rds
rush1ng
and
onl y
21
yard~ pass im~ !two fJ f nine , wi th
tw1, mterce pted 1 for a tbtal of
116 yards ru.shmg and passing.
Seventy-fr,ur r,f Wellsu,n's total
yards carne in the final period
&lt;J ~alnst the Devils ' second and
thtrd un1ls .

Gall1 polis QB Larry Snowden
o u t p~rf o r med
la s t vear 1S
wa 8 tht onl y !1 lan1.a In wh lt h AII·SEOAL . sig nal caller ,
Ecker pla yed his enllrc lint IJanny Settles , by completing 7
unit. In all , 2U lads saw a&lt;: tion , l&lt;f II aeria ls for 97 yards . Even
lor th e Gallians. Ken :.l ike Berridge , so phomore Blue
Devil signa l caller bettered
Wamlllty , 18l ·pi•Und .~t nlrJr
guard who sat r1ut the la st t~o Settles ' effort. Berridge hit six
r;AIIS tilts with an Injury, r,f e1gh t passes for 32 ya rds.
was dres;ed Friday , hut did Settles finished the night with
not set ar·tion . .John Wal ter, tw,, of seven and 21 yards . Two
J60-pouncl junifJr llrst string .Kr,cket passes th r own by
twin-safety ami scttmd strin J; halfback Terry Stewart were
tailhar·k, mi SHe d Friday 's rhtercepted by GAHS, one by
f•flntest due to lllntHii . Matt Da ve Wh1te and another by Erie
Epli ng, 191 s•&gt;fllli&gt;more tarklc. Sounders.
Tailba ck Pete Nea l,
mi sse d Friday 's ga me
playi ng only 12 minutes,
because or sitkncss.
r;AHS d&lt; Hllllloted the ~a m e 1n par:cd GAHS runners with 94'
ya rds In 11 trips. Neal scored
16 points on touchdown runs
of
two and nine yards. He
I
I

r---------·

I

I
I
1
I
1

I

I

Prudential
Own

1

APiece of

1

The Rock

:DARWIN E. PETRIE
l
Special Agent
I
Resiuence

I
I
I
I
I

I

I
I
I
I
I

1
P. 0 . Box 271
1 Gallipoli s, Ohio 456ll I
I, _________
Tele phone : 446-4153 I
.J

added two extra point con·

lhc winners.
Fullback Kev Sheets earn ed
tot&lt;il yardage honors for the
Gallians. The 160-pound junior
rushed for 36 yards in six
ve rsions ror

&lt;:::trries, and nabbed four passes
1out

FIRST PERIOD
After O..n Settles returned
larry

TOUCHDOWN - GAHS tailbaCk Pete Neal (38) ac&lt;red
from two yards out with 6:29left in the iitst period Friday
night after Jim MiUer rm Pat B~ll!r 1411 ) aoo Bud Sanders

Bulldogs Stay
Alive, Win 14-6
WAVERLY - The running of
lullback Don Wood carried the
Athens Bulldogs (() a hard·
fought l4·6 victory over
Waverly Fnday night in a
bruising de fensJve battle at
Waverly .
All of the scorin g was con·
fine d to the first half as the two
teams battled to a complete
standoff in the second half.
Coach Gerald Inbody 's
Bulldogs intercepted a Waverly
pass on the first play of the
con test and rolled 51 yards in 8
plays with Wood galloping
around end 21 yards for a touchdo wn. Garry Snow kicked the
extra point for a 7-ll Athens lead
with 6:39 left .
The Tigers came righ t back
and stormed 54 yards in 10 plays
with John Watters slamming
over fr om the one yard line .
Don Gullion 's extra point kick
was blocked and Athens led 7.0
at the 2:19 mark.
The Bulldogs took the kickoff
and used 15 plays to drive 75
yards with quarterback Dave
Green scoring on a one yard
keeper and Snow's placement
upping the margin to 14-6 with
22 seconds left in the first ha lf.
The Tigers staved off two
serious Bulldog thrusts in the

third quarter, halting Athens on
the four by recovering a fumble
and later watching a Dave
Green field goal attempt fall
short from the JG.yard line .
Waverly threatened twice in
the fourth quarll!r but lost the
ball on downs at the Athens '!1
and later fumbled it away at the
Bulldog 30 yard line with just 29
seconds left in the game .
In statistics Athens had 14
first downs, 220 yards rushing ,
and fa iled on four pass attempts.
The Tigers had seven first
downs, onl y 19 yards rushing,
but completed six of It passes
for lt5 yards with two picked off
by Athens.
Each team lost the ball once
on a fumble and each drew six
penalties, Athens for 60 yards,
and Waverly for 45.
Wood was the big ground
gainer for the winners with 10?
ya rds in 18 trips with Paul
Scarmack adding 44 in 10, Stu
Smith 32 in five , and Dave
Green 26 in seven tries.
Butch We bb carried five
times for 17 yards for the
T1.gers.
""'
The score by quarters :
Athens
7 7 0 ~1 4
Waverly
600~ 6

7
Wheelersburg 48 Minford 0

IWellstonl
GALLIPOLIS
PR YG TO
None
0 0 0
TOTALS
0
0
0
RECOVERED
ENEMY
FUMBLES : GAH5-J . Davis. 2.
\llellston·dju!chlnson .
PUNTS: Snowden, J, blocked .
Patton, 2·65, 132.51.
OFFICIALS - Da ve Le t.
tingwel l. Lloyd Peecher. Dale
Ha ll , Bery l Jones . Ironton
Chapter.
INDIVIDUAL
SCORINGGAHS : Neal. 2·yard run . 6:29
first (Neal, run !: Neal, 9-yard
run, 2:03 first, ( Nea l. run );
Rees, 6·yard run, 4.5j! second
ISnowden.fo.Whr!el ;
Safely ,
7:38 thrrd ; Shee!s. 2-yard run, .
6: 14, thrrd (run fa il ); Safety ,
3:47 thord. Wellstcm-Settles, J.
yardrun,l:l7, fourth ,( Sfewart,

Snowden

7-11

0

Berridge
TOTALS

97

MILTON - Pt. Pleasant's
Big Blacks snapped a two-y ear ,
five-game !~sing spell here ·
Friday night. by defeating the
Milton Greyhounds, 20-t4.

0

Go,

0 run ).

TEAM STATISTICS
SCORE BY QUARTERS
Gallipol is
16 8 10 o-34
Wellston
0 0 0 s- 8
FIRST OOWNS
Gall ipolis
6 4 6 3-19
Wellston
l 3 0 5- 9
YARDS GAINED RUSHING
Gall ipolis
l1S 40 43 53-251
Wellston
22 29 30 66-147
YARDS.LOST RUSHING
Gallrpolrs
0 4 0 2- 6
Wellston
5 5 35 7-52
NET YARDS RUSHING
Gall ipolis
ll 5 36 43 51-245
Wellston
17 24 ·5 59- 95
PASSES ATTEMPTED
Gall ipolis
3 5 8 3-19
Wellston
0 7 0 2- 9
PASSES COMPLETED
Gallrpolrs
13 7 2- 13
Wellston
0 I 0 1- 2
PASSES INTERCEPTED
Gallipol is
0 J 0 l- 2
Wellston
0 0 0 o-o
YARDS GAINED PASSING

x-Two intercepted .

Gallipoli s

r~;.r~r~

~

11 34 77

7- 129

Wellston
0 6 0 15- 21
TOTAL . VARDS (Rush-Pass!
Gall rpolrs
126 70 120 58- 374
Wellston
17 30 ·5 74-116
RETURN YARDAGE
Gall ipolis
0 3 51 1~9
Wellston
48 0 10 ()-Sj!
PLA.VS . FROM SCRIMMAGE
Gallrpolrs
17 13 17 11 - 58
Wellston
8 16 9 14- 47
FUMBLES
Gallipolis
0 0 l o-1
Wellston
3 0 0 l- 4
FUMBLES LOST
Gallipolis
0 0 J o-1
Wellston
2 0 0 o-2

g ~:,~:~~iEf9, 540 30 J()-105
Wellston

(6) 15 15 60 o- 9Q
LINEUPS
1Gallipolis)
ENDS - Eric Saunders. Da ve
White, Leon Briggs. Bill
Lemley. Chuck Perroud, · Leon
Smith.
TACKLES - Chuck Wood
(cc ) : Jim Miller , John
BaQshaw. Dave Kerns. Steve
Rose. Dave Brown, Chuck
Burdet!e.
GUARDS - Mike Wolfe. Pat
Boster, Ben Ba xter , Mark
Merola .

CENTERS - Bud Sanders,
Rex Plymale, Fred Ford, Brett
Epling .
BACKS Larry Snowden, Pete
Neal (cc) ; John Davis, Kev
Sheets, Mike Berridge, Ken
Collier, Rick Grymes,

Roes.

in untouched from the nine and

o

6· 8 0 J2 0
11-19 0 129 0
(Wellston)
PLAYER
C.A I YG TD
Set!les
2.7 0 21 0
Stewart
0·2 2 0 0
TOTALS
1-9 1 21 0
INDIVIDUAL RECEPTIONS
(Gallipolis)
PLAYER
C-A YG TO
Sheets
4-4 63 0
Grymes
5·6 J2 0
Saunders
1·3 17 0
Roes
1-l 1J 0
While
1~1
4 o
Perroud
1·l 0 0
Briggs
0·1 0 0
Oa vls
0-2 0 0
TOTALS
13-19 129 0
iWellstonl
PLAYER
C-A YG TO
McKinniss
1-l 15 0
J.J 6 0
Stewart
Martin .
0· J 0 0
Compston
0·2 0 0
TOTALS
2-7 11 0

!."1

Dean

with 2:03 left, it was 14·0. Neal
aga in hit right guard to make It
16-0. Bigga inerinthisdrivewas
a JJ.yardpass!rom Snowden to
Sheets .
Dav is recovered another
S!ewarttumble on !he Wellston
11 just beiO!"e the first period
ended.
SECOND PERIOD
With several GAHS second
stringersin1hegame, Wellston
t..ld Gallia on the Rocket live .
After WHS picked up a first
down. Patton punted 32 yards to
the Rockel 46 .
Eight pla ys later, it was 24-0.
Dean Rees tal lied from the six
with 4:5j! left in tt.. half .
Snowden hit split end Dave
White with Jhe two-point con·
versioo pass!omake·it24·0. Big
ga iners in the drive included a
12-yardga llopby Dav is, 17-yard
pass from Snowden to Eric
Sa unders,

and

a

Doubl e Wides . Ma ny Floor Plan s · 3 Inte rior

Is worth two In the bush and that s why most Americans
depend upon a savings account for security . . It offers :
attra ctive earnings which are paid li ke clockwork;
savl nas are guaranteed -in full ; ready availability . N~
fuzzy promises, no shaky guarantees, simply sound
securi ty in one of the best places on eartn to save money .
1

ALL sA'lfN"G'S"lroi\RANTEED IN FULL

GALLIPOliS SAVINGS
AND LOAN COMPANY

Fairfield Union 14 Bloom
Carroll 0
'Newark Catholic 60 Eas! Knox 0
Heat 14 Watkins Memorial 0
Cols . Watterson 19 Cols. Northland 18
.
Lancaster 17 Cincinnati Elder 7
Ma~letla 53 Oayton Belmont ~4

Phone 446-3832

Gallipolis·

6

SEOAL .ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L T POP
Gallipolis
5 0 0 156 68
Athens
4 1 0 109 71
Ironton
4 J 0 136 49
Meigs
4 J 0 126 58
Logan
J 2 0 160 102
Jackson
J 2 0 170 52
Wellston
1 4 0 74 128
Waver ly
0 5 0 28 153

FRUTH
PHARMACY
."Point Pleasant's I P.~liing

2501
Jackson

Ave.
Drug Store"

•

BY KEITH .WISECUP
JACKSON - Behind a
· sparkling team effort, the
Meigs Marauders destroyed the
Jackson lronmen, :lG-16, here
Friday night in a key
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League game.
The score doesn't really
reveal the lopsidedness as
Coae)J Charles Chancey's
"Maroon and Gold" completely
dominated
play•.
They
outgained the Ironmen, 371 to
106, had more first downs, 22-.5,
and even more amazing, ran 83
plays from scrimmage com. pared to 34 for Jackson!
The win for the Marauders,
their first over Jackson since
1967, gives them a fine 4·1 slate
and 2-1 In league play. The
lronmen drop to 3-2 overall,
their second straight loss after
wmnmg three in a row, and to J.
2 in league play.
Meigs had the "ole'
Williams" play going for them.
Cousins Mark Williams, 150 lb.
senior tailback , and Tiny

Williams, 175 lb . senior week is a tie between the 16 Ed Hughes to split end Chris
fullback , effectively combined players listed above!
· Ondera started the drive. MU!r
their tremendous 1-2 punch the
Coach Ben Buckles' lronmen a Meigs 15 yard penalty,
first time this year. Between suffered a big blow when top Valentine ran three straight
them, they lugged the ball 191 runner Kenny Valentine was times, going 13 yards on the
yards in, get this, 57 carries . .sidelined the remainder of the !ina! rush for the six-pointer.
Tiny carrle&lt;l 32 times for 105 game late in the first quarter, The speedy tailback also
His injury was believed to have carried in the extras to tie it up
yards and Mark 25 for 86.
Andy Vaughan, 174 lb. junior been a fractured collarbone. He with 1:34 left in the first quarter
quarterback, played his finest- stayed to watch the game, but at 11-8.
game. He connected on three of was taken to a hospital lif. The Marauders, who scored
four passing, ran for 57 yards in terwards.
the first three times they had
only six carries, and scored two
The Marauders, after forcing the ball, controlled the ball on
touchdowns .
·
the Ironmen to punt after the another long drive. This one
The Marauder line from end opening kickoff, marched 89 went for 67 yards in 18 plays,
to end were more than spec· yards in 14 plays, all on the with Vaughan rolling out and
tacular. Jeff Morris, Larry ground except a 12 yard pass taking it over from the 14 . .The
Harmon , Fred Lee , Dave from Vaughan to Morris on a slick Marauder quarterback
Krawsczyn, Roger Dixon, Ted key third down situation ,
passed to Morris for the extras
Lehew, and especially Eddie
T. Williams capped the drive to give Meigs a liHI advantage
Young, who repeatedly moved on a one yard crack up the with 6:34 left in the opening
the Jackson middle guard out of middle. Smith carried the ball half. '
·
the play , were the ones who to the o~e · from the 28 on the
Forcing Jackson to punt
should be given a tip of the hat. previous play . M. Williams ran, without allowing a first down,
On defense, John Grueser and in the extras and with 4: 11 left the Marauders once again
John Thomas along with backs in the first quarter, Meigs led ft. ground out the needed yardage,
Chuck Faulk, Keith Van In· 0.
a Ia Woody Hayes' "Three
wagen, Rick Ash, and Ron
It didn't take the fired up yards and a cloud of dust."
Smith played exceptional ball. !ronmen long to come back. A This drive was good for 63
The Marauder player of the 30-yard pass f~om quarterback yards in 13 plays. Vaughan'

Bengals Face Miami
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Cincinnati Bengals face a critical situation Sunday as they
take on the tough Miami Dol·
phins here in an atll!mpt to end
a two-game losing streak and
get back Into the running for
the Central Division Title.
The Bengals, who took a severe physical beating last Sun·
day at Green Bay, will caU on
rookie quarwrback Ken Ander·
son of Augustana (rn.) college
to fire up a slumping offense .
Quart.!rback Virgil Carter sui.
fered a shoulder separation in
the Green Bay contest and will
be oul for at least two more
weeks, putting the weight directly on Anderson 's young
shoulders.
The Dolphins are not laking
the rookie lightly, however, re-

membering their pre • season
loss to Cincinnati, 27-10, in
which Anderson entered the
game in the fourth quarter and
ignited a 17-point splurge.
The Dolphins, with a 1·1·1
record, have the second anq
third leading running backs in
the American Football Conference in Larry Csonka (50 car·
ries, 243 yds.) and Jim Kiick
(43 carries, 226 yds.).
The Bengals also are well
aware of the Dolphins' great
passing attack led by quarterback Bob Griese and wide receiver Paul Warfield.
"Griese not only throws out
of the pocket," commented
Bengals assistant coach Chuck
Studley, "He also presents a
problem when he scrambles.
And he'll be throwing to receiv-

ers like Paul Warfield, who is gals lineup, aside from Ander·
the epitome of what a receiver son, is the return of free safe·
~ Sandy Ourko to replace Ken
should be."
Dyer, who suffered a spine in·
Cleveland and Pittsburgh jury in the Green Bay game
clash Sunday in a crucial Cen- and is still confined to a Green
tral Division game and the Bay hospital with partial para·
Bengals can't help but gain lysis.
The Bengals activated defen·
from that contest regardless of
who wins. The Browns and sive lineman Ken Johnson and
St•elers are tied for first place linebacker Doug Adams for
in the division with 2·1 records. Sunday's game. Adams is a
The only change in the Ben- rookie from Ohio state .

Friday Grid Scores
Mt. -Gilead 25 Big Walnu! 14
Shaker Heights 8 Shaw 2
Akron Garfield 8 Upper Berea 7 Willoughby South 6
Arlington 0
Eastlake North 12 Midpark 7
Avon Lake 12 Westlake 10
Newark 46 Colonel White 8
Lima Senior 30 Toledo Whitmer Rocky River 6 Olmsted Falls 0
Brecksvi lle 12 Brooklyn o
13
Delphos St. Johns 14 Fairvi ew 6 Kenston 2 Chardon 0

Cloverleaf 14 Wadsworth 6
Geneva 31 Ashtabula Edgewood

Greenville 22 Sidney 8
Urbana 14 Llma Shawnee 8
Cory - Rawson 26 Leipsic 7

0

Dayton

Stiver · 26 Day!on
Meadowdale 6
Lima Bath 14 Ot!awa 6
Dayton Wayne 0 Beavercreek 0
Riverdale 28 Buckeye 0
Indian Lake 26 West Liberty 0 I tie)
Center vi lie 28 Dayton Stebbins 0
Cambridge 35 Riverview 0
Xenia 14 Fairborn Baker 14
New Concord John Glenn 0
Tri ValleyO (tiel , · I tie)
Troy 27 Fairmont West 0
.
Fort Frye 21 Shenandoah 14

o

Twin Valley South 24 Twin
Steubenville 41 Dayton Ro!h 0 Valley Nor!h 8
Weirton (W. Va .) Madonna 22 Valleyvlew 34 Xenia Woodrow
Wilson 14
M ingo 8
Colonel Martin Franklin 31.
Cadiz 32 Stan!on Local 6
Dayton Roosevelt 29
Mt. Pleasa nt 26 Dillonvale 6
Newcomerstown 7 Strausburg

carried this one over from the
two y:trd line. M. Williams
tallied the extras and with only
44 seconds left in the half, and
Meigs was on top, 24-ll.
SECOND HALF
The !ronmen, apparent!v
fired up from halftime
remarks by Buckles, at first
looked like a new team .
They forced Meigs to punt for
the first time 9fter the kickoff.
Tom Stevenson, a hard-running
sophomore, fielded Robbie
Eason's punt on the Jackson 25
and rambled all the way to
paydirt behind some excellent
downfield blocking . He went in
untouched. Hughes ran in the
extras and JaCkson narrowed
the Marauder lead to 24-16 wilh
9:52 left in the third quarter.
On the Marauder's second
play after that kickoff, Vaughan
hit Morris for 31 yards to the
lronman 33. From there the
Marauders drove to the 11. On
fourth and one T. Williams was
rocked hard at the line of
scrimmage for no gain. Jackson
took over at their own 11 but
failed to move, ood punted .
Again the Marauders were
forced to punt; a 15 yard
penalty against them killing
their chances of a first down .
Jackson fared little better,
and was also forced to punt.
Meigs, on its own 45, had a pass
intercepted by Steve Rice at the
Jackson 30 on their second play
from scrimmage.
The lronmen • for the third
straight time, ran out of downs
and punted. Ondera, the
Jackson pun.ter • was rushed
hard by Moms and punted only
16 yards to the Jackson 48.
From there, Meigs went . 48
yards m 10 plays. Tmy earned
five times, Mark four times,
and Smith - effective all night
on the counter - once . Mark
took it over from the one with
6:40 left in the game after a
near successful Jackson
goalline stand; they held Meigs
from the one on two previous
rushes . Vaughan atll!mpted the
extras but was stopped inc hes
short. That made it 30.16.
The lronmen, battling the
clock, drove to the Meigs 33 but
were stopped on downs after
four incomplete passes. Meigs
took over from there and drove
to the Jackson 42.before ruiming
out of downs. Eason punted to
the Jackson 15. The Ironmen
completed a pass, then the clock

SUNDAY ONLY
100 PM

POINT ·PLEASANT STORE ONL Yl .

BED PILLOWS
j

HECK'S REG.
12.88
PAIR

FANCY CUPS

CEREAL BOWLS

10 '
HECK'S REG.
20' EACH

FOR

HECK'S REG.
44' &amp;
49'

$}

2 QT.

CASSEROLE
W/COVER
HECK'S REG.
13.99

10 PIECE
BEVERAGE SET
HECK'S REG.

'1

3"

PLASTIC PIPE

LENGTH

Reg .

See us
for a
low cost

UTII
LDA
can arrqnge low cost
ondng on all makes

lm•od&lt;ols wi!h us, Terms
budget. Come in NCIINI
let us point out the
avings advantages of

UTO LOANS!

Beau tiful and waterproofs. Equally perfect inside, outsid f",

oboYe and below the surface .

Friday, the Marauders return
home for a match with the
)Vinless Waverly Tigers.
Jackson plays at Logan.

25 LQS.

•222

HECK'S REG.

$2.99

HAIDWARE
DEPT.

COLEMAN FUEL
1 GAUON
HECK'S REG.
11.39
2 GALLON

ROCKET MOTOR OIL
Heck's Reg.
11.68

'129

4 4.0

SHICK
PLUS PLATINUM

'fhe Management

HECK'S REG. 11.38

Says ~ ..

FOR MAKING OUR FALL
PANELING SALE A SUCCESS!

CARTER &amp; EVANS INC.

$2.34$1.88

SURE DRY WATERPROOFING

ran out.

.
iRONTON
The with 7:08 left.
Wellsville 20 Beaver Local 0
Bellefontaine 19 Piqua 8
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
Following an Ironton punt Massillon 42 Akron East 6
League recorded its first major Logan shoved off on another 7(). Wintersv ille 43 Martins Ferry 0
John Marshall (W. Va .) 26
upset of the season Friday night yard march in 12 p~ys with
Bellaire 12
when the Logan Chieftains Culbertson getting the final Barnesville 12 Bellaire Sf. John
7
rallied from a t~ halftime three yards for the TD.
INDIViDUAL RECEIVING:
By Quarters:
.
Campbell
Memor ial
.7
Meigs,
Morris
.
2-43
,
2l.l
;
8 16 0 1&gt;-30
Meigs
deficit to upset the powerful
Rtck Krebs swept end for the
Austintown 6
Harmon, 1-8, 8.0. Jackson, Jackson
B 0 8 D-16
Ironton Tigers 22·19 at Tank two point conversion to make it - Smithfield 34 Yorkville 14
Ondera. 2-42, 21.0 : Beckley, J.
Meigs Jack.
22-t3 with 12 seconds left in the Belpre 26 Paden City IW. Va .l 7 25, 25.0; Rice, 1-2, 2.0.
Stadium in Ironton .
First Downs
22 5
.d
'od
St. Clairsville 30
INDIVIDUAL
PASSING
:
by
rushing
19 1
Fullback Ken Culbertson and th1r
pen ·
New Martinsville (W.Va.) 16 Meigs. Vaughan, 3·4· l. Jackson,
by
passing
2 3
tailback Rick Krebs led the
Early in the final period (&gt;.s hland 47 Mansfield Malabar Hughes, 4-12·0.
by penalty
J
1
second half surge that not only Iron ton drove to the Chief 27
14
INDIVIDUAL
PUNTING:
Rushing
Yards
320
37
Zanesville 41 Columbus East 30
51 69
knocked the Tigers from the from where Howard missed a New Lexington 22 Sherldan,_6 Meigs, Eason, J.9J , Jl.O . Passing Yards
Ja
ckson,
Ondera,
5-170.
34.0.
'
Total
Yards
371
106
unbeaten ranks, but also field goal attempt that came up Maysville 20 Morgan 16
4
12
Pass
At!empts
Philo J2 Utica 14
dropped them into a tie with a little short
3
4
Pass
Completions
INDIVIDUAL
PUNT
Miller 35 Glouster o
ln!erceptions
I
By)
0
1
Meigs, Athens, and Logan for
Ironton forced the Chiefs to Coshocton
RETURNS
:
Meigs.
R.
Ash,
2-ll
,
40 West Hoi mes o
5.5.
Jackson,
Stevenson,
1-75
,
Fumbles
0
0
Total
second place in the league punt and quickly moved 75 Youngstown East 40
75.0, Rice, 1-2, 2.0.
Fumbles Los!
0 0
Youngstown South 6
standings.
yards in just four plays to score.
Punting
J.93
5-170
INDIVIDUAL
KICKOFF
Ursuline 36 Board3].0
34.0
Tbe first ball was a!!
Spears hit Jim Payne with a Youngstown
RETURNS
:
Meigs,
M.
Ash,
J.
man 7
23,
~3.0 ; Faulk. 1-15, 15.0 ; R.
Penalties
5-54
2-30
Ironton as lhe Tigers took the lO.yard pass, then found Steve Youngstown Cardina l Mooney
Ash,
1-19
;
19
.0.
Jackson,
Plays from Scrimmage 83 34
23
opening klckofl and on lhe Massie's open for 2'4 more, and
2-35, 17.5 ; Rice, 1·17,
INDIVIDUAL RUSHING
Hubbard 6 Stevenson,
first play from scrimmage a Boykin picked up three on a run, Can McKinley 21 Canton
17.0;
Valentine
,
1.20.
20.0
;
MEIGS
TC Yds. Avg.
Lin Buckley,
J.O,
0.0.
T.
Williams
J2 105 J.J
Hal Spears pass was In·
Spears then rifled a 38-yard
coln 17
INDIVIDUAL
IN
·
M.
Williams
25 86 3.4
tercepted by Craig Oavidsoo. TO pass to Dave Kriebel but Massillon 42 Akron East 6
TERCEPTION
RETURNS:
Smith
B 60 7.5
All ia nce 20 Cuyah~a Fall s 6
Ironton forced Logan to punt another bad center snap Cleveland
Vaughan
6 l7 9.5
Meigs,
none.
Jackson,
Rice,
1-0,
Bened ictme 14
0.0.
Van
I
nwagen
I
7 7.0
·and then shoved off on a 14 plays thwarted Howard's conversion
Cleveland John F. Kennedy 6
INDIVIDUAL
SCORING:
M.
Ash
1
3 3.0
71 yard drive that culminated attempt and the score stood at Cleve. West Tech 7 Cleve. Meigs, M. Williams, one TO and Faulk
1
2 2.0
Lincoln-West 6
with fu!!back Bobby Smith· 22-19 with 4:50 showing on the
tour
extra
points
,(
10)
:
TOTALS
74
320
4.3
Bay 13 Medina 12
.
Vaughan,
two
touchdowns
I
12)
:
blasting into the end zone frO!Jl" clock.
North Olmsted ~2 Fa irview 14 T. Williams, one TO, (6), and JACKSON
TC Yds. Avg.
the three yard line. A bad snap
On the ensuing kickoff Rick Independence 24 Cuyahoga Morris,
' 5 27 5.4
two extra points (2) .
Va
lentine
Heights o
from center spoiled Jeff Krebs slipped and fell on his
Jackson
,
Valentine,
one
2
8 4.0
Meadows
Elyria Ca thol ic 6 Cleve . touchdown and two extra points Stevenson
J
Howard's placement but own three yard line and it apGyzantlne 0
(81 : Stevenson, one touchdown Th~mpson
3 3 l.O
lronton led 6-ll with 3:32 left.
peared Logan was in deep Sandusky 33 Lorain 8
(6L
and
Hugj:les.
two
extra
4 . J ·0.3
Rice
Painesville Rivers ide lJ
In the second quarter the · trouble.
pornts
(2)
.
Hughes
2 -4 ·2.0
Warrensv ille 0
17 37 2.2
TOTALS
Tigers marched 65 yards in 12
However, the Chiefs
plays with Rick Boy kin punched it out two and three
sweeping around end the final yards at a time and never
nine yards to paydirt. Howard's permitted the Tigers to touch
kick made it 13-0 with 9:51 on the ball during thai final four
the clock.
and a half minutes as the
The Chieftains took the ~0· contest ended with Logan In
suing kickoff and drove'70 yards possession oo the Ironton 46
in just seven plays to send yard floe .
fullback Ken Culbertson
Statistics bear out the
crashing the final one yard to powerful offensive contest as
score.
Logan had 15 first downs, netted
A conversion pass attempt 338 yards rushing, and comfailed and the Tigers led 13-6 plet.!d two of two passes for t8
with 7:00 showing on the clock. yards.
The Tigers than chugged back
The losing Tigers rolled up 19
up the field to the Chieftain six first downs, had 336 yards
yard line but Logan held as the rushing, and hit on 10 of 17
final 18 seconds clicked off the passes for 156 yards with one
clock ar halftime.
Intercepted.
Individually,
Culbertson
Logan's fired up Chiefs
fumbled on the first play from carried the ball 25 times for t43
scrfn1inage the second half, yards and three touchdowns
but' then forced Ironton to while Krebs picked up 123 yards
fumble the .ball back oo the in 19 tries.
next. PlaY at the Chieftain 30,
Rick Boy kin led Ironton with
.86 yards in 17 carries and Bobby
With Krebs and Culbertson Smith added 62 in 12.
ripping the Tiger defense Logan
Only one penalty was called in
went. 70 yards in 12 plays with the hard fought contest, a five
Culbertson slamming over from yarder against Ironton as the
the l)ne. . ·
Chiefs posted their third victory
GPeg ' Smith hit Brian· in four years over the Tigers.
11
11
Davidson with a two point
Score by quarters:
conversion p~ss that put the Logan
or. 16 o- 22
8.7 OLIVE ST.
CASH CARRY
GALLIPOLIS . OHIO
Chiefs. ahead fnr keep~ 14-J:I l~'•lllpn
6 7 0 6- 19" . . . . .IIIJJ!I_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _••
~·iil.l

·7 PM

TO

Meigs Grid Statistics

SEO Standings

SEVEN DAYS AWEEK

e1gs ......,wamps ·acksOn

Logan Jolts
IHS' 22-19

Ed Martin got six, then 10, but
WHS was penal ized back to the
10. Bud Sanders caught Martin
for a four yard loss, then San·
ders nabbed Settles for a fi ve
· yard loss back !o the Rocke!
one. When J. o. Patton wen!
into the endzone to punt, tt..
ball sailed over his head tor an
automatic two point salety .
With 7:JB lett, GAHS led 26·0.
Patton elected to punt from
his own 20. John Da vis look It on

SEOAL ONLY
TEAM
W L T POP
Gallipolis
J 0 0 96 36
Athens
2 1 0 43 40
Ironton
2 1 0 69 35
Meigs
2 l 0 74 38
Logan
2 l 0 80 61
Jackson
1 2 0 63 52
Waverly
0 3 o 14 89
Wellston
0 3 0 22 llO
TOTALS
12 12 0 461 461
Friday's Results:
Gallipolis 34 Wellston 8
Athens 14 Waverly 6

••

..

Van Werf 26 Celina 22

recovered on the WHS four .

9:00 A.M. TILL 10:00 P.M.

West Jefferson 13 Teays Valley

Opposite P' .. "'fice

10-yard

(Wellston)
Densil Nibert scored Pt,
ENDS - Ra y McKi nn iss,
Pleasant's first touchdown o ~ a Max Compston.
Meigs 30 Jackson 16
TACKLES - John Cline, J . D. Logan 22 Ironton 19
five yard run. Chuck Adl ns
October 15 Games:
added a six-poinwr on a one- Patton .
GUARDS Willie Fox. Ron Gallipolis at Athens
yard plunge to give the visitors Argabright, Richar~ Zim - Ironton a! Wellston
merman.
Waverly at Meigs
a 12-(i halftime lead,
CENTERS
Bill
Starkey
.
Ja ckson ·a t Logan
In the third stanza, Adkins
. BACKS - AI Arthur, Danny
returned. a kickoff 80 yards for Settles. Terry Stewart, Randy ·
the Blacks' final touchdown . Hatton, Ed Martin , Rick
Crooksville 21 West M uskingum
Wright, Tony Hutchinson.
Adkins ran the extra points.
6
.
GAHS GAME - Oct.
Milton's first tally came on a 15 NEXT
North Union 50 Cardington 6
- At Athens.
14-yard pass from John Walter
to Tim Bi~s in the final period, r----------------~!'1•••
Walker passed to Chris
Harshbarger for the extra
points.
The Greyhounds final tally
came with two seconds left in
the game wben Bias scored on a
46-yard pass from Walker.
Point led in first downs 10.7,
but Milton held the upper hand
in total yards, 197-156.
Point is now 1-4 on the year.
The Blacks will take on Hun·
tington East at Huntington
Saturday night.
By Quarll!rs:
0 12 8 0-20
Pt. Pleasant
0 0 0 14- 14
Milton

.,

McKinnlss .

scamper by Rees.
WHS with the aid of a
roughi~g the kicker pena lly.
movedfrom itsownseventothe
Wells!o,, 41 where Eric Saun ·
dersinterceptedaStewart'pass .
Two penalties stalled the
Gallians. !hen Wellston's !or·
ward wall blocked Larry
Snowden' s only punt attempt of
the night, recovering on the
GAHS 21. Three straight Set!les
passes fell incomplete as the
half ended.
THIRD PERIOD
Eric Saunders returned Bill
Starkey' s second half kickoff
from the GAHS 30 to the Blue
Devi ls' 43 . Snowden hit Shee!s
with a 28-yard pass. Roes'
gainedsix. Sheetsbeltedi!p!he
middle for 12 to put it on tt..
Rocket 1~ . Snowden hit Sheets
with an eight-yard advance to
the four . but the GAHS fullback
tumbled . Tony Hutchinson

PHARMACIST

KITHOMES~f

See Jim Staats.or Joe Giles
Next Door to Auto Auction
Phone 446·9340
. .
Gallipolis. Ohio

INDIVIDUAL NET
VARDS RUSHING
(Gallipolis)
PLAYER- PM. TCB YG Avg.
Pete Neal , LH
11 94 8.5
Rick Grymes, FB
3 23 7.6
John Dav is. RH
8 SO 6.2
Kev Sheets, FB
6 36 6.0
Dean Rees. LH
9 4.l 4.7
LarrySnowden. OB 2 ·1 ·.5
TOTALS
39 14! 6.1
!Wellston)
PLAYER-Pos. TCB YG Avg .
Danny Settle&gt;, QB 10 ;o 4.0
Ed Martin, FB
11 JS J.l
Terry Stewart. LH
8 2l 2.8
Randy Hatlon . RH
6 11 1.8
Ray McKinniss, LE 1 .; ·•
Team
2 .Jo ·5
TOTALS
38 9! 1.5
INDIVIDUAL PASSING
!Gallipolis)
PLAYER
C-A I YG TO

Big Blacks Cop
First Grid Win
n

touchdown was recovered by

John Davis on the Rocke! 31.
Seven plays later. Neal zoomed

r;r•
T
£ lVe ~

6i
I Wellston)
Cols. Wa lnul Ridge 10 Cols.
Mohawk 0
PLAYER
KO VG TD
Cols. Eastmore 52 Cols. South 8 Stewart
2 26 0
Cols. West 28 Cols. Central 12 Settles
J 19 0
Cols. Brookha ven 26 Cols. North Hatton
J JJ 0
7
Wr ight
J 0 0
Westerville 33 Whitehall 6
TOTALS
l !8 0
Mt. Vernon 22 Reynoldsburg 20
PUNT RETURNS
Worthington 12 Gahahna 10
(Gallipolis)
Groveport 25 Grandview 0
PLAYER
PR VG TO
Cols . DeSa les 30 Cols . Hartley None
0 0 0
20
TOTALS
0 0 0

For great homes. torwretree living, for
a degree of e l egan~ and style never
before achieved - tor a great deal, take
a look at KIT.

Upper Rt •.7

yards in two trips.
Terry Stewarfs tumble two
plays alter !he first GAHS

• Do wn,
FlVe

INTERCEPTION
RUN BACKS
!Ga llipolis)
PLAYER
PI VG TO
White
l 6 0
E. Saunders
l 3 0
Ohio High School
TOTALS
1 9 o
Football Scores
I Wellston)
By United Presslnternationa I
PLAYER
PI YG TO
Portsmouth 34 ChlllicothP n
None
0 0 0
Athens 14 Wa ver ly 6
TOTALS
0 0 0
Gallipolis 34 Wellston a·
KICKOFF RETURNS
Circleville 22 Hi llsboro 0
(Gallipolis!
PLAYER
KO YG TO
Portsmouth East 66
2 JB 0
Luca sville Valley 20 Oa vis
l 13 0
New Boston 8 Port smouth Wesl E. Saunders

THE HAND

Before JOU bar, • u!

MOBILE HOME SALES

the exira point$. Neal carr ied
six times in the drive, picking
up 65 yards. Kev Sheets had 19

~led a giganUc bole mille left side~ tile WHS !lne. 'null's
Gallia 's John Davis ( 20) m lefL Wellston's Terry Stewart
( 20), Roo Argabright (54 ) and Dick Zimmennan ( 58 ) came

up too late tostq&gt; Neal on this play . GAHSwoo, 34-8.

r------------------..,
ABIRD IN

. cY~~~ ·

opening

kickoff from the WHS 12 to !he
Rocke-!&lt; 31, Ed Martin picked
""a firsl down on the WHS 41.
GAHS he ld. J. D. Pat!on punted
33 yards to Da ve White at the
GAHS 16. GAHS martned 84
ya rds in eight plays. Pole Neal
ta ll ied from the fwo with 6:29
showing on the clock. then ran

of four attempl'l from
Snowden for another 63, giving
hirn 9!1 for the ni ght. Sheets Chuck Wood, Dave White , Jim
stf!rt::d once rroril the two.
Miller , Bud Sanders and Mike
Wingback John Davis added Wolfe, played their usual steady
50 yards in eight tri ps, and game, with assistance from
SrJphorrwre ta.ilback Dea n Rees , Rick Gryrnes, Mike Berridge,
filling in for the ailing Walte r, chuck Perroud, Dave Kerns,
rushed for 43 ya rds in nine trips. and Leon Briggs . The GARS
Hces stored once fr om six defense must now prepare to
yards out.
hal t the slick Athens Bulldogs
Defensively , Eric Sounders, Friday at Athens.
Up front, Saunders, Wood,
Wolfe , John Bagshaw, Sanders,
Pat Boster, and Miller were
able to control the Golden
Rockets forward wall without
too much resistance . It will be a
diff eren t story at Athens
Friday , especially if th e
Ga llians relax aga in st the
Athenians.
For Wellstoo, Settles paced
the Rockets attack with 40
yards In to trips, Defensively,
AI Arthur, halfback, and
Randy Hatton, linebacker,
collected most of the visitors
tackles.
.
The triumph, seventh in a row
over Wellston for GAHS,left the
Blue Devils with a 32-13-2 ad·
' vanta~e over the Rockets since
the SEOAL was formed in 1925.

Styl ings . Ea s y Financing · Imm e diate
Deliv e ry .
Sold and erected by the area's most ex perienced deiller or builder of sectional
homes .
Order Now for Delivery Before Bad Weather .

Snowden ' s

the WHS 44, A personal foul
aga inst WHS put II on 1"- nine &lt;&gt;
after Snowden hit Sheel$ with a
16-yardstrlke. Roes gotsa~n to.
the two. then Sheeb carried II
over with 6: U Jell, giving the
Dev lis a 32·0 leitd, Rees appeared "In" on the run for •~Ira
points, but the officials said no.
Chuck Wood and Jim Miller,
plus a15·yard Wellston penalty,
put the Rockets right beck In
the hole later. Ar,tn Patton
went back to pun , this lime
from his own nine. With 3:47
left. GAHS had another safety,
and It was 34-0.
.
·
After Davis returned another
Patton lree kick trom the GAHS
29 to the Wellston #1 , Gallipolis.
with the entire second unit In
the lineup, marched to
Wellston's 26. but a 15-yard
holding penalty killed that
dr ive. QB Berridge hit Rick
Grymes with tour passes good
for 25 yards' In th' march.
FOURTH PERIOD
Dave White Intercepted
another Stewart pass on the
second play of the final period,
returning It six yards to the
WHS Al. In nine plays, GAHS
marched to the Wellston 22, bvt
tal ted to score. A 15·yard
holding penalty killed the drive.
Wells ion marched 78 yards In
JJ plays. Settles tallied from the
one with I: 17 left in the game.
Stewart ran the extra points.
Big gainers In the drive In·
eluded a 19-yard run by Settles
on a broken pass play, and a 15·
ya rd pass from Settles to Ray

17-Th.!lunday Timeii-Sentloei,Sunday,Od. 10,1971

•

lO's

FOOTBALL HELMET
ZEPCO 202 REEL

$117

Heck's Reg .
$),99

Heck's Reg.

'1"

PROCTOR
SILEX
COFFEE POT
HECK'S
REG.
'14.96

$

BUILDING SUPPLIES
&amp;.
'

'

'

I.

0

•

'

.

�'.

' -.,.

16- Thl Smda7 rI

.

·Snt"

-

1, a..!;ly , ocu•. IJ71

n

Rolls

•

ith

lB
Successful Homecoming

Take Over First

GAU.IPOu's - It was a the GAHS ;o, and returned It to

•

successful homecoming
~lebratioo oo Memorial Field
bore Friday night as Gallipolis
dnJpped Wellstoo 34-8 to take
ooer lllldisputeo:t first place in
the Sootbeastern Ohio Leagu~

Place In League;

5tar!din8s·

Athens Next Foe

Here is a brief play-by-play
of Gallia '.s lliumph over the
· Golden Rockel!

GALLIPOLIS - Coach C L. .1Johnny1 Ecker's
Gallipolis Blue Devils took over undisputed first
place in the Southeastern Ohio Athletic U!ague
football ra ce Friday night following a 34-8 triumph
over v11&gt;itmg Wellston before approximately 3,000
homecom ing fans at ~emorial Field.
While the Blue Devils were taking Wells ton into
camp , fronton. co-leader going into Friday's third
rou nd of SEOAL action . was knocked from the un·
beaten ranks by Logan. 22·19.
~ (J W r;r;rnE:!t th~ f 'JU.l{.h

'JUT

Sl.:ht--d:.J l'.:

ar t,.:r

hl~

rr::marktd
~ Jut

rt &lt;;f;rd~d ttr1·1r

~· J c: t r; r y

part r,f e•:er)
F.d~tr

Dt:V l iS

ht.~d

17th UlMof:CU t JH:

r; ,_·•:r a th n::e·rtar

r~.:n r....J

" Wt ll l!lilr ' ~ par&lt;.d.Jn'5 thf~
rn{:n frr;rn 1JH: ~.I!J s, t*~m mn~ e:t t
Athens FnrJay nJ~ht, ' cr;n-

tJnued

C;AHS

t h ~;:

A t htn ~.

dppdrr:lltly·

rm:nt1Jr
l l)t; k tn~

tt ht(td , !-. turqbled 'JY P.r •.~o· tnlt%
W &lt;:~verly

14.f.i

t1J

rtffl.(:!Jn

1n

cr,ntentHJfl fur tht 1~ 71 h:d~UI.:

thdrn pF!n'ihl p Thf: B ulld(J~ :-.
(jr e 4-1 fJVtrdll , ond 2--1 Jn r:rJn-

ft renc:c pl• y r;AJJS " ;,./J
fJV I:r all, &lt;Jnd J-IJ Jn crm fercm:t:
aclH1n .

GAllS all hut •rapped up
its fifth 1971 vleto ry In th e
firot period Friday ni ght. It

depa rtment, including
pena ltJes . The Gallians were
penahzed nine 1Jmt1! for 105
yards. WHS was penalized six
t1mes frJ"r 90 times.
The E:ckermen chalked up 19
f1 r st df,wn.s and ~rrmtted nine.
GAHS ~ained 245 net yards
rushrng, complett:d 13 of 19
aerials for 129 yards a nd
17 4 tr,tal ya rd s. Wellston
wa s IJmJted to 95 ya rds
rush1ng
and
onl y
21
yard~ pass im~ !two fJ f nine , wi th
tw1, mterce pted 1 for a tbtal of
116 yards ru.shmg and passing.
Seventy-fr,ur r,f Wellsu,n's total
yards carne in the final period
&lt;J ~alnst the Devils ' second and
thtrd un1ls .

Gall1 polis QB Larry Snowden
o u t p~rf o r med
la s t vear 1S
wa 8 tht onl y !1 lan1.a In wh lt h AII·SEOAL . sig nal caller ,
Ecker pla yed his enllrc lint IJanny Settles , by completing 7
unit. In all , 2U lads saw a&lt;: tion , l&lt;f II aeria ls for 97 yards . Even
lor th e Gallians. Ken :.l ike Berridge , so phomore Blue
Devil signa l caller bettered
Wamlllty , 18l ·pi•Und .~t nlrJr
guard who sat r1ut the la st t~o Settles ' effort. Berridge hit six
r;AIIS tilts with an Injury, r,f e1gh t passes for 32 ya rds.
was dres;ed Friday , hut did Settles finished the night with
not set ar·tion . .John Wal ter, tw,, of seven and 21 yards . Two
J60-pouncl junifJr llrst string .Kr,cket passes th r own by
twin-safety ami scttmd strin J; halfback Terry Stewart were
tailhar·k, mi SHe d Friday 's rhtercepted by GAHS, one by
f•flntest due to lllntHii . Matt Da ve Wh1te and another by Erie
Epli ng, 191 s•&gt;fllli&gt;more tarklc. Sounders.
Tailba ck Pete Nea l,
mi sse d Friday 's ga me
playi ng only 12 minutes,
because or sitkncss.
r;AHS d&lt; Hllllloted the ~a m e 1n par:cd GAHS runners with 94'
ya rds In 11 trips. Neal scored
16 points on touchdown runs
of
two and nine yards. He
I
I

r---------·

I

I
I
1
I
1

I

I

Prudential
Own

1

APiece of

1

The Rock

:DARWIN E. PETRIE
l
Special Agent
I
Resiuence

I
I
I
I
I

I

I
I
I
I
I

1
P. 0 . Box 271
1 Gallipoli s, Ohio 456ll I
I, _________
Tele phone : 446-4153 I
.J

added two extra point con·

lhc winners.
Fullback Kev Sheets earn ed
tot&lt;il yardage honors for the
Gallians. The 160-pound junior
rushed for 36 yards in six
ve rsions ror

&lt;:::trries, and nabbed four passes
1out

FIRST PERIOD
After O..n Settles returned
larry

TOUCHDOWN - GAHS tailbaCk Pete Neal (38) ac&lt;red
from two yards out with 6:29left in the iitst period Friday
night after Jim MiUer rm Pat B~ll!r 1411 ) aoo Bud Sanders

Bulldogs Stay
Alive, Win 14-6
WAVERLY - The running of
lullback Don Wood carried the
Athens Bulldogs (() a hard·
fought l4·6 victory over
Waverly Fnday night in a
bruising de fensJve battle at
Waverly .
All of the scorin g was con·
fine d to the first half as the two
teams battled to a complete
standoff in the second half.
Coach Gerald Inbody 's
Bulldogs intercepted a Waverly
pass on the first play of the
con test and rolled 51 yards in 8
plays with Wood galloping
around end 21 yards for a touchdo wn. Garry Snow kicked the
extra point for a 7-ll Athens lead
with 6:39 left .
The Tigers came righ t back
and stormed 54 yards in 10 plays
with John Watters slamming
over fr om the one yard line .
Don Gullion 's extra point kick
was blocked and Athens led 7.0
at the 2:19 mark.
The Bulldogs took the kickoff
and used 15 plays to drive 75
yards with quarterback Dave
Green scoring on a one yard
keeper and Snow's placement
upping the margin to 14-6 with
22 seconds left in the first ha lf.
The Tigers staved off two
serious Bulldog thrusts in the

third quarter, halting Athens on
the four by recovering a fumble
and later watching a Dave
Green field goal attempt fall
short from the JG.yard line .
Waverly threatened twice in
the fourth quarll!r but lost the
ball on downs at the Athens '!1
and later fumbled it away at the
Bulldog 30 yard line with just 29
seconds left in the game .
In statistics Athens had 14
first downs, 220 yards rushing ,
and fa iled on four pass attempts.
The Tigers had seven first
downs, onl y 19 yards rushing,
but completed six of It passes
for lt5 yards with two picked off
by Athens.
Each team lost the ball once
on a fumble and each drew six
penalties, Athens for 60 yards,
and Waverly for 45.
Wood was the big ground
gainer for the winners with 10?
ya rds in 18 trips with Paul
Scarmack adding 44 in 10, Stu
Smith 32 in five , and Dave
Green 26 in seven tries.
Butch We bb carried five
times for 17 yards for the
T1.gers.
""'
The score by quarters :
Athens
7 7 0 ~1 4
Waverly
600~ 6

7
Wheelersburg 48 Minford 0

IWellstonl
GALLIPOLIS
PR YG TO
None
0 0 0
TOTALS
0
0
0
RECOVERED
ENEMY
FUMBLES : GAH5-J . Davis. 2.
\llellston·dju!chlnson .
PUNTS: Snowden, J, blocked .
Patton, 2·65, 132.51.
OFFICIALS - Da ve Le t.
tingwel l. Lloyd Peecher. Dale
Ha ll , Bery l Jones . Ironton
Chapter.
INDIVIDUAL
SCORINGGAHS : Neal. 2·yard run . 6:29
first (Neal, run !: Neal, 9-yard
run, 2:03 first, ( Nea l. run );
Rees, 6·yard run, 4.5j! second
ISnowden.fo.Whr!el ;
Safely ,
7:38 thrrd ; Shee!s. 2-yard run, .
6: 14, thrrd (run fa il ); Safety ,
3:47 thord. Wellstcm-Settles, J.
yardrun,l:l7, fourth ,( Sfewart,

Snowden

7-11

0

Berridge
TOTALS

97

MILTON - Pt. Pleasant's
Big Blacks snapped a two-y ear ,
five-game !~sing spell here ·
Friday night. by defeating the
Milton Greyhounds, 20-t4.

0

Go,

0 run ).

