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.•••

12-: The DaUy Sentinel, ~-1'\iuaoy,O.,Ocl. D, 1171

w

•

-•

Living Costs Up
2% During Freeze

Indictments Will Stand
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals today refused to quash
the indictments of 25 persons .
charged with rioting during the
1970 disturbance at Kent State
University in whic h four stud'
ents were shot to death by NaUonal Guard troops.
Attorneys for the indictied persons contended the report of
the specia l Portage County
grand jury which blamed the
·rioting on the ·•permissive ness''
of the Kent State administration and absolved the Guardsmen of any blame in the deaths

denied those indicted the right
to a fair triaL
AU.S. District Court judge in
Cleveland on Jan. 28 ordered
the report expunged from the
record and destroyed. His decision was upheld by the Sixth
Circuit Court of Appeals in a
ruling made public Thursday.

John Foreman
Died Thursday

Watson
To Die

John E. Foreman , 87, Portland, Rt. 1, died Thursday afternoon at Veterans Memorial
HospitaL He was the son of the
late Edward R. and Martha
Rice Foreman. He was also
preceded in death by five
brothers and four sisters.
Surviving are hiS wife, Eliza
A. Foreman ; two sons, Edward
R.. Grove City, and Joseph R. ,
Racine; two daughters, Bertha
Proffitt, Columbus, and Anna
Lance, Portland ; eight grandchildren. and several nieces and
nephews .
Funeral services will be held
Sunday at 2 p.m. at Ewing
Chapel wi th the Rev. Freeland
Norris officiating . Burial will be
in Grea t Bend Cemetery.
Friends may call anytime.
CARNIVAL SET
The Racine PTA Carnival at
the elementary school will get
underway at 6:30 p.m. Saturday. There will be games with
prizes.

-------- &gt;,lft50N
1"0
_~_,

t'9!V!·IH
,..

•

THE OWL AND
THE PUSSYCAT
! Color )
Barbra Streisand
Geor ge Sega l

( Rl
- PLUS" LADY IN CAR
WITH GLASSES
AND A GUN "
Oliver Reed

"R"

MEIGS THEAtRE
Tonight &amp; Saturday
October 22 -23

R. P. M.
(Revolutions Per Minute)

(Color

'
••

WASffiNGTON (UPI) - The
cost of living went up 0,2 per
cent in September, the first full
month covered by President
Nixon's wage-price freeze, the
government said today,
Officials said most of the
Increase was due to price increases on goods and services
not rovered by the freeze.

Judge William Thomas , who
handed down the decision Jan.
28 in Cleveland, also had
refused to· quash the indictments, and this decision was
the one ruled on today by the
Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals.

LOS ANGELES (UP! I
Charles ''Tex" Watson, a former high school scholar and
star athlete who admitted
leading the blOO\ly forays in the
seven Tate.LaBlanca murders,
Thursday was sentenced to
death .
The verdict, returned by the
same jury which had convicted
the lanky Texan,made the gas
chamber unanimous for the five
Charles Manson cult members
tried for the killings.
Watson, 26, was refused a
possible penalty of life imprisonment at the penalty phase
of the trial by the same six-man
six-woman panel which earlier
rejectied his plea of innocent by
reason of insanity.

The verdict brought to an end
the long criminal proceedings in
the Tate case - excluding
appeals- but a variety of other
charges, including murder ,
against a total of 17 "family"
members still are in progress of
pending.

Tonight, Sat., Sun .
October 22-23-?"Double Feature

w

PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS: Mrs . Roy
Woomer, Mrs. Samuel Patterson, William Wright, Point
Pleasant; Oretha Kirk, Huntington ; Michael Allen, Point
Pleasant: Chervl Warden .
Southside; Ronda Langdon,
Glenwood ; Gusta Hoffman ,
Glenwood; Emory Haggy,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Wilbur Jordan,
Gallipolis Ferry.
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Charles
Reynolds, Marie Mees, James
Whittington, Robert Dolin,
Ronald Urbani, William Wright,
Mrs . J . Stover, Harriet Rhodes,
James Hartley and Mrs. Ray
Hughart.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Oct. 21, 1971
ADMITTED - Eva Little ,
Pomeroy, Michael Haning ,
Albany;
Bet tv Russell ,
Gallipolis ; Dwight McDaniel,
Rutland .
DISCHARGEDJessie
Swan Joseph Hotman, Roma
Beal.' Kevin Mowery, Debbie
Holter, Betty Gilkey, Paul Rife
and Albert M. ScholL