TEAM STATISTICS
SCORE BY QUARTERS
Gallipol is
16 8 10 o-34
Wellston
0 0 0 s- 8
FIRST OOWNS
Gall ipolis
6 4 6 3-19
Wellston
l 3 0 5- 9
YARDS GAINED RUSHING
Gall ipolis
l1S 40 43 53-251
Wellston
22 29 30 66-147
YARDS.LOST RUSHING
Gallrpolrs
0 4 0 2- 6
Wellston
5 5 35 7-52
NET YARDS RUSHING
Gall ipolis
ll 5 36 43 51-245
Wellston
17 24 ·5 59- 95
PASSES ATTEMPTED
Gall ipolis
3 5 8 3-19
Wellston
0 7 0 2- 9
PASSES COMPLETED
Gallrpolrs
13 7 2- 13
Wellston
0 I 0 1- 2
PASSES INTERCEPTED
Gallipol is
0 J 0 l- 2
Wellston
0 0 0 o-o
YARDS GAINED PASSING

x-Two intercepted .

Gallipoli s

r~;.r~r~

~

11 34 77

7- 129

Wellston
0 6 0 15- 21
TOTAL . VARDS (Rush-Pass!
Gall rpolrs
126 70 120 58- 374
Wellston
17 30 ·5 74-116
RETURN YARDAGE
Gall ipolis
0 3 51 1~9
Wellston
48 0 10 ()-Sj!
PLA.VS . FROM SCRIMMAGE
Gallrpolrs
17 13 17 11 - 58
Wellston
8 16 9 14- 47
FUMBLES
Gallipolis
0 0 l o-1
Wellston
3 0 0 l- 4
FUMBLES LOST
Gallipolis
0 0 J o-1
Wellston
2 0 0 o-2

g ~:,~:~~iEf9, 540 30 J()-105
Wellston

(6) 15 15 60 o- 9Q
LINEUPS
1Gallipolis)
ENDS - Eric Saunders. Da ve
White, Leon Briggs. Bill
Lemley. Chuck Perroud, · Leon
Smith.
TACKLES - Chuck Wood
(cc ) : Jim Miller , John
BaQshaw. Dave Kerns. Steve
Rose. Dave Brown, Chuck
Burdet!e.
GUARDS - Mike Wolfe. Pat
Boster, Ben Ba xter , Mark
Merola .

CENTERS - Bud Sanders,
Rex Plymale, Fred Ford, Brett
Epling .
BACKS Larry Snowden, Pete
Neal (cc) ; John Davis, Kev
Sheets, Mike Berridge, Ken
Collier, Rick Grymes,

Roes.

in untouched from the nine and

o

6· 8 0 J2 0
11-19 0 129 0
(Wellston)
PLAYER
C.A I YG TD
Set!les
2.7 0 21 0
Stewart
0·2 2 0 0
TOTALS
1-9 1 21 0
INDIVIDUAL RECEPTIONS
(Gallipolis)
PLAYER
C-A YG TO
Sheets
4-4 63 0
Grymes
5·6 J2 0
Saunders
1·3 17 0
Roes
1-l 1J 0
While
1~1
4 o
Perroud
1·l 0 0
Briggs
0·1 0 0
Oa vls
0-2 0 0
TOTALS
13-19 129 0
iWellstonl
PLAYER
C-A YG TO
McKinniss
1-l 15 0
J.J 6 0
Stewart
Martin .
0· J 0 0
Compston
0·2 0 0
TOTALS
2-7 11 0

!."1

Dean

with 2:03 left, it was 14·0. Neal
aga in hit right guard to make It
16-0. Bigga inerinthisdrivewas
a JJ.yardpass!rom Snowden to
Sheets .
Dav is recovered another
S!ewarttumble on !he Wellston
11 just beiO!"e the first period
ended.
SECOND PERIOD
With several GAHS second
stringersin1hegame, Wellston
t..ld Gallia on the Rocket live .
After WHS picked up a first
down. Patton punted 32 yards to
the Rockel 46 .
Eight pla ys later, it was 24-0.
Dean Rees tal lied from the six
with 4:5j! left in tt.. half .
Snowden hit split end Dave
White with Jhe two-point con·
versioo pass!omake·it24·0. Big
ga iners in the drive included a
12-yardga llopby Dav is, 17-yard
pass from Snowden to Eric
Sa unders,

and

a

Doubl e Wides . Ma ny Floor Plan s · 3 Inte rior

Is worth two In the bush and that s why most Americans
depend upon a savings account for security . . It offers :
attra ctive earnings which are paid li ke clockwork;
savl nas are guaranteed -in full ; ready availability . N~
fuzzy promises, no shaky guarantees, simply sound
securi ty in one of the best places on eartn to save money .
1

ALL sA'lfN"G'S"lroi\RANTEED IN FULL

GALLIPOliS SAVINGS
AND LOAN COMPANY

Fairfield Union 14 Bloom
Carroll 0
'Newark Catholic 60 Eas! Knox 0
Heat 14 Watkins Memorial 0
Cols . Watterson 19 Cols. Northland 18
.
Lancaster 17 Cincinnati Elder 7
Ma~letla 53 Oayton Belmont ~4

Phone 446-3832

Gallipolis·

6

SEOAL .ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L T POP
Gallipolis
5 0 0 156 68
Athens
4 1 0 109 71
Ironton
4 J 0 136 49
Meigs
4 J 0 126 58
Logan
J 2 0 160 102
Jackson
J 2 0 170 52
Wellston
1 4 0 74 128
Waver ly
0 5 0 28 153

FRUTH
PHARMACY
."Point Pleasant's I P.~liing

2501
Jackson

Ave.
Drug Store"

•

BY KEITH .WISECUP
JACKSON - Behind a
· sparkling team effort, the
Meigs Marauders destroyed the
Jackson lronmen, :lG-16, here
Friday night in a key
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League game.
The score doesn't really
reveal the lopsidedness as
Coae)J Charles Chancey's
"Maroon and Gold" completely
dominated
play•.
They
outgained the Ironmen, 371 to
106, had more first downs, 22-.5,
and even more amazing, ran 83
plays from scrimmage com. pared to 34 for Jackson!
The win for the Marauders,
their first over Jackson since
1967, gives them a fine 4·1 slate
and 2-1 In league play. The
lronmen drop to 3-2 overall,
their second straight loss after
wmnmg three in a row, and to J.
2 in league play.
Meigs had the "ole'
Williams" play going for them.
Cousins Mark Williams, 150 lb.
senior tailback , and Tiny

Williams, 175 lb . senior week is a tie between the 16 Ed Hughes to split end Chris
fullback , effectively combined players listed above!
· Ondera started the drive. MU!r
their tremendous 1-2 punch the
Coach Ben Buckles' lronmen a Meigs 15 yard penalty,
first time this year. Between suffered a big blow when top Valentine ran three straight
them, they lugged the ball 191 runner Kenny Valentine was times, going 13 yards on the
yards in, get this, 57 carries . .sidelined the remainder of the !ina! rush for the six-pointer.
Tiny carrle&lt;l 32 times for 105 game late in the first quarter, The speedy tailback also
His injury was believed to have carried in the extras to tie it up
yards and Mark 25 for 86.
Andy Vaughan, 174 lb. junior been a fractured collarbone. He with 1:34 left in the first quarter
quarterback, played his finest- stayed to watch the game, but at 11-8.
game. He connected on three of was taken to a hospital lif. The Marauders, who scored
four passing, ran for 57 yards in terwards.
the first three times they had
only six carries, and scored two
The Marauders, after forcing the ball, controlled the ball on
touchdowns .
·
the Ironmen to punt after the another long drive. This one
The Marauder line from end opening kickoff, marched 89 went for 67 yards in 18 plays,
to end were more than spec· yards in 14 plays, all on the with Vaughan rolling out and
tacular. Jeff Morris, Larry ground except a 12 yard pass taking it over from the 14 . .The
Harmon , Fred Lee , Dave from Vaughan to Morris on a slick Marauder quarterback
Krawsczyn, Roger Dixon, Ted key third down situation ,
passed to Morris for the extras
Lehew, and especially Eddie
T. Williams capped the drive to give Meigs a liHI advantage
Young, who repeatedly moved on a one yard crack up the with 6:34 left in the opening
the Jackson middle guard out of middle. Smith carried the ball half. '
·
the play , were the ones who to the o~e · from the 28 on the
Forcing Jackson to punt
should be given a tip of the hat. previous play . M. Williams ran, without allowing a first down,
On defense, John Grueser and in the extras and with 4: 11 left the Marauders once again
John Thomas along with backs in the first quarter, Meigs led ft. ground out the needed yardage,
Chuck Faulk, Keith Van In· 0.
a Ia Woody Hayes' "Three
wagen, Rick Ash, and Ron
It didn't take the fired up yards and a cloud of dust."
Smith played exceptional ball. !ronmen long to come back. A This drive was good for 63
The Marauder player of the 30-yard pass f~om quarterback yards in 13 plays. Vaughan'

Bengals Face Miami
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Cincinnati Bengals face a critical situation Sunday as they
take on the tough Miami Dol·
phins here in an atll!mpt to end
a two-game losing streak and
get back Into the running for
the Central Division Title.
The Bengals, who took a severe physical beating last Sun·
day at Green Bay, will caU on
rookie quarwrback Ken Ander·
son of Augustana (rn.) college
to fire up a slumping offense .
Quart.!rback Virgil Carter sui.
fered a shoulder separation in
the Green Bay contest and will
be oul for at least two more
weeks, putting the weight directly on Anderson 's young
shoulders.
The Dolphins are not laking
the rookie lightly, however, re-

membering their pre • season
loss to Cincinnati, 27-10, in
which Anderson entered the
game in the fourth quarter and
ignited a 17-point splurge.
The Dolphins, with a 1·1·1
record, have the second anq
third leading running backs in
the American Football Conference in Larry Csonka (50 car·
ries, 243 yds.) and Jim Kiick
(43 carries, 226 yds.).
The Bengals also are well
aware of the Dolphins' great
passing attack led by quarterback Bob Griese and wide receiver Paul Warfield.
"Griese not only throws out
of the pocket," commented
Bengals assistant coach Chuck
Studley, "He also presents a
problem when he scrambles.
And he'll be throwing to receiv-

ers like Paul Warfield, who is gals lineup, aside from Ander·
the epitome of what a receiver son, is the return of free safe·
~ Sandy Ourko to replace Ken
should be."
Dyer, who suffered a spine in·
Cleveland and Pittsburgh jury in the Green Bay game
clash Sunday in a crucial Cen- and is still confined to a Green
tral Division game and the Bay hospital with partial para·
Bengals can't help but gain lysis.
The Bengals activated defen·
from that contest regardless of
who wins. The Browns and sive lineman Ken Johnson and
St•elers are tied for first place linebacker Doug Adams for
in the division with 2·1 records. Sunday's game. Adams is a
The only change in the Ben- rookie from Ohio state .

Friday Grid Scores
Mt. -Gilead 25 Big Walnu! 14
Shaker Heights 8 Shaw 2
Akron Garfield 8 Upper Berea 7 Willoughby South 6
Arlington 0
Eastlake North 12 Midpark 7
Avon Lake 12 Westlake 10
Newark 46 Colonel White 8
Lima Senior 30 Toledo Whitmer Rocky River 6 Olmsted Falls 0
Brecksvi lle 12 Brooklyn o
13
Delphos St. Johns 14 Fairvi ew 6 Kenston 2 Chardon 0

Cloverleaf 14 Wadsworth 6
Geneva 31 Ashtabula Edgewood

Greenville 22 Sidney 8
Urbana 14 Llma Shawnee 8
Cory - Rawson 26 Leipsic 7

0

Dayton

Stiver · 26 Day!on
Meadowdale 6
Lima Bath 14 Ot!awa 6
Dayton Wayne 0 Beavercreek 0
Riverdale 28 Buckeye 0
Indian Lake 26 West Liberty 0 I tie)
Center vi lie 28 Dayton Stebbins 0
Cambridge 35 Riverview 0
Xenia 14 Fairborn Baker 14
New Concord John Glenn 0
Tri ValleyO (tiel , · I tie)
Troy 27 Fairmont West 0
.
Fort Frye 21 Shenandoah 14

o

Twin Valley South 24 Twin
Steubenville 41 Dayton Ro!h 0 Valley Nor!h 8
Weirton (W. Va .) Madonna 22 Valleyvlew 34 Xenia Woodrow
Wilson 14
M ingo 8
Colonel Martin Franklin 31.
Cadiz 32 Stan!on Local 6
Dayton Roosevelt 29
Mt. Pleasa nt 26 Dillonvale 6
Newcomerstown 7 Strausburg

carried this one over from the
two y:trd line. M. Williams
tallied the extras and with only
44 seconds left in the half, and
Meigs was on top, 24-ll.
SECOND HALF
The !ronmen, apparent!v
fired up from halftime
remarks by Buckles, at first
looked like a new team .
They forced Meigs to punt for
the first time 9fter the kickoff.
Tom Stevenson, a hard-running
sophomore, fielded Robbie
Eason's punt on the Jackson 25
and rambled all the way to
paydirt behind some excellent
downfield blocking . He went in
untouched. Hughes ran in the
extras and JaCkson narrowed
the Marauder lead to 24-16 wilh
9:52 left in the third quarter.
On the Marauder's second
play after that kickoff, Vaughan
hit Morris for 31 yards to the
lronman 33. From there the
Marauders drove to the 11. On
fourth and one T. Williams was
rocked hard at the line of
scrimmage for no gain. Jackson
took over at their own 11 but
failed to move, ood punted .
Again the Marauders were
forced to punt; a 15 yard
penalty against them killing
their chances of a first down .
Jackson fared little better,
and was also forced to punt.
Meigs, on its own 45, had a pass
intercepted by Steve Rice at the
Jackson 30 on their second play
from scrimmage.
The lronmen • for the third
straight time, ran out of downs
and punted. Ondera, the
Jackson pun.ter • was rushed
hard by Moms and punted only
16 yards to the Jackson 48.
From there, Meigs went . 48
yards m 10 plays. Tmy earned
five times, Mark four times,
and Smith - effective all night
on the counter - once . Mark
took it over from the one with
6:40 left in the game after a
near successful Jackson
goalline stand; they held Meigs
from the one on two previous
rushes . Vaughan atll!mpted the
extras but was stopped inc hes
short. That made it 30.16.
The lronmen, battling the
clock, drove to the Meigs 33 but
were stopped on downs after
four incomplete passes. Meigs
took over from there and drove
to the Jackson 42.before ruiming
out of downs. Eason punted to
the Jackson 15. The Ironmen
completed a pass, then the clock

SUNDAY ONLY
100 PM

POINT ·PLEASANT STORE ONL Yl .

BED PILLOWS
j

HECK'S REG.
12.88
PAIR

FANCY CUPS

CEREAL BOWLS

10 '
HECK'S REG.
20' EACH

FOR

HECK'S REG.
44' &amp;
49'

$}

2 QT.

CASSEROLE
W/COVER
HECK'S REG.
13.99

10 PIECE
BEVERAGE SET
HECK'S REG.

'1

3"

PLASTIC PIPE

LENGTH

Reg .

See us
for a
low cost

UTII
LDA
can arrqnge low cost
ondng on all makes

lm•od&lt;ols wi!h us, Terms
budget. Come in NCIINI
let us point out the
avings advantages of

UTO LOANS!

Beau tiful and waterproofs. Equally perfect inside, outsid f",

oboYe and below the surface .

Friday, the Marauders return
home for a match with the
)Vinless Waverly Tigers.
Jackson plays at Logan.

25 LQS.

•222

HECK'S REG.

$2.99

HAIDWARE
DEPT.

COLEMAN FUEL
1 GAUON
HECK'S REG.
11.39
2 GALLON

ROCKET MOTOR OIL
Heck's Reg.
11.68

'129

4 4.0

SHICK
PLUS PLATINUM

'fhe Management

HECK'S REG. 11.38

Says ~ ..

FOR MAKING OUR FALL
PANELING SALE A SUCCESS!

CARTER &amp; EVANS INC.

$2.34$1.88

SURE DRY WATERPROOFING

ran out.

.
iRONTON
The with 7:08 left.
Wellsville 20 Beaver Local 0
Bellefontaine 19 Piqua 8
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
Following an Ironton punt Massillon 42 Akron East 6
League recorded its first major Logan shoved off on another 7(). Wintersv ille 43 Martins Ferry 0
John Marshall (W. Va .) 26
upset of the season Friday night yard march in 12 p~ys with
Bellaire 12
when the Logan Chieftains Culbertson getting the final Barnesville 12 Bellaire Sf. John
7
rallied from a t~ halftime three yards for the TD.
INDIViDUAL RECEIVING:
By Quarters:
.
Campbell
Memor ial
.7
Meigs,
Morris
.
2-43
,
2l.l
;
8 16 0 1&gt;-30
Meigs
deficit to upset the powerful
Rtck Krebs swept end for the
Austintown 6
Harmon, 1-8, 8.0. Jackson, Jackson
B 0 8 D-16
Ironton Tigers 22·19 at Tank two point conversion to make it - Smithfield 34 Yorkville 14
Ondera. 2-42, 21.0 : Beckley, J.
Meigs Jack.
22-t3 with 12 seconds left in the Belpre 26 Paden City IW. Va .l 7 25, 25.0; Rice, 1-2, 2.0.
Stadium in Ironton .
First Downs
22 5
.d
'od
St. Clairsville 30
INDIVIDUAL
PASSING
:
by
rushing
19 1
Fullback Ken Culbertson and th1r
pen ·
New Martinsville (W.Va.) 16 Meigs. Vaughan, 3·4· l. Jackson,
by
passing
2 3
tailback Rick Krebs led the
Early in the final period (&gt;.s hland 47 Mansfield Malabar Hughes, 4-12·0.
by penalty
J
1
second half surge that not only Iron ton drove to the Chief 27
14
INDIVIDUAL
PUNTING:
Rushing
Yards
320
37
Zanesville 41 Columbus East 30
51 69
knocked the Tigers from the from where Howard missed a New Lexington 22 Sherldan,_6 Meigs, Eason, J.9J , Jl.O . Passing Yards
Ja
ckson,
Ondera,
5-170.
34.0.
'
Total
Yards
371
106
unbeaten ranks, but also field goal attempt that came up Maysville 20 Morgan 16
4
12
Pass
At!empts
Philo J2 Utica 14
dropped them into a tie with a little short
3
4
Pass
Completions
INDIVIDUAL
PUNT
Miller 35 Glouster o
ln!erceptions
I
By)
0
1
Meigs, Athens, and Logan for
Ironton forced the Chiefs to Coshocton
RETURNS
:
Meigs.
R.
Ash,
2-ll
,
40 West Hoi mes o
5.5.
Jackson,
Stevenson,
1-75
,
Fumbles
0
0
Total
second place in the league punt and quickly moved 75 Youngstown East 40
75.0, Rice, 1-2, 2.0.
Fumbles Los!
0 0
Youngstown South 6
standings.
yards in just four plays to score.
Punting
J.93
5-170
INDIVIDUAL
KICKOFF
Ursuline 36 Board3].0
34.0
Tbe first ball was a!!
Spears hit Jim Payne with a Youngstown
RETURNS
:
Meigs,
M.
Ash,
J.
man 7
23,
~3.0 ; Faulk. 1-15, 15.0 ; R.
Penalties
5-54
2-30
Ironton as lhe Tigers took the lO.yard pass, then found Steve Youngstown Cardina l Mooney
Ash,
1-19
;
19
.0.
Jackson,
Plays from Scrimmage 83 34
23
opening klckofl and on lhe Massie's open for 2'4 more, and
2-35, 17.5 ; Rice, 1·17,
INDIVIDUAL RUSHING
Hubbard 6 Stevenson,
first play from scrimmage a Boykin picked up three on a run, Can McKinley 21 Canton
17.0;
Valentine
,
1.20.
20.0
;
MEIGS
TC Yds. Avg.
Lin Buckley,
J.O,
0.0.
T.
Williams
J2 105 J.J
Hal Spears pass was In·
Spears then rifled a 38-yard
coln 17
INDIVIDUAL
IN
·
M.
Williams
25 86 3.4
tercepted by Craig Oavidsoo. TO pass to Dave Kriebel but Massillon 42 Akron East 6
TERCEPTION
RETURNS:
Smith
B 60 7.5
All ia nce 20 Cuyah~a Fall s 6
Ironton forced Logan to punt another bad center snap Cleveland
Vaughan
6 l7 9.5
Meigs,
none.
Jackson,
Rice,
1-0,
Bened ictme 14
0.0.
Van
I
nwagen
I
7 7.0
·and then shoved off on a 14 plays thwarted Howard's conversion
Cleveland John F. Kennedy 6
INDIVIDUAL
SCORING:
M.
Ash
1
3 3.0
71 yard drive that culminated attempt and the score stood at Cleve. West Tech 7 Cleve. Meigs, M. Williams, one TO and Faulk
1
2 2.0
Lincoln-West 6
with fu!!back Bobby Smith· 22-19 with 4:50 showing on the
tour
extra
points
,(
10)
:
TOTALS
74
320
4.3
Bay 13 Medina 12
.
Vaughan,
two
touchdowns
I
12)
:
blasting into the end zone frO!Jl" clock.
North Olmsted ~2 Fa irview 14 T. Williams, one TO, (6), and JACKSON
TC Yds. Avg.
the three yard line. A bad snap
On the ensuing kickoff Rick Independence 24 Cuyahoga Morris,
' 5 27 5.4
two extra points (2) .
Va
lentine
Heights o
from center spoiled Jeff Krebs slipped and fell on his
Jackson
,
Valentine,
one
2
8 4.0
Meadows
Elyria Ca thol ic 6 Cleve . touchdown and two extra points Stevenson
J
Howard's placement but own three yard line and it apGyzantlne 0
(81 : Stevenson, one touchdown Th~mpson
3 3 l.O
lronton led 6-ll with 3:32 left.
peared Logan was in deep Sandusky 33 Lorain 8
(6L
and
Hugj:les.
two
extra
4 . J ·0.3
Rice
Painesville Rivers ide lJ
In the second quarter the · trouble.
pornts
(2)
.
Hughes
2 -4 ·2.0
Warrensv ille 0
17 37 2.2
TOTALS
Tigers marched 65 yards in 12
However, the Chiefs
plays with Rick Boy kin punched it out two and three
sweeping around end the final yards at a time and never
nine yards to paydirt. Howard's permitted the Tigers to touch
kick made it 13-0 with 9:51 on the ball during thai final four
the clock.
and a half minutes as the
The Chieftains took the ~0· contest ended with Logan In
suing kickoff and drove'70 yards possession oo the Ironton 46
in just seven plays to send yard floe .
fullback Ken Culbertson
Statistics bear out the
crashing the final one yard to powerful offensive contest as
score.
Logan had 15 first downs, netted
A conversion pass attempt 338 yards rushing, and comfailed and the Tigers led 13-6 plet.!d two of two passes for t8
with 7:00 showing on the clock. yards.
The Tigers than chugged back
The losing Tigers rolled up 19
up the field to the Chieftain six first downs, had 336 yards
yard line but Logan held as the rushing, and hit on 10 of 17
final 18 seconds clicked off the passes for 156 yards with one
clock ar halftime.
Intercepted.
Individually,
Culbertson
Logan's fired up Chiefs
fumbled on the first play from carried the ball 25 times for t43
scrfn1inage the second half, yards and three touchdowns
but' then forced Ironton to while Krebs picked up 123 yards
fumble the .ball back oo the in 19 tries.
next. PlaY at the Chieftain 30,
Rick Boy kin led Ironton with
.86 yards in 17 carries and Bobby
With Krebs and Culbertson Smith added 62 in 12.
ripping the Tiger defense Logan
Only one penalty was called in
went. 70 yards in 12 plays with the hard fought contest, a five
Culbertson slamming over from yarder against Ironton as the
the l)ne. . ·
Chiefs posted their third victory
GPeg ' Smith hit Brian· in four years over the Tigers.
11
11
Davidson with a two point
Score by quarters:
conversion p~ss that put the Logan
or. 16 o- 22
8.7 OLIVE ST.
CASH CARRY
GALLIPOLIS . OHIO
Chiefs. ahead fnr keep~ 14-J:I l~'•lllpn
6 7 0 6- 19" . . . . .IIIJJ!I_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _••
~·iil.l

·7 PM

TO

Meigs Grid Statistics

SEO Standings

SEVEN DAYS AWEEK

e1gs ......,wamps ·acksOn

Logan Jolts
IHS' 22-19

Ed Martin got six, then 10, but
WHS was penal ized back to the
10. Bud Sanders caught Martin
for a four yard loss, then San·
ders nabbed Settles for a fi ve
· yard loss back !o the Rocke!
one. When J. o. Patton wen!
into the endzone to punt, tt..
ball sailed over his head tor an
automatic two point salety .
With 7:JB lett, GAHS led 26·0.
Patton elected to punt from
his own 20. John Da vis look It on

SEOAL ONLY
TEAM
W L T POP
Gallipolis
J 0 0 96 36
Athens
2 1 0 43 40
Ironton
2 1 0 69 35
Meigs
2 l 0 74 38
Logan
2 l 0 80 61
Jackson
1 2 0 63 52
Waverly
0 3 o 14 89
Wellston
0 3 0 22 llO
TOTALS
12 12 0 461 461
Friday's Results:
Gallipolis 34 Wellston 8
Athens 14 Waverly 6

••

..

Van Werf 26 Celina 22

recovered on the WHS four .

9:00 A.M. TILL 10:00 P.M.

West Jefferson 13 Teays Valley

Opposite P' .. "'fice

10-yard

(Wellston)
Densil Nibert scored Pt,
ENDS - Ra y McKi nn iss,
Pleasant's first touchdown o ~ a Max Compston.
Meigs 30 Jackson 16
TACKLES - John Cline, J . D. Logan 22 Ironton 19
five yard run. Chuck Adl ns
October 15 Games:
added a six-poinwr on a one- Patton .
GUARDS Willie Fox. Ron Gallipolis at Athens
yard plunge to give the visitors Argabright, Richar~ Zim - Ironton a! Wellston
merman.
Waverly at Meigs
a 12-(i halftime lead,
CENTERS
Bill
Starkey
.
Ja ckson ·a t Logan
In the third stanza, Adkins
. BACKS - AI Arthur, Danny
returned. a kickoff 80 yards for Settles. Terry Stewart, Randy ·
the Blacks' final touchdown . Hatton, Ed Martin , Rick
Crooksville 21 West M uskingum
Wright, Tony Hutchinson.
Adkins ran the extra points.
6
.
GAHS GAME - Oct.
Milton's first tally came on a 15 NEXT
North Union 50 Cardington 6
- At Athens.
14-yard pass from John Walter
to Tim Bi~s in the final period, r----------------~!'1•••
Walker passed to Chris
Harshbarger for the extra
points.
The Greyhounds final tally
came with two seconds left in
the game wben Bias scored on a
46-yard pass from Walker.
Point led in first downs 10.7,
but Milton held the upper hand
in total yards, 197-156.
Point is now 1-4 on the year.
The Blacks will take on Hun·
tington East at Huntington
Saturday night.
By Quarll!rs:
0 12 8 0-20
Pt. Pleasant
0 0 0 14- 14
Milton

.,

McKinnlss .

scamper by Rees.
WHS with the aid of a
roughi~g the kicker pena lly.
movedfrom itsownseventothe
Wells!o,, 41 where Eric Saun ·
dersinterceptedaStewart'pass .
Two penalties stalled the
Gallians. !hen Wellston's !or·
ward wall blocked Larry
Snowden' s only punt attempt of
the night, recovering on the
GAHS 21. Three straight Set!les
passes fell incomplete as the
half ended.
THIRD PERIOD
Eric Saunders returned Bill
Starkey' s second half kickoff
from the GAHS 30 to the Blue
Devi ls' 43 . Snowden hit Shee!s
with a 28-yard pass. Roes'
gainedsix. Sheetsbeltedi!p!he
middle for 12 to put it on tt..
Rocket 1~ . Snowden hit Sheets
with an eight-yard advance to
the four . but the GAHS fullback
tumbled . Tony Hutchinson

PHARMACIST

KITHOMES~f

See Jim Staats.or Joe Giles
Next Door to Auto Auction
Phone 446·9340
. .
Gallipolis. Ohio

INDIVIDUAL NET
VARDS RUSHING
(Gallipolis)
PLAYER- PM. TCB YG Avg.
Pete Neal , LH
11 94 8.5
Rick Grymes, FB
3 23 7.6
John Dav is. RH
8 SO 6.2
Kev Sheets, FB
6 36 6.0
Dean Rees. LH
9 4.l 4.7
LarrySnowden. OB 2 ·1 ·.5
TOTALS
39 14! 6.1
!Wellston)
PLAYER-Pos. TCB YG Avg .
Danny Settle&gt;, QB 10 ;o 4.0
Ed Martin, FB
11 JS J.l
Terry Stewart. LH
8 2l 2.8
Randy Hatlon . RH
6 11 1.8
Ray McKinniss, LE 1 .; ·•
Team
2 .Jo ·5
TOTALS
38 9! 1.5
INDIVIDUAL PASSING
!Gallipolis)
PLAYER
C-A I YG TO

Big Blacks Cop
First Grid Win
n

touchdown was recovered by

John Davis on the Rocke! 31.
Seven plays later. Neal zoomed

r;r•
T
£ lVe ~

6i
I Wellston)
Cols. Wa lnul Ridge 10 Cols.
Mohawk 0
PLAYER
KO VG TD
Cols. Eastmore 52 Cols. South 8 Stewart
2 26 0
Cols. West 28 Cols. Central 12 Settles
J 19 0
Cols. Brookha ven 26 Cols. North Hatton
J JJ 0
7
Wr ight
J 0 0
Westerville 33 Whitehall 6
TOTALS
l !8 0
Mt. Vernon 22 Reynoldsburg 20
PUNT RETURNS
Worthington 12 Gahahna 10
(Gallipolis)
Groveport 25 Grandview 0
PLAYER
PR VG TO
Cols . DeSa les 30 Cols . Hartley None
0 0 0
20
TOTALS
0 0 0

For great homes. torwretree living, for
a degree of e l egan~ and style never
before achieved - tor a great deal, take
a look at KIT.

Upper Rt •.7

yards in two trips.
Terry Stewarfs tumble two
plays alter !he first GAHS

• Do wn,
FlVe

INTERCEPTION
RUN BACKS
!Ga llipolis)
PLAYER
PI VG TO
White
l 6 0
E. Saunders
l 3 0
Ohio High School
TOTALS
1 9 o
Football Scores
I Wellston)
By United Presslnternationa I
PLAYER
PI YG TO
Portsmouth 34 ChlllicothP n
None
0 0 0
Athens 14 Wa ver ly 6
TOTALS
0 0 0
Gallipolis 34 Wellston a·
KICKOFF RETURNS
Circleville 22 Hi llsboro 0
(Gallipolis!
PLAYER
KO YG TO
Portsmouth East 66
2 JB 0
Luca sville Valley 20 Oa vis
l 13 0
New Boston 8 Port smouth Wesl E. Saunders

THE HAND

Before JOU bar, • u!

MOBILE HOME SALES

the exira point$. Neal carr ied
six times in the drive, picking
up 65 yards. Kev Sheets had 19

~led a giganUc bole mille left side~ tile WHS !lne. 'null's
Gallia 's John Davis ( 20) m lefL Wellston's Terry Stewart
( 20), Roo Argabright (54 ) and Dick Zimmennan ( 58 ) came

up too late tostq&gt; Neal on this play . GAHSwoo, 34-8.

r------------------..,
ABIRD IN

. cY~~~ ·

opening

kickoff from the WHS 12 to !he
Rocke-!&lt; 31, Ed Martin picked
""a firsl down on the WHS 41.
GAHS he ld. J. D. Pat!on punted
33 yards to Da ve White at the
GAHS 16. GAHS martned 84
ya rds in eight plays. Pole Neal
ta ll ied from the fwo with 6:29
showing on the clock. then ran

of four attempl'l from
Snowden for another 63, giving
hirn 9!1 for the ni ght. Sheets Chuck Wood, Dave White , Jim
stf!rt::d once rroril the two.
Miller , Bud Sanders and Mike
Wingback John Davis added Wolfe, played their usual steady
50 yards in eight tri ps, and game, with assistance from
SrJphorrwre ta.ilback Dea n Rees , Rick Gryrnes, Mike Berridge,
filling in for the ailing Walte r, chuck Perroud, Dave Kerns,
rushed for 43 ya rds in nine trips. and Leon Briggs . The GARS
Hces stored once fr om six defense must now prepare to
yards out.
hal t the slick Athens Bulldogs
Defensively , Eric Sounders, Friday at Athens.
Up front, Saunders, Wood,
Wolfe , John Bagshaw, Sanders,
Pat Boster, and Miller were
able to control the Golden
Rockets forward wall without
too much resistance . It will be a
diff eren t story at Athens
Friday , especially if th e
Ga llians relax aga in st the
Athenians.
For Wellstoo, Settles paced
the Rockets attack with 40
yards In to trips, Defensively,
AI Arthur, halfback, and
Randy Hatton, linebacker,
collected most of the visitors
tackles.
.
The triumph, seventh in a row
over Wellston for GAHS,left the
Blue Devils with a 32-13-2 ad·
' vanta~e over the Rockets since
the SEOAL was formed in 1925.

Styl ings . Ea s y Financing · Imm e diate
Deliv e ry .
Sold and erected by the area's most ex perienced deiller or builder of sectional
homes .
Order Now for Delivery Before Bad Weather .

Snowden ' s

the WHS 44, A personal foul
aga inst WHS put II on 1"- nine &lt;&gt;
after Snowden hit Sheel$ with a
16-yardstrlke. Roes gotsa~n to.
the two. then Sheeb carried II
over with 6: U Jell, giving the
Dev lis a 32·0 leitd, Rees appeared "In" on the run for •~Ira
points, but the officials said no.
Chuck Wood and Jim Miller,
plus a15·yard Wellston penalty,
put the Rockets right beck In
the hole later. Ar,tn Patton
went back to pun , this lime
from his own nine. With 3:47
left. GAHS had another safety,
and It was 34-0.
.
·
After Davis returned another
Patton lree kick trom the GAHS
29 to the Wellston #1 , Gallipolis.
with the entire second unit In
the lineup, marched to
Wellston's 26. but a 15-yard
holding penalty killed that
dr ive. QB Berridge hit Rick
Grymes with tour passes good
for 25 yards' In th' march.
FOURTH PERIOD
Dave White Intercepted
another Stewart pass on the
second play of the final period,
returning It six yards to the
WHS Al. In nine plays, GAHS
marched to the Wellston 22, bvt
tal ted to score. A 15·yard
holding penalty killed the drive.
Wells ion marched 78 yards In
JJ plays. Settles tallied from the
one with I: 17 left in the game.
Stewart ran the extra points.
Big gainers In the drive In·
eluded a 19-yard run by Settles
on a broken pass play, and a 15·
ya rd pass from Settles to Ray

17-Th.!lunday Timeii-Sentloei,Sunday,Od. 10,1971

•

lO's

FOOTBALL HELMET
ZEPCO 202 REEL

$117

Heck's Reg .
$),99

Heck's Reg.

'1"

PROCTOR
SILEX
COFFEE POT
HECK'S
REG.
'14.96

$

BUILDING SUPPLIES
&amp;.
'

'

'

I.

0

•

'

.

�•
IS-The sWtday 1'imes · Sentlnel,Sunday,Oct.IO, 1171
from 2 to 4. The gymnasium,
Curtis said, will be open t~ the
community · from 6 to 8 on
Friday, Oct. 1~, and 2 to 4 on
Sunday.
RIO GRANDE ·- Dr. Bruce
Both the swimming pool and
Curtis , director of health,
education
and gymnasiwn will be closed on
physical
recreation at Rio Grande Saturday, October 16, for the
College , Saturday announced Rio Grande College Invitational
the schedule for the use or the Cross Country Meet. The
Paul R. Lyne Center . The facilities are used for college
schedule covers the week of recreation on the days that are
closed to the public.
Oct. 11.
The swimming pool. will be
Fall colors are considered
open to the publicfrom 7 to 8 on
to be an incidental chemical
Tuesday , Friday and Sunday reaction of no importance
evenings, and Sunday afternoon in the life of a tree.

Schedule -. -

Annolmced

·-•!llomda71'1mes·Sentlnel,&amp;tnday,Oct. IO, lrll
CORRECTION
POMEROY - The Jr. High
football · game at Racine
Tnesday aftiTJ!_"'?fl will engage
the Southern Local 'Eighth
grade team and·the Meigs Local
k High Seventh Grade, not
E1ghth, as announced earlier.
SERIES TV IN CAVERNs
STANTON, Mo. (UP! )-The
Baltimore-Pittsburgh World Seyear. Television sets have been
placed throughout the Meramec
Caverns ' so thai tourists can
watch the baseball classic.

•

e·s
Eastern Makes It 10 . •
:

rJIJ
0'
-e

BY DALE ROTHGEB ·. CHESHIRE Eastern's powerful Eagles
vtrtually "sewed-up" their second straight Southern
Valley Athletic Conference Championship here
F 'd
·
.
. .
rJ ay mghtwith a convmcmg 46-6 romp over the
Kyger Creek Bobcats.
Eastern entered the contest with a perfect 4-o
record. ~yger Creek was 3-Q-1 in four games.
Coach Roger Kirkhart's Eagles have Southern
and Southweste'rn:.!rlt.on their 1971 league schedule.
Kyger Creek will end its league campaign this

Cops 8-6

Victory

HAP P"~

L IKE

· BY MIKE WISE
FRAZIER'S BOTI'OM- The
Hannan Trace Wildcats scored
their first touchdown of the grid
season here Friday night
against the Hannan Wildcats of
West Virginia 6ut were edged 86 in a defensive struggle on the
winners' gridiron.
The first quarter saw plenty
of action, with both teams
coming close to scoring but
failing to do so. Both defenses
were tough in the clutch. During
-";""'"'-~. the defensive struggle both
teams found themselves in punt
formation several times.
The second quarter started
off like the first, with neither
side gaining the advantage.
Hannan finally broke the ice
late in the first half.
With 3:22 left, Jake Christy,
!lplit end for Hannan, scored on
a 24-yard run from a double
reverse. Larry Hill ran in the

....

WI T H A

SON WHO LOOKS

THIS'?

~~~~~~~~~:::J conversion on an off-tackle dive

[

TERRY

•
•

ml
·

.

·

·

HT H
6 8
54 50
83 16
I 3
7 16
I 2

EXPECT TWO STARS
FREEPORT, Bahamas (UP!)
-Organizers of the $130,000
Bahamas National Open Golf
To'!rQiimenl said Friday they.
expect both Arnold Palmer and
Lee Trevino to play in 1971's
fi11al PGA tournament at the
Lucayan Country C•ub, Dec, 912

North Gallia's record· to 2-3 on
the year. Symmes Valley
dropped to 2-3. The Pirates were
led by Junior fullback Phil
Hollenbaugh who used his 190
pounds well in rushing for 89
yards and three touchdowns.
Hollenbaugh struck paydirt in

south ern En dS
L 0 s·m·' g Stre·ak

Eagles, however' suddenly ran
into trouble.
·
Two quick lt)-yard losses
placed the ball on the Eagle 17· ·
yard line.
~ATRJOT ·- Coach Bruce
On fourth down, KC's Bill Wallace 's Southern Local
Roush, senior defensive end, Tornadoes broke their eightblocked the punt attempt. Terry game losing streak l:riday night
Sheets, 170 pound, sophomore against the Southwestern
tackle fell on the ball in the Highlanders in a SVAC contest.
endzone for the touchdown. A The game ended with Southern
run for the extra points was · winning 2&amp;-14.
stopped.
Neither side scored in the first
Eastern's lead was quickly quarter due to the stingy
cut 1AJ 1~ . The score came with defenses of both teams.
just five seconds remaining in
The first TO came in the
the first quarter.
second quarter when Southern
Eastern scored midway in the scored on a four-yard run by
secorxi quarter on a 24-yard run Mike Nease. The conversion
by junior flanker Rarxiy Bor· attempt failed.
ning but the play was nullified
Southern scored again late in
oo an offensive holding penalty. the quarter on a fantastic 51·
Kyger Creek's only other yard run up the middle by Nick
bright spot of the evening came !hie, junior tailback. The
on a 5:1-yard punt return by conversion was blocked.
senior KeMy Blankenship. The
The second half saw the
speedy hack was dropped on the Highlanders' offense come
seven yard line.
alive. This was the first time
From there, the Eagles' that Southwestern started
defense, led by tackles Gordon moving the ball consistently all
Holter, Dennis Eichinger, Dick season.
On the last play from
Stettler and Rich Hauber,
shoved the Bobcats back to the scrinunage in the third quarter,
11-yard line. A fourth down Kevin Gill ran for a 16-yard
desperation pass fell short.
touchdown for the Highlanders'
Eastern broke the game wide
open with just 15 seconds
remaining in the first half.
SVAC STANDINGS
Amsbary moved his club 89
ALL GAMES
yards in nine plays for tbe ~!j~n
~ ~ J 2 ~ ~~
score.
Kyger Creek
3 1 1 79 90
In switching from a running Norlh Gaiiia
2 3 0 94 62
ro
·
Amsha hit Soulhern
1 4 o 44 98
a paSSing game,
ry
Soulhweslern
o s o 22 132
Caldwell and Boring with ·irn- Hannan Trace
o 5 0 6 128
porlant clutch passes. The
SVAC ONLY
biggest gainer was a 35-yard TEAM
W L T P DP
aerial to Bormg· which placed Eastern
3 0 0 115 6
Kyger creek
3 1 o 73 64
the ball at the 11-yard line. After Southern
1 1 o 36 28
a timeout, Caldwell grabbed an Norlh Gallia
1 2 o 44 ~4
11-yard pass in the end zone to Soulhweslern
o 2 o 14 38
Hannan Trace
0 2 0 0 88
put the Eagles inro a com- TOTALS
8 8 0 282 281
manding 21-fJ lead at the half. THIS WEEK'S GAMES:
Thethirdquartercontinued to
Eastern at Federal-Hocking.
Kyger Creek at Southwestern.
Ill' a nightmare for Coach Dick
North Gailla at Green .
Adams' Bobcats. The offense
Hannan Trace at Soulhern.
v
5
could not muster any sort of Ky.ymmes al 1ey at Wurtland.
attack while hampering itself
more with costly fwnbles and
penalties.
Eastern scored again with
6:30 remaining on a 46-yard
pass from Amsbary to Caldwell.
CaldweU broke · two tackles
enroute to the goal line ,
Hauber's kick moved the score
ro 211-3.
Disaster . really struck the
Bobcats in the fourth quarter.
Sanders scored his third touch·
down of the evening on a 37-yard
run; Ralph Parker, substitute
halfback running wildly scored
on a !&amp;-yard jaunt and with five
second remaining Hauber
ldcked an unbelievable 43-yard
field goal.
As the smoke settled into the
hills, there was no question in
anybody's mind who the best
team was.
The Eagles had come, they
had seen and there was no doubt
they had conquered. Tbe vicWry was the Meigs Counijans
first ever on the Bobcat
gridiron.
In dominating the game,
Eastern held Kyger Creek to
only two ftrst downs and a total
of 41 net yards. The Eagles
collected 18 first downs, 278
yards rushing and 122 yards
passing.
Eastern will play FederalHocking Friday night.

first touchdown of the game.
John Earl Hutchinson ran in the
extra points for Southwestern
on an end sweep. Southern ran
only four plays during the entire
third quarter because of the
Highlanders' defense.
Southern came back in the
fourth stanza to pick up two
more touchdowns. The first was
run by Mike Nease on a 16-yard
plunge. The attempt for the
extra points was stopped.
Nease scored again on sixyard run. The conversion, run
by Nease, was good, making the
score 26-8 Sou them,
The Highlanders scored their
last touchdown on a nine-yard
run by Gill. Dale Whitt attempted the kick. It was no
good. The Highlanders found
themselves on Southern 's twoyard line when the game ended .
It was an exceptionally good
night for Southwestern backs
Kevin Gill and John Hutchinson. They each gained over
100 yards rushing.
Friday Southwestern hosts
Kyger Creek. Southern plays
Hannan Trace at home .
By Quarters:
Southern
0 12 0 14-26
Southwestern
0 0 8 6-14
STATISTICS
SW S
First Downs
12 13
Rushing Yardage
194 231
Passing Yardage
30 10
Passes Attempted
11 9
Passes Completed
1 2
Penalties
10-130 7.fJ7
Interceptions
2 3

a

Fumbles
Fwnbles Lost

5

2

I
I

~

the first period on a 42-yard
gallop up the middle . .A run for
the conversion faUed.
Harvey Brown; speedy senior
end, took a three-yard pass
from senior quarterback John
Egglellln for the Pirates' second
TO of the evening. Klm Hall,
sophomore halfbac)l, ran the
extras for a 14-0 lead.
Jackie Smith, senior back,
switched two weeks ago from
his signal caUing duties to a
halfbsck position, scored two
touchdowns in the second
stanza I Smith scooted across
the wtiite stripe. on an eight·
yard run wlth 7:34 remaining
in the period and again with
three minutes left on a 10 yard
scamper.
Hall again added the conversion.
Hollenbaugh pushed the score
to 36-0 at the baH with a five
yard run. The tally came with 33
seconds remaining.
North Gallia scored its final
rouchdown with 6:15 left in the
third quarter on Hollenbaugh's
five-yard run . Eggleton ran the
conversion for a 44-0 lead.
Symmes Valley rushed
across its first sixiJOinter in the
closing minutes ol the third
quarter, Terry Pine, freshman
halfback, ran from three yards
out. A kick for the extra point
was wide.
The Vikings added their final
points with 7:30 remaining in
the game. steve Robertson
scored on a short run . A pass
from Lafon to Don Wilson was
good for the conversion.
North Gallia had 16 first
downs, 288 yards rushing and
107 passing . Eggleton had
another good night completing
10 of 21 passes.
Hall rushed for 100 yards in 13
carries. Smith and Hollenbaugh
added 89 yards each.
The Pirates travel to Green
Twp. Friday.
Symmes Valley
t
goes 0
Wurtland, Ky.
By Quarters:
Symmes Valley
0 0 6 6-14
NorthGallla
14 22 8 0--44
STATISTICS' •
DEPARTMENT
SV NG
First Downs
5 16
Yards Rushing
59 288
Yards Passing
46 107

Passes Attempted
Passes Completed
The official state tree of Fumbles
K t k 1
en uc Y s the yellow pop· Fumbles Lost
lar, according to Encyclo· p IIi
paedia Britannica.
ena es .

10
2
1
I
34

21
10
3
2
55

. BY JOHN COOPER
Soli Caasei'VIIUoD Sen•l""
PT. PLEASANT - A. C.
Bingham is building a pond on
his farm on Road Fork of Ohio
Eighteen Mile Creek. When this
pond is full of water, it will be
about 1lne-fourlh acre in size
and will hold about 350,000
gallons of water. Mr. Bingham
plans to use this pond for
wildlife improvement as well as
for livestock water .
The Western Soil Con.
servation District is doing the
earth-moving with Rupert
Sayre being the operator of the
bulldozer. Denver Yoho of $oil
Conservation Service made the
design and is cbeclting the
construction of the pond.
Mr. Bingham also made use
of the District work crew to do
the hand labor in regard to this
pond construction .
WE MET WITH Charles
Withers, County Superintendent
of Mason County School.s, and
Mrs. Mildred Gibbs, principal
ol the Hartford Elementary
School at the school to discuss a
drainage problem on the school
grounds there.
Examination showed much of
the school ground to be water·
logged because of the soil
conditions. There are two soils,
Melvin Silt Loam and Lindside
Silt Loam . These soil.s are both
wet, however Melvin is the
wetter of the two.
Mrs. Gibbs said that even
several days after a rain that it
is necessary for her to keep the

WHERE.
YOU SAVE

DOES liME A

DIFFER£NCE
Wt ,.Y you to uvt
. lind 1M P•Y Is good) .

PAIUOOK
UTI

.... Qa._ ••ldl

Ole Alhono C.Unty

,..,..... , ..... c..
2MIKIR~St

Poftlt,..,. Ololo
Member Ft&lt;ter11
Hom• Loila B1nk

Mtmber Federal Savlngt

children in.side the school
because the ground was still too
wet to play upoo.
A feasibility survey made by
Denver Yoho of SCS showed
that it was possible wdrain this
ground by outletting the tile
system into a sllll1n sewer near
Sliding Hill Creek.
TRUSTEES OF UNION
Campground near New Haveil
are considering enlarging their
parking lots on the Union
Campground, near the tabernacle. We went with Harold
Bumgarner, one of the trustees
and
Eugene
Garlow ,
representing . the ministers to
discuss and examine the
possibility of enlarging these
lots.
During the discussion it was
pointed out that about 1,300
people had attended one of their
re&lt;"ent meetings . We do not
know. but that might be a
r~ord attendance for a church
service in Mason County.

First Downs

Yards Rushing'
Yards Passing
Passes Attempted
Passes Compieled
Fumbles
Fumbles Lost

a.

LOin Insurance Corporation .

All ecc:ounts lnsur~ up to
120.00t.ot

Penalties

4 2
1 2
80 50

HEADS cANADIENS
MONTREAL ( UPI)...:.Veteran
center Henri Richard ·was
named captain of the Montreal
Canadiens Friday for the 1971·
72 National Hockey League
season, Defensemen J. C.
Tremblay and Terry Harper
and forward Frank Mahovllch
were appoi nted 8S$ietant cap·
l~ins .

ECONOMIC IMPACT
Arming to the C1rlo ,Department of De•~l~t, the
= nomic impact ol this money can result in: 198 ,ntw jobs•,
$1.320,000 in annual personal .inc&lt;Ine ; 12 !In' retail establlsbmen[S . $2!3,000 in annual bank deposil5: $1 ,902,780 ln retail sales;
161 new homes or apartmenl5 ; and tax monies to slqlp&lt;X'I ~
school children .
Urxioubtedly, the new outdoor thea in will offer finanda1
benefits to the Scioto Valley . Just as in~tailt bonver, is the
aesthetic appreciation it will foster.·
In June rJ. 19Tl the epic drama . "Tocumseh," will Ill' per.
formed at the Sugarloaf Mountain Amphitheatre. Written by
Allan W. Ecker . into&gt;mationally known author tt "The Frro.
tiersman " and "Wilderness Empire ." the play recreates the
fascinating stOI')· of the famous Shawnee Indian and the turbulent
era in. which he li ved.
The outdoor location of the theatre pennits a realism stldom
possible indoors. A walo&gt;r stage aU~ actors to enter and I~..,
the scene canot&gt;. An Indian ,iJlage located near the stage area
is bombarded by shells from artillery located on the other stage
side , in a realistic representatioo of the Battle of Tippecanoe .
Surroonded by t.rees. stars. arxi the larxi that was native w
TeeunlS&lt;'h. the audient'e can identify with the desperate struggles
of the British. Americans. arxi lrx!illns for control ol. the Northwesl Terri lOry . And through the portrayal of Tecumseh 's love
for his people, for his h&lt;meland , and for thP white woman wbo
returned his low , the audience can better understarxi the bitterness of the Indian natioo 's defeat when the se\larate cultures
foiled to find U1e cormnon grounds they needed in order to live in
peace.
When completed. the outdoor theatre will Include rain
shelters arxi conression stands and have a S&lt;&gt;ating capacity ol
1,600. Ample parking areas will be pro,ided for the audience and
1 bus service m•y run from hotel.s, motels, and central points
throughoot the surrourxiing communities .
The above two examples are just further indiratlon rJ. what
vision and initiBtive can accon1ptish w benefit both the cultural
and economic well-being of an area . The frontiers of today are
frequ ently founct in our own back yard.

GaUia FFA Chapters Compete in Judging

bothered by rain .

DUSTY lAUAN
PRE-FINISHED

Many of your neighbors
are using a Land Bank Loan
to buy a farm .
But ewn more of them
are using a Land Bank Loon
for· other needs.

Drop

:O.:uu• . \ llu r

lo .. .o l

t&gt;u~l llf' ,.,.

l ~ on , ll l:on~ 1\ ~~N&lt;k ' l:lllt ll\ "'o n

,,f m .o l\•n~

llltOIIl

uf

l&lt;l~l\ll

w

l&gt;u ~· fMnu• !loll
l oll nd 1-l;. nl,.
li mlllt'lll l!: fur t&gt;thl' r purp•- l!tofin~n.· m l deb!.
b mlrlll\~ ,,r l'f'IIHI&lt;it-llnjl 11 hmntt. 11111)1\ll'tnw-nu
m buildmM" nr tl~ot- l11111l. rn&lt;.&gt;llf')' fur Nhl&lt;Mtu n tbe!OI' (Hll t!I IHIIple~ of l lliJ!Of(Mnl lhinp Wtl

th,,

ll lH IH&lt;"Illbo•no. lhl W Ut'C!

h!'IV m11kf 1..-..thle-. r.hy wt d~~o.·u.la.n
tiMda •t your l'&gt;n~nil.m-.? Without ubliuticn.

Clyde B. Walker,
Manager
19 Locust 51.
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 446·0203
SERVING LOCAL AGRICULTURE
WITH MORE THAN W LOAN Pt.ANS

==

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

FOR WINTER·

Farm Bureau }()I)
Goes to Clingan
COLUMBUS - Charles E.
Clingan, of Mansfield, has been
named
Southeast
Field
Representative for the Ohio
Farm Bureau Federation, Inc.
The 43-yearo{)ld Richland
County native will be responsible for services to 1,900 Farm
Bureau members in the seven
southeastern Ohio counties of
Adams, Brown, Pike, Jackson,
Gallia, Scioto and Meigs. He
most recently was organization
director in Richland, Morrow,
Marion and Crawford counties.

PANELING

99

SHEET

8"x16'

PRIME SIDING
~ '18400
PER 1,000 BD. FT.

E KC
18 2
278 39
1222
7 6
6 1

Week's Weather

GALLIPOLIS
Tern·
perature , precipitation and
•weather conditions for each M
hour period as r~orded by Pete
McCormick, Fairfield weather
observer .
Day
Higb Low Pre..
Sunday
86
52
Monday
82
62
Tuesday
80
62
Wednesday
75 ~
Thursday
64
53
Friday
67 33
Saturday
80
55
LEONARD UPTON, on. Average high temperature for
Rocky Fork of Thirteen Mile week this year- 73.4. Last year
Creek, is improving a spring - 76.8.
which furnishes the water
Average low temperature for
supply for the home reservoir. week this year - 53.2. Last year
He had installed the reservoir !6.8.
some years ago out of concrete
Total pr~ipitation for week
block
and
masonry. this year - None . Last year Examiqation of the sprin~ .03 inch.
showed that it had a strong flow
GALllPOLIS - Memlll'rs of the Gallia County Chapters ofF .F.A. competed in the District
Total precipitation to date
of water and would provide this year - 24.96. Last year 14 Soil and Larxi Judging at Alexander High School on Oct. 6to develop abilities in evaluation of
plenty for them to keep the 1,300 30.17.
agricultural land.
gallon rese.Voir filled .
Among these chapters placing in the ~ 10 of the 23 teams were, North Galli a. first place:
Normal average precipitation
The spring is located about annually 40.99 inches .
Hannan Trace, third place, arxi Gallipolis, seventh place .
200 feet from their house and
David Bryan of the Gallipolis chapter r~eived the third highest individual score of 'li7 out of
about 50 feet vertical elevation
a possible 300.
above the house. This makes an
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Nocth Gallia arxi Hannan Trace will compete in the State Land Judging in May of 'i2 .
excellent gravity flow giving
Ohio extended outlook
The following boys, pictured above, participated in thP contest : front, 1 to r, James
plenty of water pressure at the Monday through Wednesday :
Lambert, Ricky John.on, Don Lambert (Hannan Trace ); Steven Rose, Jerry Cook and David
house .
Fair and cool Monday.
Bryan (Gallipolis ); Keith Hill, Kay McClaskey, Tony Glassburn (North Gallia); David Curl·
Mr. Upton is using a tile catch Chance of a shower and a
man, Brian Tucker and Lynn Johmon (Kyger Creek) , and back row , Donny l£wis, Terry
basin supplied by the Western little warmer Tuesday with
Stevens
and Steve Crouse (Southwestern\.
District
and fabricated moderating trend continuing
. especially to be used in spring Wednesday, Highs in the
MAC JAY ELECTED
developments . This piece of lower 60s Monday rising to
RACINE - Mac Jay , care of
heavy tile is two feet long and the upper 60s and lower 70s
to
Otis McClintock, Racine, has
open ended on both ends. When Wednesday. Ovemlgbi lows
been elected to membership in
set on one end there is a two- In the lower 40s early Monday
WASH!NGTON (UP! ) - The reaches a seasonal peak , but the
American
Angus
inch hole 6 inches from one end and ln the middle 40s Monday Agriculture Department said they should rise before the year Assoc iat ion a 1 St. Joseph,
and 18 inches from the other . On and Tuesday nlgbt.
Thursday hog prices may drop is out.
Missouri . There were 327
the opposite side there are ~ lsomewhat this fall as slaughter
The USDA Livestock and memberships
issued
to
inch holes.
Meat SituatiOn Report satd breeders of registered AberThis catch basin is designed State Fair Made
c~t
tle pr~ces thts fall and wmter deen-Angus in the United States
Appalachia May
to be set in the spring upright
Wlll stay about where they are·' during the ~ month.
and with the ~ hoies on the back
now.
-·4
Be Model Region
to allow water to enter the About 0 Grand
Pork output will likely drop
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
basin. The outlet pipe is placed
below a year ago and will stay
The s c i e n c e of selenoOhio
State fair this year earned ATHENS, Ohio l UP! l - considerably lower in the first
in the two-inch hole and morgraphy
is the study of the
nearly $40,000 despite five days Appalachia might "be the most hall of 1972. the USDA said .
tared with concrete.
moon . Selene is the Greek
Mr . Upton will place several of rain ·that reduced midway ·prepared area" in the nation to
Fall beef production is ex- word for moon .
crowds.
effectively
utilize
revenue·
tubfuls of gravel in behind the
pected to be the same as last
Met'
Fordyce,
administrative
sharing
funds
because
of
its
catch basin as a filter for the
falL
water. He is covering the tile supervisor said attendance for experience in dealing with local
with a lid and will cover the the !:!-{lay exposition was down developmen t agencies in the
balance of the area with soil to 37,045 from the 1970 record of past, Donald Whitehead, CoChairman of the Appalachian
prevent surface water from 2,219,170.
d
Q- Wiw was til e yo11ngest
"We
are
waiting
on
the
state
Re
gional
Commission
,
sai
entering the spring or catch
majo r league player of all
auditor's report," said Fordyce. Friday.
ba~in .
time?
"They just finished chetklng
Whitehead, who addressed
A- The Cincinnati pitcher.
our books yesterday, but it looks the Appalachian Development Joe Nmthall, who started his
like we made about $40,000." Conference at Ohio University, career in June, 1944,. aged
The t970 fair brought in about said he welcomed President 15 years. 10 months and 11
$225,000 in profits but it was not Nixon's revenue--sharing plan. days.

4'x8'

STATISTICS
DEPARTMENT

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

It's said that if)'~ wait loog enlllgh. old fashi!XlS will come
back into style. This seems to hold true fu' theatre as wei! as
clot!Ug design . Hlllldre&lt;b tt yean ago, the Greeks performed
directioos. Meigs area leaders an Invited Ill put the date ol their plays In outdoor amphitheatres, and today outdoor dran~a is
.._
Friday, Ocl 29th, oo their calendar for the Ohio Conununity making e popular arxi profitable eoo~ehack .
In Ohio, ''T!'wnpet in the Land'' is an ootdoor produclioo that
played IAJ standing.room-&lt;&gt;nly crowd-; in Dover-Nell· Philadelphia
the NEW in FARMING
the last four weekends tt this SUITUilef''s run. Accoroing to John
M. Pierce, Extensioo Specialist in CIXlliDunity Development, it is
Resource De&gt;-elopment Dlfeling in Colwnbus .
a "classical example tt c&lt;mmunity action that can lead to an
'l'bere will be special sessions in at least fi\&gt;e areas r¥ expansi&lt;11 of a local ec&lt;11&lt;my by capitaliiing ro the historical
Resource Development. A cq&gt;y of the program can be obtained in resourees and leadership talent nati"" to the ·area."
the next two wee its from the Exle!Won Of! ice. Meigs County has
On Sugarloaf Mountain, northeast of Otillicothe . plan. for the ·
done much in developing recreatim but much remains to be done . constructitl'l ol another amphitheatre are being dewloped . Based
Two different types of Resource De""lopment are either oo ~ tt other his[(lical dramas .. it is estimated that apunder way oc cummtly planned which is just another example ol proximately 67;000 people will attend the amphitheatre each tenwhat can be done . This is described in the release received this week season. J'he.money spent on gasoline, oil, motets, arxi meais
week which says, ''Outdoor Drama Expected Ill Bring Profit Ill is expected to contribute a great deal tD the deve.lopment of Sciotr&gt;
Sciow Valley."
Valley CQDmnnllles.

Hog Prices· Expected

DON'T MISS
THIS

play, making the score Hannan
8, Hannan Trace 0.
Hannan Trace's defense
really started to cramp Hannan's style in the third quarter.
Two of Hannan 's punts were
blocked by Hannan Trace, but
ironically, Hannan recovered
both of them and gained short
yardage.
liT's offense came close to
scoring midway in the quarter,
but due to a bad hando{)ff, lost
possession of the baiL
Hannan Trace made its
IAJuchdown with 4:18 left in the
game on a 38-yard pass from
Quarterback Garland Montgomery to halfback Delbert
Cisco, The conversion run by
Montgomery was no good. The
game ended with HT 'llOVing
for a final attack on its own 3().
yard line.
BY QUARTERS
·ay Quarters,
Hannan Trace
0 0 0 6---j) Eastern
14 7 7 18-46
Hannan
0 8 0 0--8 Kyger Creek
6000-6

STATISTICS
OepartmeQt
FlrstDowns
Yards Rushing
Passing Yardage
Interceptions
Penalties
Fumbles

.
VINTON - Coach John
Blake's North Gallla Pirates
made the sch~l's homecoming
a. happy occas10n here Frtday
mght rolling over Coach John
Patton's Symmes Valley
Vikings, 44-14. The win pushed

Double Ohjectl

\!1
·

eague

Hannan

c=~:::--..-------'-

·

.

P~Resource Development Meeting Set

•

·

Friday at Southwestern.
The Big Green Machine, in
winning its lOth straight league
contest over a· !w{)oyear span,
displayed an overpowering
ground game with a tenacious
passing attack.
The Eagles look charge from
the opening, and never let up.
After receiving the kickoff, the
defending cbamps drove ~
yards in 13 plays for their first
..------~ lwchdown.
Rick Sanders, senior tailback
llld the league's 'leading scorer,
buUed wer from the one-yard
line for his first six-pointer of
tbeevening .Senior quarterback
Jim Amsbary ran the conwrsion for an early 8-0 EHS
lead.
The stingy Eagle defeme,
which has surrendered only 12
~-- points all year, forced the
Bobcats to punt.
Sanders returned the punt 80
yards to paydirt. A run for the
conversion failed. Eastern
again took over after stopping
the Bobcats' running game. The

f.lOvJ CAN I&amp;.

.,

,

CAROLINA

BLUI~

ANT....H''

SUPER SALE GOES ON!

INTERNATIONAL® Opens Monday
''52-HORSE" UTILITY TRACTOR PT . PLEASANT - The
Big work-power. Four cylinder gas or diesel engines.
Short turns. Easy handling. Hydrostatic power steering. More comfort New walk-through styling. High speed lightning shift (8F-4R speeds). Smooth synchromesh transmission. Rugged planetary drive. 20
gallon rear fuel tank. Big capacity live Independent
hydraulics. Precis,ion draft control 3-polnt hitch with
infinite rate response. Dyna- Life• clutch. Hydraulic
wet disc brakes. Adjustai;)Ie seat Optio~s include
twin-shaft 540/1000 RPM PTO and differential lock.
"

Meigs Equipment Co.
Ph. 992-2176

PT. PLEASANT, W. y A.

Be Safe With

X -ray Program

SEE THE'NEW 574. HERE TODAY

312 SIXTH AVE.

Old Min Winter Can
.. Hlrd On Your
.Car, TIVCk, or Tr•ctor.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Mobile X-Ray Unit vtill be in
Mason County five days this
week offering free chest x.rays.
The schedule is as follows:
Monday - Leon IAJwn hall, 4
p.m. until 7 p.m.; Tuesday New Haven United Methodist
Church from '10 a.m. to I p.m.
and from 2 until 6 p.m.; Wednosday - Courthouse from 10
a.m . to I p.m., 2 untilo p.m. and
6 until 8 p.m.; Thursday .Courthouse, 10 a.m. to noon and
I to 3. The unit will visit at
Sunnyside School Thursday
evening from 5 until 7 p.m. and
again Friday from 10 a.m. until
noon.
The Mobile X-Ray service Is
sponsored by the Mason County , .
Tuherculosis and Respiratory
Disease Association, the West
Virginia Slate Health Departlnenl and the Masnn County
lleal ·11 tlPparlmt' nL
..

Super Sale extended for 21 more days on all
new M.F . Tractors in stock! M .F . has granted
this, because you the customer. has given us
such a great response! RECORD BREAKING
. SAU:s are being made throughout M. F.
lando ESPECIALLY at GALLIPOLIS
TRACTOR! I

r

So come

in and SAVE while the price is right!
We still have a good selection of new tractor s,
but i' we don't have what you want. we will try
our best to get it for you .

lUll CREST

Permanent Anti-freeze

We will · also give you top dollar trade-in
allowance on your tractor during this sale!

Chi.

GALLIPOLIS TRACTOR

MF
M.1

. \!

•. , ·!&lt;

.. ,/,

Your Massey-Ferguson Dealer
Upper Route 7-Kanauga
Phone : 446· 104~

$149

Central Soya

Of ·Ohio
Cklllptllt

••••••••••••••••••••il l•••""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'llf!!!l!'""'""'""'""'..""'""'""'""'-..llll••ill•••..

'•

•

''

�•
IS-The sWtday 1'imes · Sentlnel,Sunday,Oct.IO, 1171
from 2 to 4. The gymnasium,
Curtis said, will be open t~ the
community · from 6 to 8 on
Friday, Oct. 1~, and 2 to 4 on
Sunday.
RIO GRANDE ·- Dr. Bruce
Both the swimming pool and
Curtis , director of health,
education
and gymnasiwn will be closed on
physical
recreation at Rio Grande Saturday, October 16, for the
College , Saturday announced Rio Grande College Invitational
the schedule for the use or the Cross Country Meet. The
Paul R. Lyne Center . The facilities are used for college
schedule covers the week of recreation on the days that are
closed to the public.
Oct. 11.
The swimming pool. will be
Fall colors are considered
open to the publicfrom 7 to 8 on
to be an incidental chemical
Tuesday , Friday and Sunday reaction of no importance
evenings, and Sunday afternoon in the life of a tree.

Schedule -. -

Annolmced

·-•!llomda71'1mes·Sentlnel,&amp;tnday,Oct. IO, lrll
CORRECTION
POMEROY - The Jr. High
football · game at Racine
Tnesday aftiTJ!_"'?fl will engage
the Southern Local 'Eighth
grade team and·the Meigs Local
k High Seventh Grade, not
E1ghth, as announced earlier.
SERIES TV IN CAVERNs
STANTON, Mo. (UP! )-The
Baltimore-Pittsburgh World Seyear. Television sets have been
placed throughout the Meramec
Caverns ' so thai tourists can
watch the baseball classic.

•

e·s
Eastern Makes It 10 . •
:

rJIJ
0'
-e

BY DALE ROTHGEB ·. CHESHIRE Eastern's powerful Eagles
vtrtually "sewed-up" their second straight Southern
Valley Athletic Conference Championship here
F 'd
·
.
. .
rJ ay mghtwith a convmcmg 46-6 romp over the
Kyger Creek Bobcats.
Eastern entered the contest with a perfect 4-o
record. ~yger Creek was 3-Q-1 in four games.
Coach Roger Kirkhart's Eagles have Southern
and Southweste'rn:.!rlt.on their 1971 league schedule.
Kyger Creek will end its league campaign this

Cops 8-6

Victory

HAP P"~

L IKE

· BY MIKE WISE
FRAZIER'S BOTI'OM- The
Hannan Trace Wildcats scored
their first touchdown of the grid
season here Friday night
against the Hannan Wildcats of
West Virginia 6ut were edged 86 in a defensive struggle on the
winners' gridiron.
The first quarter saw plenty
of action, with both teams
coming close to scoring but
failing to do so. Both defenses
were tough in the clutch. During
-";""'"'-~. the defensive struggle both
teams found themselves in punt
formation several times.
The second quarter started
off like the first, with neither
side gaining the advantage.
Hannan finally broke the ice
late in the first half.
With 3:22 left, Jake Christy,
!lplit end for Hannan, scored on
a 24-yard run from a double
reverse. Larry Hill ran in the

....

WI T H A

SON WHO LOOKS

THIS'?

~~~~~~~~~:::J conversion on an off-tackle dive

[

TERRY

•
•

ml
·

.

·

·

HT H
6 8
54 50
83 16
I 3
7 16
I 2

EXPECT TWO STARS
FREEPORT, Bahamas (UP!)
-Organizers of the $130,000
Bahamas National Open Golf
To'!rQiimenl said Friday they.
expect both Arnold Palmer and
Lee Trevino to play in 1971's
fi11al PGA tournament at the
Lucayan Country C•ub, Dec, 912

North Gallia's record· to 2-3 on
the year. Symmes Valley
dropped to 2-3. The Pirates were
led by Junior fullback Phil
Hollenbaugh who used his 190
pounds well in rushing for 89
yards and three touchdowns.
Hollenbaugh struck paydirt in

south ern En dS
L 0 s·m·' g Stre·ak

Eagles, however' suddenly ran
into trouble.
·
Two quick lt)-yard losses
placed the ball on the Eagle 17· ·
yard line.
~ATRJOT ·- Coach Bruce
On fourth down, KC's Bill Wallace 's Southern Local
Roush, senior defensive end, Tornadoes broke their eightblocked the punt attempt. Terry game losing streak l:riday night
Sheets, 170 pound, sophomore against the Southwestern
tackle fell on the ball in the Highlanders in a SVAC contest.
endzone for the touchdown. A The game ended with Southern
run for the extra points was · winning 2&amp;-14.
stopped.
Neither side scored in the first
Eastern's lead was quickly quarter due to the stingy
cut 1AJ 1~ . The score came with defenses of both teams.
just five seconds remaining in
The first TO came in the
the first quarter.
second quarter when Southern
Eastern scored midway in the scored on a four-yard run by
secorxi quarter on a 24-yard run Mike Nease. The conversion
by junior flanker Rarxiy Bor· attempt failed.
ning but the play was nullified
Southern scored again late in
oo an offensive holding penalty. the quarter on a fantastic 51·
Kyger Creek's only other yard run up the middle by Nick
bright spot of the evening came !hie, junior tailback. The
on a 5:1-yard punt return by conversion was blocked.
senior KeMy Blankenship. The
The second half saw the
speedy hack was dropped on the Highlanders' offense come
seven yard line.
alive. This was the first time
From there, the Eagles' that Southwestern started
defense, led by tackles Gordon moving the ball consistently all
Holter, Dennis Eichinger, Dick season.
On the last play from
Stettler and Rich Hauber,
shoved the Bobcats back to the scrinunage in the third quarter,
11-yard line. A fourth down Kevin Gill ran for a 16-yard
desperation pass fell short.
touchdown for the Highlanders'
Eastern broke the game wide
open with just 15 seconds
remaining in the first half.
SVAC STANDINGS
Amsbary moved his club 89
ALL GAMES
yards in nine plays for tbe ~!j~n
~ ~ J 2 ~ ~~
score.
Kyger Creek
3 1 1 79 90
In switching from a running Norlh Gaiiia
2 3 0 94 62
ro
·
Amsha hit Soulhern
1 4 o 44 98
a paSSing game,
ry
Soulhweslern
o s o 22 132
Caldwell and Boring with ·irn- Hannan Trace
o 5 0 6 128
porlant clutch passes. The
SVAC ONLY
biggest gainer was a 35-yard TEAM
W L T P DP
aerial to Bormg· which placed Eastern
3 0 0 115 6
Kyger creek
3 1 o 73 64
the ball at the 11-yard line. After Southern
1 1 o 36 28
a timeout, Caldwell grabbed an Norlh Gallia
1 2 o 44 ~4
11-yard pass in the end zone to Soulhweslern
o 2 o 14 38
Hannan Trace
0 2 0 0 88
put the Eagles inro a com- TOTALS
8 8 0 282 281
manding 21-fJ lead at the half. THIS WEEK'S GAMES:
Thethirdquartercontinued to
Eastern at Federal-Hocking.
Kyger Creek at Southwestern.
Ill' a nightmare for Coach Dick
North Gailla at Green .
Adams' Bobcats. The offense
Hannan Trace at Soulhern.
v
5
could not muster any sort of Ky.ymmes al 1ey at Wurtland.
attack while hampering itself
more with costly fwnbles and
penalties.
Eastern scored again with
6:30 remaining on a 46-yard
pass from Amsbary to Caldwell.
CaldweU broke · two tackles
enroute to the goal line ,
Hauber's kick moved the score
ro 211-3.
Disaster . really struck the
Bobcats in the fourth quarter.
Sanders scored his third touch·
down of the evening on a 37-yard
run; Ralph Parker, substitute
halfback running wildly scored
on a !&amp;-yard jaunt and with five
second remaining Hauber
ldcked an unbelievable 43-yard
field goal.
As the smoke settled into the
hills, there was no question in
anybody's mind who the best
team was.
The Eagles had come, they
had seen and there was no doubt
they had conquered. Tbe vicWry was the Meigs Counijans
first ever on the Bobcat
gridiron.
In dominating the game,
Eastern held Kyger Creek to
only two ftrst downs and a total
of 41 net yards. The Eagles
collected 18 first downs, 278
yards rushing and 122 yards
passing.
Eastern will play FederalHocking Friday night.

first touchdown of the game.
John Earl Hutchinson ran in the
extra points for Southwestern
on an end sweep. Southern ran
only four plays during the entire
third quarter because of the
Highlanders' defense.
Southern came back in the
fourth stanza to pick up two
more touchdowns. The first was
run by Mike Nease on a 16-yard
plunge. The attempt for the
extra points was stopped.
Nease scored again on sixyard run. The conversion, run
by Nease, was good, making the
score 26-8 Sou them,
The Highlanders scored their
last touchdown on a nine-yard
run by Gill. Dale Whitt attempted the kick. It was no
good. The Highlanders found
themselves on Southern 's twoyard line when the game ended .
It was an exceptionally good
night for Southwestern backs
Kevin Gill and John Hutchinson. They each gained over
100 yards rushing.
Friday Southwestern hosts
Kyger Creek. Southern plays
Hannan Trace at home .
By Quarters:
Southern
0 12 0 14-26
Southwestern
0 0 8 6-14
STATISTICS
SW S
First Downs
12 13
Rushing Yardage
194 231
Passing Yardage
30 10
Passes Attempted
11 9
Passes Completed
1 2
Penalties
10-130 7.fJ7
Interceptions
2 3

a

Fumbles
Fwnbles Lost

5

2

I
I

~

the first period on a 42-yard
gallop up the middle . .A run for
the conversion faUed.
Harvey Brown; speedy senior
end, took a three-yard pass
from senior quarterback John
Egglellln for the Pirates' second
TO of the evening. Klm Hall,
sophomore halfbac)l, ran the
extras for a 14-0 lead.
Jackie Smith, senior back,
switched two weeks ago from
his signal caUing duties to a
halfbsck position, scored two
touchdowns in the second
stanza I Smith scooted across
the wtiite stripe. on an eight·
yard run wlth 7:34 remaining
in the period and again with
three minutes left on a 10 yard
scamper.
Hall again added the conversion.
Hollenbaugh pushed the score
to 36-0 at the baH with a five
yard run. The tally came with 33
seconds remaining.
North Gallia scored its final
rouchdown with 6:15 left in the
third quarter on Hollenbaugh's
five-yard run . Eggleton ran the
conversion for a 44-0 lead.
Symmes Valley rushed
across its first sixiJOinter in the
closing minutes ol the third
quarter, Terry Pine, freshman
halfback, ran from three yards
out. A kick for the extra point
was wide.
The Vikings added their final
points with 7:30 remaining in
the game. steve Robertson
scored on a short run . A pass
from Lafon to Don Wilson was
good for the conversion.
North Gallia had 16 first
downs, 288 yards rushing and
107 passing . Eggleton had
another good night completing
10 of 21 passes.
Hall rushed for 100 yards in 13
carries. Smith and Hollenbaugh
added 89 yards each.
The Pirates travel to Green
Twp. Friday.
Symmes Valley
t
goes 0
Wurtland, Ky.
By Quarters:
Symmes Valley
0 0 6 6-14
NorthGallla
14 22 8 0--44
STATISTICS' •
DEPARTMENT
SV NG
First Downs
5 16
Yards Rushing
59 288
Yards Passing
46 107

Passes Attempted
Passes Completed
The official state tree of Fumbles
K t k 1
en uc Y s the yellow pop· Fumbles Lost
lar, according to Encyclo· p IIi
paedia Britannica.
ena es .

10
2
1
I
34

21
10
3
2
55

. BY JOHN COOPER
Soli Caasei'VIIUoD Sen•l""
PT. PLEASANT - A. C.
Bingham is building a pond on
his farm on Road Fork of Ohio
Eighteen Mile Creek. When this
pond is full of water, it will be
about 1lne-fourlh acre in size
and will hold about 350,000
gallons of water. Mr. Bingham
plans to use this pond for
wildlife improvement as well as
for livestock water .
The Western Soil Con.
servation District is doing the
earth-moving with Rupert
Sayre being the operator of the
bulldozer. Denver Yoho of $oil
Conservation Service made the
design and is cbeclting the
construction of the pond.
Mr. Bingham also made use
of the District work crew to do
the hand labor in regard to this
pond construction .
WE MET WITH Charles
Withers, County Superintendent
of Mason County School.s, and
Mrs. Mildred Gibbs, principal
ol the Hartford Elementary
School at the school to discuss a
drainage problem on the school
grounds there.
Examination showed much of
the school ground to be water·
logged because of the soil
conditions. There are two soils,
Melvin Silt Loam and Lindside
Silt Loam . These soil.s are both
wet, however Melvin is the
wetter of the two.
Mrs. Gibbs said that even
several days after a rain that it
is necessary for her to keep the

WHERE.
YOU SAVE

DOES liME A

DIFFER£NCE
Wt ,.Y you to uvt
. lind 1M P•Y Is good) .

PAIUOOK
UTI

.... Qa._ ••ldl

Ole Alhono C.Unty

,..,..... , ..... c..
2MIKIR~St

Poftlt,..,. Ololo
Member Ft&lt;ter11
Hom• Loila B1nk

Mtmber Federal Savlngt

children in.side the school
because the ground was still too
wet to play upoo.
A feasibility survey made by
Denver Yoho of SCS showed
that it was possible wdrain this
ground by outletting the tile
system into a sllll1n sewer near
Sliding Hill Creek.
TRUSTEES OF UNION
Campground near New Haveil
are considering enlarging their
parking lots on the Union
Campground, near the tabernacle. We went with Harold
Bumgarner, one of the trustees
and
Eugene
Garlow ,
representing . the ministers to
discuss and examine the
possibility of enlarging these
lots.
During the discussion it was
pointed out that about 1,300
people had attended one of their
re&lt;"ent meetings . We do not
know. but that might be a
r~ord attendance for a church
service in Mason County.

First Downs

Yards Rushing'
Yards Passing
Passes Attempted
Passes Compieled
Fumbles
Fumbles Lost

a.

LOin Insurance Corporation .

All ecc:ounts lnsur~ up to
120.00t.ot

Penalties

4 2
1 2
80 50

HEADS cANADIENS
MONTREAL ( UPI)...:.Veteran
center Henri Richard ·was
named captain of the Montreal
Canadiens Friday for the 1971·
72 National Hockey League
season, Defensemen J. C.
Tremblay and Terry Harper
and forward Frank Mahovllch
were appoi nted 8S$ietant cap·
l~ins .

ECONOMIC IMPACT
Arming to the C1rlo ,Department of De•~l~t, the
= nomic impact ol this money can result in: 198 ,ntw jobs•,
$1.320,000 in annual personal .inc&lt;Ine ; 12 !In' retail establlsbmen[S . $2!3,000 in annual bank deposil5: $1 ,902,780 ln retail sales;
161 new homes or apartmenl5 ; and tax monies to slqlp&lt;X'I ~
school children .
Urxioubtedly, the new outdoor thea in will offer finanda1
benefits to the Scioto Valley . Just as in~tailt bonver, is the
aesthetic appreciation it will foster.·
In June rJ. 19Tl the epic drama . "Tocumseh," will Ill' per.
formed at the Sugarloaf Mountain Amphitheatre. Written by
Allan W. Ecker . into&gt;mationally known author tt "The Frro.
tiersman " and "Wilderness Empire ." the play recreates the
fascinating stOI')· of the famous Shawnee Indian and the turbulent
era in. which he li ved.
The outdoor location of the theatre pennits a realism stldom
possible indoors. A walo&gt;r stage aU~ actors to enter and I~..,
the scene canot&gt;. An Indian ,iJlage located near the stage area
is bombarded by shells from artillery located on the other stage
side , in a realistic representatioo of the Battle of Tippecanoe .
Surroonded by t.rees. stars. arxi the larxi that was native w
TeeunlS&lt;'h. the audient'e can identify with the desperate struggles
of the British. Americans. arxi lrx!illns for control ol. the Northwesl Terri lOry . And through the portrayal of Tecumseh 's love
for his people, for his h&lt;meland , and for thP white woman wbo
returned his low , the audience can better understarxi the bitterness of the Indian natioo 's defeat when the se\larate cultures
foiled to find U1e cormnon grounds they needed in order to live in
peace.
When completed. the outdoor theatre will Include rain
shelters arxi conression stands and have a S&lt;&gt;ating capacity ol
1,600. Ample parking areas will be pro,ided for the audience and
1 bus service m•y run from hotel.s, motels, and central points
throughoot the surrourxiing communities .
The above two examples are just further indiratlon rJ. what
vision and initiBtive can accon1ptish w benefit both the cultural
and economic well-being of an area . The frontiers of today are
frequ ently founct in our own back yard.

GaUia FFA Chapters Compete in Judging

bothered by rain .

DUSTY lAUAN
PRE-FINISHED

Many of your neighbors
are using a Land Bank Loan
to buy a farm .
But ewn more of them
are using a Land Bank Loon
for· other needs.

Drop

:O.:uu• . \ llu r

lo .. .o l

t&gt;u~l llf' ,.,.

l ~ on , ll l:on~ 1\ ~~N&lt;k ' l:lllt ll\ "'o n

,,f m .o l\•n~

llltOIIl

uf

l&lt;l~l\ll

w

l&gt;u ~· fMnu• !loll
l oll nd 1-l;. nl,.
li mlllt'lll l!: fur t&gt;thl' r purp•- l!tofin~n.· m l deb!.
b mlrlll\~ ,,r l'f'IIHI&lt;it-llnjl 11 hmntt. 11111)1\ll'tnw-nu
m buildmM" nr tl~ot- l11111l. rn&lt;.&gt;llf')' fur Nhl&lt;Mtu n tbe!OI' (Hll t!I IHIIple~ of l lliJ!Of(Mnl lhinp Wtl

th,,

ll lH IH&lt;"Illbo•no. lhl W Ut'C!

h!'IV m11kf 1..-..thle-. r.hy wt d~~o.·u.la.n
tiMda •t your l'&gt;n~nil.m-.? Without ubliuticn.

Clyde B. Walker,
Manager
19 Locust 51.
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 446·0203
SERVING LOCAL AGRICULTURE
WITH MORE THAN W LOAN Pt.ANS

==

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

FOR WINTER·

Farm Bureau }()I)
Goes to Clingan
COLUMBUS - Charles E.
Clingan, of Mansfield, has been
named
Southeast
Field
Representative for the Ohio
Farm Bureau Federation, Inc.
The 43-yearo{)ld Richland
County native will be responsible for services to 1,900 Farm
Bureau members in the seven
southeastern Ohio counties of
Adams, Brown, Pike, Jackson,
Gallia, Scioto and Meigs. He
most recently was organization
director in Richland, Morrow,
Marion and Crawford counties.

PANELING

99

SHEET

8"x16'

PRIME SIDING
~ '18400
PER 1,000 BD. FT.

E KC
18 2
278 39
1222
7 6
6 1

Week's Weather

GALLIPOLIS
Tern·
perature , precipitation and
•weather conditions for each M
hour period as r~orded by Pete
McCormick, Fairfield weather
observer .
Day
Higb Low Pre..
Sunday
86
52
Monday
82
62
Tuesday
80
62
Wednesday
75 ~
Thursday
64
53
Friday
67 33
Saturday
80
55
LEONARD UPTON, on. Average high temperature for
Rocky Fork of Thirteen Mile week this year- 73.4. Last year
Creek, is improving a spring - 76.8.
which furnishes the water
Average low temperature for
supply for the home reservoir. week this year - 53.2. Last year
He had installed the reservoir !6.8.
some years ago out of concrete
Total pr~ipitation for week
block
and
masonry. this year - None . Last year Examiqation of the sprin~ .03 inch.
showed that it had a strong flow
GALllPOLIS - Memlll'rs of the Gallia County Chapters ofF .F.A. competed in the District
Total precipitation to date
of water and would provide this year - 24.96. Last year 14 Soil and Larxi Judging at Alexander High School on Oct. 6to develop abilities in evaluation of
plenty for them to keep the 1,300 30.17.
agricultural land.
gallon rese.Voir filled .
Among these chapters placing in the ~ 10 of the 23 teams were, North Galli a. first place:
Normal average precipitation
The spring is located about annually 40.99 inches .
Hannan Trace, third place, arxi Gallipolis, seventh place .
200 feet from their house and
David Bryan of the Gallipolis chapter r~eived the third highest individual score of 'li7 out of
about 50 feet vertical elevation
a possible 300.
above the house. This makes an
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Nocth Gallia arxi Hannan Trace will compete in the State Land Judging in May of 'i2 .
excellent gravity flow giving
Ohio extended outlook
The following boys, pictured above, participated in thP contest : front, 1 to r, James
plenty of water pressure at the Monday through Wednesday :
Lambert, Ricky John.on, Don Lambert (Hannan Trace ); Steven Rose, Jerry Cook and David
house .
Fair and cool Monday.
Bryan (Gallipolis ); Keith Hill, Kay McClaskey, Tony Glassburn (North Gallia); David Curl·
Mr. Upton is using a tile catch Chance of a shower and a
man, Brian Tucker and Lynn Johmon (Kyger Creek) , and back row , Donny l£wis, Terry
basin supplied by the Western little warmer Tuesday with
Stevens
and Steve Crouse (Southwestern\.
District
and fabricated moderating trend continuing
. especially to be used in spring Wednesday, Highs in the
MAC JAY ELECTED
developments . This piece of lower 60s Monday rising to
RACINE - Mac Jay , care of
heavy tile is two feet long and the upper 60s and lower 70s
to
Otis McClintock, Racine, has
open ended on both ends. When Wednesday. Ovemlgbi lows
been elected to membership in
set on one end there is a two- In the lower 40s early Monday
WASH!NGTON (UP! ) - The reaches a seasonal peak , but the
American
Angus
inch hole 6 inches from one end and ln the middle 40s Monday Agriculture Department said they should rise before the year Assoc iat ion a 1 St. Joseph,
and 18 inches from the other . On and Tuesday nlgbt.
Thursday hog prices may drop is out.
Missouri . There were 327
the opposite side there are ~ lsomewhat this fall as slaughter
The USDA Livestock and memberships
issued
to
inch holes.
Meat SituatiOn Report satd breeders of registered AberThis catch basin is designed State Fair Made
c~t
tle pr~ces thts fall and wmter deen-Angus in the United States
Appalachia May
to be set in the spring upright
Wlll stay about where they are·' during the ~ month.
and with the ~ hoies on the back
now.
-·4
Be Model Region
to allow water to enter the About 0 Grand
Pork output will likely drop
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
basin. The outlet pipe is placed
below a year ago and will stay
The s c i e n c e of selenoOhio
State fair this year earned ATHENS, Ohio l UP! l - considerably lower in the first
in the two-inch hole and morgraphy
is the study of the
nearly $40,000 despite five days Appalachia might "be the most hall of 1972. the USDA said .
tared with concrete.
moon . Selene is the Greek
Mr . Upton will place several of rain ·that reduced midway ·prepared area" in the nation to
Fall beef production is ex- word for moon .
crowds.
effectively
utilize
revenue·
tubfuls of gravel in behind the
pected to be the same as last
Met'
Fordyce,
administrative
sharing
funds
because
of
its
catch basin as a filter for the
falL
water. He is covering the tile supervisor said attendance for experience in dealing with local
with a lid and will cover the the !:!-{lay exposition was down developmen t agencies in the
balance of the area with soil to 37,045 from the 1970 record of past, Donald Whitehead, CoChairman of the Appalachian
prevent surface water from 2,219,170.
d
Q- Wiw was til e yo11ngest
"We
are
waiting
on
the
state
Re
gional
Commission
,
sai
entering the spring or catch
majo r league player of all
auditor's report," said Fordyce. Friday.
ba~in .
time?
"They just finished chetklng
Whitehead, who addressed
A- The Cincinnati pitcher.
our books yesterday, but it looks the Appalachian Development Joe Nmthall, who started his
like we made about $40,000." Conference at Ohio University, career in June, 1944,. aged
The t970 fair brought in about said he welcomed President 15 years. 10 months and 11
$225,000 in profits but it was not Nixon's revenue--sharing plan. days.

4'x8'

STATISTICS
DEPARTMENT

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

It's said that if)'~ wait loog enlllgh. old fashi!XlS will come
back into style. This seems to hold true fu' theatre as wei! as
clot!Ug design . Hlllldre&lt;b tt yean ago, the Greeks performed
directioos. Meigs area leaders an Invited Ill put the date ol their plays In outdoor amphitheatres, and today outdoor dran~a is
.._
Friday, Ocl 29th, oo their calendar for the Ohio Conununity making e popular arxi profitable eoo~ehack .
In Ohio, ''T!'wnpet in the Land'' is an ootdoor produclioo that
played IAJ standing.room-&lt;&gt;nly crowd-; in Dover-Nell· Philadelphia
the NEW in FARMING
the last four weekends tt this SUITUilef''s run. Accoroing to John
M. Pierce, Extensioo Specialist in CIXlliDunity Development, it is
Resource De&gt;-elopment Dlfeling in Colwnbus .
a "classical example tt c&lt;mmunity action that can lead to an
'l'bere will be special sessions in at least fi\&gt;e areas r¥ expansi&lt;11 of a local ec&lt;11&lt;my by capitaliiing ro the historical
Resource Development. A cq&gt;y of the program can be obtained in resourees and leadership talent nati"" to the ·area."
the next two wee its from the Exle!Won Of! ice. Meigs County has
On Sugarloaf Mountain, northeast of Otillicothe . plan. for the ·
done much in developing recreatim but much remains to be done . constructitl'l ol another amphitheatre are being dewloped . Based
Two different types of Resource De""lopment are either oo ~ tt other his[(lical dramas .. it is estimated that apunder way oc cummtly planned which is just another example ol proximately 67;000 people will attend the amphitheatre each tenwhat can be done . This is described in the release received this week season. J'he.money spent on gasoline, oil, motets, arxi meais
week which says, ''Outdoor Drama Expected Ill Bring Profit Ill is expected to contribute a great deal tD the deve.lopment of Sciotr&gt;
Sciow Valley."
Valley CQDmnnllles.

Hog Prices· Expected

DON'T MISS
THIS

play, making the score Hannan
8, Hannan Trace 0.
Hannan Trace's defense
really started to cramp Hannan's style in the third quarter.
Two of Hannan 's punts were
blocked by Hannan Trace, but
ironically, Hannan recovered
both of them and gained short
yardage.
liT's offense came close to
scoring midway in the quarter,
but due to a bad hando{)ff, lost
possession of the baiL
Hannan Trace made its
IAJuchdown with 4:18 left in the
game on a 38-yard pass from
Quarterback Garland Montgomery to halfback Delbert
Cisco, The conversion run by
Montgomery was no good. The
game ended with HT 'llOVing
for a final attack on its own 3().
yard line.
BY QUARTERS
·ay Quarters,
Hannan Trace
0 0 0 6---j) Eastern
14 7 7 18-46
Hannan
0 8 0 0--8 Kyger Creek
6000-6

STATISTICS
OepartmeQt
FlrstDowns
Yards Rushing
Passing Yardage
Interceptions
Penalties
Fumbles

.
VINTON - Coach John
Blake's North Gallla Pirates
made the sch~l's homecoming
a. happy occas10n here Frtday
mght rolling over Coach John
Patton's Symmes Valley
Vikings, 44-14. The win pushed

Double Ohjectl

\!1
·

eague

Hannan

c=~:::--..-------'-

·

.

P~Resource Development Meeting Set

•

·

Friday at Southwestern.
The Big Green Machine, in
winning its lOth straight league
contest over a· !w{)oyear span,
displayed an overpowering
ground game with a tenacious
passing attack.
The Eagles look charge from
the opening, and never let up.
After receiving the kickoff, the
defending cbamps drove ~
yards in 13 plays for their first
..------~ lwchdown.
Rick Sanders, senior tailback
llld the league's 'leading scorer,
buUed wer from the one-yard
line for his first six-pointer of
tbeevening .Senior quarterback
Jim Amsbary ran the conwrsion for an early 8-0 EHS
lead.
The stingy Eagle defeme,
which has surrendered only 12
~-- points all year, forced the
Bobcats to punt.
Sanders returned the punt 80
yards to paydirt. A run for the
conversion failed. Eastern
again took over after stopping
the Bobcats' running game. The

f.lOvJ CAN I&amp;.

.,

,

CAROLINA

BLUI~

ANT....H''

SUPER SALE GOES ON!

INTERNATIONAL® Opens Monday
''52-HORSE" UTILITY TRACTOR PT . PLEASANT - The
Big work-power. Four cylinder gas or diesel engines.
Short turns. Easy handling. Hydrostatic power steering. More comfort New walk-through styling. High speed lightning shift (8F-4R speeds). Smooth synchromesh transmission. Rugged planetary drive. 20
gallon rear fuel tank. Big capacity live Independent
hydraulics. Precis,ion draft control 3-polnt hitch with
infinite rate response. Dyna- Life• clutch. Hydraulic
wet disc brakes. Adjustai;)Ie seat Optio~s include
twin-shaft 540/1000 RPM PTO and differential lock.
"

Meigs Equipment Co.
Ph. 992-2176

PT. PLEASANT, W. y A.

Be Safe With

X -ray Program

SEE THE'NEW 574. HERE TODAY

312 SIXTH AVE.

Old Min Winter Can
.. Hlrd On Your
.Car, TIVCk, or Tr•ctor.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Mobile X-Ray Unit vtill be in
Mason County five days this
week offering free chest x.rays.
The schedule is as follows:
Monday - Leon IAJwn hall, 4
p.m. until 7 p.m.; Tuesday New Haven United Methodist
Church from '10 a.m. to I p.m.
and from 2 until 6 p.m.; Wednosday - Courthouse from 10
a.m . to I p.m., 2 untilo p.m. and
6 until 8 p.m.; Thursday .Courthouse, 10 a.m. to noon and
I to 3. The unit will visit at
Sunnyside School Thursday
evening from 5 until 7 p.m. and
again Friday from 10 a.m. until
noon.
The Mobile X-Ray service Is
sponsored by the Mason County , .
Tuherculosis and Respiratory
Disease Association, the West
Virginia Slate Health Departlnenl and the Masnn County
lleal ·11 tlPparlmt' nL
..

Super Sale extended for 21 more days on all
new M.F . Tractors in stock! M .F . has granted
this, because you the customer. has given us
such a great response! RECORD BREAKING
. SAU:s are being made throughout M. F.
lando ESPECIALLY at GALLIPOLIS
TRACTOR! I

r

So come

in and SAVE while the price is right!
We still have a good selection of new tractor s,
but i' we don't have what you want. we will try
our best to get it for you .

lUll CREST

Permanent Anti-freeze

We will · also give you top dollar trade-in
allowance on your tractor during this sale!

Chi.

GALLIPOLIS TRACTOR

MF
M.1

. \!

•. , ·!&lt;

.. ,/,

Your Massey-Ferguson Dealer
Upper Route 7-Kanauga
Phone : 446· 104~

$149

Central Soya

Of ·Ohio
Cklllptllt

••••••••••••••••••••il l•••""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'llf!!!l!'""'""'""'""'..""'""'""'""'-..llll••ill•••..

'•

•

''

�20- The Sunday Tl!lle! Si;ntwl Sunday Oct 10

1971
21-Tbe!UidlyTI!n~·S.ntlnel &amp;llday Oct Iiifiii197llli.•---------

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Card of Thanks

LEGAL NOTICE

Generation Rap

(An en le I Se

te J o
No 2

t Heso lutlO

JOI NT HESOLUrtON

By Helen and Sue Bottel

Real Estate For Sale

THE FAM IL Y of Will am C
Board wtshes to express our

450 Second Ave
238 1
Ph 446 4775
TWO BR COTTAGE - Located
on

cute

TEMPORARY hours effectiVe
Oct

jfoA 3 2

¥ 65
+ I086 52
... J [O O
{ D)

" 10 9 7
¥A KQ92
• 73
,._AQ 2
North South vu lnerable
West North East South

Stg ned

any debts other than my own

as of th s date Oct 10 1971
S gned Stanley K1 ngery
238 3
R ~E~D~U~C~E~s~
af~e-a7
nd~fa~
s t--wth

Gobese tablets and E Vap
water p Its Glllmgham Drug
223 26
Clean ng

4.

So l

Thomas Logue Williams
GalhpOIIS and Clmton Hale
Oak Hill were recent callers of
Hershel! Norman
Mr and Mrs Paul Jone s of
Homestead Flonda spen t
overmght with her mece Mr
and Mrs Harley Greene and
called on her cousm Mrs
Wilham Thomas
Mr and Mrs Halaon Thomas
Mr and Mrs James K Thomas
and son Jamie Allen spent a
recent weekend In Columbus

J

on S Rt 124 m Sy racuse
Oh1o
Ava table fo r 1m
med ate occupancy To see

Ph Gall po l s 446 9539 after 5

p m weekdays for appt

232 II

Neal Realty

petlng paflo 2 car base gar
a
la rge landscaped tot Th s
properly can be bought for
today s replacement cost
w lh elec door Located on

Edge of C1ty
OWNER wants th s one sold

"HOME" Plus
"FARM"

soon

THAT IS what you II ~ro udly be
f you buy th s large 254 acre
tarm with a beauflful two

slory home 3 BR &amp; bath all
bu It n k1lchen n color

paneled eat ng area spac ous
formal d nmg room stone

f replace n LR

large por

same as new

5 ni ce

rm s and bath plus ulil1ty rm
II has a beautiful k !chen
Cathedral
H W ll oors
ce I ng larg e carport and
l ocated on &amp;' large lot Pnce

only $16 soo

C1ty
EXCELLENT res denflal sec
2 story 6 b g rms bath and
ut I ly rm Storm dr s and

ches new furna ce and water
windows
parttal
base
ta nk alum mu m s d ng and
Local an pr ce and comfort
awn ngs dug well 80 acres
cannot be beat on th s prop
permanent pasture 100 acres
$14 750
good limber new barn 2 A
tobacco base Call Howard 2 BDRM - 3 m fro m lown
Bra nnon n ow to see th s I arm
neat par t new plenty closet
space new roof Ha s 10 x 12
54 Acres
storage bldg located on near

ON A Stale Rt 40 acres I liable

farm pond tool shed small
barn 2 cnbs ch cken house
corn base a good 7 room and
bath hom e w th new roof and
f urn ace deep well

I A tot Pme $13 500

New L1stmg
84 Acres

35 If

nand gas ava tab le Ph 446

2210

233 6

Lost

HUSK E wh te w•th god blue Campmg Equ1pment
eyes If relurned no quest ons
STARCRAFT
ask ed Reward 446 2829
SEE
the
1972
rave l trail ers and
236 3

Instruction
Open The Door To

Adult Bas1c Educatlon

campers n stock 15 per cent
plus d1scount 1 71 trailer
dealers cos
We stock all
accessor es serv 1ce what we
sell and guarantee Cam!='
Con ey Slarcrafl Sales Rl 62
Nor h of Po nl Pleasant W

Va

205 If

Classes begtn OctoberS
At
North Ga tha H1gh School
Southwestern H1gh School
Galha Academy H1gh School

For Sale

Hannan Trace Htgh School

spr ngs

Kyger Creek H1gh School
Call

Corb n &amp; Snyder
955 Second Ave

Enrol

446 1171

3 If
--~~~~-

STORE bu ld ng

now

for next term Gall pol s
Bus ness College R N 7 02
0032 B Ph 446 4367
162 If

24x62 It

L ocated St R 2 near
Pleasan Ph 446 1474

DOING YOUR
CHRISTMAS DREAMING?
IT S NOT too ear y to sta rt bu ld a prof table bus ness of
your ow n as an AVO N
Representative and make

those dreams come true
Wr te or cal Mrs Helen
Yeager Box 172 Jackson

Ohm Ph 286 4028
233 6
WILL pay well for your spare
t me warkt n9 at home for us
Anyone who can read and
wr e can qual fy Weekly
sa lar v Deta Is wnte James

Bl ss Co P 0 Box 324 Dept
K487 Lev tlow
Pa 9053
235 12

237 3

3 50"HOU~ 0 JT

EX ANDING company
O A T~

AND REPEAL

ljo

OF' FICE OF TH E SECH ETAR Y
Of S f ATE

lmmed ale ass gnmenls to
respons ble tabs nat10nw de
Fore1gn
ass gnments
ava able follow ng tra nmg
E)((ept anal
wage
and
benet Is program Women s

Army Corps Ph 446 3343
238 5
-~~~--:--c--:--c

to

o vo u d

ad1u st

$4

99 Call 675 1589
219 tf

For Sale or Traae
HOUSE John Deere dozer

&amp;

pan tra 1l er space bu ld ng
slle au tomob le or w II trade
for house tra fer farm tractor
equ pment o I le cha n saw

Ph 446 0168

Downtown
Ia ge

234 II

~----

68 FORD XL good cond

62
Tr umph convertible 20
I ghl we ghl chatn s"dw Ph

367 7268

..