The Bureau of Labor Statistics said the increase in the
consumer price index was half
the 0.4 per cent jump in August.
The price index has averaged
0.4 per cent durillg the previous
six months, although the July
Increase without the freeze had
been 0.2 per cent.

News ... in Briefs
NEW SCHOOL BUS - The Southern Local School District Monday received a new International 66-passenger school bus, continuing its program to steadily improve its transportation equipment. The oldest bus the district now owns is a 1966-modeL Standing, left to
right, are Bill Cozart, head mechanic ; Ralph Sayre, superintendent, and Russell 1Whistle )
Cline, bus driver.

Good Year for the Grates
RUTLAND - It should be a
very good year for the Grate
family ! After all, three
members of the family have
kissed the famed Blarney Stone
in Ireland.
Kissing the famous stone was
just one of the highlights of a
trip taken recentl ' by Wendell
Grate and his nephews, David
and Herbert, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Grate, to Ireland.
The trip, awarded to the
Rutland Furniture Store by the
Gibson Co. on the basis of the
sale of refrigera tors, marked
the seventh year that the store
has qualified for trips.
Previously, the excursions, last
year to Holland, were taken by
Mr . and Mrs. Arnold Grate.
The trio from the Grate
family left Columbus by plane

Building Plans
Obtained with
Contributions

Sept. 25 with 171 others in their
tour on the six day trip. They
landed in Dubliri, a city of
700,000 and then boarded a train
for a 185 mile south trip to
Killarney and from there went
to Shannon for their trip home.
The three visited several
castles, including the famed
Blarney Castle near Cork. They
were taken via [our motor
coaches with their party to
places of historical significance

LIVlNG M!MDfff...

?..U:~
A Check1ng Account gt ves you insta nt money .
A1g lll wtl en you need it
And there's no ch an ce of losing cash along the way.
Your check One of the most val uable papers you sign .

POMEROY

Legar Monument
992-Slld

(Continued from Page I)
Court are being greeted with optimism and guarded reaction ,
except for New York Mayor John V. Lindsay and the national
Women.'s Political Caucus.
"We can only conclude that the imagination of Mr. Nixon or
that of his advisers is limited, that their estimation of the intelligence of women is low, and that their understanding of the
role women do and can play in this society is sadly out of date, "
the Policy Council of the Women's Rights Coalition said, There
had been speculation that a woman would be nominated. Lindsay
expressed disappointment that Rehnquist is "undistinguished"
and Powell "has the appearance of being insensitive to the most
basic problems now dividing the country."

dropped 0.8 per cent before
adjustment for seasonal factor\
but only 0.3 per cent after aiJ!
justment, and autom.obil~
Jl'ices also declined-new cara.
by 1.5 per cent on an 1111adjuste8
basis and used cars by 0.8 per
•
cent.
But prices rose for clothinrt
household services and roUe~
tuition, Tuition went up by 9 Jl6!
cent.

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•

Court

(Continued from page I)
constitutional authority.
..
In his speech announcing his
nominees, Nixon repeatied hi&amp;
view that the court had become
one-sided in protecting the
rights of criminal defendants. '

IN TRAINING
LONG BOITOM - Shirley
Sue Congo has begun her
training at Ohio State
Cosmetology
School
in
Columbus. She will study eight
months prior to receiving her
state license .

as well as to scenic spots.
SUPPER HOURS SET
Wendell said the people were
A jitney supper from 5 to 7:30
quite friendly and that he enp.m. will be held at the Letart
countered more of a rural at- Talks Shift to Coal Heartland
Falls Elementary School
CHARLESTON, W. VA. -CONTRACT negotiations between Saturday in conjunction with a
mosphere than he had expectied.
A familiar sign throughout the representatives of the soft roal industry and the striking United carnival which will feature·
to ur were donkeys pulling two- Mine Workers Union (UMW) shift today from Washington to the games and a free program,
wheeled carts loaded with heartland of the bituminous roal fields . Gov. Arch A. Moore of
CONTRACT RENEWED
cream cans.
West Virginia announced Thursday night he had arranged for
A contract between Lebanon
both negotiating teams to meet in his office today at 4 p.m.
Township
and the Racine Fire
The bargaining teams held their last meeting Tuesday in
Washington for about two hours and afterwards a management Department has been renewed,
VERMILION, Ohio (UPI)
Mrs . Mae Cleland, Racine
- Mayor John Malden said spokesman announced the talks had recessed "indefinitely." Village clerk, reports. Firemen
Moore said he took the initiative to bring the two sides together in
Thursday there would be no
will answer fire calls in the
hopes the presence of such talks in the nation's largest coal
more trick-or-treat olgbts In
township.
producing state might be "the catalyst that may solve these
this northern Ohio com.
munity because last year outstanding differences."
TWO EXAMINED
more children were tricked
Two Meigs County men were
It's Good Bread Anyway!
than treated.
forwarded to Fort Hayes,
IX
"We had some chlldren
WASHINGTON - THE MA~ of Wonder Bread Columbus , for pre-induction
pick up candy bars containing acknowledged today that their product may rontain no more physical examinations Wed0
razor blades, open safety pins nutrients than competing brands; but they denied their "Builds nesday by the Meigs County
and other sharp objects,"
Selective Service System.
Strong Bodies 12 Ways" advertisements were deceptive.
Malden said. "Those things
The firm, ITT Continental Baking Co., Inc., Rye, N. Y., also
Eighty-live Ea ste rn High
are possible to detect but 11 denied false nutritional advertising charges made against
School students have been they do this, tbey could put
CLUB TO MEET
Hostess Snack Cakes. The company's reply to the Federal Trade
named to the honor roll at the something else In, like drugs
Meigs Temple Stall and
Commission (FTC) set the stage for Utigatlon viewed In the adclose of the first six weeks
for Instance.
vertising industry as a key test of the FTC's quest for new curbs Officers Club will meet at 7:30
'grading period, Bobby J. Ord ,
principal, announces. They are : ·:::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::*:~~:--s::::=:~::~: on allegedly deceptive ads. The Wonder Bread case is considered p.m. Monday at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
FRESHMEN - (all A) , Jane
a test of whether the FTC can clamp down on "uniqueness"
building social rooms In Midclaims for a product that isn 't really unique.
Bahr,Karen Reed, Becky Root,
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
dlepOV,to
Mandie Rose, Reg1~a K1mes, The Pomeroy E-R unit anCaroleKuhl,MaryMtlls,(A-B), swered a call at 10 :30 a.m . ( -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·
MaryBarrtnger .. Randy Blake, Thursday to t60 Mulberry Ave.
Debbie Boatnght, Phtltp for Mrs. Eva Little who had
Bowen, Amta Buckley, Cathy become ill at home there . She
Davt s, K e v1~ D11l , Becky was taken to Veterans
Ebersbach, Vtckte Gaul , Pam Memorial Hospital where she
Sams, Rhond~ Sovel, Ctndy wa; admitted .
Thomas, Bonme Welsh, Robert
Harris, Deanna Hensley,