..

238 3

heal ng located n Gall pols
Ph 446 3258

rates

fr eQ Q"a r age park ng

L bby Hotel
SLEEP IN G ROOMS
rates

Park Centra l

week ly

Hotel
308 If

FURN ap l newly remodeled
all new turn lure &amp; ap
p ances al uhllt1es pa1d
lnqu1re at R ce s NeW &amp; Used

Furn 446 9523

35 - deep l ot w th a bu11t m
ncome

RUSSELL

WOOD

carpe ting
built n k !chen
double garage pat o fenced
yard
2 m le from new

hosp1lal Ph 446 9690
238 6

STROUT REALTY
THE LEADER SINCE 1900 IN
SERVING THE NATIONS
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
Ph 446 0008
VERY RARE
LIKEnew 3BRbrckwth1564

REALTOR
446·1066

fl of I v ng space on mam
floor plus fin shed basement

Bu It n k tc hen w th 20 fl of

S PCT

cab nets Ux26 fam ly room

MEMB ERS of the Nat onal
boards and have for \ears
a comm1ss on

rate of fiVe (5) percent If you
wantto buy or sell deal with a

r ealtor who adheres to the
stan dards of professional
pract ce
AT A resta urant coun ter one
m an asked fo r a ham on rye
apple p e and coffee Sounds

good

ww

World's Largest

nodded the fnend

10xl3 d n ng room 40xl6 Rec
r oom large llv ng r oom and
ut I ty room HW floo rs and
garage an a large landscaped
lawn

EASY TERMS
NICE 8 room home barn
several frulf trees Buy w1th 1
acre or 50 Your cho1ce

GENTLEMAN S FARM
4 , A ON 160 N1 ce 6 room
home garage workshop and

pond

FEED MILL

I II WELL esla bl shed bus ness on
state rd $90 000 reported

have the sam e except make
11 roast beef chocola te P•e

and lea

VIEW

2~1:~tle.n

mcome E Z terms for the
nght per son $14 500

ass gnments to Europe after SL EEP IN G r ooms or r oom and
board Ph 446 0060
Iran ng 1n U S Fu pay
wh le lram ng
Rap d ad
236 6
va ncement f or real go
ge ter s Free med cal and SLEEPI NG rooms nea r Gav n
denial care U nb eatab l ~ ., Plan Ph 446 0002

86--Ensnan~

ahawls

2t--Unttaf

st.......
CUrT'Iflcy

!CJ-.Iarll: cklth

32-lmtfl Islands
U-T~ntoot

34-0inct atllp

35-lncounttr
317--f-tdlippfnt
Moolom

39--MIII:II
~nntto

41-hrtntr
42~alamltous

44--Mt•fun dish

•6---CMrtt
"""'
•7-Unlta
4'-4plkononl
50--..... lttnt
52-Mont~

Pl)'tllitt ilt
ln~rnlt

53-ConJunction
~5---ftaiHd dxk
of wtMl

57-lttllrotd
(tbbr)

sa-tdtntical

59--Nulunee
150 ;..._tltlon
62-sho, tl"p

NO

6ot--fur betrtna
mtmmal
66-Ft roe ltlendt
whlrtwlnd

Good Home Prtced
Rtght In Thurman

Sa.....:.Hebftw tetter
69-Mo]otlt)l
70--Gal'6tf1 tool

3 BEDROOM HOME
COMPLETLY
CAR
PETED
MODERN
FURNACE AN D BATH ON
A LARGE LOT JUS T
STEPS FROM GRA DE
SC HOO L

other

CREEK

27~o,.l&amp;ners

28- Bnstla
31-Sandarac t H
33-Tw .. tad
36-Snare
38-Habrew
mauure
40-Unltplratad
41-DIIIIIId
43-God of love
45-Dren
1rotectors
46-Most crlpplad
47- Expal
49--Parforms
51-8 nds
52-Sindy waste

87- ar..c:l of doc
89-Newt
92-open to vlaw
95--Ditturbancet
98-Tardy
99-Hubbub
101 - Nt&amp;atlon
I 03-0.tlrnatlna
halaht of t de
104---Ante
105-Sta k
106--Nole of scale
107- Man s
n ckname
101-Phll pplne
natives
llD-Ocaan
111-Symbol for
tel urium
112-chlef
113-Frult
115--Nota of scala
117--G rl t name
119--Army officer
(lbb )
12o-R p
121-W thout meant
124-Muslcal
Instrument
126-Unru y t t1i d
127---fl. .d
128--lnstant
I»-Wh p
132-Prov de
celina
133-Diractlon
t:u-Thl sun
135-Midday

53--P Inter
54--0 strict n
Germany
Sf-Walked
around to
prottct
59-Mon•rch
60-C ty In
Garman)'
61-Bui'Jiar (1lan1)
63-Appel\1
65-Man s name
67-$uperlattvl
end ne
69--Pa •nt (co loq)

DOWN
1-Provlnce of
l('ldll
2-Fondled
3-NI CIIIIr'j
nutritive
substanct
at witt.
effort
5-Sendforth
6-150 (Roman
number)
7-Rivtir Island
8-H ndu 1arment
9--Frameworll
built across
ravlna
to-communion

•-o

70-0id World
birds
72-LOnlllllld
bird
74-h.t. den loved
by Zeus
76--Symbol for
tlntalum
77-l&lt;lled
79-Southem
blackbird
83- Be m staken
85-W ne of tha
10d1
86-SIIkWO"f'l

plata
11-Waraod
12-Man 1
nlcknam•
13--A continent
(abbr)
14-l'oot
l~enod of1 rna
16--0atorates with
tpoh
17-HIJhest
standards

87::-:~ Narrow

open n1

They are on I lot and to se ll
together Pr ce $10 500

and large barn
2 acre
tobacco base well fen ced
pasture land Rural water tap
pad 2m les from R o Grande

on Slate Route 325
$31 500

Pr ce

no bu ld ng

state rd All stock
equ p mcluded
CITY

and

NICE 2 story home on Eastern
Ave 7 rm s down mcludes
d1nmg rm and TV rm 2
garages set on the reur of the

large lot Pr ced tor qu ck
sale $15 000
Ranny Blackburn
Branch Manager

IN GREEN Townsh p
acres

!ached Over 1 acre of land an

104

d1stnct w th

2

PS

A r cond

GREAT

BU LD NG
LOTS
N
CLOSE TO TOWN OR OUT
IN THE COUNTRY

base Pr ce S12 500
IN EU REKA a large store
bu ldlng w fh 7 n ce rooms
upsta irs w1th bath and lur
nace Pn ce $6 900

f

•• • •

••••

I

,•

•• •

......... .

B auto

Low miles one owner

...

,

43 000

102-Narrow flat
board
10~halr

•n:•

109-P
112--Cur.

6

113-Shut up
11"-Havlne many
fissures
116--Solsr d sk
118-Rae on
120--P•rt of eun
121-Sprlnt
122-0na who
co lact s tot 1
123- Min s nama
125-Narrat va
126---Awayl
127-claan
129-Sound • hom
131-Art.lc:las cf
furniture
132-GoCidau of
veeatatlon
133-Simpla
134--Sea nymph

m1les

PS PB

•

IF YOU'RE LOOKING

• • •

Standard

'

'

I

'

seat~

I

I I I

I I I

I I '

I I

••

1965 BUICK SPORTSWAGON
9 Pass

sharp •

•

...

····~·· ......

•aoo

• •

1965 OLDS CUTLASS 2 DR. HDTP
Runs oood mce second car

standard
138-Wants

..

••••••• 1

•••

.... ~700

140-0man
141-AnlmJtad

1965 OORVAIR 2 DR. HDTP.

142--comtort
14-4-Tidy
147-Sw 11 canton
148-Nova ty
149-Witer elf
151-Runlan
commune
153-Ean:h 10ddus
155--Near

4 speed •

.~400

•• •

1965 FORD 4 DOOR
V 8 au1omat1c transmiSSion

1

I

Itt

t

t' t

'

.~400

'

1963 FORD FAIRLANE 2 DR. HDTP
,

e

e

t

I

t

•200

•

•

For Sale
24 ACRES on Bnck Road 2 PAINT DAMAGE - 1971 Z g
m1tes from Add son Several
Zag sew ng machmes Shit In
excellent bu ld ng lots Ph
o r~g nal cartons
No af
367 7598
tachments needed as our
204 If con trols are bu It n Sews
1971 MERCURY Marqu s fully w th 1 or 2 needles makes
buttonholes sew on buttons
equ pped low m1teage Ph
mon ograms and bl nd hem
388 9991
st
lch Full cash pr ce 538 50
236 6

•

61 VOLKSWAGEN
7745

Ph

367

2366
-:C-:O-:M
:-P
::-L
:--::
E-::T-::E--C
::-u-:1-:1-g_a_n-soft

remodeled and carpeted 2
concre te porches 100 acres

water cond honer

2
2
A
5
1

steel and

locust posts 10 hole hen nests
and feeders straw Ph 446
4170 alter 6 P m
236 J
-------~

Ira ler lot w1th well septic ~
ta nk and concrete porc hes 2
m les from Crown City on Rt !

ANGUS he fer calf Ph 245 5652
alter 5 p m
236 3

553 16 m les from Gallipol s
Call Moms Sheets 256 6228 •
227 II

KENMORE gas range used 2
mos

avocado

Ph

.446 074.4

236 3

'

Localton- 3 m1les north of Cheshtre or J m1tes south of
Mtddleport turn at Texaco sfal•on onto Story s Run
(Meigs Co 345) Road go 1 m1le
Will sell at Public Auchon estate of W W Underwood
cons1shng m part of

For Sale

For Sale

PUBLIC seating folding ta bles
and chairS

-

restaurants

churches
organizations
Complete line of off1ce cha~rs
and desks Simmons Ptg &amp;
Office Equip Ph 446 1397
141 If

GE portable stereo record
player black 2speakers $35
Ph 256 6546 affer 6 p m
235 6
El«:ELLENT cond1t on 1970
Mavenck automatic 18 000
m1les

1970 CADILLAC sed DeV1IIe
fully equ1pped low m1leage
Ph Pl. Pleas 675 4283 after 6
226 If

rad o

lamps chest of drawers dressers sew mg machine old

tars Kimball organ anf1que co box trunks cane chairs
spindle back chairs round oak table set dining chairs
RCA Victrola uti ty trailer grinder stone jars and jugs
set of pony harness brass kettles glassware hand toots
and other arf1cles too numerous to 1st

Nof res119ns!ble for accidents

MR RONALD SARGENT Owner
LEMLEY AUCTION SERVICES
Andrew Lem loy- Aucl

SIGNS
No hunt ng or
frespasslng or others Protect
your rights Simmons Pig &amp;
Office Equip
203 11
USEb
Mobile
Home
Headquarters All size mobile
homes In stock B &amp; S Mob1te
Home Sales Second &amp; VIand
PI Pleasant next to Heck s
67 If
WHITE cement all s1zes tte'"
slack 12 &amp; 15 field tile

SUI fable for highway d1tchmg

concrete

blocks

GALLIPOLIS BlOCK CO
ph 446 2783
97 If

heater

pnce

$1 695 Ph 446 2228
235 6
LARGE

Reg

Charola•s

70 000 btu fuel 011 mculaf ng heater washer
refr gerator range (gas ) dryer beds I vlng room suites

Semces Offered

Semces Offered

FRENCH CITY Builders
Supply 750 lsi Ave .446 t499

FAIN
EXTERMINATING CO

Pant

Term te &amp; Pest Control
Wheel ersburg Oh•o

Ph 574 6112
23 t It
GILLENWATER S sephc tank
clean ng and repa r
al :.a
ho use wreck lnQ

Ph

9499 Establ shed n 1940
69 If

WATER well dnll ng

3'
bull

yr

old

Woodrow

Eggleton Wh te Oak Rd

1960
For Sale
1967
1963 FORD 2 dr h I Gal 500 1957
260 V 8 automatic Ph 446 1966
3849 or see J ohn Lane
1960
237 6 1960
1965
HAY for sale Ph 446 2226
1962
237 3 1960
1967 PONTIAC
powe r

ar

excellent

SI 500 Ph 446 3257

All tra lers clean and recon
co nd

shape
237 3

-~~---:-

BARREL for Rem mod t 100
26 1mp cyt vr also 22 22
2363
mag s1ngle act on revolvers

~---:-----:-

1965 BUICK Wildcat 4 dr hdlp
P S P B Deluxe Custom
$795 Ph 446 9052
236 3
65 CHEV

' T van lruck 64
Chev ' T p cku p truck Ph
245 5071
236 3

SINGER Sew ng fll\dCm e ~a1es
&amp; Serv1ce All models m
stock F.ree del• very Service
guaranteed Models pnced

USE 0 TRAILERS
Nat onal lOx50 2 br
Hor zon 12x50 2 br
Gt der 45x8 3 br
Namco 52xl0 3 br
Van Dyke 10x50 2 br
Van Dyke 10x50 2 br
Kentuckian 56xl0 3 br
Colon al 50xl0 2 br
Van Dyke 10x40 2 br

SJ1 95 and numerous other

dil oned Ready for oc
cupancy Free Del very and
sel up Trt County Mobile
Homes 446 0175
9311

RICE'S NEW &amp;
USED FURNITURE

hand guns and niles Ph 446
3881
NEW 3 pc Early Amer can
237 3
maple or walnut bedroom
COMPLETE LIN E ol p pes and
accessories

GBD

and

Charalan Tawney Jewelers
424 Second Ave
17311
1968 ENGLISH Ford

good

su1tes $99 95 new 2 pc I vlng
room suite was $119 95 now

S89 95 new 7 pc maple all
wood dinette set $159 95 854
Second (across from Te)(aco

Stat on! 446 9523
231 If

cond new w w l res S750 Ph

446 4782

235 6

from $69 95 French City
Fabr c Shoppe Smger ap 1963 BE LAIR Chevrolet sial on
proved dealer 58 Court St
wagon 45 000 n les Ph 446
Ph 446 92S5
9704
JOB If
236 3

IF YOU are bu ldln g a new
home or rem odel mg see us

We are bu tders Distributor
for Holpo nt Appl1ances
Allison Electric
154 If

For Sale
FARMALL Super M tractor
w1th two row mounted corn

p cker $1 050 Bill Goodwin
Rl 3 Albany Oh10
238 I

paneling

It

236 If

Myers

Central A1r Condlltonlng
- Heat1ng
Free Estimates
Stew•rt s Hardware
Vmton Oh10

pumps Sales and Serv ce
Complete water I ne serv ce

and trench ng C J Lemle y
V nton Ohio Ph 388 8543
114 11

D P MARTIN &amp; Son Water
Del1very
Serv1ce
Your
patr onage
Will
be
ap
prec1ated Ph 446 0463

711
HORSE SHOE'"'"

COMPLETE

Bob

farner serv1ce
Schaeff1ng 446 1510

188 If

RUSSELL 5
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
SEPTIC lank clean ng electr c
sewer clean ing d1t ch1ng
Gall pol s Oh o Ph 446 4782
193 If
Brammer Plumbing &amp; Heating
300 Fourth Ave
Phone 446 1637
Gene Plants Owner

298 II
DEWITT S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen

28l tt

STANDARD
Plumb ng &amp; Heat ng
215 Th rd Ave 446 3782
187 If

f•re

TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE nspect•oo Call 446-3245
Mernll 0 Dell Operator for
Extermmal Term1fe Serv ce

19 Belmont'Dr

167 If

DEAD STOCK
S5 00 $erv1ce Charge
W I I remove your deac
horse and cows

HOLLEY 5 DITCHING
OF ANY type and complete
water

I ne

Installation

gua ran feed Ph J P Holley
245 5018 or 446 43~
219 If
ALBERT EHMAN
Water Del very Serv1ce

Patr ot Star Rt Gallipol s
Ph 379 2133
2ol3 If

SWISH ER rsDITCH TRENCHING
SERVICE Ph U7 7475
17 4 tl
J D s Rad o &amp; TV Serv ce
Serv1ng Gall1pol15 &amp; Pt
Pleasant reasonable rates
prompt sen tee Also even ng

calls Ph 675 5220
203 If
-----~-~

SWISHER S

Plumb ng &amp;
contractor
We
spee~allze n hooking up rural
water !me system to your
Electr c

tf

home Completely bu ld your
bathroom

chec k w th your Grange
agents at the Neal Ins
Agency 64 State Sl Agents
for auto

IV'

Call Jackson 286 4531

Plumbmg &amp; Heanng

Phone 446 2735

hardware

plumb ng and electncal
supp l es Hours 7 to 5
Thursday 7 to l2 Attend our
Founders Oay and Grand
open ng Sale begmn ng Oct

4.46

FOR ALL your m surance needs

We Need Ltstrngs

SATURDAY - OCT. 16 - 11 AM.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Insurance

HENKLE AVE

AUCTION

UPPER RT. 7

CARTERS ~LUMlliNv
AND HEATING
930 Fourth Avenue
Phone 446 3888 or 446 4477
155

•

2 BEDROOM MOB LE
HOME ACROSS F ROM
C TV BLDG

clea n 25 acres bottom land
wells Improved spring
barns - I f1 xed for Grade
da1ry w•lh tank and milker
out bldgs I 860 lb tob base

NORRIS DODGE INC.

••••

SMALL
MODERN
2
BEDROOM HOME O N

AT EDGE OF TOWN
4
B E DROOM
GOOD
HOME W TH 600 FEE T
FRONTAGE O N RT 1&lt;1
BARN
AND
OTHER
OUTBUILDINGS PLU S 4
GOOD&lt;lBUtLD NG LOT S

PRICES EXTRA LOW

•

For Rent

Older Home
4 Acres

FOR A CAR - DON'T
MISS lHIS NICE SELECTION.

•••••

;

extra n ce ••' ••

Gold black buckef

136-Accaptad

~-~~-~

Lunch on grounds

I I

P S P B vmy I top

4 m le

acre toba cco

I I

P S P B auto

A r cond

88-Peel
89-Printer's
maasurt:
90-Woods
91-Handle
92-Room In harem
93-F n11 alned
lambskin
94-Prlnt.r's
maasurw
96--Ch nua walaht
97-Quarrel
100-Part of

Dr ve

s 5 room s and bath

hme green •

V 8 automafJ c rough -but ready •••.

THIN" NG OF BUILD NG
THE HOME OF YOUR
DREAM 6
WE
HAVE
SO ME -

REALLY

I

I OVER 40 CARS I
•

••

Butld mg Lots

from City n Gall polls school
232 ,

cWen
H--Henct*l

18-Unt dy
20-Juncturt
23-Edlble stads
25-Bitmlsh

145-"''"

81-Mutlc as
wrlHen
82--shortly
84- Lareeaun

dltpll1
24-l.on&amp; tltnder

SHOUL D
AP
TH tS
O:NE

WHICH
MEANS
MONEY DOWN

80-l'o"h

22-$01o
23 Pompoua

137-ls and off
lrt'land
139-Ura:e on
l4D-S.nd wom
tround wtlst
141-CoHon tflread
143--Anon
s
n ckname
146--t&lt;navlsfl
148--Stoker
150---Shudder
152-Yiacr
153-Donated
154-A continent
1!56-Posted
1!57-European I ncfl
158-Paradlu
159-The cna
followln&amp;
160-Lock of flair

GROCERY STORE
OVER 3 500 sq ft s tore
houses No 13 2 and 14 One s
budd ng
lovely
I v ng 115 ACRE Grade A daory farm
7 room house bath newly
6 rooms and bath and the
quar ers and ca rp or t at

ON MILL

HAVE some tots tor sale on
pens on plan Only three yeol" --;------ - - - - -237 3 WE
the
Ne ghborhood Road 110
enl slment U S Army Ph
feel x 275 fee t Pr ce $1 350
Seill
446 3343
MOBILE home spaces for 12ft
eac h
Sep 26 Oc t 3 10 17 2 &lt;~
68 mode l or newer
c ty
2385
water total elect or gas
Office 446 1066
walk
s
ramps
pat
as
$40
Even1ngs Call
Thomas
Wanted To Do
mo d46 4774 Larry Evans
Ron
Canaday 446 3636
Mr and Mrs B1ll Tuttle and WALLPAPER hang ng Ph 446
238 12
John I Richards 446 0280
Billy of Fairborn viSited Sunday
3608
Russett D Wood 446 4618
238 6 FIRST fl oor (urn apt adults - -- - - - -- -wi~ Mr and Mrs Chester
pr e ferred
re f erence
Jones
r equ red 631 4 h Ave
NEW 3 bedroom hom e n Plantz
DO ES your han e need sma or
Mr. an~ Mrs Lester Raynes
Subd1v good locatiOn '" c ty
238
If
gene a r epa r s and you can
school
dlstr cl W II be
NitrO W Va spent Saturday
f nd me or som eone to do
f
n
shed
soon $15 500 Ph
t em ? If so ca ll &lt;146 0126 and Wanteo To Buy
w1th Mr and Mrs Chesler
Delbert
Clark
446 0390
I
see w ha t can be done
Jones
'
208 II
HONDA
m
n
b
ke
prefer
50CC
r ree es ma e reasonable
Ph
446
4843
,, rra es a 1d a I work guaran
\n tart v r m natl:v
1u "'t eed
238 3 FO R SALE by owner 2 story
br ck at 452 First Ave 7
' thea t&lt; rn ~ustraha atl\
235 6
r ooms 2 baths gas hot a r
lam&lt; an 1 xlreme length I
Wanted
f u rna ce
present
Ill If f? f1 I 1nd a dtamete1
arrangement
2
apartments
AL ~M &amp; v nyl s dong roof ng
f
~
f 1n nrh
EXPERIENCED dry wa ll
Eas ly co nvert ed to onP
os rrr J
b &amp; wmdows Ca
ta m ly dw ell ng
Ask ng
Byerly C n,
4 6 3608 107 hang e s and hn1shers Ca ll
I'
379 2237
$35 000 shown
by ap
( A v..- G.:~ po s
ro n men I Ph 446 0208
234 6
236 12
----199 If
JED W B ROWN
Sec c
y of S El te

ranch

rented 110 ft fr ontage on Rl

~0 ACRE farm flat to roll ng
74 11..-, w 1h good 3 bedroom house

~----==-~--

3 BEDROOM

FHA
PA"E&gt;VE

21-falslfltr

14-Dartlen

T S A 3 BEDROOM
HOME ON COR NER LOT
ON
CENTRA L AVE

home - double w de 24 x 60 3
BR 2 bath beautiful LR &amp;

operated on

3

Owner Must Sell

been look mg for R t 35 near
the new hasp tal New mob le

l...._..,tltollln•

6-Hurt

VERY GOOD HOME AND
IS ACRES WITH E_X
CE L LENT S HOP AND
GARAGE BLDG OWNER
WANTS AN OFFER

New L1stmg

d n•n g r-oom all bu It n
k !c hen laundry room 7
close s gas furnace pat10 All
lhts plus a 6 r oom 1 :2 bath 3
B R d1n ng r oom
por ch
basement (now rented ) also
mob1le home pad s pace now

~OIJ.fi'IOS

73--BHrmuas
75---Lanc:lad
proJMrty
77--Muslcal
compos tlon
78--MICIW

10--FrM ~cket

Ctty Farmer??

k !chen and storage room
formal d n ng room two
porches fru I room
arge
garage Pr ced tor qu1ck sale
Vacan

state and loca l rea l esta te

have car ao!j be w II ng to
232 f
learn C~tl 4~ Mil
- - - -- -- - - 238 3 SLEEPING ROOMS weekly

• 35
18

UN 1 E 0 ST ATES OF AMER ICA
STATE OF' OHIO

219 If

cen tral a r cond h onin g and

Must

storage rooms el ectr c heat
and a1r cond1 t1oner carport 2
large level l ots w th plenty
f ower s sh rubs and shade
trees Pr ce Sl4 000 Now
vacant

6 ROOMS &amp; I , bath

•••••.,.
GEl'

71--Soap~tona

l_,.rutt

HERES
A
HOUSE
PR CEO
TO
SELL
TODAY
DON T MISS
SEE NG THE CLEA NEST
J
BE DR OOM
HOME
BARGA N
IN
TOWN
LARGE
ROOMS
THROUGHOUT PLUS A
FAM LV ROOM ON 2
LOT S !GOOD GARDEN
IPOT I AT EDGE OF
TOWN
LESS
THAN
S20 000

2

b II S 8 44 675 I589

2 BEDROOM houselra ler

1

2 BR

ma c h ne W II se ll for repa r

2 BEDROOM mob le home near
Ga tlip ol s Ph 367 7329,
234 If

MEN - FULL OR
PART TIME

necessary

PORTABLE SINGER sew ng

For Rent

$MONEY$

e!hc ~

PI

SEWING mach ne serv ce n
your home Clean all and

Help Wanted

exper

Ph

ACROSS

Bargatn Hunter

THIS IS the locaton you have

LOW low pr ces on l::lemco and
Se r ta maltresses and box
Furn

country k !chen

I I I

•2795
1969 PLYMOUTH 2 DR. HDTP.
•1995
1968 CHEV. CAPRICE 4 DR. HDTP.
•1995
1968 OLDS CUTLASS 4 DR. HOTP.
•1995
1967 BUICK LeSABRE 4 DR.
'1495
1966 OLDS 4 DR. SEDAN '88'
....... ...... .•995
1966 PLYMOUTH VALIANT
'795
1966 BUICK RIVIERA
•1495

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

MORE
THAN
S22 000
WORTH
OF
CON
TENTMENT HERE BUT
THAT S ALL
WERE
ASK NG

w II never age Beaut ful
decorated
wa ll s
large

.... ...

Cond

A r Cond

SUNDAY OCTOBER 10 1971

NEW

•• • ••

••

1969 BUICK LeSABRE 4 DR. HDTP.

Kanauga, Ohto

WATER

EXCELLENT

4 LOTS n Plantz Subd v Water THIS a tracflve one story home

opera ors

BEDROOM RANCH ON
A 2 ACRE PLOT JUST I
MILE OUT NICE SIZED
ROOMS
ATTRACTIVE
K TCHEN
CENTRAL
A R 1 CAR GARAGE
NICE QUIET LOCATION
PR CEO
LESS THAN

BEDROOMS VERY NI CE
K TCHEN
GARAGE

Country
Settmg

Charles M Neal 446 1546
J Mochael Neal 446 IS03

A~r

SMilH AUTO
SALES

Very Ltvable

NEARLY

• • ••

1969 BUICK ELECJ'RA 2 DR. HDTP.

Galhpohs,O

PRICED

S26 900

CITY

•• •• •• ••••••••• • •• ••

A1r cond

M NUT ES
FROM
DOWNTOWN
ROOMY
RANCH STYLE BRI CK

wa er tap tobacco base no
house Th s s good farm la nd

Evenmgs

GARAGE

'2395
•1995
•3295
•279 5

a •••••••••••••••••••••••••••

1970 PLYMOUTH DUSTER
Auto

BEST SELECTION
IN THE AREA!

1969 PONTIAC FIREBIRD

Comfort &amp;
Convemence

TED on Raccoon Creek Across LOCA
2
m from Northup 0 new
H gh Schoo l
near
barn Ia r to good fence rural

Olf1ce Phone - 446 1694

HERES
A
REAL
PARADISE
FOR
PARENTS &amp; CHILDREN
ALIKE - IN TOWN ON
LA RGE SHADY LOT IN
EXCELLENT
NEIGH
BORHGOD 3
BEDROOMS 1 V2 BA T&lt;f; S
CA RPETED ENTRANCE
LIVING
ROOM
AND
FORMAL DINING FULL
BASE MENT
AND

Eastern Ave.

Ps p

Auto

GAS AND SC HOOLS

lot at t 12 State 51

from
bus ness d str ct Pnced to
sell
Ca ll
us
today

Attractive Modern
Colontal In Town

520 000

3 OR 4 BR home located on n ce

GBC gradu ates

VISitmg Mr and Mrs Wilson
Lewis
Mr and Mrs Blame Vance
Ypsilanti Michigan are here
VISIIIng Mrs J oe Blackburn and
other relatives
Mrs L W Goodwm and son
of Columbus and Warner Craft
Galhpohs were recent callers
of Mrs W H Thomas
Mr and Mrs Archie Biml of
M1 ch1gan are campmg on Clark
Chapel Acres and ca lling on
fllend s 1n lhiS VICini ly
Mr and Mr s Ralph A
C ucl cn ( ulumbu s spent part
f H 1\ cck w11h Mrs \1 II

!ached garage Offered at a
pr q: you ca n a fford

17 500

tOIJAY S QUESTIO~
lou
no

plenly of shad e lrees Located
on large lot 250 It by 250 II

r epai r S' Has 6 acres of land
barn and located on SR 218 4
m les f rom town Full pnce

tt hull

cont nu

5 rooms &amp;

1ns de and out new forced a r
gas furnace new plumb ng
th r oughout c l y water at

room

BETTER tabs are ava la ble lor

P2ss
p

pa 1 n 1.;
spa t s Wha t

d n ng

2 BR home tha t needs some

MEN 17 34 LIVE AND WORK
IN EUROPE Guaranteed

y0

room

Free

WOMEN '
NO EX
PERIENCE NE CESSI\RY
TRA IN AT FULl PAY

I¥
I¥

Lovely 1 story

bath completely remodeled

'1795
WOOD MOTOR SALES

T E E H E E aiand lor
Techmcal Engineenng
Excellence And Htqhly
E:rlravaqant Extras
Slandard equtpment like
• Safely lronl dtiiC brakes
• Overhead cam engme
• Reclining front buckela
• Tinted glass
• Whilewalla
See the Small Car Expert
your Dalltun dealer for a
free leal drive
Dnve a Datsun lhen
decide

Evemng
Ike Wtseman
446 3796
E N Wtseman
446 4500

washer bar range and many
n ce cabmets all H W fl oors
covered w th the best car

1970 PONTIAC G.T.O. OONV.

•i!ii ltE.I.I

Off. 446·3643

'72 Models are Rolling,
So that means Quality,
One Owner Trade-lns.

SMilH
SAYS:

2 Dr hardtop p steenng radto &amp; heater
auto trans Vedora green wtth matching
mtenor w s w ttres

510

REALTOR

3 b g bdrrns huge I v rm
k tchen has d sposal diSh

home wtth

floors nat gas furnace 50
ga llo n elect water heater 2
large recreat 1on rooms
paneled
n basement
2
po r ches garage con c r ete
dnveway la rge yard w th

197 If

---------------------------By Mrs W H Thomas

Servtce

Al388 8724 Day or Evemng

F.asl

and comfor t
see th s all
br ck with cen a r 11 2 baths

New L1stmg

hea I county water level lot s
for bu Jd ng CNmer leav ng
state

est mates Ph 446 0294

NEWSPAI'ER ENTERPRISE ASSN

th

f l oor

RALPHS Carpet - Upholstery

A me cos ,tap •expe rts ex pia n the
tournamerrl w nn 'rl'g lechn ques n a
new 128 page book on J A C 0 8 Y
MODERN For your copy se nt ST
w th your no me atldreH and z p
code to Wm at B clge (c/ o th s
newspope ) P0 Box 489 Rad o C tv
Stat on New York N Y 10019

South w ns the diamond
I&lt;ad and d aws trump w ll
two leads He w ns the sec
ond trump n dummy and

Deer Creek

Howard

I WI LL NOT be respons ble for

a dub fm es.:&gt;e

olld plays the jack of clubs
R1 ght here s wh e re th e

Joseph

238 3

bankei might go wrong If
he fin esses the club at this
tim e he winds up los in g two
tncks m each black s u11
If South IS a bndge pla1ei
he goes n ght up with the ace

~

LOOKING for qual ty beauly

LOT IOOx160 It located In
beaut ful bUilt n kitchen o I
V•llage of R o Grande Oh o

ll v ng

Roush

'

" lhng to play at three If
So Ilh doesn t
South has enough to go to
gam e I he contract would be
Ironclad If e1ther North or nc"
Sout h held thre e d1amonds
and two cl ubs but each one P"
bolls tw o d I. m o n d s and p,
t I I e e clubs an d at ftr st Poss
gl ance 11 see ms to depend on
Yo

Fa1rv1ew

Howard or Luc1lle Brannon
Evenmgs 446 1226

ba t h w th shower large
k tchen w th lot ot bu II on
b r ch cijb nets har dwood

0 1971

HOWARD NEEKAMP

IS

leatls a low spade
East hops up v. th th e ace

Red

as ol lhiS date Oct

of clubs Then he plays a
I¥
seco nd spade The way th e
Pa ss
3¥
Pass 4 ¥
cards he he doesn t have to
Puss
Pass
Pass
11 orry about the club fmesse
Open ng lead- + Q
because West wms the tnck
If West plays a club South
makes hiS queen If West
By Oswald &amp; James Jacob} ~ lead s anythin g else South
Bankers s h o u 1d realize gets to diScard a club on
there IS one great dtfference dummy s fourth spade
betwee n bndge and bankmg
Suppose that East started
There IS no mterest paid on 11 Ith both ac e and k ng of
tncks so the last one counts spades In that c as e he
as much as the ftrst
would wm the second spade
an d play anot her club So uth
N
orth s three heart bid IS would still make his contract
a typical hm11 JUmp raise If the cl b kmg were held by
He wants to be In game If
"
EFfECfi VE
South has anythmg more East

than a mJm mum bid and

Denver

I WILL not be r esponstble for
any debts other than my own

Don't Bank on Finesse
EAST

11

one

The WISEMAN
Agency

Realtor, 32 State St
Tel. 44&amp;,1998

Hobart D1llon Realtor
Office 446 2674

- -~~~~~

Dear Helen
As a btcycle dealer I must argue with you on l!H;peeds
Rams horn handlebars can be changed to conventional types at no
extra charge Hand brakes are safer than foot brakes Also
eaSter The wtres and cables are not all that Complicated and they
really wox-k Thm tire treat lasts longer Seats on our last three
shipments have been comfortable and PADDED BIKING IS NOT
A FAD - WHEELER AND DEALER

... 8 74

tax

Higley s Barber Shop w1il be
Oscar Ba1rd 446 4632
open Mon thru Fr 2 p m t II
Doug Wetherholl 446 4244
8pm OpenalldaySal Sam
1118pm
238 6 7
ROOM block 4 bedrooms

SARAH

+ AK

l ow

Dillon
Agency

THREE BR 4 ACRES - Very
238 6

9

route

MASSIE

"DOC"

68 PONTIAC CATALINA

Real Estat9 For Sale'

Real Estate For Sale

tor farm or Ira ler

A Seruor turns hiS class rmg around so that the prmtmg can be
read by people who see his hand as he extends tt Before )OU
arrtve at that exalted slate you wear the rmg so that prmting IS
rtghlstde up to you when you look at your hand -SUE
NOTE FROM HELEN
The thmg.s I don t know But then after all these years I m
not yet sure whether a woman wears her weddmg nng above or
below her engagement rmg
And now my daughter mforms me that when I clasp my hands
together I do tl the wrong way
that the left thumb should he
over the nght one
Qutck now everybody clasp hands Then wnte and tell me
which thumb you have on top -nght or left'
After the clobbermg I took on the lc 1-speed btke controversy
!truly hope more than half of you clasp my way Amother has to
wm SOMETIMES doesn I she' - H
NOTE FROM SUE
Ah yes the len-speed bike argument Here are sample
comments - and (sorry about that podner) if you don I read any
laking Mom s Stde tl s because there weren t any
LAST WORD FROM HELEN
So far"
•
Dear Helen
For the ftrst time you blew It The subject 1s ten-speed bikes
Listen to ) our daughter
The thlng that has caused the resurgence m cycling IS the ten
speed Maybe yoo don t need all 10 m flatland Sacramento but
over herem htlly San FranCISCo and on our mountain bike trails
they re essential
Rams horn handlebars' Wmd resiStance IS a factor Also
the thm wheels and light weight of modern cycles combmed l\1th
the gears gJve them speed enough to be used as transportation to
and from work Saves on smog and gas
I am now 50 years old Being a conservative old goa t I figured
a five-speed was sufficient for my exerciSe needs Then our son
prevailed upon us for a ten-speed and I discovered I couldn t keep
up wtth him So out went the old m came the new
There IS an element of fad m the popularity My wife seemg
ours mslSted she have one too
So will you Helen - STEADY READER
Dear Helen
Even though I m only lJ I completely disagree With vour
static on JIH;peeds Maybe they re Wtcomfortable at first- !
a sore behind from that narrow seat- but you get used to them
And II ISn t only l!H;peeds that are stolen Whatever ktnd of bike
you have - keep II safe m your bedroom not Ln the garage -

NORTH
to QJ64
¥J10 84

s lat e

dlstr ct coun ty water fully
ca rpeted w lh full bat h new
o I furnace owner w II trade

Dear G T

WEST
toK 85
¥ 13
+ QJ94
... K653
SOUTH

BAIRD REALTY CO.
Os'ar Baird, Realtor

s ncere thanks to our fr ends
and netghbors who remem
bered us wtth floral offer ngs
cards calls and food dur ng
our recent bereavement

(Got a problem• Or a subjed lor discussion two-genera lion
style• Dlreet your quesUoos to either Sue or Helen Bottel -or
both, U you want a combinaUon mother-daughter aoswer )
wHEN THE RING TURNS
Dear Whtchever of You Can Answer Thts
Somebody told me you were supposed to wear your class nng
a certam way when you rea Semor True' - GETTING THERE

WIN AT BRIDGE

Real Estate For Sale

homeowners

hosp ta l and general liabil ity
84 tf

Calf us for com

ptete free esl1mate Delbert
Swisher AddiSon Ph 367
7475
135 If
BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE est mates liability In
surance Prun1ng
and cav 1ly work

tr im m ing
tree and

slump removal Ph .446 4953
For Sale
.7311
1971 VW Super Beetle yellow
w1lh black leatherette m 1965 NEW Moon mob le home
ter or air cond1t onmg stereo
lOx55 w th awn ng $2 500 Ph
or budget plan available
tape player rad10 bumper
446 2656 a flee 5
Phone 446 0665
gua rd s etc 9 000 mites
238 3
238 6
O.Vner start ng to college
Must sell Save $500 Ph 245 SUPER sluff sure nul' Thai s
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
5134
Blue Lustre for cleaning rugs
Cleaner complete wilh at
238 3
and up holstery Rent electric
tachments cordwinder and
shampooer Sl Central Supply
"SEU THE AUCTION
pant spray Used but 1n like
Co
new cond 1t1on Pay $37 45
WAY"
238 6
cash or cred 1 terms
available Phone 446 0665
238 6 1967 DATSUN P U
Busmess Opportun1t1es
45 FT ALUM wmdow awn ng 1966 , T GMC P U
HIGH volume Ashland serv ce
1969 Plymouth Roa drun nE&gt;r
n good shape pnced to sell
s a on for leas e
Pa d
Ph 446 2852
1YOJ L/!loU rord truct&lt;
tram ng Call 992 522t or 446
238 2 1965 •, T GMC P U
1085 or Mar ietta 373 8412
- - ---------- - - - 1969 Chev dump tr uck
211 If
NEW Idea manure spreader
1952 ' T Chev P U
New Idea corn p cker Ph 1965 1 T GMC
MAN OR WOMAN
446 32 10
1969 GMC 4 T loq truck
RELIABLE
person from thiS
238 3
area to serv ce and co llect
1917 , T GMC t' U
Sale Every
fr om automat c dispensers
18
FT
YELLOWSTONE 1965 , T Ford P U
1963
2 T Chev P U
No
exper
ence
needed
we
Saturday
camper See at 2136 Chatham
1969 I T GMC
esta bl sh accounts for you
Ave st 200
Evenmgs 7 00
Car references and S995 to
238 3 1967 , T GMC P U
1968 Chev Suburban
Sl aas cash cap1fal necessary
Corner lrd &amp;Olive AYI
4 lo 12 hours weekly nels
1966 '• T Chev P U
NO REGRE T lhe besl yet
We .. 11
a.nyfhlng for
excellent monthly 1ncom e
Blue Lustre cleans carpet 1967 '• T Chevrolet p ck up
anybody
We
also buy some
Full
1
me
more
For
local
1963
F600
Ford
Truck
beaut fully Rent electr c
estates
For
Pick
up Service
nterv
ew
wnte
include
1%1 2 T GMC
shampooer $1 Lower G C
teleph
one
number
Eagle
1964 3 T GMC
Murphy Store
Ca 11 Knotts
Com
lnd uslr es
3938
238 6 1964 , T Chev P U
Meadowbrook Road St Lou s
mumty Auclton, 446
---- - - - - - - - : Park
M
nnesota
55426
2917
BEAUTIFUL Early Amencan
SOMMERS GM C
238 t
TRUCKS INC
Maple stereo radio com
133 P1ne 51
bmat1on AM FM radio 4
Ph 446 25J2
speed changer
sepa ra te
Business Opportumtles
controls .4 speaker sound
241 tf
system Balance $79 15 Use
WHCJ'LE~~E DISTRIBUTOR WANTED
our budget term s Call 446
To sell to c6mpanyc_ established all cash accounfs In fhls
SILVER We maraner pups
1028
area Thl~ I! no~1P. cqtn operated vending rouhl CNr
AKC 11 wks Dam twice 4 H
238 3
product J$' sold tn tocaflons such as offices employee
obedience ch Top bird &amp;
lounges In retail stores tlnantla' tnslltuflons small
watch dogs George Wood
MODERN Walnut Stereo radi o
manufacturing plant! warehouses ~chools and hosplfals
ward 379 2597
combination AM FM radio
The d1sfrJbutor we !elect will .be responsible for main
236
3
separate controls 4 speed
talntng lltese tocaltono and resfockfng Inventory All
changer 4 speaker sound
locations al'e established by our company, • 10 year old
system $67 35 Use our GOOD (LoAN LUMP and
company We need a dependable distributor male or
budget l~ rms Call 446 1028
female In this area wllh $1 595 minimum to Invest In
stoker coal Cart Wmters Rio
238 3
equipment
and Inventory which will turn over about two
Grande Phone 245 5115
limes monthly Earnings can grow fo S25 000 annually and
Btl
up We w•ll consider p.arf lime appllcanf&gt; Write for
POMERANIAN pupp1es while
complete nlormatlon Including phone number and Area
female 2 years champion
WE specialize In portrait and
Code All Inquiries strtc11~ conlldentlal
T
s tud serv1ce
Yorksh re
commerc at photography
CONSOLIOATED CHEMICAL CORPORA I0 N
T err er female male .. 46 0548
church weddmgs ,.eun ons
Freeze Dried Praclucts Division
at er 6 p m and weekends
etc
Tawney
Stud
o
3815
Montrose
Blvd Su1te 215
Houston Tous 77106
238 3
BA If

SERVIa

New GMC
Truck Headquarters

JAMES (JIMME)
SAYRE
PH. 446-3444
AUCJION

•

�20- The Sunday Tl!lle! Si;ntwl Sunday Oct 10

1971
21-Tbe!UidlyTI!n~·S.ntlnel &amp;llday Oct Iiifiii197llli.•---------

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Card of Thanks

LEGAL NOTICE

Generation Rap

(An en le I Se

te J o
No 2

t Heso lutlO

JOI NT HESOLUrtON

By Helen and Sue Bottel

Real Estate For Sale

THE FAM IL Y of Will am C
Board wtshes to express our

450 Second Ave
238 1
Ph 446 4775
TWO BR COTTAGE - Located
on

cute

TEMPORARY hours effectiVe
Oct

jfoA 3 2

¥ 65
+ I086 52
... J [O O
{ D)

" 10 9 7
¥A KQ92
• 73
,._AQ 2
North South vu lnerable
West North East South

Stg ned

any debts other than my own

as of th s date Oct 10 1971
S gned Stanley K1 ngery
238 3
R ~E~D~U~C~E~s~
af~e-a7
nd~fa~
s t--wth

Gobese tablets and E Vap
water p Its Glllmgham Drug
223 26
Clean ng

4.

So l

Thomas Logue Williams
GalhpOIIS and Clmton Hale
Oak Hill were recent callers of
Hershel! Norman
Mr and Mrs Paul Jone s of
Homestead Flonda spen t
overmght with her mece Mr
and Mrs Harley Greene and
called on her cousm Mrs
Wilham Thomas
Mr and Mrs Halaon Thomas
Mr and Mrs James K Thomas
and son Jamie Allen spent a
recent weekend In Columbus

J

on S Rt 124 m Sy racuse
Oh1o
Ava table fo r 1m
med ate occupancy To see

Ph Gall po l s 446 9539 after 5

p m weekdays for appt

232 II

Neal Realty

petlng paflo 2 car base gar
a
la rge landscaped tot Th s
properly can be bought for
today s replacement cost
w lh elec door Located on

Edge of C1ty
OWNER wants th s one sold

"HOME" Plus
"FARM"

soon

THAT IS what you II ~ro udly be
f you buy th s large 254 acre
tarm with a beauflful two

slory home 3 BR &amp; bath all
bu It n k1lchen n color

paneled eat ng area spac ous
formal d nmg room stone

f replace n LR

large por

same as new

5 ni ce

rm s and bath plus ulil1ty rm
II has a beautiful k !chen
Cathedral
H W ll oors
ce I ng larg e carport and
l ocated on &amp;' large lot Pnce

only $16 soo

C1ty
EXCELLENT res denflal sec
2 story 6 b g rms bath and
ut I ly rm Storm dr s and

ches new furna ce and water
windows
parttal
base
ta nk alum mu m s d ng and
Local an pr ce and comfort
awn ngs dug well 80 acres
cannot be beat on th s prop
permanent pasture 100 acres
$14 750
good limber new barn 2 A
tobacco base Call Howard 2 BDRM - 3 m fro m lown
Bra nnon n ow to see th s I arm
neat par t new plenty closet
space new roof Ha s 10 x 12
54 Acres
storage bldg located on near

ON A Stale Rt 40 acres I liable

farm pond tool shed small
barn 2 cnbs ch cken house
corn base a good 7 room and
bath hom e w th new roof and
f urn ace deep well

I A tot Pme $13 500

New L1stmg
84 Acres

35 If

nand gas ava tab le Ph 446

2210

233 6

Lost

HUSK E wh te w•th god blue Campmg Equ1pment
eyes If relurned no quest ons
STARCRAFT
ask ed Reward 446 2829
SEE
the
1972
rave l trail ers and
236 3

Instruction
Open The Door To

Adult Bas1c Educatlon

campers n stock 15 per cent
plus d1scount 1 71 trailer
dealers cos
We stock all
accessor es serv 1ce what we
sell and guarantee Cam!='
Con ey Slarcrafl Sales Rl 62
Nor h of Po nl Pleasant W

Va

205 If

Classes begtn OctoberS
At
North Ga tha H1gh School
Southwestern H1gh School
Galha Academy H1gh School

For Sale

Hannan Trace Htgh School

spr ngs

Kyger Creek H1gh School
Call

Corb n &amp; Snyder
955 Second Ave

Enrol

446 1171

3 If
--~~~~-

STORE bu ld ng

now

for next term Gall pol s
Bus ness College R N 7 02
0032 B Ph 446 4367
162 If

24x62 It

L ocated St R 2 near
Pleasan Ph 446 1474

DOING YOUR
CHRISTMAS DREAMING?
IT S NOT too ear y to sta rt bu ld a prof table bus ness of
your ow n as an AVO N
Representative and make

those dreams come true
Wr te or cal Mrs Helen
Yeager Box 172 Jackson

Ohm Ph 286 4028
233 6
WILL pay well for your spare
t me warkt n9 at home for us
Anyone who can read and
wr e can qual fy Weekly
sa lar v Deta Is wnte James

Bl ss Co P 0 Box 324 Dept
K487 Lev tlow
Pa 9053
235 12

237 3

3 50"HOU~ 0 JT

EX ANDING company
O A T~

AND REPEAL

ljo

OF' FICE OF TH E SECH ETAR Y
Of S f ATE

lmmed ale ass gnmenls to
respons ble tabs nat10nw de
Fore1gn
ass gnments
ava able follow ng tra nmg
E)((ept anal
wage
and
benet Is program Women s

Army Corps Ph 446 3343
238 5
-~~~--:--c--:--c

to

o vo u d

ad1u st

$4

99 Call 675 1589
219 tf

For Sale or Traae
HOUSE John Deere dozer

&amp;

pan tra 1l er space bu ld ng
slle au tomob le or w II trade
for house tra fer farm tractor
equ pment o I le cha n saw

Ph 446 0168

Downtown
Ia ge

234 II

~----

68 FORD XL good cond

62
Tr umph convertible 20
I ghl we ghl chatn s"dw Ph

367 7268

..

..

238 3

heal ng located n Gall pols
Ph 446 3258

rates

fr eQ Q"a r age park ng

L bby Hotel
SLEEP IN G ROOMS
rates

Park Centra l

week ly

Hotel
308 If

FURN ap l newly remodeled
all new turn lure &amp; ap
p ances al uhllt1es pa1d
lnqu1re at R ce s NeW &amp; Used

Furn 446 9523

35 - deep l ot w th a bu11t m
ncome

RUSSELL

WOOD

carpe ting
built n k !chen
double garage pat o fenced
yard
2 m le from new

hosp1lal Ph 446 9690
238 6

STROUT REALTY
THE LEADER SINCE 1900 IN
SERVING THE NATIONS
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
Ph 446 0008
VERY RARE
LIKEnew 3BRbrckwth1564

REALTOR
446·1066

fl of I v ng space on mam
floor plus fin shed basement

Bu It n k tc hen w th 20 fl of

S PCT

cab nets Ux26 fam ly room

MEMB ERS of the Nat onal
boards and have for \ears
a comm1ss on

rate of fiVe (5) percent If you
wantto buy or sell deal with a

r ealtor who adheres to the
stan dards of professional
pract ce
AT A resta urant coun ter one
m an asked fo r a ham on rye
apple p e and coffee Sounds

good

ww

World's Largest

nodded the fnend

10xl3 d n ng room 40xl6 Rec
r oom large llv ng r oom and
ut I ty room HW floo rs and
garage an a large landscaped
lawn

EASY TERMS
NICE 8 room home barn
several frulf trees Buy w1th 1
acre or 50 Your cho1ce

GENTLEMAN S FARM
4 , A ON 160 N1 ce 6 room
home garage workshop and

pond

FEED MILL

I II WELL esla bl shed bus ness on
state rd $90 000 reported

have the sam e except make
11 roast beef chocola te P•e

and lea

VIEW

2~1:~tle.n

mcome E Z terms for the
nght per son $14 500

ass gnments to Europe after SL EEP IN G r ooms or r oom and
board Ph 446 0060
Iran ng 1n U S Fu pay
wh le lram ng
Rap d ad
236 6
va ncement f or real go
ge ter s Free med cal and SLEEPI NG rooms nea r Gav n
denial care U nb eatab l ~ ., Plan Ph 446 0002

86--Ensnan~

ahawls

2t--Unttaf

st.......
CUrT'Iflcy

!CJ-.Iarll: cklth

32-lmtfl Islands
U-T~ntoot

34-0inct atllp

35-lncounttr
317--f-tdlippfnt
Moolom

39--MIII:II
~nntto

41-hrtntr
42~alamltous

44--Mt•fun dish

•6---CMrtt
"""'
•7-Unlta
4'-4plkononl
50--..... lttnt
52-Mont~

Pl)'tllitt ilt
ln~rnlt

53-ConJunction
~5---ftaiHd dxk
of wtMl

57-lttllrotd
(tbbr)

sa-tdtntical

59--Nulunee
150 ;..._tltlon
62-sho, tl"p

NO

6ot--fur betrtna
mtmmal
66-Ft roe ltlendt
whlrtwlnd

Good Home Prtced
Rtght In Thurman

Sa.....:.Hebftw tetter
69-Mo]otlt)l
70--Gal'6tf1 tool

3 BEDROOM HOME
COMPLETLY
CAR
PETED
MODERN
FURNACE AN D BATH ON
A LARGE LOT JUS T
STEPS FROM GRA DE
SC HOO L

other

CREEK

27~o,.l&amp;ners

28- Bnstla
31-Sandarac t H
33-Tw .. tad
36-Snare
38-Habrew
mauure
40-Unltplratad
41-DIIIIIId
43-God of love
45-Dren
1rotectors
46-Most crlpplad
47- Expal
49--Parforms
51-8 nds
52-Sindy waste

87- ar..c:l of doc
89-Newt
92-open to vlaw
95--Ditturbancet
98-Tardy
99-Hubbub
101 - Nt&amp;atlon
I 03-0.tlrnatlna
halaht of t de
104---Ante
105-Sta k
106--Nole of scale
107- Man s
n ckname
101-Phll pplne
natives
llD-Ocaan
111-Symbol for
tel urium
112-chlef
113-Frult
115--Nota of scala
117--G rl t name
119--Army officer
(lbb )
12o-R p
121-W thout meant
124-Muslcal
Instrument
126-Unru y t t1i d
127---fl. .d
128--lnstant
I»-Wh p
132-Prov de
celina
133-Diractlon
t:u-Thl sun
135-Midday

53--P Inter
54--0 strict n
Germany
Sf-Walked
around to
prottct
59-Mon•rch
60-C ty In
Garman)'
61-Bui'Jiar (1lan1)
63-Appel\1
65-Man s name
67-$uperlattvl
end ne
69--Pa •nt (co loq)

DOWN
1-Provlnce of
l('ldll
2-Fondled
3-NI CIIIIr'j
nutritive
substanct
at witt.
effort
5-Sendforth
6-150 (Roman
number)
7-Rivtir Island
8-H ndu 1arment
9--Frameworll
built across
ravlna
to-communion

•-o

70-0id World
birds
72-LOnlllllld
bird
74-h.t. den loved
by Zeus
76--Symbol for
tlntalum
77-l&lt;lled
79-Southem
blackbird
83- Be m staken
85-W ne of tha
10d1
86-SIIkWO"f'l

plata
11-Waraod
12-Man 1
nlcknam•
13--A continent
(abbr)
14-l'oot
l~enod of1 rna
16--0atorates with
tpoh
17-HIJhest
standards

87::-:~ Narrow

open n1

They are on I lot and to se ll
together Pr ce $10 500

and large barn
2 acre
tobacco base well fen ced
pasture land Rural water tap
pad 2m les from R o Grande

on Slate Route 325
$31 500

Pr ce

no bu ld ng

state rd All stock
equ p mcluded
CITY

and

NICE 2 story home on Eastern
Ave 7 rm s down mcludes
d1nmg rm and TV rm 2
garages set on the reur of the

large lot Pr ced tor qu ck
sale $15 000
Ranny Blackburn
Branch Manager

IN GREEN Townsh p
acres

!ached Over 1 acre of land an

104

d1stnct w th

2

PS

A r cond

GREAT

BU LD NG
LOTS
N
CLOSE TO TOWN OR OUT
IN THE COUNTRY

base Pr ce S12 500
IN EU REKA a large store
bu ldlng w fh 7 n ce rooms
upsta irs w1th bath and lur
nace Pn ce $6 900

f

•• • •

••••

I

,•

•• •

......... .

B auto

Low miles one owner

...

,

43 000

102-Narrow flat
board
10~halr

•n:•

109-P
112--Cur.

6

113-Shut up
11"-Havlne many
fissures
116--Solsr d sk
118-Rae on
120--P•rt of eun
121-Sprlnt
122-0na who
co lact s tot 1
123- Min s nama
125-Narrat va
126---Awayl
127-claan
129-Sound • hom
131-Art.lc:las cf
furniture
132-GoCidau of
veeatatlon
133-Simpla
134--Sea nymph

m1les

PS PB

•

IF YOU'RE LOOKING

• • •

Standard

'

'

I

'

seat~

I

I I I

I I I

I I '

I I

••

1965 BUICK SPORTSWAGON
9 Pass

sharp •

•

...

····~·· ......

•aoo

• •

1965 OLDS CUTLASS 2 DR. HDTP
Runs oood mce second car

standard
138-Wants

..

••••••• 1

•••

.... ~700

140-0man
141-AnlmJtad

1965 OORVAIR 2 DR. HDTP.

142--comtort
14-4-Tidy
147-Sw 11 canton
148-Nova ty
149-Witer elf
151-Runlan
commune
153-Ean:h 10ddus
155--Near

4 speed •

.~400

•• •

1965 FORD 4 DOOR
V 8 au1omat1c transmiSSion

1

I

Itt

t

t' t

'

.~400

'

1963 FORD FAIRLANE 2 DR. HDTP
,

e

e

t

I

t

•200

•

•

For Sale
24 ACRES on Bnck Road 2 PAINT DAMAGE - 1971 Z g
m1tes from Add son Several
Zag sew ng machmes Shit In
excellent bu ld ng lots Ph
o r~g nal cartons
No af
367 7598
tachments needed as our
204 If con trols are bu It n Sews
1971 MERCURY Marqu s fully w th 1 or 2 needles makes
buttonholes sew on buttons
equ pped low m1teage Ph
mon ograms and bl nd hem
388 9991
st
lch Full cash pr ce 538 50
236 6

•

61 VOLKSWAGEN
7745

Ph

367

2366
-:C-:O-:M
:-P
::-L
:--::
E-::T-::E--C
::-u-:1-:1-g_a_n-soft

remodeled and carpeted 2
concre te porches 100 acres

water cond honer

2
2
A
5
1

steel and

locust posts 10 hole hen nests
and feeders straw Ph 446
4170 alter 6 P m
236 J
-------~

Ira ler lot w1th well septic ~
ta nk and concrete porc hes 2
m les from Crown City on Rt !

ANGUS he fer calf Ph 245 5652
alter 5 p m
236 3

553 16 m les from Gallipol s
Call Moms Sheets 256 6228 •
227 II

KENMORE gas range used 2
mos

avocado

Ph

.446 074.4

236 3

'

Localton- 3 m1les north of Cheshtre or J m1tes south of
Mtddleport turn at Texaco sfal•on onto Story s Run
(Meigs Co 345) Road go 1 m1le
Will sell at Public Auchon estate of W W Underwood
cons1shng m part of

For Sale

For Sale

PUBLIC seating folding ta bles
and chairS

-

restaurants

churches
organizations
Complete line of off1ce cha~rs
and desks Simmons Ptg &amp;
Office Equip Ph 446 1397
141 If

GE portable stereo record
player black 2speakers $35
Ph 256 6546 affer 6 p m
235 6
El«:ELLENT cond1t on 1970
Mavenck automatic 18 000
m1les

1970 CADILLAC sed DeV1IIe
fully equ1pped low m1leage
Ph Pl. Pleas 675 4283 after 6
226 If

rad o

lamps chest of drawers dressers sew mg machine old

tars Kimball organ anf1que co box trunks cane chairs
spindle back chairs round oak table set dining chairs
RCA Victrola uti ty trailer grinder stone jars and jugs
set of pony harness brass kettles glassware hand toots
and other arf1cles too numerous to 1st

Nof res119ns!ble for accidents

MR RONALD SARGENT Owner
LEMLEY AUCTION SERVICES
Andrew Lem loy- Aucl

SIGNS
No hunt ng or
frespasslng or others Protect
your rights Simmons Pig &amp;
Office Equip
203 11
USEb
Mobile
Home
Headquarters All size mobile
homes In stock B &amp; S Mob1te
Home Sales Second &amp; VIand
PI Pleasant next to Heck s
67 If
WHITE cement all s1zes tte'"
slack 12 &amp; 15 field tile

SUI fable for highway d1tchmg

concrete

blocks

GALLIPOLIS BlOCK CO
ph 446 2783
97 If

heater

pnce

$1 695 Ph 446 2228
235 6
LARGE

Reg

Charola•s

70 000 btu fuel 011 mculaf ng heater washer
refr gerator range (gas ) dryer beds I vlng room suites

Semces Offered

Semces Offered

FRENCH CITY Builders
Supply 750 lsi Ave .446 t499

FAIN
EXTERMINATING CO

Pant

Term te &amp; Pest Control
Wheel ersburg Oh•o

Ph 574 6112
23 t It
GILLENWATER S sephc tank
clean ng and repa r
al :.a
ho use wreck lnQ

Ph

9499 Establ shed n 1940
69 If

WATER well dnll ng

3'
bull

yr

old

Woodrow

Eggleton Wh te Oak Rd

1960
For Sale
1967
1963 FORD 2 dr h I Gal 500 1957
260 V 8 automatic Ph 446 1966
3849 or see J ohn Lane
1960
237 6 1960
1965
HAY for sale Ph 446 2226
1962
237 3 1960
1967 PONTIAC
powe r

ar

excellent

SI 500 Ph 446 3257

All tra lers clean and recon
co nd

shape
237 3

-~~---:-

BARREL for Rem mod t 100
26 1mp cyt vr also 22 22
2363
mag s1ngle act on revolvers

~---:-----:-

1965 BUICK Wildcat 4 dr hdlp
P S P B Deluxe Custom
$795 Ph 446 9052
236 3
65 CHEV

' T van lruck 64
Chev ' T p cku p truck Ph
245 5071
236 3

SINGER Sew ng fll\dCm e ~a1es
&amp; Serv1ce All models m
stock F.ree del• very Service
guaranteed Models pnced

USE 0 TRAILERS
Nat onal lOx50 2 br
Hor zon 12x50 2 br
Gt der 45x8 3 br
Namco 52xl0 3 br
Van Dyke 10x50 2 br
Van Dyke 10x50 2 br
Kentuckian 56xl0 3 br
Colon al 50xl0 2 br
Van Dyke 10x40 2 br

SJ1 95 and numerous other

dil oned Ready for oc
cupancy Free Del very and
sel up Trt County Mobile
Homes 446 0175
9311

RICE'S NEW &amp;
USED FURNITURE

hand guns and niles Ph 446
3881
NEW 3 pc Early Amer can
237 3
maple or walnut bedroom
COMPLETE LIN E ol p pes and
accessories

GBD

and

Charalan Tawney Jewelers
424 Second Ave
17311
1968 ENGLISH Ford

good

su1tes $99 95 new 2 pc I vlng
room suite was $119 95 now

S89 95 new 7 pc maple all
wood dinette set $159 95 854
Second (across from Te)(aco

Stat on! 446 9523
231 If

cond new w w l res S750 Ph

446 4782

235 6

from $69 95 French City
Fabr c Shoppe Smger ap 1963 BE LAIR Chevrolet sial on
proved dealer 58 Court St
wagon 45 000 n les Ph 446
Ph 446 92S5
9704
JOB If
236 3

IF YOU are bu ldln g a new
home or rem odel mg see us

We are bu tders Distributor
for Holpo nt Appl1ances
Allison Electric
154 If

For Sale
FARMALL Super M tractor
w1th two row mounted corn

p cker $1 050 Bill Goodwin
Rl 3 Albany Oh10
238 I

paneling

It

236 If

Myers

Central A1r Condlltonlng
- Heat1ng
Free Estimates
Stew•rt s Hardware
Vmton Oh10

pumps Sales and Serv ce
Complete water I ne serv ce

and trench ng C J Lemle y
V nton Ohio Ph 388 8543
114 11

D P MARTIN &amp; Son Water
Del1very
Serv1ce
Your
patr onage
Will
be
ap
prec1ated Ph 446 0463

711
HORSE SHOE'"'"

COMPLETE

Bob

farner serv1ce
Schaeff1ng 446 1510

188 If

RUSSELL 5
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
SEPTIC lank clean ng electr c
sewer clean ing d1t ch1ng
Gall pol s Oh o Ph 446 4782
193 If
Brammer Plumbing &amp; Heating
300 Fourth Ave
Phone 446 1637
Gene Plants Owner

298 II
DEWITT S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen

28l tt

STANDARD
Plumb ng &amp; Heat ng
215 Th rd Ave 446 3782
187 If

f•re

TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE nspect•oo Call 446-3245
Mernll 0 Dell Operator for
Extermmal Term1fe Serv ce

19 Belmont'Dr

167 If

DEAD STOCK
S5 00 $erv1ce Charge
W I I remove your deac
horse and cows

HOLLEY 5 DITCHING
OF ANY type and complete
water

I ne

Installation

gua ran feed Ph J P Holley
245 5018 or 446 43~
219 If
ALBERT EHMAN
Water Del very Serv1ce

Patr ot Star Rt Gallipol s
Ph 379 2133
2ol3 If

SWISH ER rsDITCH TRENCHING
SERVICE Ph U7 7475
17 4 tl
J D s Rad o &amp; TV Serv ce
Serv1ng Gall1pol15 &amp; Pt
Pleasant reasonable rates
prompt sen tee Also even ng

calls Ph 675 5220
203 If
-----~-~

SWISHER S

Plumb ng &amp;
contractor
We
spee~allze n hooking up rural
water !me system to your
Electr c

tf

home Completely bu ld your
bathroom

chec k w th your Grange
agents at the Neal Ins
Agency 64 State Sl Agents
for auto

IV'

Call Jackson 286 4531

Plumbmg &amp; Heanng

Phone 446 2735

hardware

plumb ng and electncal
supp l es Hours 7 to 5
Thursday 7 to l2 Attend our
Founders Oay and Grand
open ng Sale begmn ng Oct

4.46

FOR ALL your m surance needs

We Need Ltstrngs

SATURDAY - OCT. 16 - 11 AM.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Insurance

HENKLE AVE

AUCTION

UPPER RT. 7

CARTERS ~LUMlliNv
AND HEATING
930 Fourth Avenue
Phone 446 3888 or 446 4477
155

•

2 BEDROOM MOB LE
HOME ACROSS F ROM
C TV BLDG

clea n 25 acres bottom land
wells Improved spring
barns - I f1 xed for Grade
da1ry w•lh tank and milker
out bldgs I 860 lb tob base

NORRIS DODGE INC.

••••

SMALL
MODERN
2
BEDROOM HOME O N

AT EDGE OF TOWN
4
B E DROOM
GOOD
HOME W TH 600 FEE T
FRONTAGE O N RT 1&lt;1
BARN
AND
OTHER
OUTBUILDINGS PLU S 4
GOOD&lt;lBUtLD NG LOT S

PRICES EXTRA LOW

•

For Rent

Older Home
4 Acres

FOR A CAR - DON'T
MISS lHIS NICE SELECTION.

•••••

;

extra n ce ••' ••

Gold black buckef

136-Accaptad

~-~~-~

Lunch on grounds

I I

P S P B vmy I top

4 m le

acre toba cco

I I

P S P B auto

A r cond

88-Peel
89-Printer's
maasurt:
90-Woods
91-Handle
92-Room In harem
93-F n11 alned
lambskin
94-Prlnt.r's
maasurw
96--Ch nua walaht
97-Quarrel
100-Part of

Dr ve

s 5 room s and bath

hme green •

V 8 automafJ c rough -but ready •••.

THIN" NG OF BUILD NG
THE HOME OF YOUR
DREAM 6
WE
HAVE
SO ME -

REALLY

I

I OVER 40 CARS I
•

••

Butld mg Lots

from City n Gall polls school
232 ,

cWen
H--Henct*l

18-Unt dy
20-Juncturt
23-Edlble stads
25-Bitmlsh

145-"''"

81-Mutlc as
wrlHen
82--shortly
84- Lareeaun

dltpll1
24-l.on&amp; tltnder

SHOUL D
AP
TH tS
O:NE

WHICH
MEANS
MONEY DOWN

80-l'o"h

22-$01o
23 Pompoua

137-ls and off
lrt'land
139-Ura:e on
l4D-S.nd wom
tround wtlst
141-CoHon tflread
143--Anon
s
n ckname
146--t&lt;navlsfl
148--Stoker
150---Shudder
152-Yiacr
153-Donated
154-A continent
1!56-Posted
1!57-European I ncfl
158-Paradlu
159-The cna
followln&amp;
160-Lock of flair

GROCERY STORE
OVER 3 500 sq ft s tore
houses No 13 2 and 14 One s
budd ng
lovely
I v ng 115 ACRE Grade A daory farm
7 room house bath newly
6 rooms and bath and the
quar ers and ca rp or t at

ON MILL

HAVE some tots tor sale on
pens on plan Only three yeol" --;------ - - - - -237 3 WE
the
Ne ghborhood Road 110
enl slment U S Army Ph
feel x 275 fee t Pr ce $1 350
Seill
446 3343
MOBILE home spaces for 12ft
eac h
Sep 26 Oc t 3 10 17 2 &lt;~
68 mode l or newer
c ty
2385
water total elect or gas
Office 446 1066
walk
s
ramps
pat
as
$40
Even1ngs Call
Thomas
Wanted To Do
mo d46 4774 Larry Evans
Ron
Canaday 446 3636
Mr and Mrs B1ll Tuttle and WALLPAPER hang ng Ph 446
238 12
John I Richards 446 0280
Billy of Fairborn viSited Sunday
3608
Russett D Wood 446 4618
238 6 FIRST fl oor (urn apt adults - -- - - - -- -wi~ Mr and Mrs Chester
pr e ferred
re f erence
Jones
r equ red 631 4 h Ave
NEW 3 bedroom hom e n Plantz
DO ES your han e need sma or
Mr. an~ Mrs Lester Raynes
Subd1v good locatiOn '" c ty
238
If
gene a r epa r s and you can
school
dlstr cl W II be
NitrO W Va spent Saturday
f nd me or som eone to do
f
n
shed
soon $15 500 Ph
t em ? If so ca ll &lt;146 0126 and Wanteo To Buy
w1th Mr and Mrs Chesler
Delbert
Clark
446 0390
I
see w ha t can be done
Jones
'
208 II
HONDA
m
n
b
ke
prefer
50CC
r ree es ma e reasonable
Ph
446
4843
,, rra es a 1d a I work guaran
\n tart v r m natl:v
1u "'t eed
238 3 FO R SALE by owner 2 story
br ck at 452 First Ave 7
' thea t&lt; rn ~ustraha atl\
235 6
r ooms 2 baths gas hot a r
lam&lt; an 1 xlreme length I
Wanted
f u rna ce
present
Ill If f? f1 I 1nd a dtamete1
arrangement
2
apartments
AL ~M &amp; v nyl s dong roof ng
f
~
f 1n nrh
EXPERIENCED dry wa ll
Eas ly co nvert ed to onP
os rrr J
b &amp; wmdows Ca
ta m ly dw ell ng
Ask ng
Byerly C n,
4 6 3608 107 hang e s and hn1shers Ca ll
I'
379 2237
$35 000 shown
by ap
( A v..- G.:~ po s
ro n men I Ph 446 0208
234 6
236 12
----199 If
JED W B ROWN
Sec c
y of S El te

ranch

rented 110 ft fr ontage on Rl

~0 ACRE farm flat to roll ng
74 11..-, w 1h good 3 bedroom house

~----==-~--

3 BEDROOM

FHA
PA"E&gt;VE

21-falslfltr

14-Dartlen

T S A 3 BEDROOM
HOME ON COR NER LOT
ON
CENTRA L AVE

home - double w de 24 x 60 3
BR 2 bath beautiful LR &amp;

operated on

3

Owner Must Sell

been look mg for R t 35 near
the new hasp tal New mob le

l...._..,tltollln•

6-Hurt

VERY GOOD HOME AND
IS ACRES WITH E_X
CE L LENT S HOP AND
GARAGE BLDG OWNER
WANTS AN OFFER

New L1stmg

d n•n g r-oom all bu It n
k !c hen laundry room 7
close s gas furnace pat10 All
lhts plus a 6 r oom 1 :2 bath 3
B R d1n ng r oom
por ch
basement (now rented ) also
mob1le home pad s pace now

~OIJ.fi'IOS

73--BHrmuas
75---Lanc:lad
proJMrty
77--Muslcal
compos tlon
78--MICIW

10--FrM ~cket

Ctty Farmer??

k !chen and storage room
formal d n ng room two
porches fru I room
arge
garage Pr ced tor qu1ck sale
Vacan

state and loca l rea l esta te

have car ao!j be w II ng to
232 f
learn C~tl 4~ Mil
- - - -- -- - - 238 3 SLEEPING ROOMS weekly

• 35
18

UN 1 E 0 ST ATES OF AMER ICA
STATE OF' OHIO

219 If

cen tral a r cond h onin g and

Must

storage rooms el ectr c heat
and a1r cond1 t1oner carport 2
large level l ots w th plenty
f ower s sh rubs and shade
trees Pr ce Sl4 000 Now
vacant

6 ROOMS &amp; I , bath

•••••.,.
GEl'

71--Soap~tona

l_,.rutt

HERES
A
HOUSE
PR CEO
TO
SELL
TODAY
DON T MISS
SEE NG THE CLEA NEST
J
BE DR OOM
HOME
BARGA N
IN
TOWN
LARGE
ROOMS
THROUGHOUT PLUS A
FAM LV ROOM ON 2
LOT S !GOOD GARDEN
IPOT I AT EDGE OF
TOWN
LESS
THAN
S20 000

2

b II S 8 44 675 I589

2 BEDROOM houselra ler

1

2 BR

ma c h ne W II se ll for repa r

2 BEDROOM mob le home near
Ga tlip ol s Ph 367 7329,
234 If

MEN - FULL OR
PART TIME

necessary

PORTABLE SINGER sew ng

For Rent

$MONEY$

e!hc ~

PI

SEWING mach ne serv ce n
your home Clean all and

Help Wanted

exper

Ph

ACROSS

Bargatn Hunter

THIS IS the locaton you have

LOW low pr ces on l::lemco and
Se r ta maltresses and box
Furn

country k !chen

I I I

•2795
1969 PLYMOUTH 2 DR. HDTP.
•1995
1968 CHEV. CAPRICE 4 DR. HDTP.
•1995
1968 OLDS CUTLASS 4 DR. HOTP.
•1995
1967 BUICK LeSABRE 4 DR.
'1495
1966 OLDS 4 DR. SEDAN '88'
....... ...... .•995
1966 PLYMOUTH VALIANT
'795
1966 BUICK RIVIERA
•1495

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

MORE
THAN
S22 000
WORTH
OF
CON
TENTMENT HERE BUT
THAT S ALL
WERE
ASK NG

w II never age Beaut ful
decorated
wa ll s
large

.... ...

Cond

A r Cond

SUNDAY OCTOBER 10 1971

NEW

•• • ••

••

1969 BUICK LeSABRE 4 DR. HDTP.

Kanauga, Ohto

WATER

EXCELLENT

4 LOTS n Plantz Subd v Water THIS a tracflve one story home

opera ors

BEDROOM RANCH ON
A 2 ACRE PLOT JUST I
MILE OUT NICE SIZED
ROOMS
ATTRACTIVE
K TCHEN
CENTRAL
A R 1 CAR GARAGE
NICE QUIET LOCATION
PR CEO
LESS THAN

BEDROOMS VERY NI CE
K TCHEN
GARAGE

Country
Settmg

Charles M Neal 446 1546
J Mochael Neal 446 IS03

A~r

SMilH AUTO
SALES

Very Ltvable

NEARLY

• • ••

1969 BUICK ELECJ'RA 2 DR. HDTP.

Galhpohs,O

PRICED

S26 900

CITY

•• •• •• ••••••••• • •• ••

A1r cond

M NUT ES
FROM
DOWNTOWN
ROOMY
RANCH STYLE BRI CK

wa er tap tobacco base no
house Th s s good farm la nd

Evenmgs

GARAGE

'2395
•1995
•3295
•279 5

a •••••••••••••••••••••••••••

1970 PLYMOUTH DUSTER
Auto

BEST SELECTION
IN THE AREA!

1969 PONTIAC FIREBIRD

Comfort &amp;
Convemence

TED on Raccoon Creek Across LOCA
2
m from Northup 0 new
H gh Schoo l
near
barn Ia r to good fence rural

Olf1ce Phone - 446 1694

HERES
A
REAL
PARADISE
FOR
PARENTS &amp; CHILDREN
ALIKE - IN TOWN ON
LA RGE SHADY LOT IN
EXCELLENT
NEIGH
BORHGOD 3
BEDROOMS 1 V2 BA T&lt;f; S
CA RPETED ENTRANCE
LIVING
ROOM
AND
FORMAL DINING FULL
BASE MENT
AND

Eastern Ave.

Ps p

Auto

GAS AND SC HOOLS

lot at t 12 State 51

from
bus ness d str ct Pnced to
sell
Ca ll
us
today

Attractive Modern
Colontal In Town

520 000

3 OR 4 BR home located on n ce

GBC gradu ates

VISitmg Mr and Mrs Wilson
Lewis
Mr and Mrs Blame Vance
Ypsilanti Michigan are here
VISIIIng Mrs J oe Blackburn and
other relatives
Mrs L W Goodwm and son
of Columbus and Warner Craft
Galhpohs were recent callers
of Mrs W H Thomas
Mr and Mrs Archie Biml of
M1 ch1gan are campmg on Clark
Chapel Acres and ca lling on
fllend s 1n lhiS VICini ly
Mr and Mr s Ralph A
C ucl cn ( ulumbu s spent part
f H 1\ cck w11h Mrs \1 II

!ached garage Offered at a
pr q: you ca n a fford

17 500

tOIJAY S QUESTIO~
lou
no

plenly of shad e lrees Located
on large lot 250 It by 250 II

r epai r S' Has 6 acres of land
barn and located on SR 218 4
m les f rom town Full pnce

tt hull

cont nu

5 rooms &amp;

1ns de and out new forced a r
gas furnace new plumb ng
th r oughout c l y water at

room

BETTER tabs are ava la ble lor

P2ss
p

pa 1 n 1.;
spa t s Wha t

d n ng

2 BR home tha t needs some

MEN 17 34 LIVE AND WORK
IN EUROPE Guaranteed

y0

room

Free

WOMEN '
NO EX
PERIENCE NE CESSI\RY
TRA IN AT FULl PAY

I¥
I¥

Lovely 1 story

bath completely remodeled

'1795
WOOD MOTOR SALES

T E E H E E aiand lor
Techmcal Engineenng
Excellence And Htqhly
E:rlravaqant Extras
Slandard equtpment like
• Safely lronl dtiiC brakes
• Overhead cam engme
• Reclining front buckela
• Tinted glass
• Whilewalla
See the Small Car Expert
your Dalltun dealer for a
free leal drive
Dnve a Datsun lhen
decide

Evemng
Ike Wtseman
446 3796
E N Wtseman
446 4500

washer bar range and many
n ce cabmets all H W fl oors
covered w th the best car

1970 PONTIAC G.T.O. OONV.

•i!ii ltE.I.I

Off. 446·3643

'72 Models are Rolling,
So that means Quality,
One Owner Trade-lns.

SMilH
SAYS:

2 Dr hardtop p steenng radto &amp; heater
auto trans Vedora green wtth matching
mtenor w s w ttres

510

REALTOR

3 b g bdrrns huge I v rm
k tchen has d sposal diSh

home wtth

floors nat gas furnace 50
ga llo n elect water heater 2
large recreat 1on rooms
paneled
n basement
2
po r ches garage con c r ete
dnveway la rge yard w th

197 If

---------------------------By Mrs W H Thomas

Servtce

Al388 8724 Day or Evemng

F.asl

and comfor t
see th s all
br ck with cen a r 11 2 baths

New L1stmg

hea I county water level lot s
for bu Jd ng CNmer leav ng
state

est mates Ph 446 0294

NEWSPAI'ER ENTERPRISE ASSN

th

f l oor

RALPHS Carpet - Upholstery

A me cos ,tap •expe rts ex pia n the
tournamerrl w nn 'rl'g lechn ques n a
new 128 page book on J A C 0 8 Y
MODERN For your copy se nt ST
w th your no me atldreH and z p
code to Wm at B clge (c/ o th s
newspope ) P0 Box 489 Rad o C tv
Stat on New York N Y 10019

South w ns the diamond
I&lt;ad and d aws trump w ll
two leads He w ns the sec
ond trump n dummy and

Deer Creek

Howard

I WI LL NOT be respons ble for

a dub fm es.:&gt;e

olld plays the jack of clubs
R1 ght here s wh e re th e

Joseph

238 3

bankei might go wrong If
he fin esses the club at this
tim e he winds up los in g two
tncks m each black s u11
If South IS a bndge pla1ei
he goes n ght up with the ace

~

LOOKING for qual ty beauly

LOT IOOx160 It located In
beaut ful bUilt n kitchen o I
V•llage of R o Grande Oh o

ll v ng

Roush

'

" lhng to play at three If
So Ilh doesn t
South has enough to go to
gam e I he contract would be
Ironclad If e1ther North or nc"
Sout h held thre e d1amonds
and two cl ubs but each one P"
bolls tw o d I. m o n d s and p,
t I I e e clubs an d at ftr st Poss
gl ance 11 see ms to depend on
Yo

Fa1rv1ew

Howard or Luc1lle Brannon
Evenmgs 446 1226

ba t h w th shower large
k tchen w th lot ot bu II on
b r ch cijb nets har dwood

0 1971

HOWARD NEEKAMP

IS

leatls a low spade
East hops up v. th th e ace

Red

as ol lhiS date Oct

of clubs Then he plays a
I¥
seco nd spade The way th e
Pa ss
3¥
Pass 4 ¥
cards he he doesn t have to
Puss
Pass
Pass
11 orry about the club fmesse
Open ng lead- + Q
because West wms the tnck
If West plays a club South
makes hiS queen If West
By Oswald &amp; James Jacob} ~ lead s anythin g else South
Bankers s h o u 1d realize gets to diScard a club on
there IS one great dtfference dummy s fourth spade
betwee n bndge and bankmg
Suppose that East started
There IS no mterest paid on 11 Ith both ac e and k ng of
tncks so the last one counts spades In that c as e he
as much as the ftrst
would wm the second spade
an d play anot her club So uth
N
orth s three heart bid IS would still make his contract
a typical hm11 JUmp raise If the cl b kmg were held by
He wants to be In game If
"
EFfECfi VE
South has anythmg more East

than a mJm mum bid and

Denver

I WILL not be r esponstble for
any debts other than my own

Don't Bank on Finesse
EAST

11

one

The WISEMAN
Agency

Realtor, 32 State St
Tel. 44&amp;,1998

Hobart D1llon Realtor
Office 446 2674

- -~~~~~

Dear Helen
As a btcycle dealer I must argue with you on l!H;peeds
Rams horn handlebars can be changed to conventional types at no
extra charge Hand brakes are safer than foot brakes Also
eaSter The wtres and cables are not all that Complicated and they
really wox-k Thm tire treat lasts longer Seats on our last three
shipments have been comfortable and PADDED BIKING IS NOT
A FAD - WHEELER AND DEALER

... 8 74

tax

Higley s Barber Shop w1il be
Oscar Ba1rd 446 4632
open Mon thru Fr 2 p m t II
Doug Wetherholl 446 4244
8pm OpenalldaySal Sam
1118pm
238 6 7
ROOM block 4 bedrooms

SARAH

+ AK

l ow

Dillon
Agency

THREE BR 4 ACRES - Very
238 6

9

route

MASSIE

"DOC"

68 PONTIAC CATALINA

Real Estat9 For Sale'

Real Estate For Sale

tor farm or Ira ler

A Seruor turns hiS class rmg around so that the prmtmg can be
read by people who see his hand as he extends tt Before )OU
arrtve at that exalted slate you wear the rmg so that prmting IS
rtghlstde up to you when you look at your hand -SUE
NOTE FROM HELEN
The thmg.s I don t know But then after all these years I m
not yet sure whether a woman wears her weddmg nng above or
below her engagement rmg
And now my daughter mforms me that when I clasp my hands
together I do tl the wrong way
that the left thumb should he
over the nght one
Qutck now everybody clasp hands Then wnte and tell me
which thumb you have on top -nght or left'
After the clobbermg I took on the lc 1-speed btke controversy
!truly hope more than half of you clasp my way Amother has to
wm SOMETIMES doesn I she' - H
NOTE FROM SUE
Ah yes the len-speed bike argument Here are sample
comments - and (sorry about that podner) if you don I read any
laking Mom s Stde tl s because there weren t any
LAST WORD FROM HELEN
So far"
•
Dear Helen
For the ftrst time you blew It The subject 1s ten-speed bikes
Listen to ) our daughter
The thlng that has caused the resurgence m cycling IS the ten
speed Maybe yoo don t need all 10 m flatland Sacramento but
over herem htlly San FranCISCo and on our mountain bike trails
they re essential
Rams horn handlebars' Wmd resiStance IS a factor Also
the thm wheels and light weight of modern cycles combmed l\1th
the gears gJve them speed enough to be used as transportation to
and from work Saves on smog and gas
I am now 50 years old Being a conservative old goa t I figured
a five-speed was sufficient for my exerciSe needs Then our son
prevailed upon us for a ten-speed and I discovered I couldn t keep
up wtth him So out went the old m came the new
There IS an element of fad m the popularity My wife seemg
ours mslSted she have one too
So will you Helen - STEADY READER
Dear Helen
Even though I m only lJ I completely disagree With vour
static on JIH;peeds Maybe they re Wtcomfortable at first- !
a sore behind from that narrow seat- but you get used to them
And II ISn t only l!H;peeds that are stolen Whatever ktnd of bike
you have - keep II safe m your bedroom not Ln the garage -

NORTH
to QJ64
¥J10 84

s lat e

dlstr ct coun ty water fully
ca rpeted w lh full bat h new
o I furnace owner w II trade

Dear G T

WEST
toK 85
¥ 13
+ QJ94
... K653
SOUTH

BAIRD REALTY CO.
Os'ar Baird, Realtor

s ncere thanks to our fr ends
and netghbors who remem
bered us wtth floral offer ngs
cards calls and food dur ng
our recent bereavement

(Got a problem• Or a subjed lor discussion two-genera lion
style• Dlreet your quesUoos to either Sue or Helen Bottel -or
both, U you want a combinaUon mother-daughter aoswer )
wHEN THE RING TURNS
Dear Whtchever of You Can Answer Thts
Somebody told me you were supposed to wear your class nng
a certam way when you rea Semor True' - GETTING THERE

WIN AT BRIDGE

Real Estate For Sale

homeowners

hosp ta l and general liabil ity
84 tf

Calf us for com

ptete free esl1mate Delbert
Swisher AddiSon Ph 367
7475
135 If
BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE est mates liability In
surance Prun1ng
and cav 1ly work

tr im m ing
tree and

slump removal Ph .446 4953
For Sale
.7311
1971 VW Super Beetle yellow
w1lh black leatherette m 1965 NEW Moon mob le home
ter or air cond1t onmg stereo
lOx55 w th awn ng $2 500 Ph
or budget plan available
tape player rad10 bumper
446 2656 a flee 5
Phone 446 0665
gua rd s etc 9 000 mites
238 3
238 6
O.Vner start ng to college
Must sell Save $500 Ph 245 SUPER sluff sure nul' Thai s
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
5134
Blue Lustre for cleaning rugs
Cleaner complete wilh at
238 3
and up holstery Rent electric
tachments cordwinder and
shampooer Sl Central Supply
"SEU THE AUCTION
pant spray Used but 1n like
Co
new cond 1t1on Pay $37 45
WAY"
238 6
cash or cred 1 terms
available Phone 446 0665
238 6 1967 DATSUN P U
Busmess Opportun1t1es
45 FT ALUM wmdow awn ng 1966 , T GMC P U
HIGH volume Ashland serv ce
1969 Plymouth Roa drun nE&gt;r
n good shape pnced to sell
s a on for leas e
Pa d
Ph 446 2852
1YOJ L/!loU rord truct&lt;
tram ng Call 992 522t or 446
238 2 1965 •, T GMC P U
1085 or Mar ietta 373 8412
- - ---------- - - - 1969 Chev dump tr uck
211 If
NEW Idea manure spreader
1952 ' T Chev P U
New Idea corn p cker Ph 1965 1 T GMC
MAN OR WOMAN
446 32 10
1969 GMC 4 T loq truck
RELIABLE
person from thiS
238 3
area to serv ce and co llect
1917 , T GMC t' U
Sale Every
fr om automat c dispensers
18
FT
YELLOWSTONE 1965 , T Ford P U
1963
2 T Chev P U
No
exper
ence
needed
we
Saturday
camper See at 2136 Chatham
1969 I T GMC
esta bl sh accounts for you
Ave st 200
Evenmgs 7 00
Car references and S995 to
238 3 1967 , T GMC P U
1968 Chev Suburban
Sl aas cash cap1fal necessary
Corner lrd &amp;Olive AYI
4 lo 12 hours weekly nels
1966 '• T Chev P U
NO REGRE T lhe besl yet
We .. 11
a.nyfhlng for
excellent monthly 1ncom e
Blue Lustre cleans carpet 1967 '• T Chevrolet p ck up
anybody
We
also buy some
Full
1
me
more
For
local
1963
F600
Ford
Truck
beaut fully Rent electr c
estates
For
Pick
up Service
nterv
ew
wnte
include
1%1 2 T GMC
shampooer $1 Lower G C
teleph
one
number
Eagle
1964 3 T GMC
Murphy Store
Ca 11 Knotts
Com
lnd uslr es
3938
238 6 1964 , T Chev P U
Meadowbrook Road St Lou s
mumty Auclton, 446
---- - - - - - - - : Park
M
nnesota
55426
2917
BEAUTIFUL Early Amencan
SOMMERS GM C
238 t
TRUCKS INC
Maple stereo radio com
133 P1ne 51
bmat1on AM FM radio 4
Ph 446 25J2
speed changer
sepa ra te
Business Opportumtles
controls .4 speaker sound
241 tf
system Balance $79 15 Use
WHCJ'LE~~E DISTRIBUTOR WANTED
our budget term s Call 446
To sell to c6mpanyc_ established all cash accounfs In fhls
SILVER We maraner pups
1028
area Thl~ I! no~1P. cqtn operated vending rouhl CNr
AKC 11 wks Dam twice 4 H
238 3
product J$' sold tn tocaflons such as offices employee
obedience ch Top bird &amp;
lounges In retail stores tlnantla' tnslltuflons small
watch dogs George Wood
MODERN Walnut Stereo radi o
manufacturing plant! warehouses ~chools and hosplfals
ward 379 2597
combination AM FM radio
The d1sfrJbutor we !elect will .be responsible for main
236
3
separate controls 4 speed
talntng lltese tocaltono and resfockfng Inventory All
changer 4 speaker sound
locations al'e established by our company, • 10 year old
system $67 35 Use our GOOD (LoAN LUMP and
company We need a dependable distributor male or
budget l~ rms Call 446 1028
female In this area wllh $1 595 minimum to Invest In
stoker coal Cart Wmters Rio
238 3
equipment
and Inventory which will turn over about two
Grande Phone 245 5115
limes monthly Earnings can grow fo S25 000 annually and
Btl
up We w•ll consider p.arf lime appllcanf&gt; Write for
POMERANIAN pupp1es while
complete nlormatlon Including phone number and Area
female 2 years champion
WE specialize In portrait and
Code All Inquiries strtc11~ conlldentlal
T
s tud serv1ce
Yorksh re
commerc at photography
CONSOLIOATED CHEMICAL CORPORA I0 N
T err er female male .. 46 0548
church weddmgs ,.eun ons
Freeze Dried Praclucts Division
at er 6 p m and weekends
etc
Tawney
Stud
o
3815
Montrose
Blvd Su1te 215
Houston Tous 77106
238 3
BA If

SERVIa

New GMC
Truck Headquarters

JAMES (JIMME)
SAYRE
PH. 446-3444
AUCJION

•

�.,

. 22-TIE Sunday Times. SenUnel, ~,Oct 10, 1971

.
R
l
·
or Ras t es U ts
Use The Sunday1Fo~:;:ooM.
Times-Sentinel
.

•

..•••

WE OFFER THE PEOPLE OF THIS AREA THE BEST
SERVICE ON ALL MAKES AND MODELS. THE
FOLLOWING MEN ARE EMPLOYED BY SMITH
NELSON MOTORS SERVICE DEPT., EDDIE WELLS,
NATE BIGGS, DENNIS EYNON, LARRY HUDSON,
ALFRED BIGGS. IN CHARGE OF SERVICE, RON
SMITH. RON &amp; BILL WILL GUARANTEE ALL THEIR
WORK. FOR THE PURCHASE OF A NEW BUICK,
PONTIAC, OPEL, GMC TRUCK OR USED CAR CALL
BILL NELSON, CEWARD CALVERT OR RON SMITH.
FRANK SISSON IS OUR NEW PARTS MGR. FEEL
FREE TO CALL HIM FOR ANY AUTOMOTIVE PARTS
OR ACCESSORIES NEEDED FOR FRIENDLY FAST
SERVIC"=.

•..,.
:.
•
•

...'••·
•

..
,.

.·
.•
.,•·

·

'

'.•.
'.•
'.·,•

PH.

,•
~:

wANT Ao
INFORMATION
DE~DLINES

Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
(an.c;e!latlon &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a.m. fo r
Day of Publication

~

E.

MAIN

REGULATIONS

(he Publisher reserves the·

right lo edit or reject any ads
deemed

POMEROY, OHIO

ST.

VAN DYKE

MES

..
~

...,
~

..,._,'
•.

",,

.
-,.•.
.

FALL

•

'

"

••

•

Talk to the Dealin'
Man- .
DAN THOMPSON

,..

HURRY TO
OUR LOT...
SAVE UP .TO

•1,000

65xl2 · 65xl4 · 50x12
FREE DELIVERY - FREE SET-UP

Stop i~. call or write or talk to Dan Thompson,
Tom Lavender or John Ketchka.

KEITH GOBLE
MOBILE HOME SALES
Lot . Ph . 992-7004
If No Answer , 992-3422
Daily 12 to 9', Sunday llo 6
OPPOSITE GOBLE'S USED CAR LOT

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

GMC
TRUCKS

Racine
Social Events
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Miss Wilma Rose of
Columbus spent a week with
Mr . and Mrs. Herman Wolfe
and Mr. and Mrs. Ward Sayre.
Mrs. Loe Tisdale and Mr .
Charles Moody of Buckeye Lake
spent several days with her
sister, Mrs. Hazel Carnahan.
Mrs. Thereon Johnson was a
recent guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Scott Wheeler and daughter of
Sciotoville.
Mr. and Mrs . Allen Graham
and son were recent guests of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Willford and son.
Mr. Kenneth Swart of Akron
spent the weekend with his
mother, Mrs. James Swart and
his sister, Mrs. Alfred Crow and
family .
Mrs. Ola Hysell of Long
Bottom spent several days with
Mrs. Grace Krider and visited
Mrs. Ada Cramlet.
•
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Cleland,
Vince and Ryan, of Columbus
spent several days with Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Cleland and Mrs.
Anna Wines and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Simpson
spent Sunday in Columbus with
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Carlyle.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Spaun
· and family moved to near
Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs . Roderick
Grimm returned home after
visi ling in Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Morris
visited her sister, Mrs . Esther
Comstock, Tuesday.

More than 2 million VISI·
tors pour into the republic
of San Marino each year.
The tiny republic has a na.
tive population of only 19,-

000.

r-------------------------- ---------------i Voice along Broadway !
I

I
BY JACK O'BRIAN
cities didn't have their problems. (true!),
. AT ITS WORSr,
"For my part, I moved here from London a
NEW YORK'S NOT BAD
year ago, and I love living here . I am sure that is
NEW YORK - We're getting a lot of flak no city with so much to offer. This summer was a
about whether New York City, with emphasis on delight, with open-air concerts, operas and plays
Broadway, is as violently ugly as recent media - quite impossible to imagine in England ; and
stories insist; we've been covering show even in winter , the sky·is blue and the days are
business here more than 25 years, have traipsed brilliant. Soon after I arrived, I wrote a letter to
the !JJwn at every hour of the day and night, and that effect to the newspapers here, and I more
haven't been bothered - so far; we are, of than stand by it today."
course, .not traversing the town with no thought
Our grateful bow to Lady Haire of
of where we walk, or even ride. We keep off dark Whi teabbey for putting our perspective back in
side streets after dusk, never enter Central Park focus . We suffered no terminal fear, but had
after six p.m., rarely enter itat all; we dash indulged uneasy wonderment that permaps we
away from Broadway-Times Square directly might have a chauvinistically slanted attitude in
after the theater and always by cab; but with favor of the city we 've lived in and loved these
practiced caution, we haven't been violated by ·decades; and still do.
any ol the .viciO!ls night people who do. populate
Lady Haire concluded : ''The action is here
the once'fllamorous area these troublous mid- - the passionate commitment to ideas and
nights.
.
issues of our time. Walt Whibnan's 'athletic
The plight of visitors is something else: they democracy' is alive and kicking . And I am happy
are folks with .no certain knowledge of which to be here, to witness it despite the agony of my
areas are dangerous, and the result has been a new beginning , of looking for a place to live .( I
drop in tourist business here, a rjsing list of wondered would I ever get an apartment in N.
cancelled convention plans which hils hotels Y.) and a job of work to do. But I remember the
where they live, at the cashier's cage.
adage : those who come to New York must be
It's true that New York is not nearly so vast prepared to be lucky. I certainly am."
a wasteland as the scare-tales have emphasized.
, Lady Haire's final philosophical satisfaction
Still, we can't be certain personally , by all our about Manha ttan emigres is valid. We know
years of Manhattan happiness, what the precise scads of folks in the lighter enthusiasms, from
story is . The prostitutes, pimps, midnight the perspiring arts to stage, screen, TV ,
cowboys , illegal hustlers of cheap watches, and newspapermen , who, like Lady Haire, felt the
sidewalk . whisper salesmen assuring you of big relentless ucge toward New York City and came
bargains with hints they are pushing "hot," here to do well , far better than we had in our
meaning stolen, goods.
home towns.
Forty-Becond St. from 6th Ave. to 9th Ave. is
It cseemed in all these careers, coma lower-depths disgrace, every vice on sale paratively few native New Yorkers surrounded
openly. But just as we again were getting the rest of us who unanimously were declared
discouraged about this, our favorite city, along hicks, rubes, tiny. towners - no matter if we
came a letter from Lady Haire of Whiteabbey, arrived straight from a cowpatch or from a
hearing a di$tinguished and titled British name, fairly large city such as, like ourself, exotic
who responded to some remarks we had made Buffalo.
about til€ worst TV-told tales of Man)lattan ,
spreadmg gloom by e~aggeralion .
Arthur Brisbane ca me from Buffalo ; a
"! so much agree with your remarks about
New Yorkers spreading,alarm and despondency "Brisbane Building" still . sta nds in downtown
about their city," Lady Haire writes. " It is such Buffalo, or did last we looked. Katharine Cornell
a· pity that they should become their own . was a Buff ale ga t So was Stuff Smith, the great
detractors and see onlv the dark side . As if other jazz violinist.

,

Notice
TRAP and Siill shoal, Sunday,
October 10, I p.m.. Rutland
Gun Club on New Lima Road.
I0-10.lfc
YARD SALE, Friday and
Saturday, Oct. IS and 16. 10
a.m. to 5 p.m., m iscellaneous

items . 1165 Vine Street.
Middleport, Ohio.

'

25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days. ANYONE interested in forming
CARD OF THANKS
a small organization for the
&amp;OBITUARY
care of pets; such as dogs,
$L50 for 50 word minimu rr .
cais &amp; birds, please call 992Each additional word 2c .
6978.

BLIND ADS

10·7·6tc

Additional 2Sc Charge per
Advertisem~nt.

OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8:3 0 a,m. io 12:00 Noon
Saturday .

SAVE up io one hall. Bring your
sick TV io Chuck's TV Shop,
151 Bu 1 t(;l'nut Ave. , Pomeroy .

phone 992.5080.
9-2&lt;·1fc

Ftow~r.

10-5-6fp

PORTABLE Necchi zig -zag

Virgil u~

My

son and I want to express our thanks to you who
have helped i.n any way to make the name Blaettnar. to
stand for dependable transportation since 1853.

~k~r

unfurnished
'

PRICES

home

USED CARS
'ttnted glass, factory air condllloned, sports mirrors,
console, air spoiler, turbo hydromatlc, power steering &amp;
brakes. 350 cu. tn. V-8 engine. Really Sharp.

1970 Olevrolet BelAir 4 Door-- '2795

HAPPY
DAY

WMP0/1390

word s. For all the cards,
notes of inspiration, beautiful
fl owers and food we are most

Wippel Rd . near Five Points .
Anyone
knowing
the
wherea bouts · call
Bill

16 FT. LINEMAN boat. 30 hp

One . Eva Robson and sis ter,
Genev ieve.

10·10-Jtc

10·7-31c

gralefuL May God Bl ess Each

Buckley, 985-3341 or 992.7086.

motor with trailer, $325 .

Phone 667 ·3333.