EHS
on
85
week s
H onor L1St

so

The status of contributions
made towards the construction
".R"
of a new lire department
FRANKENSTEIN
headquarters building in
MUST BE
Middleport was explained today
DESTROYED
by the fire department bond
CTechnicolor)
issue committee.
Peter Cushing
Veronic a Carlson
"Although much time has
" M"
elapsed since the project was
SHOW STARTS I P.M.
originated, money donated and
raised by projects, the Mid- Marsha Kim es, Lou Ann
Newell .
"
SOPHOMORE
( A).
..- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · dleport
has
not been Fire
idle inDepartment
working toward
Lawren ce Harp e r , Nan cy
a new lire station. Plans and
specifications have been drawn Miller , Shelia Sampson , (A-B ),
Steve Anderson , William
and approved lor the new
An1berger, Tim Baum, Debbie
station at a cost of several
Burns, Teresa Chichester ,
hundred dollars. This cost has
Virginia Cline, Steve Follrod,
been paid.
Steve Goebel , Bill Hayes,
"The money that remains will
Janice Holter, Chryll Kimes,
be used toward the overall
Cheryl Kuhn, Diana Larkins,
construction and equipping of
Carol Taylor, David Weber,
the new station in order to hold
the costs down . The end result Jane Whitehead.
JUNIOR - '(A), Richard
of this could very well make the
Cross, Bobby Edwards, Lucy
tax less than the $1.20 per
Holter, Robin Humphrey, Dick
thousand being asked", the Stettler , Byron McCoy ; (A-B ),
committee states.
Lana Benedum, Steve Boston,
Residents of Middleport will
Alan Duvall, Cindy Farrar,
vote on a 1.2 mill bond issue,
Debbie Heaton, Debbie Jeffers,
which would provide funds for
Jane Ann Karr, Glenda Lawson,
the new structure, at the Nov. 2
Rita
Marcinko ,
Debbie
election.
Millhone, Phyllis Newlun,
Ann Margaret
Anthony Qu inn

The price freeze went into
effect Aug. 15, but because of
lags in reporting time, and
because only half the month
w.S covered, officials said the
August rise reflected only
minimal effect of the order.
The September increase was
affected by the freeze, however.
"Analysis of price data In the
September CPI Indicates that
most of the increase In the
September index for items
covered by the freeze occurred
prior to Aug. 15 or wa.i due to
seasonal or other price changes
which, under certain conditions,
are permissible under the
freeze," the BLS said.
The BLS said food prices

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

DIVORCES GRANTED
Two divorces have been
granted in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court. Delber.t
Teaford, Jr., was grantied a
divorce from Helen Marie
Teaford on charges of gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty, and Joyce M.
Gallimore one from Steven E.
Gallimore on charges of gross
neglect.

TREATS CHANGED
Trick or Treat night in Racine
has been changed from Oct. 28
to Saturday, Oct. 30, the same
evening on which the event is to
be held in a number of other
Meigs County communities.
Hours in Racine will be !rom 7
to 8 and the village siren will
sound at the beginmng and end
Cathy Pickens, Mike Sanders, of the hour.
Nancy Sexson, Vickie Spencer,
Barbara Well, Sandra Wood,
Melinda Amsbary.
SENIOR lA), Julia Holter,
Roger Karr, Mary1 Jo Wolf,
Jeanne Newlun, (A-B ), Jim
Amsbary , Mike Benedum,
Melanie Dean, Janice Dixon,
Dennis Eichinger , Marjorie
Gillilan, Alan Holter, Steve
Kirkman , Jennie Lawson, Rick
Martin, Kathy Sanders, Larry
Stalnaker, Marcella Wyers,
Randy Young.

Open Tonight Until 9 P.M.
.

Shop Saturday 9:30 to 9 P.M.
See the Big Selections of Kimball Pianos and Organs .
Sheet Music- Books- Records- Tapes. Instruments. and
accessories in our Second Floor Music Department.
Select from RCA and Panasonic Television, Radios,
Stereos, Tape Players, and Recorders.

-Be Sure to Shop in Elberfelds Toy Store

WEAtHER REPORT
Cloudy with chance · of occasional Ught rain or drlzzle
Sunday and Sunday night. High
Sunday In,mid to upper 60s. Low
Sunday night In 50!1 •. Variable
cloudiness and a tittle warmer
Monday With chance of showers ·
southeast. Highs Monday in ro,,

+

tmts
30 PAGES

VOL VI NO. 39

~roing

RUMNO

Meigs County

Since 1872

Pomeroy-Middleport

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1971

Bank Will Not Be Open For Business On Mona., , October
2S In Observance Of Veteran '!\ Day .