10-10-ltp SHORT legged small black and
ta n beegie, Saturday evening

WARM MORN lNG gas heater,
48,750 btu . Antique organ.
Out nam, 75 years to 100 years
in Rutland . Reward. Phone
Notice
old
. Phone Nellie . Dudding,
742-4179.
New Haven, W. Va . 882-3219.
PEP-UP with new Zipples iron
10-7-3tc
10-7-3tp
pills. Non-hab it forming . Only - - - - - -- - $1.98, Nelson Orugs .
9-22-JOtp
4 SPEED transmission for 289
~anted To Buy
- $75 . Phone 949-4843.
Q- Does tile murm lwve 11 OLD Furniture. dishes. clock, ___ _ _____1_0-6-6lp•
and -or com~lete households.
I · 1
duy """ 1nght.
M. . M'tl
1 er, Rt . 4, FARM and Home !alex house
't
A- Yes. It ro ta tes upon 1 s Wnie
Pomeroy , Ohio. Call 99 2-6271 . painl sale, King Builders
axis in 29.53 earth days.
.
·8-25-ifc
Supply, Middlepor t.
That
is itthehaslength
day. -;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;,_ _ _111!"_!!"11_~-~10~-6~-1~2t,c
so
that
aboutof15itsearth·
1
days of light and 15 earthp
days of darkness alternately ' ' .L'

~~rtan!e

all .CZearance At Gauls

one place upon its

Q- Who holds the record
for the Senate's longest {Ui·
buster?

A-Sen. Strom Thurmond
of South Ca rolin a-~4 hours.
Ill minutes.
Q- Wiwt is the na tion's

"71" TRAVEL TRAILERS
ALL.. RENTAL
UNITS. ,
''
·

'72 Monaco, Banner, Go- Tag-A- Long

PRICED O

T SELL

·

Winterize Your Trailer with Winter Magic
All This' And More AI

Gau I 'Tral'Ier saIes, 'Inc. ·.

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, Oct

16t 1971

11:00 A.M.

To settle the estate .rf the late M. A. (Hood! Nicholson, we
will sell the following al the farm located on Meigs Co. Rd.
7 or the Side Hili - Carpenter Rd. From Ruttand, Ohio
takelhe new Lima Rd. lo Cp. Rd. 7. Watch for sale signs
from S.R. 124 in Rutland, Ohio.
MACHINERY: 9 N Ford with 'bel ly mower', step up, on
excellent rubber, will be sold together . 7' bull disc,
Dearborn 2.12 3 pt. plow, 3 pt. Fergurson scoop, 3 pt. cutoff

1970 Ford Maverick. 2 dr.

Dr .• sedan, vinyl top. air conditioninQ .

sedan~

1970

standard.

Volkswagen,

1

passenger station wagon

(owned by our
salesman!.

'2495

1971 MAVERICK FORD

1969 Mercury Monlego, 2 dr.
H.T.

1968 CADILlAC

1969 Ford LTD, 4 dr.
H.T.

2

S2395
1969 Chrysler Newport, 2 d•.
H.T. (air) .

Dr. , vinyl top .

I

1967 CADILLAC
Convertible.

'2595
1969 Ford Custom, 4 dr.
sedan (air) .

1969
442
Ol.lfSMOBILE
4

S1995
196B Ford XL, 2 dr. H. T.

4 Speed.

Business Services
.~SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph . 446-4782,
Gallipolis . John Russell,
Owner &amp; Operator .
5-13-ttc :

S1495

1968 BUICK SKYLARK

Ctievelle, 4
S1295
1968 Ford Gataxie 500, 2 dr.
H.T. tAirl S}795

6Cyl .. std. trans .• new fires, nef!(ls grllte, bumpera..bood.
SPECIAL!

1964 Die¥. BelAir 4 Door ------'695
8 Cyl., auto. trans., local 1 owner tacfy driven car, radio.

1971 Challenger $3025
2 Dr. H. T., console, auto. trans., AM- FM. P.S.,

1964 Falcon Sta. Wagon·-----J169

·Pomeroy Motor Co.

radio, Rallye wheels, black vinyl top, red
finish, extra clean, low mlleage.

1970 Coronet
2 Dr. H. Top. V-8, console, A. T. , P.S., radio.
road wheels.

· ~n ~ves. TiiB

992-212~ ,

UNCI'alllble theM bar Jumbla,
one letter to each ~quare, to
form lour orclinarr word1.

I RAYPH

•:~::=..- ·

1

~

I.

~u iH~

BOPHIS

L

IF
oo
f"li!ACTic.E

nt

2 dr. H.T.• A.T., P.S., vinyl top .

$1195

R. H. Rawlings Sons Co.
Dependable City

Now arranp the clrdetlletten

.I I I ( J I I ~:::teci~J~..:'C:.:.

MIDDLEPORT 992-2151 • 992-2152

1967 Ford Falcon Futuro,
sports coupe. auto. shift.

NEW contractor in area. Dry

'1095
cadillac Coupe Deville,
tall power, airl.

wall patching , general
painting . Call Richard I.
Dubbeld, phon,. 742-5825 . .
Rutland.
10-4-5tc

·sEWING .MACHINEs:· Repair
service, all makes, 992-2284,
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Aulhorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

3-29-tfc
NEIG.LER Building. Supply.
Free estimate on · building

your new home. Will draw
prints to suit the lay of your
land .. Cali . Guy Neigler ,
Racine, Ohio. For repair and

aluminum siding. soffet and
gulter. Cali Donald Smith,
Racine, Ohio.
10-7-tfc

;:1=~,..=..~..
~-~;:::
..~1 (I XI I I] ,_-~_ ___:.___. . . : :. . ._____~
(Aoo,... ....,)

Jumblo01 PIIZI

SJQOP

INOUGH

Yetterclay'•

Aatwer1 fou ••n dlm6 up.....,.. .,..ily
1.,.. An 010 Ill••- THI IOPIS For Sale
For
SWEET peppers, hot pepplrs, . POTATOES, .home grown,
$1 a bushel, pick your own.
extra nice, just dug for winter
Marshall Adams, Letart
use. Cobblers and KeMebecs.
Fatls.
Paut Sayre, Portland, Ofllo,
10·7-6fc
11'2 mites below Ravenswood
-------Ferry on R!. 3J8. Phcine 8432286.
HALF -RUNNER beans, $1
10-7-Jtc
bushel. Pick your own.
Clarence Proffit!, Portland. TROPICAL fish and supptles.
Phone 843-2254.
Forest Showatler, Chester,
Ofllo. 985·3356. Open evenings
and weekends.
I0-8-2lp

sale

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOM'E IN RACINE
TWO HOMES tN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME tN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 hOme can be purchased wilh a
monthly payment as low'as $65.00 for a family wilh a base
salary of $5,000.00 ·and three children. 7'1• Pet. annual

ICiAR~Et;w~it~t•~c~
a~~.tWi&lt;~enew
-,.h~n~ 992-5550,

JOHN IE'S
BEAUTY
Corner
and Stale
Hours- Monday,
Wednesday and Fd&lt;bv
8:30a.m. to 6 p.m.
Thursday
1Da.m. toB :JOp.m .
S.turctay
8:3oa.m. to 1 p.m.
J"HON I' 992-7474

10-8-6tc

1 - - -- - - -

1 ~iAS heater, 30,000 BTU - $20,
old Kenmore
elet:tric dryer, $90. Electric
heater, $5 . F• r pair of
drares, sa. All in good shape.
Cat 992. 5510. ·
· ·
10·8-3tc
2 • GAS ctrculatlng heaters.
Phone 992-5262 evenings.
.
·
9. 21-llc

wringer Washer, electr:ic hot water heater, gas range,

65,000 BTU Warm Morning heater - gas, Hoover sweeper,
5 piece dinette, library table. bookcase, beds, dressers,
stands. porch glider. pots, pans, dishes and other old and
interesting items .

Dale Nicholson, Adm. ofthe estate of !he late
M. A. t Hood) Nicholson

BAKER
FURNITURE
''

.

.BILL NELSON
992-3657

C.

HILTON WOLFE
949-3211
o&lt;I:AUY -t.IIX

I.Ui'l\..1&lt;1: II:

SALES. SERVICE

'1795
1966 Volkswagen, 2 dr .
sedan.

Ford Mustall!l. 2 dr.
., 289 VB, 4 speed.

?95
Our Cheapies
1965 Ford Galaxle 500, 4 dr.
sedan.
'395

1971 CADIUAC ELDORADO COUPE ....... ?495

1965 Mercury Monterey, 4 dr.
sedan.
'295

Almond Firem ist finish, matching interior , luH power
equipment, AM-FM radio, Climate Control a1r con-

1965 Rambler Classic, 4 dr.
Station Wago•

dit ioning, one owner, low mileage.

S245

1971 CADIUAC SEDAN DeVILLE ...... •.. '6600
.

-~

1964 Ford Falcon, l dr. '1-T.
(289 V8, 4Speedl .

:.,

Tawny beige, brown vinyl top, matching inL full power
equipment, Climate Control air conditioning, tilt &amp;
telescope wheel, AM-FM radio, 7,000 miles, 1 owner, new
Cadillac trade.

S495
1964 Falcon 2 dr. H.T. (219
VB, 4 Speed).

1971 CADILlAC COUPE DeVIUE ........ '6500

'395

Tawny beige finish, brown vinyl top, malching leather
lnL full power equipment, Climate Control air condit ioni ng, AM-FM radio. 1 owner new Cadillac trade .

1963 Chevrolet Impala, 2 dr.
H,T,

'IOOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK . ,
SPOUTING, ·
ROOF PAINTING

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

1962 Cadillac, 4 dr. H.T.
SS5
Ford Fairlane,

cadillac . Oldsmobile
Open Eves. Tile-Til5 P.M. Sat.
992..5:!41
GMAC Financing Available
PomeJ;Oy
" You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Busin,ess"

."'

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
15,55
- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto
Open8TiiS
Monday thrli Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

.POMEROY

,JOHNSON

-

-

M~NRY

?5
.
'TRUCKS"

966 Dodge D100 'It Ton

Baths
Room Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endloader Work
~&lt;.lichens,

Sepl\c Tanks
And Leach Beds.

4 Jr·.

1961 Chevrolet Belair, 2 dr.
H.T.

Cpmplete
}:( emod.eling

SS95
1966 International
Pickup.

'~'•

Ton

, 1
1965 lnttrnationat 1 Ton Cab
Chassis.

.M2·7608

&amp;

SMITH NELSON

1967 International 2V. Ton
with Dump Body, New
Tires.

'1295

HOME &amp; AUTO
delivered right to your
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Fre.,
NEW &amp; OLD WORk
9?2-~094
est. mates .. Phone 992-3284. All Weather Roofing &amp;
606 E. Main Pomeroy
ooeglein Ready-Mix Co .• Construction Co. and AnMiddleport, Ohio.
· thony Plumbing &amp; Heating.
PHONE NUMBER
OFFICE
SUPPLIES
6·30-tf,
Complete
Plumbing,
STEREO. Walnut modern style. SEP IlL •anks cleaned. M1ller ··AviN.IN.GS, storm .doors and Heating and A.lr Con And
992-2174
4 'spe!lker sound system. 4 Sanitation, Stewart, Oil to. Ph.
w 1n d 0 w s, carports, ditioning.
·
speed automatic changer.
662-3035.
,
marquees, aluminum siding
FURNITURE
240 Lincoln St., Mlddlepol'l
• 2-12-tfc
ana railing. Call A.. Jacob,
FOR SALES
Balance $65.71. Use our
Stop In and See Our
budge! terms. Call '992-7085. · .
·.sales representative. For free
Floor Display.
' ·
t0-4-6fc . o·ut:'LL vvHt:t:l. .a11gnmeru estimates, phone Charles
Phone 992·2550
&amp; SERVICE
. R
S
dl
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Lisle, Syracuse. V. . V. Insured - Experienced
EA LY American tereo-ra o . Complete front end service
Johnson and Son, Inc.
Work Guaranteed
' combination, AM-FM radio, 4
iune up and brake 'setvice:
·
S-27-tfc
'
'
.
l
AUTOMOBILE 'fnsurance been ' THE SHOP, Custom meat
speaker sound system, 4
Wheels htanced elec..
See us
tor
fi'r ee
cancelled?
Lost
your . cutting, Pleasant RldQe Road,
speed ~utomatic 'Changer.
tronlcally:
All
work HACKNEY'S Electric Service; Est.imale on Furn~ce
opera lor's license, Call 992- , Pomeroy . Dick. Vaugnan, 99~ ·
Balahce $78.73 . . Use our
guaranleed. ' R~asonable ali fyP'~ of elec!rical work.
2966. '
3374 and Date Little, 992·6346.
bud!ll!f term~. Call 992-7085.
rales. Phone 992-3213.
Phone 992-6407 .
lnstalation.
6-15-tfc
.,
9-12-JOtc
10-Htc
.. ~
7. V:lfl::~.,..;,.._ _ _ _ _ _ 9-29-JOtc ~=====::::=--,-'
'
BRADFORD, Auctioneer
. Complete Service
Phone 9&lt;49-3821
Raclne,Ohio
Crltt Bradford
S-l-Ife

SS95

SllTioi'Y YO(IR NEEDS

Business Services

MIIIIT
I{

•

service In

1967 Ford
Coronet 4 dr. sedan, A. T .• P.S., radio.

.

mach in~

'1295

1967 Chrysler, New Yorker, 4
dr. sedan (All power,
air) .
Sl495

your home. Clean , oil and

BACKHOEAND DOZER work.
Septic tanks installed. George
(Bill) Pul li ns, Phone 992·W8.
4-25-tfc

·1966 Dodge

I rI J I I

LURPPE

SEWING

Station Wagon, 9 pass., A. T.,' A. C., P.S. &amp;
brakes.

Galaxie XL,

rJ

9-8·30tp
HA.R'RTSON' S f\1 al'ld Antenna .,;;;;;;;;,;;.,_,.;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. ,
Service. Phone 992-2522.
6-IO·ffc

HDUS E MOVING: Houses, etc.
raised. moved, underpinned,
remodeled. Estimates free.
anywhere . National House
Movers, Box 5002. Charleston,
W.Va. 25311, or phone 304·9253279.
9-30-60tp

1969 Chevrolet s2195

Pomeroy

s1595
Ford Gataxie 500, 2 dr.

adius t - $4. Phone 992-7085.
t0-4-6ic

YoiU' Chevy Dealer

AUTOS: 1959 Rambler and 1960 Ford station wagon, boih
with standard transmission anp on good rubber.
HOUSEHOLD : t;'hllco refr igerator, Zenith TV, Maytag

..• •

1970 Ford Muslong Mach I,
351auto. shift.

Door , hardtop.

'1&amp; Comet 2 Door------..-.o!495

and other items too numerous to mention .

CARNAHAN AUCTION SERVICE
mo .~t-read comic strip1
949-2708 - J. C~rnahan
D. Smith-949-2033 .
A- It is beJie·;ed to be
Racine, Ohio
" Pea nuts." by C. M. Schulz. I ,.;.Pilhiiiolinlieii
.9JiJ85it-li3JiJ83ii2;.._ _ _ _ _ _•Chiiiiieiiisloteliroi'•Oiohliii.o-• IL,;,.~ot responsible f9r accidenh or loss of property.

11:95

finish. like new blue vinyl Int.

Sears Jet water pumps, complete, box of carpenter tools.
hand tools, 2 HP electric motor, 15 ton jack, PTO grass
seeder, Huffy 5 HP riding mower. Rototilier. log chains,

LUn\.n 1"\n ...... ...

1969
CHEVELLE
2

1969 MERCURY MONTEGO

md--------------~

saw, 16' rubber t ired wagon , Mac 15 chain saw, Molasses
m ill and evaporator pan complete, 16' extension ladders, 2

Terrris : Cash

o cyi,

Dr.·---··

SENTINEL
CARRIERS
IN POMEROY

A

dr

'2495

Speed, vinyl top.

1965
Buick Special 4
V-e motor. auto. trans., radio, good w-s-w fires, white

WANTED!

HAVE

Fred S. Blaettnar, Partner

Fairlane 500 4 doo,', L;_,at~wner, -n...:;, tires;-;,le!ln Int .. 6
cyl, std. trans. , radio.

Oeland
Realty

-----~

Blaettnar Auto Co.

1968 Docile 'Dart 4 Door-----'1495
11*

Convertible .

4

4 Dr., sedan. 6 cyl., auto. , low mileage.

. HT Cpe., towner &amp; very nice, V-Benglne, wide ova( tires,
P.S., P. B., factory air cond., radio&amp; otherexlras .

SPECIAL

'3195
1970 Ford Custom 500,
sedan.

4 Dr. Sedan.

1967 Ford Mustang -·----- '1595

F

1971 Ford Mustang, 2 dr .
H.T., VB, outo. sllift.

1971 CHEVROLET

4 Or.;v:eengine, automatic trans., P.S .. facfory air, good
fires, radio &amp; other extras, white finish, clean interior .

MOBil£ HOMES

Middleport

lrd Ave .

4 Dr ., sedan, vinyl top, air conditioning.

1970 Dodge Polan~ ·------·'2495

·270 Series, vinyl roof, white tinlsh,-litl good fires,
automatic trans ., radio, cie!ln Interior.

CARLOT

1970 FORD

Both I and my family thank you greatly, and look
forward to serving you in our future field of operation.

Less than 10,000 miles by Iota! owner. Sharp as new in ali
ways, white' over gold finish, 350 V-8 engine, power
steering, radio, white-watis, wh. covers.

MILLER

.NEW- USED

1970 FIAT SPIDER 850

4

"When we asunder part,
It gives us inward pain:
But we shall still be joined in heart,
And hope to meet again."

Sport equipped, Ctasstc copper with &amp;andatwood lnterJor,

(n

f . ,

KEITH GOBLE
FORD

1970 CHEVROLET

1970
Camaro Cpe. --..----- '3295.
l....ss man 11,000 Jl'lli~ &amp; appe!lrance of i1 model. Rally

Middlepor t. . Buill-in kitchen ,

ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT . Auto Sales
In Memory
ceramic tile bath, aU -electric!
overweight lad ies, teenS and
heat, good neig hborhood, Can
IN LOVING memory of our
12:
·
.14'
·
24'
WIDE
men interested in a Weight '65 PONTIAC l)onneville, '66
arrange FHA f ina ncing .,
father and mother, Edward
Pontiac
fr
on
t
en
d
for
parts,
Watchers IRJ Class in
Telephone 99n6oo or 992and Mary Fuller, who passed , Pomeroy write : Weight
a l so '59 Pon tiac. Phone 7422186.
away Jan. 1952 and Sept. 1967,
4871, Eimer Milchell , Ri. I,
Walchers tRI , 1863 Section
7-25-tfc
Middleport.
also our brother, ICricket)
Rd .. Cincinnati , Ohio 45237.
Howell Fuller who was kill&amp;d
10·8·3 lc
~ IX ROOM house, bath, · tutr
10·3-lfc
in a car wreck Jan . 1953.
·mo Washington' Bfvd .
baseme~t , 133 Bullernt,t~ A've ,,1
Don 't ask us if we mi ss, For
just wa lk ing d is taoce~~o from1
Belpre,
Ohio
REDUCE
safe
and
fasi
with
1966
PONTIAC
Lemans,
1964
words cannot express the
d&lt;Jwn town Pomeroy . Contactt
Gobese
tablets
and
E-Vap
Pontiac
Catal
ina
.
Co
nta
ct
'
--loneliness without them,
: d Hedrick , 2137 Wadswo1!1rJ
Water Pills. Nelson Dr ugs.
Gerald R. Doug las, Baum
Or the aching emptiness, The
1970
SCHULTZ
mobile
home
urive,
Columbus, Ohio, phonel
9-22.30ip
Addition , Rt. 3, Pomeroy or
years may wipe out many
60xi2
with
expando,
two
231·4334,
Columbus.
phone
985-3807.
things,
bedrooms,
excellent
con
5-9-ttd
10·6-4tc
But t his they wipe out never , GUN SHOOT, Sunday , October
dillon
.
Make
us
an
offer.
See
-The memory of those happy
to, I p.m , Racine Gun Club.
anytime, 982 Hyse ll St.,
days.
10·6-4ic
Middleport.
Wh en we were all toge ther.
For Sale or Trade
10·6-4tc
Sadly missed by daughlers. KOSCOT Kosmetics for sale,
1964
I=HEVY
2
dr
..
standard,
v.
(Lou ise) Mr s. Sam Yates ,
delivered to your door. New
B. 1967 Firebird convertib le,
Racine, Ohio, (Helen) Mrs . products
coming
out
aulomatic
1963 Oidsrnobile, 4 Mobile Homes for Sale
Robert Ntberi , Northup, Ohio . regularly. Would you · like to
dr. ha rdtop , automatic .
10,10-lic try them? Ca ll 992-511 3.
Gi FINANCING AVAILABLE :
Phone 992-6547.
~08 East Main
10·5-tfc
No down payment. 12 yea r s to
- 10·8-3tc
POMEROY
WHY ' whould our tears in - - - - - -- - pay lo qualified GL Up to
sorrow flow , When God Auto Sales
$1 ,500 available for lot im· BUSINESS AND HOME OF
recalls His own;
For Sale
provements if you own a ioi.
YOUR OWN FOR ONE
And bids them leave a world of I97U OLDS Cutlass, 2 door.
Get your new mobile home
140,000
BTU,
Sears
600
series
woe , For a·n immortal crown? hardto~ , 1962 Olds Sta rhre ,
now. See James Sim pkins,
PRICE , - 2 siory building
iuel oi l furnace and tank . Valley Estates Mobile Home
Is not e'en death a gain to those, ex tra n1ce, .1~31 Model a ford,
30x45 n1 ce apartment over , 3
basement typ e, used one
Whose life to God was given? good condJtJon. Phone 742Sales , Rl. 50 East Athens _
bedrooms, baih, lots of
wil)olqr, 5300, Ph,qne 949 · 2~71 ..• 593-8762
Giadiy to earlh their eyes they 44 23.
~,1C', stora g e , hardwood f loQJs,
t0-10-6tc
close , to open Ihem in heaven . _ _ _ _ __ _ _,_0-8-JtC
.
9-19-37tc
BUSINESS. ESTABLISHED
t N 1951, doing good busmess .
Their foils are past - their
1970 VW 7 passenger sta ti on
INTERESTED CALL US.
work is done, and they are Help Wanted
wagon " bus, " 24,000 miles, Real Estate
fu lly blest;
DEXTER - 2 slory frame , 4
They fought the fight. lhe , . . - - - - - - - ----, excellent condition inside and
· out , Includes at no extra For Sale or Trade
bedrooms, bath . GREAT
victory won, And entered into
charge (4) mud and snow ,
FOR FAMILY, lot 50x100,
rest.
sludded tires, $2,400. Call HOUSE - Two apts .. 4 rooms
space lor 2 cars , large storage
Then let your sorrows cease to
and
bath
each,
near
new
(day 1 992 2196 (after 61 949building , STEAL AT JUST
flow - God has recailod His
housing project. Trade fo r
4651,
ask for Frank Gheen.
$8,900.
own ,·
sma ll er house. Phone 992 ·
10-10·6tc
But let our hearts in every woe ,
2608.
SYRACUSE
DRIVE
IN ,
Sliil sa'y, "Thy will be done."
•
130,000 TOMATO sla kes, 6 II.
9-26·30tc
BUILDING
AND ALL
in memory of Henry R.
long. Call Huniington , W. Va - - - - - - - - EQUIPMENT, do ing nice
Beach, who departed this life
453-3412 or 453·2726.
business , OWNER HAS
October 9, 1964. Wife, Lydia
10-10·li e Real Estate For Sale
OTHER INTERESTS. JUST
Beach, Children, Mil dred
7-ROOM block house . 4 Sl8,500.
Jacobs, Oma Nelson . Clyda
H
&amp;
N
day
old
or
siaried
bedrooms, liv ing room, dining
Bing , Freda Van lnWagen ,
PHONE
992-2156
Leghorn
pull
ets
.
Both
floor
or
PLACE THE SALE OF
room, bath with shower, lar~e
Richard Beach.
cage
grown
available .
YOUR PROPERTY IN
kitchen with lotS of built-In
10-10-lie
Poultry
housi ng
and
COMPE:rENT HANDS
b irch Cab ine t s. Hardwood
FOR DETAILS!
automation. Modern Poultry ,
floors . Natura l gas furnace,
HENRY E. CLELAND
399 W. Mai n, Pomeroy , 992.
REALTOR
SO-gallon elecl ric water
Card of Thanks
2164 .
Office 992 -2259
heater. 2 large recreat ion
EA RN AT HOME addressing
10-10· itc
WE WISH to thank ihe many envelopes. Rush st amped
rooms, paneled in basement,
Residence 992·2568
people who were so kind,
2
porches,
garage,
concrete
10-5-6ic
addressed envelope. Osswald PAINT damage. 1971 Zig-Zag
helpful and understanding
dnvewa{,
large
yard
with
Mail Service, 5173 68th Lane.
sewing machines . Sti ll in
plenty o shade trees, located
during
our
period
of
51. Petersburg , Fla . 33709.
or iginal cartons. N o af .
on
la rge lot, 250 fl . by 250ft. on 1,000 FT. of Frontage on Rt . 7
bereavement. Our soecial
10-I0-6ip
between Chester and Tuppers
lachments needed as our
thanks go out to Ewing
SR 124 in Syracuse. Ohio.
Plains with water tap. With or
built
-in.
Sews
cont
r
ols
are
Available lor immed ia te
t-un eral Home, Dr. J . J .
without 25 wooded acres .
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
occupancy. To see, phone
Da vis. Dr . Lobo and his staff WIL L PAY well lor your spare
Henry Bahr , Phone 985-3988.
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
Gallipolis 446-9539after 5 p.m.
al
Cabell
Huntington tim e working at home for us.
Anyone
who
can
read
and
10-7·6fp
monograms, and blind hem
week days for appointmen t.
Hospital. the Rev . Rober t
write
ca
n
qualify
.
Weekly
slilch.
Full
case
pr
ice,
S3fl.50
Card, the organist and
10-3-tf
or budget plan available.
HOUSE , !642 Lincoln Heights.
voca list, and ail those who salary . Fo·r. 'detail s, write,
James Bliss Co., P. 0. Box
Phone 992.564 L
se n t flower s and food . The
Cali Dann y Thompson , 992ACRE farm . 3 ponds, fr ee
324, Dept. K 479. Levittown,
2196.
10·10·6tc 175gas,
family of Ada Taylor.
li mbe r , farm ing and
10-10-ltp Pa 19053
7-18-tfc
pasture land, well and cistern
9-28-12tc ELECTROLUX Vacuum
water . HOuse, downstairs, dry
Cleaner complete with at WE WISH io express our mosl
basement with gas furnace,
tachments , cordwinder and
heartfelt thanks to all ihose HOUSEKEEPER, companion
living room, bedroom, kit.
paint spray . Used b'ut in Hke
for elderly lady . Private
who were so kind and
chen
-dining area together .
new condition . Pay S37.45
ihoughttul to us in the loss ot living qua rters. Write to Box
built -in ca binet s, built -in
cash
or
credi t
it?rms
729-B. c-o The Dally Sentinel.
our dear mother , Mary
oven , bath. wall to wall
Pomeroy .
available. Phone 992-5641.
Hei nes. To all the nurses and
carpet . Upstairs
3
10-I06tc
ministers at Holzer Medi ca l _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _10_-8·6tp
bedrooms . plenty of closet
Center who were so attentive ·space . Out of Harr isonville on
during her stay there in lhe WAITRESS , no ex peri ence APPLES, Burdette Farm , County Road 17, Landon
In tensive Care Un it. Special
necessary, ni ght shift , apply
Pomeroy, J&lt;t. 2. Phone 992Smith. Phone 741-3694.
in person. Blue Tarta n,
thanks to our many friend s
3930.
10·7-3tc
who offered to assist us and
Middlepor t.
10.7.3tp
I0-8-6ic
appreciate these acts of
BEDROOM brick ;,um e.
kindness. Ewing Funera l
RED AND Green peppers, pick 3 Choice
location in Middleport. ·
Home, Mrs. Gerald Pull ins, Lost
your own, $2 bushel. Bring·
Seen
by
appointment only.
organist and the pallbearers .
co ntainers. Earl Adarns,
ON YOUR DIAL
Phone
992-5523
after 4 p.m. •
Letari Falls.
Al so to Rev . Eugene Gill for THREE MONTH OLD Black
5-7-tfc
'
10·7-3tc
, his prayers and consoling and White English Seiter on

We are especially grateful to our many friends who
have bought vehicles1 parts and services during this
time. We also want to thank our (faithful) employees
who have helped us in any way. We cannot ·forget the
manufacturers who have given us such splendid
products for so many years, and we must rem~mber
the financial institutions who have helped us to ftnance
our customers.

FOR THESE BmER

==~~~-,---

NEW, 3-bedroom

HARTS
HAS
THE
CAR
FOR
YOU

Dear Friends:

TEAfORD
SR.

sewing machine, makes
buftonholes, fashion designs,

STOP·W' .
SAJIE .

HUNT NO FURTHER

110 Metban1c Street
. etc. Total price $32.50. Phone
Pbineroy, Ohio
992-7085.
FURNISHED and
10·4·6ic CHESHIRE - Business lot with
apartments. Close to school.
- - - - -.c -:-:
. - .- block building.
Phone 992-5434.
·
10-1S-tfc POODLE pupp1es, S1lver Toy,
Parkview Kennels . Phone 992·. 2 HOUSES - One5rooms, bath,
t1X60 MOBILE home, 2 bdrm ..
5443.
furnace and garage. $6,500.00
was her and dryer, on
8-15-tfc other $4,500.00.
Bulaville-Porier Rd. Cali 675APPLES
Fitzpa triCk Or- HERE ITIS.-4acreson Route
1319 .
chards, State Roule 689, 7. 5 rooms, bath, panelina,
10-3-6 tc
phone Wilkesv ille, 669·3785. carpeting. Only $10,500.00.
. 9-3-tfc
TRAILER space, de s irable
4 BEDROOMS - Bath, gas
'·'
neighborhood . phone 992-2084. MUMS, ail ..colors,
field
grown,
furnace . Nicely arranged.
9-19-tfc
ready to go. Big clusters.
New
doubl e · garage.
Reynolds Flower Shop,
$14,500.00.
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's.Moblie . Mason, W. Va.
Co uri , Rl. 124, Syracuse,
10-S-6tp LOOK - 30 acres on 143.
0hio 992-295 I.
Sever~! building sites. Only
·~­
4-2-tfc -----~----~
POTATOES for winter . Ken : $5,000.00.
nebec , red Poniiac . 1 mile off
124 on 338 ioward terry Great WARM - Nice 3 bedrooms, 1'12
UNFURNISHED apartme nl
Bend . Tom Sayre, Phone 843· baths, gas furna ce. Modern
with 4 large rooms and bath,
2436.
furnace
heat,
new ly
kitchen with stove and
decorated. Phone 992 2864
10-6-61p refrigera tor, 2 lot s, double
I0-8-3ic
garage .
"S TAR " ki ll s rats qui ck ly.
Sure . 2'h pounds , SL69, REASONABLE - 3 bedrooms,
TRAILER spaces, exira large,
Ebersbach Hardware, Sugar
bath , gas iurnace. Garage. 2
overlooking the Ohio River Run Mills. Pickens Hard· acres . Only $8,()()('.00.
525 a monih . Velma G.
ware , Mason .
Zuspan, Mason , W. Va .
9·21 -30tp
PRICES ARE RISING.
10-5·20tc
BETTER BUY NOW
APARTMENTS, furn ished or
AND SAVE .
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
unfurnished, beautif ul large
ASSOCIATE
rooms, central heaL garbage
992-3325 992-2378
di sposal, di shwa she r , car pels Phone 992-3074.
10·10-6tc
10-5-6tc
·•·

~

RUMMAGE Sale in Fry
Building, Middleport, Oct. 13
RATES
thru 16. Funds for building of
For Want Ad Service
Free Will Baptist Church.
5 cents per Word one insert ion
Also have Mink Stole for sale,
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three. S50 cash or trade for 20 books
of S &amp; H or TV Stamps. Cali
consec uti ve insert ions.
992-2324 if interested in siole.
18 cents per word six consec utive insertions.
10-I0-3tc

,•

,.

-..
•

The '

for mare than one incorrect
insert ion.

,.

MOBILE

objectional.

publisher will not be responsible
992-2174

co uples.

highway . Reynolds
Shop.

ooaaaa oaaaa aaaa a a:; :.anraa: :aaaaaaaa: c: a a aa a~

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

.•

idea l for

Contact McClure's Dairy Isle, MINIATURE Sctiriiiu'zers AKC puppies, no shedding.
992-5248 or 992-3436.
odorless,
permanent shols.
10-6-Sip
wormed, $85. Coolville 667 ·
6214 .
4 ROOM and bath furn ished
9-29· 12tp
apartment. Te lephone 773 -

Classifieds

\WATCH FOR OUR GRAND OPENING I

.•

ment,

5145, Mason, W. Va. on main

5 PM. Oay Before Publication

...

· For Sale
Rea 1Estate For Sale
For Rent or Sale
,.
HOME Comfort cook stove, 52.300 WILL bUY &gt;J acres In
NEW 1 bedroom mobile home
good cond ition .. 2 wileel
loca led inMason, W. Va . Call
Bedford Township, Wolfpen
trai ler . Phone 992-6467. No
Roberl DJXon, Me1gs Mobile
Road . 20 minutes from
Sunday calls.
Home Sales, Tuppers Plain s,
Pomeroy. 'I• of land in timber,
10·8-61p balance in pasture. No
667-3891.
buildings. Call 992-2152 and
10-8-3tc
!;OAL, limestone . ExcelsiQ'fl ask for Dick .
,
.' &gt;if Works. E. Main Sl:,
9-22-tfc
,.&gt;omeroy. Phone 992-3891. 1 - tra iler apart
. -- "-9.. flc.

MOTOR, INC.
.

'2495

I

1966 G.M.C., 2...... Ton_ 1~tf11
Dump Body, good ,.x2t
tires.

'1895
We Still Have 4 New
71's.
'
2-:-2 DR. H.T. L l.D.
2-4 DR. H. 1'. L T~
_power,

�.,

. 22-TIE Sunday Times. SenUnel, ~,Oct 10, 1971

.
R
l
·
or Ras t es U ts
Use The Sunday1Fo~:;:ooM.
Times-Sentinel
.

•

..•••

WE OFFER THE PEOPLE OF THIS AREA THE BEST
SERVICE ON ALL MAKES AND MODELS. THE
FOLLOWING MEN ARE EMPLOYED BY SMITH
NELSON MOTORS SERVICE DEPT., EDDIE WELLS,
NATE BIGGS, DENNIS EYNON, LARRY HUDSON,
ALFRED BIGGS. IN CHARGE OF SERVICE, RON
SMITH. RON &amp; BILL WILL GUARANTEE ALL THEIR
WORK. FOR THE PURCHASE OF A NEW BUICK,
PONTIAC, OPEL, GMC TRUCK OR USED CAR CALL
BILL NELSON, CEWARD CALVERT OR RON SMITH.
FRANK SISSON IS OUR NEW PARTS MGR. FEEL
FREE TO CALL HIM FOR ANY AUTOMOTIVE PARTS
OR ACCESSORIES NEEDED FOR FRIENDLY FAST
SERVIC"=.

•..,.
:.
•
•

...'••·
•

..
,.

.·
.•
.,•·

·

'

'.•.
'.•
'.·,•

PH.

,•
~:

wANT Ao
INFORMATION
DE~DLINES

Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
(an.c;e!latlon &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until 9 a.m. fo r
Day of Publication

~

E.

MAIN

REGULATIONS

(he Publisher reserves the·

right lo edit or reject any ads
deemed

POMEROY, OHIO

ST.

VAN DYKE

MES

..
~

...,
~

..,._,'
•.

",,

.
-,.•.
.

FALL

•

'

"

••

•

Talk to the Dealin'
Man- .
DAN THOMPSON

,..

HURRY TO
OUR LOT...
SAVE UP .TO

•1,000

65xl2 · 65xl4 · 50x12
FREE DELIVERY - FREE SET-UP

Stop i~. call or write or talk to Dan Thompson,
Tom Lavender or John Ketchka.

KEITH GOBLE
MOBILE HOME SALES
Lot . Ph . 992-7004
If No Answer , 992-3422
Daily 12 to 9', Sunday llo 6
OPPOSITE GOBLE'S USED CAR LOT

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

GMC
TRUCKS

Racine
Social Events
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Miss Wilma Rose of
Columbus spent a week with
Mr . and Mrs. Herman Wolfe
and Mr. and Mrs. Ward Sayre.
Mrs. Loe Tisdale and Mr .
Charles Moody of Buckeye Lake
spent several days with her
sister, Mrs. Hazel Carnahan.
Mrs. Thereon Johnson was a
recent guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Scott Wheeler and daughter of
Sciotoville.
Mr. and Mrs . Allen Graham
and son were recent guests of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Willford and son.
Mr. Kenneth Swart of Akron
spent the weekend with his
mother, Mrs. James Swart and
his sister, Mrs. Alfred Crow and
family .
Mrs. Ola Hysell of Long
Bottom spent several days with
Mrs. Grace Krider and visited
Mrs. Ada Cramlet.
•
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Cleland,
Vince and Ryan, of Columbus
spent several days with Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Cleland and Mrs.
Anna Wines and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Simpson
spent Sunday in Columbus with
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Carlyle.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Spaun
· and family moved to near
Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs . Roderick
Grimm returned home after
visi ling in Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Morris
visited her sister, Mrs . Esther
Comstock, Tuesday.

More than 2 million VISI·
tors pour into the republic
of San Marino each year.
The tiny republic has a na.
tive population of only 19,-

000.

r-------------------------- ---------------i Voice along Broadway !
I

I
BY JACK O'BRIAN
cities didn't have their problems. (true!),
. AT ITS WORSr,
"For my part, I moved here from London a
NEW YORK'S NOT BAD
year ago, and I love living here . I am sure that is
NEW YORK - We're getting a lot of flak no city with so much to offer. This summer was a
about whether New York City, with emphasis on delight, with open-air concerts, operas and plays
Broadway, is as violently ugly as recent media - quite impossible to imagine in England ; and
stories insist; we've been covering show even in winter , the sky·is blue and the days are
business here more than 25 years, have traipsed brilliant. Soon after I arrived, I wrote a letter to
the !JJwn at every hour of the day and night, and that effect to the newspapers here, and I more
haven't been bothered - so far; we are, of than stand by it today."
course, .not traversing the town with no thought
Our grateful bow to Lady Haire of
of where we walk, or even ride. We keep off dark Whi teabbey for putting our perspective back in
side streets after dusk, never enter Central Park focus . We suffered no terminal fear, but had
after six p.m., rarely enter itat all; we dash indulged uneasy wonderment that permaps we
away from Broadway-Times Square directly might have a chauvinistically slanted attitude in
after the theater and always by cab; but with favor of the city we 've lived in and loved these
practiced caution, we haven't been violated by ·decades; and still do.
any ol the .viciO!ls night people who do. populate
Lady Haire concluded : ''The action is here
the once'fllamorous area these troublous mid- - the passionate commitment to ideas and
nights.
.
issues of our time. Walt Whibnan's 'athletic
The plight of visitors is something else: they democracy' is alive and kicking . And I am happy
are folks with .no certain knowledge of which to be here, to witness it despite the agony of my
areas are dangerous, and the result has been a new beginning , of looking for a place to live .( I
drop in tourist business here, a rjsing list of wondered would I ever get an apartment in N.
cancelled convention plans which hils hotels Y.) and a job of work to do. But I remember the
where they live, at the cashier's cage.
adage : those who come to New York must be
It's true that New York is not nearly so vast prepared to be lucky. I certainly am."
a wasteland as the scare-tales have emphasized.
, Lady Haire's final philosophical satisfaction
Still, we can't be certain personally , by all our about Manha ttan emigres is valid. We know
years of Manhattan happiness, what the precise scads of folks in the lighter enthusiasms, from
story is . The prostitutes, pimps, midnight the perspiring arts to stage, screen, TV ,
cowboys , illegal hustlers of cheap watches, and newspapermen , who, like Lady Haire, felt the
sidewalk . whisper salesmen assuring you of big relentless ucge toward New York City and came
bargains with hints they are pushing "hot," here to do well , far better than we had in our
meaning stolen, goods.
home towns.
Forty-Becond St. from 6th Ave. to 9th Ave. is
It cseemed in all these careers, coma lower-depths disgrace, every vice on sale paratively few native New Yorkers surrounded
openly. But just as we again were getting the rest of us who unanimously were declared
discouraged about this, our favorite city, along hicks, rubes, tiny. towners - no matter if we
came a letter from Lady Haire of Whiteabbey, arrived straight from a cowpatch or from a
hearing a di$tinguished and titled British name, fairly large city such as, like ourself, exotic
who responded to some remarks we had made Buffalo.
about til€ worst TV-told tales of Man)lattan ,
spreadmg gloom by e~aggeralion .
Arthur Brisbane ca me from Buffalo ; a
"! so much agree with your remarks about
New Yorkers spreading,alarm and despondency "Brisbane Building" still . sta nds in downtown
about their city," Lady Haire writes. " It is such Buffalo, or did last we looked. Katharine Cornell
a· pity that they should become their own . was a Buff ale ga t So was Stuff Smith, the great
detractors and see onlv the dark side . As if other jazz violinist.

,

Notice
TRAP and Siill shoal, Sunday,
October 10, I p.m.. Rutland
Gun Club on New Lima Road.
I0-10.lfc
YARD SALE, Friday and
Saturday, Oct. IS and 16. 10
a.m. to 5 p.m., m iscellaneous

items . 1165 Vine Street.
Middleport, Ohio.

'

25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days. ANYONE interested in forming
CARD OF THANKS
a small organization for the
&amp;OBITUARY
care of pets; such as dogs,
$L50 for 50 word minimu rr .
cais &amp; birds, please call 992Each additional word 2c .
6978.

BLIND ADS

10·7·6tc

Additional 2Sc Charge per
Advertisem~nt.

OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Daily,
8:3 0 a,m. io 12:00 Noon
Saturday .

SAVE up io one hall. Bring your
sick TV io Chuck's TV Shop,
151 Bu 1 t(;l'nut Ave. , Pomeroy .

phone 992.5080.
9-2&lt;·1fc

Ftow~r.

10-5-6fp

PORTABLE Necchi zig -zag

Virgil u~

My

son and I want to express our thanks to you who
have helped i.n any way to make the name Blaettnar. to
stand for dependable transportation since 1853.

~k~r

unfurnished
'

PRICES

home

USED CARS
'ttnted glass, factory air condllloned, sports mirrors,
console, air spoiler, turbo hydromatlc, power steering &amp;
brakes. 350 cu. tn. V-8 engine. Really Sharp.

1970 Olevrolet BelAir 4 Door-- '2795

HAPPY
DAY

WMP0/1390

word s. For all the cards,
notes of inspiration, beautiful
fl owers and food we are most

Wippel Rd . near Five Points .
Anyone
knowing
the
wherea bouts · call
Bill

16 FT. LINEMAN boat. 30 hp

One . Eva Robson and sis ter,
Genev ieve.

10·10-Jtc

10·7-31c

gralefuL May God Bl ess Each

Buckley, 985-3341 or 992.7086.

motor with trailer, $325 .

Phone 667 ·3333.

10-10-ltp SHORT legged small black and
ta n beegie, Saturday evening

WARM MORN lNG gas heater,
48,750 btu . Antique organ.
Out nam, 75 years to 100 years
in Rutland . Reward. Phone
Notice
old
. Phone Nellie . Dudding,
742-4179.
New Haven, W. Va . 882-3219.
PEP-UP with new Zipples iron
10-7-3tc
10-7-3tp
pills. Non-hab it forming . Only - - - - - -- - $1.98, Nelson Orugs .
9-22-JOtp
4 SPEED transmission for 289
~anted To Buy
- $75 . Phone 949-4843.
Q- Does tile murm lwve 11 OLD Furniture. dishes. clock, ___ _ _____1_0-6-6lp•
and -or com~lete households.
I · 1
duy """ 1nght.
M. . M'tl
1 er, Rt . 4, FARM and Home !alex house
't
A- Yes. It ro ta tes upon 1 s Wnie
Pomeroy , Ohio. Call 99 2-6271 . painl sale, King Builders
axis in 29.53 earth days.
.
·8-25-ifc
Supply, Middlepor t.
That
is itthehaslength
day. -;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;,_ _ _111!"_!!"11_~-~10~-6~-1~2t,c
so
that
aboutof15itsearth·
1
days of light and 15 earthp
days of darkness alternately ' ' .L'

~~rtan!e

all .CZearance At Gauls

one place upon its

Q- Who holds the record
for the Senate's longest {Ui·
buster?

A-Sen. Strom Thurmond
of South Ca rolin a-~4 hours.
Ill minutes.
Q- Wiwt is the na tion's

"71" TRAVEL TRAILERS
ALL.. RENTAL
UNITS. ,
''
·

'72 Monaco, Banner, Go- Tag-A- Long

PRICED O

T SELL

·

Winterize Your Trailer with Winter Magic
All This' And More AI

Gau I 'Tral'Ier saIes, 'Inc. ·.

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, Oct

16t 1971

11:00 A.M.

To settle the estate .rf the late M. A. (Hood! Nicholson, we
will sell the following al the farm located on Meigs Co. Rd.
7 or the Side Hili - Carpenter Rd. From Ruttand, Ohio
takelhe new Lima Rd. lo Cp. Rd. 7. Watch for sale signs
from S.R. 124 in Rutland, Ohio.
MACHINERY: 9 N Ford with 'bel ly mower', step up, on
excellent rubber, will be sold together . 7' bull disc,
Dearborn 2.12 3 pt. plow, 3 pt. Fergurson scoop, 3 pt. cutoff

1970 Ford Maverick. 2 dr.

Dr .• sedan, vinyl top. air conditioninQ .

sedan~

1970

standard.

Volkswagen,

1

passenger station wagon

(owned by our
salesman!.

'2495

1971 MAVERICK FORD

1969 Mercury Monlego, 2 dr.
H.T.

1968 CADILlAC

1969 Ford LTD, 4 dr.
H.T.

2

S2395
1969 Chrysler Newport, 2 d•.
H.T. (air) .

Dr. , vinyl top .

I

1967 CADILLAC
Convertible.

'2595
1969 Ford Custom, 4 dr.
sedan (air) .

1969
442
Ol.lfSMOBILE
4

S1995
196B Ford XL, 2 dr. H. T.

4 Speed.

Business Services
.~SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph . 446-4782,
Gallipolis . John Russell,
Owner &amp; Operator .
5-13-ttc :

S1495

1968 BUICK SKYLARK

Ctievelle, 4
S1295
1968 Ford Gataxie 500, 2 dr.
H.T. tAirl S}795

6Cyl .. std. trans .• new fires, nef!(ls grllte, bumpera..bood.
SPECIAL!

1964 Die¥. BelAir 4 Door ------'695
8 Cyl., auto. trans., local 1 owner tacfy driven car, radio.

1971 Challenger $3025
2 Dr. H. T., console, auto. trans., AM- FM. P.S.,

1964 Falcon Sta. Wagon·-----J169

·Pomeroy Motor Co.

radio, Rallye wheels, black vinyl top, red
finish, extra clean, low mlleage.

1970 Coronet
2 Dr. H. Top. V-8, console, A. T. , P.S., radio.
road wheels.

· ~n ~ves. TiiB

992-212~ ,

UNCI'alllble theM bar Jumbla,
one letter to each ~quare, to
form lour orclinarr word1.

I RAYPH

•:~::=..- ·

1

~

I.

~u iH~

BOPHIS

L

IF
oo
f"li!ACTic.E

nt

2 dr. H.T.• A.T., P.S., vinyl top .

$1195

R. H. Rawlings Sons Co.
Dependable City

Now arranp the clrdetlletten

.I I I ( J I I ~:::teci~J~..:'C:.:.

MIDDLEPORT 992-2151 • 992-2152

1967 Ford Falcon Futuro,
sports coupe. auto. shift.

NEW contractor in area. Dry

'1095
cadillac Coupe Deville,
tall power, airl.

wall patching , general
painting . Call Richard I.
Dubbeld, phon,. 742-5825 . .
Rutland.
10-4-5tc

·sEWING .MACHINEs:· Repair
service, all makes, 992-2284,
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Aulhorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

3-29-tfc
NEIG.LER Building. Supply.
Free estimate on · building

your new home. Will draw
prints to suit the lay of your
land .. Cali . Guy Neigler ,
Racine, Ohio. For repair and

aluminum siding. soffet and
gulter. Cali Donald Smith,
Racine, Ohio.
10-7-tfc

;:1=~,..=..~..
~-~;:::
..~1 (I XI I I] ,_-~_ ___:.___. . . : :. . ._____~
(Aoo,... ....,)

Jumblo01 PIIZI

SJQOP

INOUGH

Yetterclay'•

Aatwer1 fou ••n dlm6 up.....,.. .,..ily
1.,.. An 010 Ill••- THI IOPIS For Sale
For
SWEET peppers, hot pepplrs, . POTATOES, .home grown,
$1 a bushel, pick your own.
extra nice, just dug for winter
Marshall Adams, Letart
use. Cobblers and KeMebecs.
Fatls.
Paut Sayre, Portland, Ofllo,
10·7-6fc
11'2 mites below Ravenswood
-------Ferry on R!. 3J8. Phcine 8432286.
HALF -RUNNER beans, $1
10-7-Jtc
bushel. Pick your own.
Clarence Proffit!, Portland. TROPICAL fish and supptles.
Phone 843-2254.
Forest Showatler, Chester,
Ofllo. 985·3356. Open evenings
and weekends.
I0-8-2lp

sale

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOM'E IN RACINE
TWO HOMES tN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME tN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 hOme can be purchased wilh a
monthly payment as low'as $65.00 for a family wilh a base
salary of $5,000.00 ·and three children. 7'1• Pet. annual

ICiAR~Et;w~it~t•~c~
a~~.tWi&lt;~enew
-,.h~n~ 992-5550,

JOHN IE'S
BEAUTY
Corner
and Stale
Hours- Monday,
Wednesday and Fd&lt;bv
8:30a.m. to 6 p.m.
Thursday
1Da.m. toB :JOp.m .
S.turctay
8:3oa.m. to 1 p.m.
J"HON I' 992-7474

10-8-6tc

1 - - -- - - -

1 ~iAS heater, 30,000 BTU - $20,
old Kenmore
elet:tric dryer, $90. Electric
heater, $5 . F• r pair of
drares, sa. All in good shape.
Cat 992. 5510. ·
· ·
10·8-3tc
2 • GAS ctrculatlng heaters.
Phone 992-5262 evenings.
.
·
9. 21-llc

wringer Washer, electr:ic hot water heater, gas range,

65,000 BTU Warm Morning heater - gas, Hoover sweeper,
5 piece dinette, library table. bookcase, beds, dressers,
stands. porch glider. pots, pans, dishes and other old and
interesting items .

Dale Nicholson, Adm. ofthe estate of !he late
M. A. t Hood) Nicholson

BAKER
FURNITURE
''

.

.BILL NELSON
992-3657

C.

HILTON WOLFE
949-3211
o&lt;I:AUY -t.IIX

I.Ui'l\..1&lt;1: II:

SALES. SERVICE

'1795
1966 Volkswagen, 2 dr .
sedan.

Ford Mustall!l. 2 dr.
., 289 VB, 4 speed.

?95
Our Cheapies
1965 Ford Galaxle 500, 4 dr.
sedan.
'395

1971 CADIUAC ELDORADO COUPE ....... ?495

1965 Mercury Monterey, 4 dr.
sedan.
'295

Almond Firem ist finish, matching interior , luH power
equipment, AM-FM radio, Climate Control a1r con-

1965 Rambler Classic, 4 dr.
Station Wago•

dit ioning, one owner, low mileage.

S245

1971 CADIUAC SEDAN DeVILLE ...... •.. '6600
.

-~

1964 Ford Falcon, l dr. '1-T.
(289 V8, 4Speedl .

:.,

Tawny beige, brown vinyl top, matching inL full power
equipment, Climate Control air conditioning, tilt &amp;
telescope wheel, AM-FM radio, 7,000 miles, 1 owner, new
Cadillac trade.

S495
1964 Falcon 2 dr. H.T. (219
VB, 4 Speed).

1971 CADILlAC COUPE DeVIUE ........ '6500

'395

Tawny beige finish, brown vinyl top, malching leather
lnL full power equipment, Climate Control air condit ioni ng, AM-FM radio. 1 owner new Cadillac trade .

1963 Chevrolet Impala, 2 dr.
H,T,

'IOOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK . ,
SPOUTING, ·
ROOF PAINTING

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

1962 Cadillac, 4 dr. H.T.
SS5
Ford Fairlane,

cadillac . Oldsmobile
Open Eves. Tile-Til5 P.M. Sat.
992..5:!41
GMAC Financing Available
PomeJ;Oy
" You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Busin,ess"

."'

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
15,55
- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto
Open8TiiS
Monday thrli Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

.POMEROY

,JOHNSON

-

-

M~NRY

?5
.
'TRUCKS"

966 Dodge D100 'It Ton

Baths
Room Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endloader Work
~&lt;.lichens,

Sepl\c Tanks
And Leach Beds.

4 Jr·.

1961 Chevrolet Belair, 2 dr.
H.T.

Cpmplete
}:( emod.eling

SS95
1966 International
Pickup.

'~'•

Ton

, 1
1965 lnttrnationat 1 Ton Cab
Chassis.

.M2·7608

&amp;

SMITH NELSON

1967 International 2V. Ton
with Dump Body, New
Tires.

'1295

HOME &amp; AUTO
delivered right to your
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Fre.,
NEW &amp; OLD WORk
9?2-~094
est. mates .. Phone 992-3284. All Weather Roofing &amp;
606 E. Main Pomeroy
ooeglein Ready-Mix Co .• Construction Co. and AnMiddleport, Ohio.
· thony Plumbing &amp; Heating.
PHONE NUMBER
OFFICE
SUPPLIES
6·30-tf,
Complete
Plumbing,
STEREO. Walnut modern style. SEP IlL •anks cleaned. M1ller ··AviN.IN.GS, storm .doors and Heating and A.lr Con And
992-2174
4 'spe!lker sound system. 4 Sanitation, Stewart, Oil to. Ph.
w 1n d 0 w s, carports, ditioning.
·
speed automatic changer.
662-3035.
,
marquees, aluminum siding
FURNITURE
240 Lincoln St., Mlddlepol'l
• 2-12-tfc
ana railing. Call A.. Jacob,
FOR SALES
Balance $65.71. Use our
Stop In and See Our
budge! terms. Call '992-7085. · .
·.sales representative. For free
Floor Display.
' ·
t0-4-6fc . o·ut:'LL vvHt:t:l. .a11gnmeru estimates, phone Charles
Phone 992·2550
&amp; SERVICE
. R
S
dl
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Lisle, Syracuse. V. . V. Insured - Experienced
EA LY American tereo-ra o . Complete front end service
Johnson and Son, Inc.
Work Guaranteed
' combination, AM-FM radio, 4
iune up and brake 'setvice:
·
S-27-tfc
'
'
.
l
AUTOMOBILE 'fnsurance been ' THE SHOP, Custom meat
speaker sound system, 4
Wheels htanced elec..
See us
tor
fi'r ee
cancelled?
Lost
your . cutting, Pleasant RldQe Road,
speed ~utomatic 'Changer.
tronlcally:
All
work HACKNEY'S Electric Service; Est.imale on Furn~ce
opera lor's license, Call 992- , Pomeroy . Dick. Vaugnan, 99~ ·
Balahce $78.73 . . Use our
guaranleed. ' R~asonable ali fyP'~ of elec!rical work.
2966. '
3374 and Date Little, 992·6346.
bud!ll!f term~. Call 992-7085.
rales. Phone 992-3213.
Phone 992-6407 .
lnstalation.
6-15-tfc
.,
9-12-JOtc
10-Htc
.. ~
7. V:lfl::~.,..;,.._ _ _ _ _ _ 9-29-JOtc ~=====::::=--,-'
'
BRADFORD, Auctioneer
. Complete Service
Phone 9&lt;49-3821
Raclne,Ohio
Crltt Bradford
S-l-Ife

SS95

SllTioi'Y YO(IR NEEDS

Business Services

MIIIIT
I{

•

service In

1967 Ford
Coronet 4 dr. sedan, A. T .• P.S., radio.

.

mach in~

'1295

1967 Chrysler, New Yorker, 4
dr. sedan (All power,
air) .
Sl495

your home. Clean , oil and

BACKHOEAND DOZER work.
Septic tanks installed. George
(Bill) Pul li ns, Phone 992·W8.
4-25-tfc

·1966 Dodge

I rI J I I

LURPPE

SEWING

Station Wagon, 9 pass., A. T.,' A. C., P.S. &amp;
brakes.

Galaxie XL,

rJ

9-8·30tp
HA.R'RTSON' S f\1 al'ld Antenna .,;;;;;;;;,;;.,_,.;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. ,
Service. Phone 992-2522.
6-IO·ffc

HDUS E MOVING: Houses, etc.
raised. moved, underpinned,
remodeled. Estimates free.
anywhere . National House
Movers, Box 5002. Charleston,
W.Va. 25311, or phone 304·9253279.
9-30-60tp

1969 Chevrolet s2195

Pomeroy

s1595
Ford Gataxie 500, 2 dr.

adius t - $4. Phone 992-7085.
t0-4-6ic

YoiU' Chevy Dealer

AUTOS: 1959 Rambler and 1960 Ford station wagon, boih
with standard transmission anp on good rubber.
HOUSEHOLD : t;'hllco refr igerator, Zenith TV, Maytag

..• •

1970 Ford Muslong Mach I,
351auto. shift.

Door , hardtop.

'1&amp; Comet 2 Door------..-.o!495

and other items too numerous to mention .

CARNAHAN AUCTION SERVICE
mo .~t-read comic strip1
949-2708 - J. C~rnahan
D. Smith-949-2033 .
A- It is beJie·;ed to be
Racine, Ohio
" Pea nuts." by C. M. Schulz. I ,.;.Pilhiiiolinlieii
.9JiJ85it-li3JiJ83ii2;.._ _ _ _ _ _•Chiiiiieiiisloteliroi'•Oiohliii.o-• IL,;,.~ot responsible f9r accidenh or loss of property.

11:95

finish. like new blue vinyl Int.

Sears Jet water pumps, complete, box of carpenter tools.
hand tools, 2 HP electric motor, 15 ton jack, PTO grass
seeder, Huffy 5 HP riding mower. Rototilier. log chains,

LUn\.n 1"\n ...... ...

1969
CHEVELLE
2

1969 MERCURY MONTEGO

md--------------~

saw, 16' rubber t ired wagon , Mac 15 chain saw, Molasses
m ill and evaporator pan complete, 16' extension ladders, 2

Terrris : Cash

o cyi,

Dr.·---··

SENTINEL
CARRIERS
IN POMEROY

A

dr

'2495

Speed, vinyl top.

1965
Buick Special 4
V-e motor. auto. trans., radio, good w-s-w fires, white

WANTED!

HAVE

Fred S. Blaettnar, Partner

Fairlane 500 4 doo,', L;_,at~wner, -n...:;, tires;-;,le!ln Int .. 6
cyl, std. trans. , radio.

Oeland
Realty

-----~

Blaettnar Auto Co.

1968 Docile 'Dart 4 Door-----'1495
11*

Convertible .

4

4 Dr., sedan. 6 cyl., auto. , low mileage.

. HT Cpe., towner &amp; very nice, V-Benglne, wide ova( tires,
P.S., P. B., factory air cond., radio&amp; otherexlras .

SPECIAL

'3195
1970 Ford Custom 500,
sedan.

4 Dr. Sedan.

1967 Ford Mustang -·----- '1595

F

1971 Ford Mustang, 2 dr .
H.T., VB, outo. sllift.

1971 CHEVROLET

4 Or.;v:eengine, automatic trans., P.S .. facfory air, good
fires, radio &amp; other extras, white finish, clean interior .

MOBil£ HOMES

Middleport

lrd Ave .

4 Dr ., sedan, vinyl top, air conditioning.

1970 Dodge Polan~ ·------·'2495

·270 Series, vinyl roof, white tinlsh,-litl good fires,
automatic trans ., radio, cie!ln Interior.

CARLOT

1970 FORD

Both I and my family thank you greatly, and look
forward to serving you in our future field of operation.

Less than 10,000 miles by Iota! owner. Sharp as new in ali
ways, white' over gold finish, 350 V-8 engine, power
steering, radio, white-watis, wh. covers.

MILLER

.NEW- USED

1970 FIAT SPIDER 850

4

"When we asunder part,
It gives us inward pain:
But we shall still be joined in heart,
And hope to meet again."

Sport equipped, Ctasstc copper with &amp;andatwood lnterJor,

(n

f . ,

KEITH GOBLE
FORD

1970 CHEVROLET

1970
Camaro Cpe. --..----- '3295.
l....ss man 11,000 Jl'lli~ &amp; appe!lrance of i1 model. Rally

Middlepor t. . Buill-in kitchen ,

ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT . Auto Sales
In Memory
ceramic tile bath, aU -electric!
overweight lad ies, teenS and
heat, good neig hborhood, Can
IN LOVING memory of our
12:
·
.14'
·
24'
WIDE
men interested in a Weight '65 PONTIAC l)onneville, '66
arrange FHA f ina ncing .,
father and mother, Edward
Pontiac
fr
on
t
en
d
for
parts,
Watchers IRJ Class in
Telephone 99n6oo or 992and Mary Fuller, who passed , Pomeroy write : Weight
a l so '59 Pon tiac. Phone 7422186.
away Jan. 1952 and Sept. 1967,
4871, Eimer Milchell , Ri. I,
Walchers tRI , 1863 Section
7-25-tfc
Middleport.
also our brother, ICricket)
Rd .. Cincinnati , Ohio 45237.
Howell Fuller who was kill&amp;d
10·8·3 lc
~ IX ROOM house, bath, · tutr
10·3-lfc
in a car wreck Jan . 1953.
·mo Washington' Bfvd .
baseme~t , 133 Bullernt,t~ A've ,,1
Don 't ask us if we mi ss, For
just wa lk ing d is taoce~~o from1
Belpre,
Ohio
REDUCE
safe
and
fasi
with
1966
PONTIAC
Lemans,
1964
words cannot express the
d&lt;Jwn town Pomeroy . Contactt
Gobese
tablets
and
E-Vap
Pontiac
Catal
ina
.
Co
nta
ct
'
--loneliness without them,
: d Hedrick , 2137 Wadswo1!1rJ
Water Pills. Nelson Dr ugs.
Gerald R. Doug las, Baum
Or the aching emptiness, The
1970
SCHULTZ
mobile
home
urive,
Columbus, Ohio, phonel
9-22.30ip
Addition , Rt. 3, Pomeroy or
years may wipe out many
60xi2
with
expando,
two
231·4334,
Columbus.
phone
985-3807.
things,
bedrooms,
excellent
con
5-9-ttd
10·6-4tc
But t his they wipe out never , GUN SHOOT, Sunday , October
dillon
.
Make
us
an
offer.
See
-The memory of those happy
to, I p.m , Racine Gun Club.
anytime, 982 Hyse ll St.,
days.
10·6-4ic
Middleport.
Wh en we were all toge ther.
For Sale or Trade
10·6-4tc
Sadly missed by daughlers. KOSCOT Kosmetics for sale,
1964
I=HEVY
2
dr
..
standard,
v.
(Lou ise) Mr s. Sam Yates ,
delivered to your door. New
B. 1967 Firebird convertib le,
Racine, Ohio, (Helen) Mrs . products
coming
out
aulomatic
1963 Oidsrnobile, 4 Mobile Homes for Sale
Robert Ntberi , Northup, Ohio . regularly. Would you · like to
dr. ha rdtop , automatic .
10,10-lic try them? Ca ll 992-511 3.
Gi FINANCING AVAILABLE :
Phone 992-6547.
~08 East Main
10·5-tfc
No down payment. 12 yea r s to
- 10·8-3tc
POMEROY
WHY ' whould our tears in - - - - - -- - pay lo qualified GL Up to
sorrow flow , When God Auto Sales
$1 ,500 available for lot im· BUSINESS AND HOME OF
recalls His own;
For Sale
provements if you own a ioi.
YOUR OWN FOR ONE
And bids them leave a world of I97U OLDS Cutlass, 2 door.
Get your new mobile home
140,000
BTU,
Sears
600
series
woe , For a·n immortal crown? hardto~ , 1962 Olds Sta rhre ,
now. See James Sim pkins,
PRICE , - 2 siory building
iuel oi l furnace and tank . Valley Estates Mobile Home
Is not e'en death a gain to those, ex tra n1ce, .1~31 Model a ford,
30x45 n1 ce apartment over , 3
basement typ e, used one
Whose life to God was given? good condJtJon. Phone 742Sales , Rl. 50 East Athens _
bedrooms, baih, lots of
wil)olqr, 5300, Ph,qne 949 · 2~71 ..• 593-8762
Giadiy to earlh their eyes they 44 23.
~,1C', stora g e , hardwood f loQJs,
t0-10-6tc
close , to open Ihem in heaven . _ _ _ _ __ _ _,_0-8-JtC
.
9-19-37tc
BUSINESS. ESTABLISHED
t N 1951, doing good busmess .
Their foils are past - their
1970 VW 7 passenger sta ti on
INTERESTED CALL US.
work is done, and they are Help Wanted
wagon " bus, " 24,000 miles, Real Estate
fu lly blest;
DEXTER - 2 slory frame , 4
They fought the fight. lhe , . . - - - - - - - ----, excellent condition inside and
· out , Includes at no extra For Sale or Trade
bedrooms, bath . GREAT
victory won, And entered into
charge (4) mud and snow ,
FOR FAMILY, lot 50x100,
rest.
sludded tires, $2,400. Call HOUSE - Two apts .. 4 rooms
space lor 2 cars , large storage
Then let your sorrows cease to
and
bath
each,
near
new
(day 1 992 2196 (after 61 949building , STEAL AT JUST
flow - God has recailod His
housing project. Trade fo r
4651,
ask for Frank Gheen.
$8,900.
own ,·
sma ll er house. Phone 992 ·
10-10·6tc
But let our hearts in every woe ,
2608.
SYRACUSE
DRIVE
IN ,
Sliil sa'y, "Thy will be done."
•
130,000 TOMATO sla kes, 6 II.
9-26·30tc
BUILDING
AND ALL
in memory of Henry R.
long. Call Huniington , W. Va - - - - - - - - EQUIPMENT, do ing nice
Beach, who departed this life
453-3412 or 453·2726.
business , OWNER HAS
October 9, 1964. Wife, Lydia
10-10·li e Real Estate For Sale
OTHER INTERESTS. JUST
Beach, Children, Mil dred
7-ROOM block house . 4 Sl8,500.
Jacobs, Oma Nelson . Clyda
H
&amp;
N
day
old
or
siaried
bedrooms, liv ing room, dining
Bing , Freda Van lnWagen ,
PHONE
992-2156
Leghorn
pull
ets
.
Both
floor
or
PLACE THE SALE OF
room, bath with shower, lar~e
Richard Beach.
cage
grown
available .
YOUR PROPERTY IN
kitchen with lotS of built-In
10-10-lie
Poultry
housi ng
and
COMPE:rENT HANDS
b irch Cab ine t s. Hardwood
FOR DETAILS!
automation. Modern Poultry ,
floors . Natura l gas furnace,
HENRY E. CLELAND
399 W. Mai n, Pomeroy , 992.
REALTOR
SO-gallon elecl ric water
Card of Thanks
2164 .
Office 992 -2259
heater. 2 large recreat ion
EA RN AT HOME addressing
10-10· itc
WE WISH to thank ihe many envelopes. Rush st amped
rooms, paneled in basement,
Residence 992·2568
people who were so kind,
2
porches,
garage,
concrete
10-5-6ic
addressed envelope. Osswald PAINT damage. 1971 Zig-Zag
helpful and understanding
dnvewa{,
large
yard
with
Mail Service, 5173 68th Lane.
sewing machines . Sti ll in
plenty o shade trees, located
during
our
period
of
51. Petersburg , Fla . 33709.
or iginal cartons. N o af .
on
la rge lot, 250 fl . by 250ft. on 1,000 FT. of Frontage on Rt . 7
bereavement. Our soecial
10-I0-6ip
between Chester and Tuppers
lachments needed as our
thanks go out to Ewing
SR 124 in Syracuse. Ohio.
Plains with water tap. With or
built
-in.
Sews
cont
r
ols
are
Available lor immed ia te
t-un eral Home, Dr. J . J .
without 25 wooded acres .
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
occupancy. To see, phone
Da vis. Dr . Lobo and his staff WIL L PAY well lor your spare
Henry Bahr , Phone 985-3988.
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
Gallipolis 446-9539after 5 p.m.
al
Cabell
Huntington tim e working at home for us.
Anyone
who
can
read
and
10-7·6fp
monograms, and blind hem
week days for appointmen t.
Hospital. the Rev . Rober t
write
ca
n
qualify
.
Weekly
slilch.
Full
case
pr
ice,
S3fl.50
Card, the organist and
10-3-tf
or budget plan available.
HOUSE , !642 Lincoln Heights.
voca list, and ail those who salary . Fo·r. 'detail s, write,
James Bliss Co., P. 0. Box
Phone 992.564 L
se n t flower s and food . The
Cali Dann y Thompson , 992ACRE farm . 3 ponds, fr ee
324, Dept. K 479. Levittown,
2196.
10·10·6tc 175gas,
family of Ada Taylor.
li mbe r , farm ing and
10-10-ltp Pa 19053
7-18-tfc
pasture land, well and cistern
9-28-12tc ELECTROLUX Vacuum
water . HOuse, downstairs, dry
Cleaner complete with at WE WISH io express our mosl
basement with gas furnace,
tachments , cordwinder and
heartfelt thanks to all ihose HOUSEKEEPER, companion
living room, bedroom, kit.
paint spray . Used b'ut in Hke
for elderly lady . Private
who were so kind and
chen
-dining area together .
new condition . Pay S37.45
ihoughttul to us in the loss ot living qua rters. Write to Box
built -in ca binet s, built -in
cash
or
credi t
it?rms
729-B. c-o The Dally Sentinel.
our dear mother , Mary
oven , bath. wall to wall
Pomeroy .
available. Phone 992-5641.
Hei nes. To all the nurses and
carpet . Upstairs
3
10-I06tc
ministers at Holzer Medi ca l _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _10_-8·6tp
bedrooms . plenty of closet
Center who were so attentive ·space . Out of Harr isonville on
during her stay there in lhe WAITRESS , no ex peri ence APPLES, Burdette Farm , County Road 17, Landon
In tensive Care Un it. Special
necessary, ni ght shift , apply
Pomeroy, J&lt;t. 2. Phone 992Smith. Phone 741-3694.
in person. Blue Tarta n,
thanks to our many friend s
3930.
10·7-3tc
who offered to assist us and
Middlepor t.
10.7.3tp
I0-8-6ic
appreciate these acts of
BEDROOM brick ;,um e.
kindness. Ewing Funera l
RED AND Green peppers, pick 3 Choice
location in Middleport. ·
Home, Mrs. Gerald Pull ins, Lost
your own, $2 bushel. Bring·
Seen
by
appointment only.
organist and the pallbearers .
co ntainers. Earl Adarns,
ON YOUR DIAL
Phone
992-5523
after 4 p.m. •
Letari Falls.
Al so to Rev . Eugene Gill for THREE MONTH OLD Black
5-7-tfc
'
10·7-3tc
, his prayers and consoling and White English Seiter on

We are especially grateful to our many friends who
have bought vehicles1 parts and services during this
time. We also want to thank our (faithful) employees
who have helped us in any way. We cannot ·forget the
manufacturers who have given us such splendid
products for so many years, and we must rem~mber
the financial institutions who have helped us to ftnance
our customers.

FOR THESE BmER

==~~~-,---

NEW, 3-bedroom

HARTS
HAS
THE
CAR
FOR
YOU

Dear Friends:

TEAfORD
SR.

sewing machine, makes
buftonholes, fashion designs,

STOP·W' .
SAJIE .

HUNT NO FURTHER

110 Metban1c Street
. etc. Total price $32.50. Phone
Pbineroy, Ohio
992-7085.
FURNISHED and
10·4·6ic CHESHIRE - Business lot with
apartments. Close to school.
- - - - -.c -:-:
. - .- block building.
Phone 992-5434.
·
10-1S-tfc POODLE pupp1es, S1lver Toy,
Parkview Kennels . Phone 992·. 2 HOUSES - One5rooms, bath,
t1X60 MOBILE home, 2 bdrm ..
5443.
furnace and garage. $6,500.00
was her and dryer, on
8-15-tfc other $4,500.00.
Bulaville-Porier Rd. Cali 675APPLES
Fitzpa triCk Or- HERE ITIS.-4acreson Route
1319 .
chards, State Roule 689, 7. 5 rooms, bath, panelina,
10-3-6 tc
phone Wilkesv ille, 669·3785. carpeting. Only $10,500.00.
. 9-3-tfc
TRAILER space, de s irable
4 BEDROOMS - Bath, gas
'·'
neighborhood . phone 992-2084. MUMS, ail ..colors,
field
grown,
furnace . Nicely arranged.
9-19-tfc
ready to go. Big clusters.
New
doubl e · garage.
Reynolds Flower Shop,
$14,500.00.
TRAILER LOTS, Bob's.Moblie . Mason, W. Va.
Co uri , Rl. 124, Syracuse,
10-S-6tp LOOK - 30 acres on 143.
0hio 992-295 I.
Sever~! building sites. Only
·~­
4-2-tfc -----~----~
POTATOES for winter . Ken : $5,000.00.
nebec , red Poniiac . 1 mile off
124 on 338 ioward terry Great WARM - Nice 3 bedrooms, 1'12
UNFURNISHED apartme nl
Bend . Tom Sayre, Phone 843· baths, gas furna ce. Modern
with 4 large rooms and bath,
2436.
furnace
heat,
new ly
kitchen with stove and
decorated. Phone 992 2864
10-6-61p refrigera tor, 2 lot s, double
I0-8-3ic
garage .
"S TAR " ki ll s rats qui ck ly.
Sure . 2'h pounds , SL69, REASONABLE - 3 bedrooms,
TRAILER spaces, exira large,
Ebersbach Hardware, Sugar
bath , gas iurnace. Garage. 2
overlooking the Ohio River Run Mills. Pickens Hard· acres . Only $8,()()('.00.
525 a monih . Velma G.
ware , Mason .
Zuspan, Mason , W. Va .
9·21 -30tp
PRICES ARE RISING.
10-5·20tc
BETTER BUY NOW
APARTMENTS, furn ished or
AND SAVE .
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
unfurnished, beautif ul large
ASSOCIATE
rooms, central heaL garbage
992-3325 992-2378
di sposal, di shwa she r , car pels Phone 992-3074.
10·10-6tc
10-5-6tc
·•·

~

RUMMAGE Sale in Fry
Building, Middleport, Oct. 13
RATES
thru 16. Funds for building of
For Want Ad Service
Free Will Baptist Church.
5 cents per Word one insert ion
Also have Mink Stole for sale,
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three. S50 cash or trade for 20 books
of S &amp; H or TV Stamps. Cali
consec uti ve insert ions.
992-2324 if interested in siole.
18 cents per word six consec utive insertions.
10-I0-3tc

,•

,.

-..
•

The '

for mare than one incorrect
insert ion.

,.

MOBILE

objectional.

publisher will not be responsible
992-2174

co uples.

highway . Reynolds
Shop.

ooaaaa oaaaa aaaa a a:; :.anraa: :aaaaaaaa: c: a a aa a~

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

.•

idea l for

Contact McClure's Dairy Isle, MINIATURE Sctiriiiu'zers AKC puppies, no shedding.
992-5248 or 992-3436.
odorless,
permanent shols.
10-6-Sip
wormed, $85. Coolville 667 ·
6214 .
4 ROOM and bath furn ished
9-29· 12tp
apartment. Te lephone 773 -

Classifieds

\WATCH FOR OUR GRAND OPENING I

.•

ment,

5145, Mason, W. Va. on main

5 PM. Oay Before Publication

...

· For Sale
Rea 1Estate For Sale
For Rent or Sale
,.
HOME Comfort cook stove, 52.300 WILL bUY &gt;J acres In
NEW 1 bedroom mobile home
good cond ition .. 2 wileel
loca led inMason, W. Va . Call
Bedford Township, Wolfpen
trai ler . Phone 992-6467. No
Roberl DJXon, Me1gs Mobile
Road . 20 minutes from
Sunday calls.
Home Sales, Tuppers Plain s,
Pomeroy. 'I• of land in timber,
10·8-61p balance in pasture. No
667-3891.
buildings. Call 992-2152 and
10-8-3tc
!;OAL, limestone . ExcelsiQ'fl ask for Dick .
,
.' &gt;if Works. E. Main Sl:,
9-22-tfc
,.&gt;omeroy. Phone 992-3891. 1 - tra iler apart
. -- "-9.. flc.

MOTOR, INC.
.

'2495

I

1966 G.M.C., 2...... Ton_ 1~tf11
Dump Body, good ,.x2t
tires.

'1895
We Still Have 4 New
71's.
'
2-:-2 DR. H.T. L l.D.
2-4 DR. H. 1'. L T~
_power,

�. 24 ....: The Sunday Times.Sl&gt;nttnei,Sint.y,Oct.10, 19'71

· •· · ,.,.v.v.;,:.'.;,~'''"'''&gt;i•'S•VS·······~····•&gt;•;o;&lt;'W••···s,•Y'
• •• ••;::·:·.··
· w,,.,.,
...,............
,.,,,..·.~~•,·:::;··-.--"-2'.&lt;"""'"
·· ,.,.,.,.,"',. ··~~-u-='"'"'W...W'm~·"'•
w~
..~··
~r. rrn:.
.....,-.:..-..-.. ,o,,o,;o;y;o.,"-..;:..-v_.. _o,o!•.•!·.~·-·!·~!o!o.o\!·»~-·=-:•.•.•!•:O:•.•.•:o.•!•!·!•!•:•:•:o,;
o\"»:o&gt;.-.........x-.x-:-;-;o;Q;., . .................. .:~~:-:.:;:o:r.o:-.-8!o:-:o:.:-.:..
..:.w.·.-.·-·.--.,;""''"ih ....•;y;.o;.r.Q.•!•:.r.
...~.

I~

Times-Sentinel
Feature Page

~B

Beat....

I
I

l Of the Bend

l

I By Bob Hoeflich

I

I

I
I

I

I

POMEROY - It's difficult to realize that Mrs. Rose Reynolds
has worked at the Citizens' National Bank in Middleport over f&gt;O
years isn't it? She just couldn't be that old!
Mrs. Reynolds was reminiscing the other day about the
Reynolds Dairy Shop operated by her husband, Edgar, from 1941
to 1961 and recalled events which helped close the establisluoent.
One of the factors involved was the beginning of a school lunch
program. Before the program went into effect, employes of the
dBiry shop would look from the shop window down Fourth Ave. to
view students enroute from the school to the dairy shop. When
they spotted the first students, the milk shake machines would be
put into operation and the employes started preparing hot dogs
and hamburgers for the onalaught. The shop would fiU up and
empty a couple of times during the lunch hour.
Another factor influencing the closing was the installa~on of
ice cream cabinets in grocery stores. Before that time, residents
would go to the shop to purchase packaged ice cream to take
home. However, with the grocery stores making ice cream
available, patrons just purchaaed the dessert along with their
groceries. Edgar, by the way, made his own ice cream.
So, the pendulum swings. Perhaps, it will swing back and
again people wiU be turning to the dairy shop with indoor sealing.
WE ARE HAPPY to get your letters to the editor but let us
remind you that they must carry your signature. The signature
can be withheld upon request but the original letter must have a
signature.
MRS. MARTIIA ROSE has found receptive clientele for her
Hidden Treasures Gift Shoppe in her home on County Road 34
near Royal Oak Park. However, the problem now is whether there
will be enough handmade items avaUable for the demand . Anyone
who has a hobby which might provide articles for the shoppe can
con tact Mrs. Rose.
SIXTY-FOUR POMEROY ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
students took part in Thursday night's art class ·under the
direction of Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis with parents and teachers
assisting with the large number taking part.
The Class has been uoderway several weeks and enrollment
hangs in the 60's which is really amazing. Besides voluntarUy
giving up an evening, youngsters also have to pay a srnaU fee -a
portion of which goes for some of their materials- to take part in
the program. Already, the children have had ~perience in
pastels, sketching and finger painting and will be moving into
working with oUs in the near future.
Incidentally, there is a possibility that a similar program will
be developed at the Middleport Elementary School in the near
future.

-··

, _ __

••

·- ·

..

•

..
'

+

' . . ..

tmts·

'

'

'.

•

':' ·~ ·

'.
'

·· - ·

.

Devoted To· The Greater
Middle Oliio .Valley
.
·'

.

'

~

'

r

I ..

OW!

HERE'S TI1E FACE-OFF
FOR THE START OF THE
BIG HOCKE'f' GAME ..

Letters of
Opinion

ON THE

OW!

SHtN!

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
IJ=lir=ll

~

•·

OW!
ooooo!!

'-IE J.IIT ME

I

. ...

LNien of apillbll are welcomed. 1bey should be less
~:: IliaD 300 words lq (01' be subject to reducll411 by tbe editor)
wscs of the Racine : IJ!!Imut be alpecl with lbe signee's addresa, Names may
Charge held a special meeting
be withheld upon pabUcaUaa, however, 411 request. Letten
Tuesday evening at the , aboaid be ill good taate, addmsillg lmles, not penoaallties.
Methodist Church in Racine
with a missionary from
Pakistan as guest speaker. Hurrah for Kids, Team, School
Members from Apple Grove
Church attending were Mrs. To the Parents of Meigs Local School District:
I think the people of Pomeroy, Middleport and Rutland have a
Donna Hill, Mrs. Dolly Wolfe,
Mrs. Lucille Rhodes, Mrs . lot to be thankful for and we should count our blessings.
First, we have the very best schools, our elementary SChoolS,
Bessie Parsons, Mr. and Mrs .
Early Roush. From the Letart and our new Meigs High. The kids are great. We have a footbsU
FaUs Church were Mrs. Lois team and band to be very proud of.
I think if everyone would praise instead of gripe all the time,
Bell, Mrs. Nora Cross, Mrs.
Erma Hili, Mrs. Inez Hill. At- we would all be better off.
tending from East Letart were
Our children need praise ; we like praise and attention, so our
Mrs. Mabel Shields, Mrs. Nora children need it more.
Pearson, Mrs. Margaret
Back your schools, join the PTA, the band boosters, the
Gloeckner, Mrs. Hazel Fox and varsity clubs, take a part in things! Join your chUdren, bridge the
Mrs . Focie Hayman .
sCH:alled generation gap. All you have to do is love them and
Mr . and Mrs. Don BeD 'spent a praise them.
morning. with Raymond BeU at
All this griping ·and growling just pushes the kids farther
Oak Grove. Monday evening away from us. We create the hippies and yippies.
they visited Mr. and Mrs. Paul
I say hurrah for the kids, hurrah for the band and hurrah for
Erwin and family .
the footba:ll team!!!
Recent guests of Mr . St. Clair
God Bless them aU.
Hili were Mr. and Mrs. Harold
A parent (Name withheld on re&lt;\llest).
Grimm, Joe and Bob Grimm,

Hayman who is recuperating at
her home were Mrs. Scott
Wheeler and Mary Elizabeth of
Wheelersburg, Mrs. Lucy
Donohue, Mrs . Hazel Fox, Mrs.
Clara Adams, Mrs. Barbara
Dugan and Mrs . Margaret
Gloeckner.
Mr. and Mrs . Fern Norris of
Racine spent Sunday afternoon
with Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Norris.
Mr . and Mrs. Scott Wheeler
and Mary Elizabeth of
Wheelersburg spent the
weekend with Mr . and Mrs.
Theron Johnson and made
apple butter.
Mrs. Benny Boggess and son,
Wayne, Mr . and Mrs. Lloyd
Sayre and son, Chad, of
Minersville and Steve Norris
were dinner guests Suoday of
Mr. and Mrs . Jess Anderson.
Mr . and Mrs. Jim Roush of
Letart spent Sunday afternoon
withMr .andMrs. Roy Pearson.
Mr . and Mrs. John Ord and all of Columbus, Mr . and Mrs.
son of New Haven spent Harold Roush of Portland,
Saturday with Mrs. Euia Wolfe Harold Kiser and friends of
and Aaron.
Napoleon, Dallas Hill and Bob
Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner and Burnem. '
son, David, visited with Mr. and St. Clair Hill was an overnight
Mrs. Larry Badely and children guest of Mr . and Mrs. Harold
at Fairfax, Va . Mrs. Gloeckner. Roush at Portland and attended
will rema'in for an indefinte services at the Methodist
visit. David returned to enter Church.
Ohio State University.
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Erwin and
Mrs. Blanch Winters and children of Dorcas spent SunHerschel Winters of Rio Grande day evening with Mr. and Mrs.
called on Mrs. Ada Norris, Mr . Don Bell and Lorna.
and Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner Mr . and Mrs. Howard Roush
.
Sunday.
of Mansfield spent a weekend
The Golden Rule Sunday with Mrs. Edna Roush and
, School class of · the Letart Gladys· Shields and attended
Methodist Church met at the funeral services for their aunt,
home of Mrs. Lois Bell Thurs- Mrs. Josie Roush in Pomeroy .
. day evening. Attending . were Calling on Mrs . Edna Roush
, Mrs. Margie Roush, Mrs. ln~z on Sunday, Sept. 19 and helping
Hill, Mrs. Grace Huffman, Mrs. her celebrate her 85th birthday
Mary Hill, .Mrs. Nora .Cross, at the home of Mrs. Gladys
Mrs . Erma Hill . Guests were Shields at Racine were Mr. and
Beth Ann Huffman·, Linda Hill, Mrs. Herbert Roush and Roger,
and the hostesses, Mrs. Lois Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush,
Bell and daughter, Lorna .
Sharon, Cindy, Davi'd and
Weekend guests of Mr . and Edward, Mr . and Mrs. Ronnie
TO CALL FOR THE BEST Mrs. Wallie Stover were Mr . Russell , Mr . and Mrs. Dana
BUY ON YOUR INSURANCE and Mrs . Larry Johnson and Lewis , Mrs . Jim Connolly ,
two children of Mammoth, W. Brian and Shelly, Mr. and. Mrs.
Va . Sunday guests of the Roger Manuel, Mr. ahd Mrs.
CARROL K. SNOWDEN
Stovers were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hill, Mr. and Mrs .
Park ~tnlral Hotel Bldg.
!.conard Sto ver and two Randall Roberts, Todd, LeslieSecond Ave. Ph. 44f·4Z90
•:hildrcn, Mrs. Belv~ Fi.;ller and and Chad.
Horroe Ph. 446.4518
two children, Mrs . Bertha M~ . and Mrs . Cliaries
"G•IIiPOIIs
'Rollinson and Mrs. Facie Winebrenner and children of
r.:..:::-:
.....:::'1
.. STATE fARM Hayman
Cheshire spenl Suoday with Mr .
A
Mrs . Ger-ald Hayman ~nd and Mrs. Ve'rnon Donohue.
'"'""' -Ofilm, ll«ml•ll••· llllntll Mrs. Berth~ R&lt;Jbinson were· Mr . and Mrs. l)rew Fisher
a &amp;ttfttO
~ucsls ,f Mrs. Amoa Scarberry. haw oun:ltased a mobile hume

'-""eom"nltl

.L

:

l

Apple Grove News, Events v~e

TH
MAN

· ·-

'

i

Mrs. Focie Stover at Evans, W.

IS···)

Gtillia ·

we've run yet!' His dejected answer
embarrass .Cooper by giving his foot. ~
was: 'Yeah, I know. But every lime I
ball team a good flogging.
~~
· get near that sideline some crazy man
"So we recruited !he meanest bunch ~
BY HOBART wti!ON, JR
hits me with a singletree! '
we could muster. Some of our guys ~.
"Mocco (Cornell) went out early.
hadn't played football.,or years. Others %
They musta heard he liked to run into
had never played the game. Some had ~
SfEVE Stebbins, a 1971 Gallia Academy High Schol·
people. They obliged him. DaUey
~ver even gone to high sch~l. But, .~ graduate, Is now a member of Purdue University's famowi AJI.
replaced ·Mocco and soon was unWith thlt incentive, they shaped up ~:: America marching ~d.
conscious too. They fed on fullbacks."
pretty .fast. Regretfully, you guys :::!
+++
For years the authoc thought the
walked mto the trap. Nothing personal, :~:
Sf EVE, f(.l'lller band, baskeu.Jllllld lmt .tlndoulal GAlli
final score was BU. Recently, a paryou understand.
.
;:::
'~"
ticipant said he thougbtit had been 118-0.
"SUre, of course. No offense." That :::: isthesonofMr.andMrs.John
Stebbins.
On
'the
weekend
of
Infonned the reported score was 57.0, · guy was still mighty sturdy.
:~:
.,
he replied:
But the 1927 season didn't end with ~:; Oct. 2, Mr. and Mrs. Stebbins
"Pal, it's anybody's guess. The
Ravel)swood. One very important i§ journeyed to West Lafayette,
score could've been anything. Those
contest remained, to be played at home. :;:; Ind ., to watch Steve perfonn
guys were so big and tough and firedMonday's Tribune headlined:
~~ with the Boilennaker band
up, they not only ran over us, they
"Preparing For Turkey Day's Rig % during the Purdue-Iowa Big 10 , 0
stomped as they went. That team
Football Game. Annllal .Clsssic With ~ football game.
+++
scored any time it w.anted. H an opPt. Pleasant Wlli Draw Thousands. ::~
A
freshman
majoring in
ponent got tired he simply ~changed
Blue Devils Work Hard."
::~
with a buddy just as rugged, and took a
"Pt. Pleasant r~ters are coming :::; engineering, Steve, as he did .
little breather. For us, it was sheer selfdown en masse to witness the game. :::; for A. K. (Red) Suiter's GAHS
preservation."
Rooters of both cities will have their :::; band, plays the trombone.
And so it went for any Blue DevU
bands and each will slage a parade :i:!· Steve's dad, one of Gallia
team's"iongestday."Theygotzapped,
before the game .... Pt. Pleasant ::::· Academy's all-time great
but good.
discounts the overwhelming defeat of ·:::: athletes 11946-49) said that
FoUowing the game the Blue DevUs
Ga:Uipolis by Ravenswood, pointing out i:i: ABC-TV is scheduled to shoot
received perfect hospitality. The
Ravenswood scored two unearned :::: a special feature on the
Ravenswood ladies treated the boys to
touchdowns and Gallipolis did not exert :::: Purdue band when the
a fine down-home supper. Those able to
itself, and that Coach Cooper used his :::: Boilermakers · take on Mineat, that is. Nothing personal, you
second and third teams most of the ~:: nesota. "They didn't say when
understand.
·
game." (Cooperusedhisreserves? You !:!: it would be shown over the
Now for the kicker. Some dozen
can bet your old barracks bag he did!) :::: national network," John remarked.
+++
years later a Blue DeVIl player, in
A classified ad read : "The Lady ::::
GALUPOUS residents should be proud that a l&lt;'cal boy has
Pittsburgh on business, wondered
who lnst the crank for an Overland car ::::
about one man present- feeling they'd
may have same by paying for ad." And :::: made the "big time"show in collegiate ranks. Very few freshmen
met before. Eventually they chatted
the Gallipolis Theater was featuring ~:: ever make the big Jump, esPecially at Purdue. It's an honor for
and the stranger admitted he'd been
Lon Chaney in "Mockery." (D'ja .:::: Steve, his parents, and all who assisted him while a student at
eyeing the Gallipolltan in turn. So, it
suppCl!le Chaney'd been at Raven- !:) Ga:Uia Academy High School. Steve, if his schedule permits, may
transpired the guy was from Ravensswood?)
::~; try out for the Purdue track team next spring.
wood and they'd met sure enough;
Wednesday's paper stated: :~:'
+++
glaring volcanically across a scrim"Preparations Complete For Grid ':!!
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the fUes of the DaUy Tribune
mage line in 1927.
Clsssic. Predict Cold Snappy Day ."
::! and weekly Gallia Times , .. Ed Mullinealll[ claimed by death ....
This fellow solved the mystery yet
•:coach Cooper's Blue Devil :::: Nolan P. Carter and uncle; Gene Carter, purchase White Imsurrounding that fabled GAHS rout :
warnors went through a light workout :::: plement Co .... Carl Glliespie named District FFA repocter ....
"You see, the general economic
Tuesday evening, .centering their at. :::: Eugene McMahon home leveled by fire at Gage .... Gene
situation was poor. The labor situation
tention on signal drlll. No practice wiU : :::
Wetherhoit injured in grid drills at Ohio University .... GAHS
was tense. Lots of folks were in a real
be held this evening. The boys will get a i:!:
defeats Logan 26-13 for second straight victory.
bad mood. Now if you recall, your
rest one day before the big game. DriU ::::
coach, Isaac Cooper, is a Ravenswood
Mooday and Tuesday polished up the :;::
native. And his life position, his ad- forward pass defense which i.s expected N!:l
BIGGER HOSPITAL
Q-What military salute COLUMBUS (UP!) - A $'1
vantages, or whatever, did not exacUy
to stop Pt. Pleasant's aerial attack. :;:)
paraUei that of the average guy in
Each player is on fighting edge. "
.:!( is accorded to the U.S. vice mlllion expansion and partial
president?
thnse parb. NaturaUy, somebody got
SUre they were.
~1:
A-He is entitled to a 19· renovation· program was anthe notion it would be a good idea to
(To Be Continued)
:::1 gun salute, and is entitled to nounced Friday for Children's
the same amount of ruffles Hospital, including an adand
flourishes (four) as the ditional three-11tory building to
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::~::8:::::::::~::;:;:;~:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::~:!;!;!;!;!~:::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:;;:;:; : ;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::
president.
house new patients care
m;; 11110\ltU:.:. ::..u 1
facilities .
ATHLETE DIES
~
LONDON , Ohio (UPI)
:-:;:
Harry Dwight Steel, 72, an area '
farmer wlio was a prominent '
athiete&lt;n_the early 192~, died
Friday. He \vas a member of the
19~24 Ohio State University
Make Elberfelds In Pomeroy your headquarters for
football teams and won an M
~·
Olympic gold medal for M~.·.
wall-to-wall carpeting for every room in your home.
··~
wrestling in 1924.
:~::
I I I~,_.'-'
~~·
BY J. A. McKEAN
(Series Continued)
~
GALUPOUS - While recalling
~ . the Gallipolis . Ravenswood football
:~ game, Nov. 18, 1927 several relevant
~' factors must be regarded. Then, advanced scouting was virtually nil, since
~:~ a:ll schools used basically the same
formadons. Oh, occasionally a kid
::;:: would acquire an area 'rep' but that
:~:: was dealt with at game time. It was a
.:::: simple game - you got the baU and
::::: took it to 'em.
:!i:
Squads were srnaU in numbers and
::::: size (Today's high school team
::::: averages a good 20 lbs. heftier.) Watch:::: charm guards and 125lb. backs were
:::: commonplace. Eligibility observance
:::: was shadowy, especially in non~:: conference games.
::::
We have noted it was a time when
industrial strife was unusua:Uy bitter,
:):: particularly in the coal fields, and ours
:::: is a coal region. And a rare, but very
.~ salient specific affected that contest
~::: and will be revealed in this text.
':!!
Now, there follows some personal
:l: accounb given me over the years by
•::~ GAHS players: incidents which lead to
:;:~ the belief no true report of that gridiron
:1( classic will ever be written. The players
:::; speak:
::!
"When we first lined up, 1 saw the
:::: guy opposite me had week.()Jd, heayy
:::: black whiskers. Must have weighed 200
i* and been 25 years old. Man, he looked
~:: fierce -and he was. Liked to tromped
~:;: me to death.
~!
"We made a couple of yards, with
:::: the tackle and me gelling a good high!!i low block oo a burly Uneman. He was
~: chompin' a huge 'chaw'. As we lined up
~: next, he pointed to Ille and said, 'Sonny
~; Boy, try that trick again and I'm gonna
~~ spit right in your eye.' It was too late_
~1 I had him to block. But he didn't spit in
:~ my eye. Just !jpurted a dark stream of
!;~ ihat tobacco juice and hit the bridge of
!* my nCl!le and got both eyes. I left for a
:::: speU.
;:::
"We had the ball near the sideline.
::::
The signal ca:Ued for a ciose-6ide run .
N
:::: Our tackle objected at once, even
)!: pleaded, 'Don't! Please don't ca:U that
:!:j play again!' Irritably, he was asked,
:::! 'Why not? It's the only decent play

~·

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Casper
and grandsons, BiUy and Brian
Dye , Columbus, spent a
weekend with the latter 's
mother, Mrs . DoUy Wolfe and
helped her celebrate her birthday. On Monday evening a
dinner was held in Mrs. Wolfe 's
honor at the home of another
daughter , Mrs. Dallas Hill.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Junior Wolfe and Wendy of
Cheshire, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Rou~h and son, Joey, Mrs.
Mike Hill and Dolly, Jan, Artie ,
Dean and Dallas HiU.
Miss Loretta Ours of Middleport spent a weekend with
her parents, Mr . and Mrs.
Ralph Ours at New Brighton,
Pa., and helped t11e,m celebrate
their 30th wedding anniversary.
Mr . Ours is a former resident.
Mrs. Focie Hayman and Mrs.
Bertha Robinson spent Sunday
afternoon with their brother,
Mr . and Mrs . Wallie Stover.
Mr . and Mrs. Don Bell and
Lorna and Mrs. Bell's father ,
St. Clair HiD, spent Saturday
with Mr . and Mrs. J.D. Thomas
and Henry at Lanham, W. Va .
Calling on Mrs . Ferne

,,,

~:::

~~
~

·---------------------------,I

I

1
·
J0UTft8
l

:.&lt;:

7s::s:s:: ::cr:s::s:ss:s:sssss 1:1 :I,~SIIIIIII lllts:::==::s~s:;sr:
1
I
I

S0 rf 0 {

t
You ·Can't Get to There : :;
From Here No More
i;l

'(OU ·~TvPIP

51RO! 'i91fik'NE~
I OU&gt;N'T HAVE

..

I ' "'.........

ANI{ SHIN
PADS ON!

ow! oooo!

.,

ow!!
ooooo!

ow!!

NQ(L)

·lb ~PEND THE
NEXT HOUR

S!TT!Ne IN ML(

WHIRL. POOl.
BATH ...

1~-/0

Hundreds of samples of Lees and many other popular brands of carpet -

-

by. Coker &amp; Penn~

LANCELOT
.

I HAVr:

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

Nylon, ~odel, Acrilan, Wool, Polyester.

Rata-tat-tat and Oompa Oompa!
Oct. 5, 1971
Pomeroy, Ohio
Dear Editor:
As members of the Meigs Marauder hand, we have one
question to ask, Why?! ! !
Why doesn't anyone at our school care about the band?
People, we're getting really fed up. We've been put down by the
public in general, and that includes our student body, and football
team, and even some teachers.
In the letter pubUshed last Friday, we were blamed as a
reason for not having another championship team at Meigs. Now,
have you ever heard of anything so ridiculous?
NoW I suppose you'll blame the Ironton game on us, too, well,
goahead,butthatdoesn'tmakeitanylessridiculous.
Whoever wrote that letter should leU the truth. At Wellston
the only Ume we didn't play the fight song after a tOuchdown was
when we were lining up for our halftime show, which, we might
add, none of our publlc appreciated, and the third quarter, the
only time we have off during a game.
There has also been talk about how the Gallipolis band
marches through the streets playing the fight song. Now can you
picture Ill! marching down a Pomeroy street before a game? The
people who would be held up in traffic behind us wouldn't get to
the game until halftime .
The football team deserves plenty of support, but we stili exist
and we need some too.
Whoknows?Ifwehadsomemoresupportandlesscriticlsm
maybe we'd do things like Ironton or Gallipolis, or some of those
other bands you seem to think are so great. Anyway who wants to
be like them? We are Melgs, and why should we have to be Uke
any other band? '
P.S. we'renotashamed totellwhoare,elther.
The Drummers and Tuba players ofthe Meigs High Band.

L~t us show

you the samples,
take several
of your choice
home with you
'o observe in
your own setting.
We will send a
qualified person
to measure the
area you want
carpeted
and
we'll
quote the completely
Installed
price.

Easl Lelart.
and fressa •. of Mammoth, W.
Mr . and.Mrs. Robert Johnson Va .. soent a weekend with Mr.

·€rOM!:&gt; LS%et-J&amp; fROM 'fOU!

You can really
save on your
carpeting needs
at El.berfelds.

Use our sensible
credit service.

- - - - - - ' - - - ' - - - - - - - - - ' - - - --

·

MI.( WII='Ei WOU/..P L.IKe iO TAKE?:

ELBERFELDS -~
1 N.~
PO~M
~.EROY .

•

••
"~·

�. 24 ....: The Sunday Times.Sl&gt;nttnei,Sint.y,Oct.10, 19'71

· •· · ,.,.v.v.;,:.'.;,~'''"'''&gt;i•'S•VS·······~····•&gt;•;o;&lt;'W••···s,•Y'
• •• ••;::·:·.··
· w,,.,.,
...,............
,.,,,..·.~~•,·:::;··-.--"-2'.&lt;"""'"
·· ,.,.,.,.,"',. ··~~-u-='"'"'W...W'm~·"'•
w~
..~··
~r. rrn:.
.....,-.:..-..-.. ,o,,o,;o;y;o.,"-..;:..-v_.. _o,o!•.•!·.~·-·!·~!o!o.o\!·»~-·=-:•.•.•!•:O:•.•.•:o.•!•!·!•!•:•:•:o,;
o\"»:o&gt;.-.........x-.x-:-;-;o;Q;., . .................. .:~~:-:.:;:o:r.o:-.-8!o:-:o:.:-.:..
..:.w.·.-.·-·.--.,;""''"ih ....•;y;.o;.r.Q.•!•:.r.
...~.

I~

Times-Sentinel
Feature Page

~B

Beat....

I
I

l Of the Bend

l

I By Bob Hoeflich

I

I

I
I

I

I

POMEROY - It's difficult to realize that Mrs. Rose Reynolds
has worked at the Citizens' National Bank in Middleport over f&gt;O
years isn't it? She just couldn't be that old!
Mrs. Reynolds was reminiscing the other day about the
Reynolds Dairy Shop operated by her husband, Edgar, from 1941
to 1961 and recalled events which helped close the establisluoent.
One of the factors involved was the beginning of a school lunch
program. Before the program went into effect, employes of the
dBiry shop would look from the shop window down Fourth Ave. to
view students enroute from the school to the dairy shop. When
they spotted the first students, the milk shake machines would be
put into operation and the employes started preparing hot dogs
and hamburgers for the onalaught. The shop would fiU up and
empty a couple of times during the lunch hour.
Another factor influencing the closing was the installa~on of
ice cream cabinets in grocery stores. Before that time, residents
would go to the shop to purchase packaged ice cream to take
home. However, with the grocery stores making ice cream
available, patrons just purchaaed the dessert along with their
groceries. Edgar, by the way, made his own ice cream.
So, the pendulum swings. Perhaps, it will swing back and
again people wiU be turning to the dairy shop with indoor sealing.
WE ARE HAPPY to get your letters to the editor but let us
remind you that they must carry your signature. The signature
can be withheld upon request but the original letter must have a
signature.
MRS. MARTIIA ROSE has found receptive clientele for her
Hidden Treasures Gift Shoppe in her home on County Road 34
near Royal Oak Park. However, the problem now is whether there
will be enough handmade items avaUable for the demand . Anyone
who has a hobby which might provide articles for the shoppe can
con tact Mrs. Rose.
SIXTY-FOUR POMEROY ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
students took part in Thursday night's art class ·under the
direction of Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis with parents and teachers
assisting with the large number taking part.
The Class has been uoderway several weeks and enrollment
hangs in the 60's which is really amazing. Besides voluntarUy
giving up an evening, youngsters also have to pay a srnaU fee -a
portion of which goes for some of their materials- to take part in
the program. Already, the children have had ~perience in
pastels, sketching and finger painting and will be moving into
working with oUs in the near future.
Incidentally, there is a possibility that a similar program will
be developed at the Middleport Elementary School in the near
future.

-··

, _ __

••

·- ·

..

•

..
'

+

' . . ..

tmts·

'

'

'.

•

':' ·~ ·

'.
'

·· - ·

.

Devoted To· The Greater
Middle Oliio .Valley
.
·'

.

'

~

'

r

I ..

OW!

HERE'S TI1E FACE-OFF
FOR THE START OF THE
BIG HOCKE'f' GAME ..

Letters of
Opinion

ON THE

OW!

SHtN!

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
IJ=lir=ll

~

•·

OW!
ooooo!!

'-IE J.IIT ME

I

. ...

LNien of apillbll are welcomed. 1bey should be less
~:: IliaD 300 words lq (01' be subject to reducll411 by tbe editor)
wscs of the Racine : IJ!!Imut be alpecl with lbe signee's addresa, Names may
Charge held a special meeting
be withheld upon pabUcaUaa, however, 411 request. Letten
Tuesday evening at the , aboaid be ill good taate, addmsillg lmles, not penoaallties.
Methodist Church in Racine
with a missionary from
Pakistan as guest speaker. Hurrah for Kids, Team, School
Members from Apple Grove
Church attending were Mrs. To the Parents of Meigs Local School District:
I think the people of Pomeroy, Middleport and Rutland have a
Donna Hill, Mrs. Dolly Wolfe,
Mrs. Lucille Rhodes, Mrs . lot to be thankful for and we should count our blessings.
First, we have the very best schools, our elementary SChoolS,
Bessie Parsons, Mr. and Mrs .
Early Roush. From the Letart and our new Meigs High. The kids are great. We have a footbsU
FaUs Church were Mrs. Lois team and band to be very proud of.
I think if everyone would praise instead of gripe all the time,
Bell, Mrs. Nora Cross, Mrs.
Erma Hili, Mrs. Inez Hill. At- we would all be better off.
tending from East Letart were
Our children need praise ; we like praise and attention, so our
Mrs. Mabel Shields, Mrs. Nora children need it more.
Pearson, Mrs. Margaret
Back your schools, join the PTA, the band boosters, the
Gloeckner, Mrs. Hazel Fox and varsity clubs, take a part in things! Join your chUdren, bridge the
Mrs . Focie Hayman .
sCH:alled generation gap. All you have to do is love them and
Mr . and Mrs. Don BeD 'spent a praise them.
morning. with Raymond BeU at
All this griping ·and growling just pushes the kids farther
Oak Grove. Monday evening away from us. We create the hippies and yippies.
they visited Mr. and Mrs. Paul
I say hurrah for the kids, hurrah for the band and hurrah for
Erwin and family .
the footba:ll team!!!
Recent guests of Mr . St. Clair
God Bless them aU.
Hili were Mr. and Mrs. Harold
A parent (Name withheld on re&lt;\llest).
Grimm, Joe and Bob Grimm,

Hayman who is recuperating at
her home were Mrs. Scott
Wheeler and Mary Elizabeth of
Wheelersburg, Mrs. Lucy
Donohue, Mrs . Hazel Fox, Mrs.
Clara Adams, Mrs. Barbara
Dugan and Mrs . Margaret
Gloeckner.
Mr. and Mrs . Fern Norris of
Racine spent Sunday afternoon
with Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Norris.
Mr . and Mrs. Scott Wheeler
and Mary Elizabeth of
Wheelersburg spent the
weekend with Mr . and Mrs.
Theron Johnson and made
apple butter.
Mrs. Benny Boggess and son,
Wayne, Mr . and Mrs. Lloyd
Sayre and son, Chad, of
Minersville and Steve Norris
were dinner guests Suoday of
Mr. and Mrs . Jess Anderson.
Mr . and Mrs. Jim Roush of
Letart spent Sunday afternoon
withMr .andMrs. Roy Pearson.
Mr . and Mrs. John Ord and all of Columbus, Mr . and Mrs.
son of New Haven spent Harold Roush of Portland,
Saturday with Mrs. Euia Wolfe Harold Kiser and friends of
and Aaron.
Napoleon, Dallas Hill and Bob
Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner and Burnem. '
son, David, visited with Mr. and St. Clair Hill was an overnight
Mrs. Larry Badely and children guest of Mr . and Mrs. Harold
at Fairfax, Va . Mrs. Gloeckner. Roush at Portland and attended
will rema'in for an indefinte services at the Methodist
visit. David returned to enter Church.
Ohio State University.
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Erwin and
Mrs. Blanch Winters and children of Dorcas spent SunHerschel Winters of Rio Grande day evening with Mr. and Mrs.
called on Mrs. Ada Norris, Mr . Don Bell and Lorna.
and Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner Mr . and Mrs. Howard Roush
.
Sunday.
of Mansfield spent a weekend
The Golden Rule Sunday with Mrs. Edna Roush and
, School class of · the Letart Gladys· Shields and attended
Methodist Church met at the funeral services for their aunt,
home of Mrs. Lois Bell Thurs- Mrs. Josie Roush in Pomeroy .
. day evening. Attending . were Calling on Mrs . Edna Roush
, Mrs. Margie Roush, Mrs. ln~z on Sunday, Sept. 19 and helping
Hill, Mrs. Grace Huffman, Mrs. her celebrate her 85th birthday
Mary Hill, .Mrs. Nora .Cross, at the home of Mrs. Gladys
Mrs . Erma Hill . Guests were Shields at Racine were Mr. and
Beth Ann Huffman·, Linda Hill, Mrs. Herbert Roush and Roger,
and the hostesses, Mrs. Lois Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush,
Bell and daughter, Lorna .
Sharon, Cindy, Davi'd and
Weekend guests of Mr . and Edward, Mr . and Mrs. Ronnie
TO CALL FOR THE BEST Mrs. Wallie Stover were Mr . Russell , Mr . and Mrs. Dana
BUY ON YOUR INSURANCE and Mrs . Larry Johnson and Lewis , Mrs . Jim Connolly ,
two children of Mammoth, W. Brian and Shelly, Mr. and. Mrs.
Va . Sunday guests of the Roger Manuel, Mr. ahd Mrs.
CARROL K. SNOWDEN
Stovers were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hill, Mr. and Mrs .
Park ~tnlral Hotel Bldg.
!.conard Sto ver and two Randall Roberts, Todd, LeslieSecond Ave. Ph. 44f·4Z90
•:hildrcn, Mrs. Belv~ Fi.;ller and and Chad.
Horroe Ph. 446.4518
two children, Mrs . Bertha M~ . and Mrs . Cliaries
"G•IIiPOIIs
'Rollinson and Mrs. Facie Winebrenner and children of
r.:..:::-:
.....:::'1
.. STATE fARM Hayman
Cheshire spenl Suoday with Mr .
A
Mrs . Ger-ald Hayman ~nd and Mrs. Ve'rnon Donohue.
'"'""' -Ofilm, ll«ml•ll••· llllntll Mrs. Berth~ R&lt;Jbinson were· Mr . and Mrs. l)rew Fisher
a &amp;ttfttO
~ucsls ,f Mrs. Amoa Scarberry. haw oun:ltased a mobile hume

'-""eom"nltl

.L

:

l

Apple Grove News, Events v~e

TH
MAN

· ·-

'

i

Mrs. Focie Stover at Evans, W.

IS···)

Gtillia ·

we've run yet!' His dejected answer
embarrass .Cooper by giving his foot. ~
was: 'Yeah, I know. But every lime I
ball team a good flogging.
~~
· get near that sideline some crazy man
"So we recruited !he meanest bunch ~
BY HOBART wti!ON, JR
hits me with a singletree! '
we could muster. Some of our guys ~.
"Mocco (Cornell) went out early.
hadn't played football.,or years. Others %
They musta heard he liked to run into
had never played the game. Some had ~
SfEVE Stebbins, a 1971 Gallia Academy High Schol·
people. They obliged him. DaUey
~ver even gone to high sch~l. But, .~ graduate, Is now a member of Purdue University's famowi AJI.
replaced ·Mocco and soon was unWith thlt incentive, they shaped up ~:: America marching ~d.
conscious too. They fed on fullbacks."
pretty .fast. Regretfully, you guys :::!
+++
For years the authoc thought the
walked mto the trap. Nothing personal, :~:
Sf EVE, f(.l'lller band, baskeu.Jllllld lmt .tlndoulal GAlli
final score was BU. Recently, a paryou understand.
.
;:::
'~"
ticipant said he thougbtit had been 118-0.
"SUre, of course. No offense." That :::: isthesonofMr.andMrs.John
Stebbins.
On
'the
weekend
of
Infonned the reported score was 57.0, · guy was still mighty sturdy.
:~:
.,
he replied:
But the 1927 season didn't end with ~:; Oct. 2, Mr. and Mrs. Stebbins
"Pal, it's anybody's guess. The
Ravel)swood. One very important i§ journeyed to West Lafayette,
score could've been anything. Those
contest remained, to be played at home. :;:; Ind ., to watch Steve perfonn
guys were so big and tough and firedMonday's Tribune headlined:
~~ with the Boilennaker band
up, they not only ran over us, they
"Preparing For Turkey Day's Rig % during the Purdue-Iowa Big 10 , 0
stomped as they went. That team
Football Game. Annllal .Clsssic With ~ football game.
+++
scored any time it w.anted. H an opPt. Pleasant Wlli Draw Thousands. ::~
A
freshman
majoring in
ponent got tired he simply ~changed
Blue Devils Work Hard."
::~
with a buddy just as rugged, and took a
"Pt. Pleasant r~ters are coming :::; engineering, Steve, as he did .
little breather. For us, it was sheer selfdown en masse to witness the game. :::; for A. K. (Red) Suiter's GAHS
preservation."
Rooters of both cities will have their :::; band, plays the trombone.
And so it went for any Blue DevU
bands and each will slage a parade :i:!· Steve's dad, one of Gallia
team's"iongestday."Theygotzapped,
before the game .... Pt. Pleasant ::::· Academy's all-time great
but good.
discounts the overwhelming defeat of ·:::: athletes 11946-49) said that
FoUowing the game the Blue DevUs
Ga:Uipolis by Ravenswood, pointing out i:i: ABC-TV is scheduled to shoot
received perfect hospitality. The
Ravenswood scored two unearned :::: a special feature on the
Ravenswood ladies treated the boys to
touchdowns and Gallipolis did not exert :::: Purdue band when the
a fine down-home supper. Those able to
itself, and that Coach Cooper used his :::: Boilermakers · take on Mineat, that is. Nothing personal, you
second and third teams most of the ~:: nesota. "They didn't say when
understand.
·
game." (Cooperusedhisreserves? You !:!: it would be shown over the
Now for the kicker. Some dozen
can bet your old barracks bag he did!) :::: national network," John remarked.
+++
years later a Blue DeVIl player, in
A classified ad read : "The Lady ::::
GALUPOUS residents should be proud that a l&lt;'cal boy has
Pittsburgh on business, wondered
who lnst the crank for an Overland car ::::
about one man present- feeling they'd
may have same by paying for ad." And :::: made the "big time"show in collegiate ranks. Very few freshmen
met before. Eventually they chatted
the Gallipolis Theater was featuring ~:: ever make the big Jump, esPecially at Purdue. It's an honor for
and the stranger admitted he'd been
Lon Chaney in "Mockery." (D'ja .:::: Steve, his parents, and all who assisted him while a student at
eyeing the Gallipolltan in turn. So, it
suppCl!le Chaney'd been at Raven- !:) Ga:Uia Academy High School. Steve, if his schedule permits, may
transpired the guy was from Ravensswood?)
::~; try out for the Purdue track team next spring.
wood and they'd met sure enough;
Wednesday's paper stated: :~:'
+++
glaring volcanically across a scrim"Preparations Complete For Grid ':!!
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the fUes of the DaUy Tribune
mage line in 1927.
Clsssic. Predict Cold Snappy Day ."
::! and weekly Gallia Times , .. Ed Mullinealll[ claimed by death ....
This fellow solved the mystery yet
•:coach Cooper's Blue Devil :::: Nolan P. Carter and uncle; Gene Carter, purchase White Imsurrounding that fabled GAHS rout :
warnors went through a light workout :::: plement Co .... Carl Glliespie named District FFA repocter ....
"You see, the general economic
Tuesday evening, .centering their at. :::: Eugene McMahon home leveled by fire at Gage .... Gene
situation was poor. The labor situation
tention on signal drlll. No practice wiU : :::
Wetherhoit injured in grid drills at Ohio University .... GAHS
was tense. Lots of folks were in a real
be held this evening. The boys will get a i:!:
defeats Logan 26-13 for second straight victory.
bad mood. Now if you recall, your
rest one day before the big game. DriU ::::
coach, Isaac Cooper, is a Ravenswood
Mooday and Tuesday polished up the :;::
native. And his life position, his ad- forward pass defense which i.s expected N!:l
BIGGER HOSPITAL
Q-What military salute COLUMBUS (UP!) - A $'1
vantages, or whatever, did not exacUy
to stop Pt. Pleasant's aerial attack. :;:)
paraUei that of the average guy in
Each player is on fighting edge. "
.:!( is accorded to the U.S. vice mlllion expansion and partial
president?
thnse parb. NaturaUy, somebody got
SUre they were.
~1:
A-He is entitled to a 19· renovation· program was anthe notion it would be a good idea to
(To Be Continued)
:::1 gun salute, and is entitled to nounced Friday for Children's
the same amount of ruffles Hospital, including an adand
flourishes (four) as the ditional three-11tory building to
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::~::8:::::::::~::;:;:;~:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::~:!;!;!;!;!~:::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:;;:;:; : ;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::
president.
house new patients care
m;; 11110\ltU:.:. ::..u 1
facilities .
ATHLETE DIES
~
LONDON , Ohio (UPI)
:-:;:
Harry Dwight Steel, 72, an area '
farmer wlio was a prominent '
athiete&lt;n_the early 192~, died
Friday. He \vas a member of the
19~24 Ohio State University
Make Elberfelds In Pomeroy your headquarters for
football teams and won an M
~·
Olympic gold medal for M~.·.
wall-to-wall carpeting for every room in your home.
··~
wrestling in 1924.
:~::
I I I~,_.'-'
~~·
BY J. A. McKEAN
(Series Continued)
~
GALUPOUS - While recalling
~ . the Gallipolis . Ravenswood football
:~ game, Nov. 18, 1927 several relevant
~' factors must be regarded. Then, advanced scouting was virtually nil, since
~:~ a:ll schools used basically the same
formadons. Oh, occasionally a kid
::;:: would acquire an area 'rep' but that
:~:: was dealt with at game time. It was a
.:::: simple game - you got the baU and
::::: took it to 'em.
:!i:
Squads were srnaU in numbers and
::::: size (Today's high school team
::::: averages a good 20 lbs. heftier.) Watch:::: charm guards and 125lb. backs were
:::: commonplace. Eligibility observance
:::: was shadowy, especially in non~:: conference games.
::::
We have noted it was a time when
industrial strife was unusua:Uy bitter,
:):: particularly in the coal fields, and ours
:::: is a coal region. And a rare, but very
.~ salient specific affected that contest
~::: and will be revealed in this text.
':!!
Now, there follows some personal
:l: accounb given me over the years by
•::~ GAHS players: incidents which lead to
:;:~ the belief no true report of that gridiron
:1( classic will ever be written. The players
:::; speak:
::!
"When we first lined up, 1 saw the
:::: guy opposite me had week.()Jd, heayy
:::: black whiskers. Must have weighed 200
i* and been 25 years old. Man, he looked
~:: fierce -and he was. Liked to tromped
~:;: me to death.
~!
"We made a couple of yards, with
:::: the tackle and me gelling a good high!!i low block oo a burly Uneman. He was
~: chompin' a huge 'chaw'. As we lined up
~: next, he pointed to Ille and said, 'Sonny
~; Boy, try that trick again and I'm gonna
~~ spit right in your eye.' It was too late_
~1 I had him to block. But he didn't spit in
:~ my eye. Just !jpurted a dark stream of
!;~ ihat tobacco juice and hit the bridge of
!* my nCl!le and got both eyes. I left for a
:::: speU.
;:::
"We had the ball near the sideline.
::::
The signal ca:Ued for a ciose-6ide run .
N
:::: Our tackle objected at once, even
)!: pleaded, 'Don't! Please don't ca:U that
:!:j play again!' Irritably, he was asked,
:::! 'Why not? It's the only decent play

~·

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Casper
and grandsons, BiUy and Brian
Dye , Columbus, spent a
weekend with the latter 's
mother, Mrs . DoUy Wolfe and
helped her celebrate her birthday. On Monday evening a
dinner was held in Mrs. Wolfe 's
honor at the home of another
daughter , Mrs. Dallas Hill.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Junior Wolfe and Wendy of
Cheshire, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Rou~h and son, Joey, Mrs.
Mike Hill and Dolly, Jan, Artie ,
Dean and Dallas HiU.
Miss Loretta Ours of Middleport spent a weekend with
her parents, Mr . and Mrs.
Ralph Ours at New Brighton,
Pa., and helped t11e,m celebrate
their 30th wedding anniversary.
Mr . Ours is a former resident.
Mrs. Focie Hayman and Mrs.
Bertha Robinson spent Sunday
afternoon with their brother,
Mr . and Mrs . Wallie Stover.
Mr . and Mrs. Don Bell and
Lorna and Mrs. Bell's father ,
St. Clair HiD, spent Saturday
with Mr . and Mrs. J.D. Thomas
and Henry at Lanham, W. Va .
Calling on Mrs . Ferne

,,,

~:::

~~
~

·---------------------------,I

I

1
·
J0UTft8
l

:.&lt;:

7s::s:s:: ::cr:s::s:ss:s:sssss 1:1 :I,~SIIIIIII lllts:::==::s~s:;sr:
1
I
I

S0 rf 0 {

t
You ·Can't Get to There : :;
From Here No More
i;l

'(OU ·~TvPIP

51RO! 'i91fik'NE~
I OU&gt;N'T HAVE

..

I ' "'.........

ANI{ SHIN
PADS ON!

ow! oooo!

.,

ow!!
ooooo!

ow!!

NQ(L)

·lb ~PEND THE
NEXT HOUR

S!TT!Ne IN ML(

WHIRL. POOl.
BATH ...

1~-/0

Hundreds of samples of Lees and many other popular brands of carpet -

-

by. Coker &amp; Penn~

LANCELOT
.

I HAVr:

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

Nylon, ~odel, Acrilan, Wool, Polyester.

Rata-tat-tat and Oompa Oompa!
Oct. 5, 1971
Pomeroy, Ohio
Dear Editor:
As members of the Meigs Marauder hand, we have one
question to ask, Why?! ! !
Why doesn't anyone at our school care about the band?
People, we're getting really fed up. We've been put down by the
public in general, and that includes our student body, and football
team, and even some teachers.
In the letter pubUshed last Friday, we were blamed as a
reason for not having another championship team at Meigs. Now,
have you ever heard of anything so ridiculous?
NoW I suppose you'll blame the Ironton game on us, too, well,
goahead,butthatdoesn'tmakeitanylessridiculous.
Whoever wrote that letter should leU the truth. At Wellston
the only Ume we didn't play the fight song after a tOuchdown was
when we were lining up for our halftime show, which, we might
add, none of our publlc appreciated, and the third quarter, the
only time we have off during a game.
There has also been talk about how the Gallipolis band
marches through the streets playing the fight song. Now can you
picture Ill! marching down a Pomeroy street before a game? The
people who would be held up in traffic behind us wouldn't get to
the game until halftime .
The football team deserves plenty of support, but we stili exist
and we need some too.
Whoknows?Ifwehadsomemoresupportandlesscriticlsm
maybe we'd do things like Ironton or Gallipolis, or some of those
other bands you seem to think are so great. Anyway who wants to
be like them? We are Melgs, and why should we have to be Uke
any other band? '
P.S. we'renotashamed totellwhoare,elther.
The Drummers and Tuba players ofthe Meigs High Band.

L~t us show

you the samples,
take several
of your choice
home with you
'o observe in
your own setting.
We will send a
qualified person
to measure the
area you want
carpeted
and
we'll
quote the completely
Installed
price.

Easl Lelart.
and fressa •. of Mammoth, W.
Mr . and.Mrs. Robert Johnson Va .. soent a weekend with Mr.

·€rOM!:&gt; LS%et-J&amp; fROM 'fOU!

You can really
save on your
carpeting needs
at El.berfelds.

Use our sensible
credit service.

- - - - - - ' - - - ' - - - - - - - - - ' - - - --

·

MI.( WII='Ei WOU/..P L.IKe iO TAKE?:

ELBERFELDS -~
1 N.~
PO~M
~.EROY .

•

••
"~·

�WI~TBROP

by Dick Cavalli
r INTEND 1V ENJOY
IHIS MAGNIFICENT
D\YlD THE LlTNOBr.
( .

{

'

--

I

1

IT FlGURE6 •••

.

I
' '
'

I

I'
I

I

~

l

i

I ,

d

II, .,

I
'

I

I

I

:

'

I II
I

.~. .r: u
. .

I

OH, NO,

IT ISN'T

..
II

OH,·YES.
IT IS!

..

by AI Veru,eer

SECTION

38,

PAG-E-gl-8
CLEARL'Y'
STA15S . ..

..

I II,

10·10

a~.
r\ A ....~v

PRISCILLA'S POP

.

'

ANDY CAPP

'

•

... on. orbehind·

'ow oo 'I'ER

OW WAtS TI-IAT
NEW PUS?

a team's

own ~oal
line ...

'APPENTO
KNOW 1 E~

FI~TNAME?

GREAT! THE
I.ICI:NSEE 11S

•
'

WIFE,MOL.L'Y,

•
'

WAc; A..-

''

8UNbL.E

O' FUN!

© 19:i l

Dall y Mi rror Nt!'II'IJIIJU!I'II Ltd.

TM ® PubHshm· Rall Syndlute

'

l'

.'

.

... and
pr:ov[ded (B)
It IS

not a

11

touchdown.

•'

BUT

1 DOA

LOT OF ,

READIN~

..II

.

i
I
I
I

I

•I
'1

~:

by Dick Rogers

'JOHNNY WONDER··
WIJ.A1 co~o~ 1!1
'I'Hi'I'OP 61'~1F'S
IN fHg

AM!ii~ICAN

·-&lt;•'

, .... ·.· .

3

+

MINI ~cf;s.... .

~ Ai~l~

P~AG , '0/.0~ 1HE! ~~A~

Reo, WH11'E! e. ewe:.

·.

'

~
I

~1'

·I

...

'T'AK&amp;:fS At.M051'
:ZOO 0Pii~A1'101'6
'T'O MA~e
ONE:

•
•'

l

~HO!S,

91

icU~.L{;

'di~

dOJ. 9HJ.
'SSc:tt:l!l.l·&amp;l !IJ;ii'IM
9 (:IN\' ~Sdi~J.~

d:!l:l i. SI21W 92:1!111J.

.•

•

••

.
•

.•

.,
•
'

: 9\"1::1

,.

I

, ••1H'Y SANS E!ON~!i

: OP: A !.I~SNI?AR."r'
~fRO WHO WM
'T'Hf CHAMPION OF=
fHf C:OMMON
PSOP'-J AGAIN51"
UNFAIR L.AW•;
~ 15 NM\S WAS

il
•

•
'••

I

.,

. . .'

I
I
I

!•
,'

~.JJil~l

~
I

'

l'
I

ROSIIIJ HOO\?.
. iU1'•.1,tlfQ.AIU NO.•
F~Tt TO PftOVf.
'1'H~'I' Hf WAt A ·
R8Al. PfR60N •

·HEY.
GROUP!

A valuable prize for the ' '''•'
q~estio11 answered here
. ~· ~·~··
eoeh week, and libiary
' l:
editions of the World
.,.•
Almanac for the·next
.
f!lur best! Send ques•
.•
tions to:
I

~Wrnrdw
(c/o this newspaper)
P:O. Box

l

.

133~ (SUNDY)

Santo Cruz.•Calif.

•,.

...

I·

.,
I

..

...•

.. . •...
~

�'

COME IN

~E'LL SEE 'IOU iN

ANOSif
DOWN -

A MINUTE,,8/A10

PR£St!&gt;ENrPoMP,
WWV DON'T 'IOU GO
JUMP IN TJ.I&amp; LAKE

'i

CL

TiiA'T'S ENOL)G(.l
01:' 1'j.jAT, MtSS ·

.';l'JIE~-BORN LOSER

SPEI.LEf:l. ;
•

••• •

,.

FROM 'DOOLITTLE CO.L.L'EG.E

by r.~~tuvut· tktUGO FLV A KITE

GIVE U_l), POMP, YOU
·COULDN'T COMMAND A
J(JNI&gt;eRGARTEN t

IN AN liiL.iCTRICAL

STORM!

.;

~

"

1!111r N!A. '" ·• T.M.

U.l. '"·Orr.

1
~

.,U.(Ut1~ .;

.

.• .••.

YOU

TI-l AI'S
SI:IJERANCE
PA'I!

\

YJT A

FA\Se!

~
10 -10

by Stoffel &amp; -Hei:andahl

BUGS BUNNY
WHEN !. FINISH T~EAT"tN' YA W\TH .
MV HOME: ~eMEDIE:S, YA'l-L f5E-

I' KID ? I NEVE~

' FE:L:r ~t:HE~ ...
I 11-ltNK .'

KICKIN' UP Ye!&lt;. .

He:E;L.S ...,..
.

El-L~ .

WAAI·'S

UP1

PUT' THIS THe;~MOME.TER
IN "rrU~ IVOUTH ... YOU
l-OOK FeVE.W\SH .'

I'M GETTIN' A
YOU'F:.E.
WUNNINGA
HEADACHE,
AN' MY
TEMPEWAfURE

.•• iHIS coul-D

eE SEWIOUS/

IAJAAT A RR.FS:n.'r

GO HOME AND GE;i INTO
BCD! I'l-l:.. BE OVI5R AS SOON

PEACE.~- ITS WONDE;RFUL../

AS I FE.E:L. BETTE-R.

MYSeLF.'

"510t&lt;o.,.{ACH's
CHURN IN'!

PIPPLE
WAS ALL
ONCt. THE.

OU'r!!-we.

~E"

:SUioJ IS
IUARM...

'-- .CIUoi..ITI f\)1.. ~V. l.

J"UST" AS !. THOL\9~\, .. 111.:.
CDATEO ••• ON SOTH SIDES.'

Wl-'0 YA TRVIN 1

DUN'TLIKE .

PIPPLE~R

SAME.

COLOR.!! ------'11.

C:OLOR·•·

-'U)""J}JE AIR.

IS. :SO CleAR, ..

-I:'&gt;UT, THOUSANDS OF
'!IRRS AGO, CANIE A

&amp;1-IZZAP.I&gt;!! SOME. -

Al-tn1~POLOGiC::ALL'/

THE. 5UN NEVER SHINED ON
U5 PI PPL"E. ON eoTTOM -SO

5PIKK11-Kl -

8L-UE-5HMUE !!

W£. TUFI.NEI( &amp;LUE !! _....,

WEARE

ALL &amp;RUDDERS!!

ME-WITI4A .
FINE BLUE.'5KIN
- - ~EIR

BRUDDER?

. PIPPLE ENDED ON TOP!!
SOME ON &amp;oTTOM !!

'

\

)

I

I.,

~.

'

\'·

•·

. I

'

I

�_,

.
.---·

The expenditure of approximately $30,000 in Herscher
Foundation, Inc., funds to
establish a Meigs County
.Museum in Pomeroy has -been
0
approved.
As a result, the Meigs CoUI)ty
Pioneer and Historical Society
is expected to move toward the
purchase of a museum site
'• Friday at the Grace Episcopal
Parish House in Pomeroy. The
annual meeting begins at 1p.m.

IS FANTASTIC, Hfi(E I
AM l-OOKING ~ IN'l'O

VAU.E.Y6 AN~ ~A~MS/

~EACH ~OCK 16 A V~RY

The group has definite plans
to buy the old Finsterwald
Funeral Home on Butternut
Ave., more recently the offices
and home of Dr. and Mrs. Ray
Heaton. PUrchase price of the
brick structure is $32,000.
Tentative plans for the
museinn are that the upstairs of
the building will be used as a
rental apartment to provide an
income for the Society with the
museum on the first floor.

A·museum has been planned Foundation on several ocseveral years. John •. J." Her- c.asions asked that the money
scher, who at one t~e resided given by~ . Herscher, who had
in Pomeroy, later In Charleston, died before the museum
W, Va., gave $35,000 for a materialized, be returned. The
museum . HoweveJ:, ,~ p)ans sOCiety continued negotiating
drawn for such a structl!'"e with the foundati~n, however,
proved unsatisfactory wl!tn .. while keeping' the JllOney.
estimates for building it ran·as
Meanwhile, the Heaton
high as $105,000. A!Jerilpll'.i\1 .. property became available.
raise the difference we•e WI· Society members detennined to
successful.
use the balance of the Herscher
Trustees of the Herscher donation to purchase that home

!iHOgr

IT5 A WA'l'~ '

A~OV~ TH~ HLIPGON.. RIV~R. 11

NO. 125

POMEROY·M IDDLEPORT, OHIO

ir\E LONGE5T TiME IN ifiE VIORLD
15 !3EiWEEN GETTING UP AND lt-\E:
6REP...KFA!&gt;T 60N6 WHE.N

! G/&gt;.YE UP ON THE MAIL S!iRVICE
LONG AGO-NOW IF TflE:.
NE.WSPAI'EI't BOY I? 1&lt;\A?U'T,

ir\ERE.'5 NQ SUNDAY PAPEI&lt;:

~
~

~
M,
~;

f&gt;..LL 16 LO:iT!

E. I'THE.~
lriE SONIC
eoot~~

aoY!7

OR TI-lE

PAPER

HI&gt;.$ AK'RIVED!

ARE UP
EARLY-

WERE YOU ~0 f1,1.RD·UP
FOR CMH 'YOU WENT
PE.PDLING
Pl'-PE1&lt;5
IN Tf&lt;E:.

WH~l'

Tt-\EY

GAW.._

CLEVELAND (UPII - The .Ohlo FederaUoa of
Teachet'l, with 10,000 members, will not support any
~
statewide sfrlte cr work stoppage, FederaUon
~
~esident Raymoad Kikta •aid Sunday.
Earlier this month, tbe Ohio Education
~
AllsociaUoa, whlclt,haslOO,OOOmemben, authorized its
~
exe&lt;!uUve couneU to call a statewide work stoppage if
the Ohlo Legislature faDs to meet certain demands.
f
The demands lnelnde passage ol a graduated state
i!:
lnc&lt;me tax, more stale funds for educatioa and more
moaey to reduce class sue.
~:
Kikta, a teacher at WUbur Wright Junlor High · ~
here, said the declsioa not to support a statewide
walkout was made over lbe weekend by hla group'•
~
execuUve couoeU. "We are not arguing with the goa\Ji
~
setforth by lbe OEA," be said, ''but a statewide strike
or work stoppage would not accompllsb getUng the
~
legislature to do what is wanted."
~

i

·f.·

i
i

i

Weather
Variable c loudiness
southeast, a chance of showers
northeast. Cool tonight, lows
upper 30s to mid 40s. Partly
cloudy .and cool Tuesday with
highs in the 50s.

The Eighth District of the
American Legion went on
record Sunday in support of
measure s to convert the
Southeastern Ohio Tuberculosis
Hospital, Nelsonville, scheduled
to be closed in June, into a
Veterans Administration
Hospital.
At the Legion's fall confe~ence Sunday at the Racine
I.
\
Post Home, petitions were
' )
circulated urging that the
tuberculosis hospital be con·verted to a veterans hospital.
The petitions, when signed, will
AMONG THE DIGNITARIES attending the Eighth
chapeau, 8 and 40; Ebner Pickens, Racine Post, combe compiled in the district and
Dilitrict American Legion Fall conference at the Racine Post
mander; back row, .MarUn Bush, Crooksville, distrlcl
forwarded to President Richard
602 haU Sunday were, front, l to 4, Pat Hone, department
commander; Dick Lentz, Junction City, past district comNixon.
adjutant; Judge John C. Bacon, Racine Post, who gave the
As a Veterans Hospital, the
mander; James Waggonseller, Lancaster, past department
institution would serve Athens,
address of welcome ; Harold Cottrill, a past dis\rict com·
corrunander, and Alec Blair, Jackson, past department
Fairfield, Galli a, Hocking,
mander ; Mrs. 0. A. Martin, Pomeroy, departemental
corrunander.
Jackson , Licking , Meigs,
Morgan, Muskfngum, Noble,
Injunction Gotten Perry, Pickawpy, Ross, Vinton ·
and Washington coWJties and
NEW
PHILADELPHIA, fringe areas in Delaware,
Ohio (UPI) - An injunction
to end " any further
RUTLAND - A Langsville motorcycle approaching ap· the left, struck and knocked harrassment" at non-union
teenager was admitted to proximately 100 feet behind over a MinersviUe speed limit strip mine operations in this
Veterans Memorial Hospital him , he stopped. His directional sign then came back across the area by members of tbe
following a car-motorcycle signals were on, he said.
.• highway and struck a utility Unlted Mine Workers Union
collision here Sunday at 12:47
There was medium damag~" pole.
have been obtained by 10
p.m. on Salem St.
to the Stafford car. Tlie A two-car accident Saturday owners, who also seek
. The Meigs County Sheriff's motorcycle was demolished.
at 6:45p.m. at the intersection
Four calls for assilitance were
· Dept. sail! Michael G. Caton, 19,
The Martin ambulance was of SR 124 and 338 also was $2511,000 damages.
The
Injunction
was
sought
answered
over the weekend by
suffered abrasions of the body on its way to the hospital with reported ..
alter several of the soH coal the Middleport E-R unit, three
and a fractured left leg when his Caton when the Middleport E-R
mines were hit by vanclalfsm patients being removed to
motorcycle struck the left front unit arrived. Caton was trans· Herman E. Bickert, 49, following the UMW strike Holzer Medical Center by the
of a car driven by Jack Hobart !erred to the E-R unit and Marietta, turning around in the · Sept. 30.
-1
Stafford, Jr., 37, of Griffis Air taken to the hospital.
Force Base, N. Y.
Also under investigation bl ~:~k~u~e~~=c~edr~~~::; ·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: • Wl~i 8:35 p. m. Saturday, the
"d 1
squad went to Afrtca Road m,
The accident, still under the sheriff's dept. is an accident ansuc
d tr k th esteoacar
.
investigation, occurred when that occurred some time traveling west driven by Brent
the Cheshtre area for Mahlon
W
Rutter who had suffered an
Stafford had pulled · from the ·Sunday night on Rt. 124 at Hart 17 Ra i
•
•
c
ne
.
.
.
.
.
apparent
heart attack. He was
curb to make a left turn into the Minersville , the driver leaving
There were no . tnjurtes or
.
taken to the Holzer Center. At
Merle Davis driveway. Stafford the scene. ,and only light damage
12:20 a. m. SWJday, the squad
said ihat when he saw through A car traveling east , ap· arrests
to. the ~art vehicle and none to
went to the Kenneth Mathout
his rear -view mirror the parently went off the road on Btckert s.
• .,....
home on Story's Run Road.
p

• •

•

.

Franklin, Guernsey, Knox ,
Lawrence Monroe, Pike and
Scioto coWJties in Ohio, and
Mason, Wirt and Wood counties,
and fringes of Jackson, Putnam
and Rome counties in West

Virginia .
Following a buffet dinner
served by the Racine Post's
Ladies Auxiliary from tables
carrying out the blue and gold
Legion colors, the business

session of the fall conference
got underway with approximately 125 attending .
Commander Marlin Bush,
Crooksville, was in charge of ·
(Continued·on Page 5)
'

:o

4 Aided
By Unit

EGAD, TH5 HORROR OF
li! ... rve GOT POW!?:~$
!. NSVE~ EVEN

rEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

I

Cyclist Injured

I&lt;F'.\N?

CAPTAIN EASY

~
~

10,000 WON'T STRIKE

Nixon or Vet Hospital
,

'

~

'

Legion to Petition

Ot7R BOARDING HOUSE

HIMF-

~

.

!f:

MONDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1971

'

HLIP60~

WO~FC:.AtoJG

l

'

•

'I

15 MDL.Y 5HAKE:foJ
5'1' Hl5 DRAMATIC
SU CCE55- A7 A
HEAD-'3HRINK€R'!

I
~

.

Devoted To The InteresiJ Of The Meigs-Mason Area
VOL. XXIV

tfJ:,YCHIAiRI~T

·:-:

raise $10,000, and succeeded. :~
. Certification that the amount :~~~
has been raised was forwarded ~:;
to the trustees who in ·a letter to . ;~:
the trustees who in a letter to c. i~~;
E. Blakeslee, president of the ;:;;
historical society, stated:
;:;;
"The Trustees of Herscher :::i
Foundation , Inc., are pleased to :::;
be advised that you have $10,00Q ;;:;
on deposifiobe used for the @
purchase of property located at :m&lt;::·&gt;"n;·x·:'&lt;'"'"'"'"'''"'''"'~·:·:~·:·&gt;",:·&gt;.::.':·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:~·:·:·:·:·:·x~~-:~·~:·:·:·:;::m:········&lt;·~
(Continued on Page 8)
...... ................... ... .. ............ ....... · · .................. ·

at

San Juan , Puerto Rico, set.tled in 1508, is the oldest city
under the U. S. flag ..

tffrAI~WA.Y WHICH PUT6 A
~OA'l' A~MDST .ZOO F1!~1 ·

as the musum location, if
possible.
Several months ago the
Herscher Foundation trustees
indicated it probably would
approve such an arrangement if
$10,000 were raised through
local efforts to show that funds
would ..be available to make
changes necessary for the
museum in the home, and for its
maintainance for a time.
The society went to work to

•

Now You Know

l'l~iANCE--W I THI N ~IGHr··OP
'TH~ N~X T.

erscher's ~30,000 Assured
~ounty's Museum

-~····;-·- -

l

"•"•"•'•"•"•"•"•"'•".(•"r'".W~~-~~--&gt;-&gt;~/J.OW~-N~·,·,·,•,•,•,•,·,•,•r···
,y,•,·....-n~.t'&lt;:o"o":'.•:~o";~
.
-x.
_. ...tt:'.I'-"-'H.U.o'N.T,.YN!NV'"'"r"" ••• , • , •.• •

by Crooks &amp; Lawrence

Po er Down

Self.JnfJicted Shot Fatal
NEW HAVEN - Elmer
James Grimm, 59, New Haven,
was pronounced dead upon
arrival at the Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis Saturday
evening.
..... ,
Mr. Grimm died of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot
wound. He was transferred to
the Holzer Medical Center from

f
I
I
I

Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was taken by am·
bulance.
It was reported ·Mr. Grimm
was found about 2:45 p. m. in
lhe back yard of the residence
of Mrs. Sadie Warth, who was
his sister.
Gallia County Coroner Donald
Warehime r!lled death was by a .

---------------------------,
1\T .
•
B . l..f.
1

,ews... rn

rre1 s.
.

I
1
I

By United Press InternaUonal

Largest Antique R ebom Sunday
LAKE JAV ASU CITY, ARIZ. -THE 140-YEAR.OLD lA&gt;ndon
.Bridge, largest antique ever sold, was reborn Sunday In the hot
Arizona desert halfway aroWJd the world from the River Thames.
oThe Lord Mayor of London, Sir Peter M. Studd, dedicated the
reopening of the granite bridge across a segment of the COlorado
River.
It took a 40-man crew 23 months to reassemble all 10,276
granite blocks shipped and trucked here in precisely the sam~
·order they were when the bridge was b'!ilt. McCulloch Oil Corp.,
developers of thili lakeside city, purchased the bridge from
London for $2.46miUion and company officials estimated the total
price for the project at $7 milliOn
·

. Sadat in Moscow Huddle

.,

CAIRO -EGYPTIAN PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT went
by plane today to Moscow to confer with Soviet chiefs on what
moves the Arabs will make if a Middle East settlement has not
been reached within the nextthree months. Said Sadat : "We have
reached a decisive point ... if we let this ye3r end without taking
action ... the occupation of Arab land by the Israelis will become
th t) d~ bt$ ouo ·-'~

State
Speakers
Coming
.

Three State Department of
Education representatives and
one from the Teachers
Retirement System of Ohio wiU
speak Thursday when the Meigs
County Teachers Assn. meets
ali-day at Eastern High School.
Mrs. Grella Suttle, a Meigs
~~: Pomeroy custome1'S of the Mathout, who was ill, also was
County
school supervisor, will
ColUmbus 'arid · ~utl\el!li· · Ohio taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Elecjric Co . were ' wit~out At 1 p. m. Sunday the squad introduce Mrs. Virginia Uoyd,
servtce about four hours Sunday was called ior Michael Caton elementary section chief of the
self-inflicted gunshot woWJd. night and early today fli!lowing.,:VintOn who was injured in a~ Ohio Department of Education,
Mr. Grimm was a laborer an auto accident on West Main aj!lo,cycle accident. He was
with the New Haven Porcelain St near the Pomeroy-Mason ta'ke'n to Veterans Memorial
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
.
Hospital and admitted.
Co. He was a veteran of World Brtdg: app~oach.
Ohio: Extended Outlook for
War II and a member of the Pohce satd a car drtven by Sunday at 3:35p.m. the squad Wednesday through Friday:
Smith-Captehart American Marhn Roush, 18, Hartford, W. was ca11ed for Deborah Young,
Cool Wednesday
and
Legion Post 140 at New haven . Va., .htl a guardratl~ .t~en on Wheaton Road in Gallia warmer Thursday and
He was born July 19, 1912 at crossed the htghway, strtkfng County. She was ill and was Friday. Chance of showers
New Haven, the son of the late and chppmg off a pole of the taken to tlie Holzer Medical about Friday. Highs in the
Lewill J . and Effie Graham power cgmpany. Roush satd he Center
upper 50s and lower 60s
lost control of his car when a
·
Grimm.
front tire blew out.
~&lt;:::-":::::::::~::~::::::~:=-.~::::::~::~::;~:::::::;:;:;:::;::
Wednesday, warming to the
Surviving are two brothers,
upper 60s and lower 70s by
Roushwasnotinjured,buthis c--~ew
Melvin,
Syracuse,
and
Friday. Ovemtgbtlows In the
UC 11
Franklin, of Pomeroy; four car was termed a total loss by
mid 30s early Wednesday,
A curfew for people under
sisters, Mrs. Sadie Warth and police. He was cited to mayor's
climbing to the lower 50s by
Mrs. Ada Wears, both of New court on a charge of excessive 18 years of age will go into Friday morning.
effect tonight in Middleport,
Haven; Mrs. Florence Yonker, speed for road conditions.
to
the
Pomeroy
Power
Chief of Police J . J.
Cambridge, Ohio, and Mrs.
Genevieve Grinstead of Albany. customers was off from about Cremeans said today.
The siren will be sounded at
Funeral services will be held 9:15p.m. SWJday to 1:25 a.m.
Monday.
8
each evening to mark the
at 1:30 p. m. Tuesday at the
start . of curfew b.ours. All
Foglesong Funeral Home with
SOUTH POINT - State Highyoung people. under 18 must
the Rev. David Fields, Jr.,
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
way
Patrolman Tom Danner
be
off
the
streets.
Nor
will
officiating. Burial will be in
SATURDAY
ADMISSIONS
they be permitted to "ride was sure a man he gave help to
Broad Run ~metery . Friends
Clifford
S~umbo, Middleport;
around
Ute community in one night last week wasn 't his
may call ·at tile funeral home
Harrison
Rooinson,
Sr.,
Letart,
brother, although it seemed
cars," the chid said.
a~ytlme after 3 p. m. today.
W. Va .
The' curfew has been made momentarily that he was.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES necessary because of
Danner was called to lend aid
NEXT ON 26TH
- , William Stevens, ~borah damaging pre-Halloween to a motorist whose auto was hit
· The pub.llc is reminded that Holthouse.' Earla Pickens, pranks, the chief stated.
by a large rock weighing
the next bloodmobile will be ,_Carrm Bol~ne, Usa Gilland.
possibly 10 lbs. dropped from
held on Tuesday, Oct. 2G, at the SUNDAY;, "-DMI~!UONS the overpass on Rt. 52 leading
Pomeroy Elementary School Clanc'e ·Bo6o, Coolvtlle; Nellie
WIND KI~ 3 CHUTISTS
from South Point onto the new
from 1 to 6 p.m.
Ebhn, Pomero,y ; Carl Stt11, BANGKOK (UP!) - Three bridge into Huntington. The
Middleport : tarry Klein, border patrol policemen rock had pierced the top ul the
Mi"nersville; Michael Caton, making a demonstration car, over the driver's seat, and
Vinton·.
parachute jump at Hua Hin struck the driver, who, after
TO MEET TONIGHT • SUNDAY DffiCHARGES - drowned and two others were wrecking his car. was in shock
The Southern ' At~l e tic William Ledlie, Thurston Stone, injured SWJday when • sudden but not critically .injured.
Boosters will meet this evening J ohn T~ompsor · ~ Minnie wind swept them inlo the Gulf of
l;'~ trolman Danner got to the
at 7::10·p.111. .at the high scliool. C~rro ll .
Thail'l,nd.
point where he was to ask the

Four Hours

SIJSPE:CTED!

DEPARTMENT ADJUTANT PAT HONE, center, was greeted by host adjutant, Virgil
Walker, Sunday when Racine American Legion Post 602 was host for the Eighth District fall
conference. With tbe adjutants is Mrs. John Boyd, president of the Racine Post's Ladies
Auxiliary, which had an important role in the conference.

at 8

who will speak on the "right to
read " program.
Mrs. Eileen Buck wi11 introduce Dr. Ambrose Brazelton,
supervisor of elementary
physical education for the State
Department of Education, the
afternoon speaker. Doyle
Shwnaker, secondary section
chief of the State Department oi
Educaiion, and Mrs. Uoyd of
the elementary division, will be
introduced by Robert Bowen, .
county superintendent of
schools. Teachers will be
divided into groups to hear
them discuss educational
standards. ·

superintendent of the Eastern
District,
extending
the
welcome.
Coffee and donuts wi11 be
served during the registration
period from 9:30a.m. with Mrs.
Margaret Ella Lewis in charge.
There will be displays of visual
aids by Vere Smith, Athens, and
school materials by Latta's and
Denyer-Gepperg.
The Eastern Band Boosters
will serve a luncheon at noon.
All Meigs County Schools will be
closed Thursday.

Pomeroy E-R

Miss
Marjorie
Ator ,
representative
of
the
Retirement System in Ohio, wiU
also speak. Mrs. Janice Ritchie
will be in charge of the
recognition of retired teachers.
Presiding over the meeting Th e Pomeroy E-R squad
will be Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee, answered a call at 7 a.m.
presiden t of the county Monday for Mrs. Reed Wlll,
association , with John Riebel,
Maple Place, Pomeroy, who
fractured a leg . She was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
where she was still confined in
the emergency room late this
man ior identification.
morning.
uoann er ," he said, -vand
At 4:10 p.m . · SWlday, the
spelled otit "D-A-N-N-E-R."
squad was called to the
·"What's your first name?" Lawrence Lanning residence in
asked Patrolman Danner, Naylor's Run , Mr. Lanning was
breaking into the driver's dead upon its arrival.
repeated assertion, through his
At 4:10 a.m. Saturday, the
shock, that his : name was squad went to the John Hunnell
Danner.
home· on Spring Ave. He was
" Robert
Danner,"
he taken to Holzer Medical Center
managed to say.
by ambulance.
That- was ii billion to one
coincidence, or more, because
Pa trolman Dannerls older
FINED $11, COSTS
br other · is named Robert James Laullermllt, 22,
Danner, who lives in II'Jarion, Pomeroy, was fined $10 and
Qhio. There was rro relation- costs by Pomeroy Mayor
ship. The brothers are the sons Charles Legar Saturday night
oi Mr. and Mrs. James Danner, on conviction of ·driving wlthou.t
13 Pine St., Gallipolis,
an llp;l!rator's Uce ..

Billion to 1 Shot

Unit Made'3

Weekend Runs

I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="81">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1801">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="33355">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="33354">
              <text>October 10, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="735">
      <name>hudson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6486">
      <name>lucky</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1746">
      <name>mayo</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="62">
      <name>waugh</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