GALLII'OLIS - Gallia County
sheriff's deputies late Saturday filed
breaking and entering and grand larceny
charges against Larry A. Murray, 20, Rt.
2, Ewington arrestied in connection with
the early morning theft of 10 guns and
ammunition from Stewart's Hardware in
Vinton,
,
Asecond man, Harold E. Williams, 29,
Rt. I, Ewington, was being held for investigation pending further questioning.
Stmilar charges may be filed against

Williams.
Jackson, Meigs and Vinton entered into
The pair was arrested by Deputy Sheriff the chase but were unable to locate the
James Crace, who, with Deputy Irvin getaway car, described as a tan station
Crabtree, continued Investigation of the wagon.
burglary of the hardware tbroughout the
Deputy Crabtree spottied the car
day.
again, however, Saturday while on patrol
Murray had been the object of a four- in the Alice area, at Williams' trailer home
county manhunt sirlce being seen about where Murray anq Williams were taken
1:30 a.m. Saturday driving away from the into custody without resistance.
hardware store. Deputies were alerted by
Taken in the breaking and entering
residents living in the vicinity of the store, were four shotguns, a rifle, five pistols,
Four sheriffs ' departments, Gallla, several boxes of 12 and 20 gauge shotgun

Physician
Dies at 85

Credit Co.
Files Suit

GALUPOUS - Dr. Samuel Roy
Bossard, 85, retired member of the
Gallipolis Stste Institute medical staff,
and veteran officer of both World War I
and II, died unexpectedly at his home at 92
Court St., around 3 p.m., Saturday.
Dr. Bossard had been a member of the
Gallipolis State Institute staff more than 50
years.
He retired from GSI in July, 1964, from
active medical practice. After his
retirement, he actied in the capacity of a
medical consultant on the GSI medical
staff.
He was a graduate of the State
College, Edinboro, Pa ., and received his
academic degree there . He was a 1 ~16
graduate of the Stritch School of Medicine,
Loyola University, Chicago.
Dr. Bossard served as a medical interne at th,e C &amp; 0 Hospital in Huntington,
W. Va. He was engaged in private practice
at Belville, W. Va., from 1917 untill919. He
was commissioned a first lieutenant in
World War I, and joined the stall of the
Ohio Hospital for Epileptics on June 22,
1920 (Now the GS!).
On May 8, 1941, he returned to military
service during World War JI as a
lieutenant coloneL He was discharged on
June 19, 1947.
He was a member of the Gallia County
Medical Society, Ohio State Medical
Association, Morning Dawn Masonic
Lodge, Gallipolis Chapter , Royal Arch
Masons and Odd Fellows in Lumber City,
Pa .
He also was a member of the
President's Club, Alumni Association,
Edinboro State College.
Dr, Bossard was born June 11, 1886, in

GALLIPOLIS - Industrial Credit
Company, St. Paul, Minn., Saturday filed a
petition in Gallia County Common Pleas
Court seeking recovery of equipment and
$19,000 plus damages from Dudley Mining
Company, Inc., Pomeroy.
According to the petition, plaintiff
says he is an owner in a caterpillar D8H
tractor with hydraulic dozer and ripper
and a Michigan loader and that on Dec. 12,
1970, defendant delivered to Industrial
Credit Co., a chattel mortgage for $36,457,
payable in equal monthly installments of
$812 each.
DR. SAMUEL BOSSARD
Plaintiff contends that the defendant
has failed to pay his instaltments for the
Woodcock Twp ., Crawford County, Pa,, months of June, July, August, September
son of the late Samuel A. and Caroline and October.
Bossard.
Oty M. Stewart, Gallia County
Dr . Bossard is survived l)_y three Treasurer, has filed a delinquent land tax
sisters, Mrs. Evelyn Dickson, Lionville, suit against James A. Coughenour, Rt. I,
Pa.; Mrs. Mary Humes, Cambridge Langsville . Stewart seeks $166.87 in back
Springs, Pa ., and Mrs. Mary Rushlander, taxes on 55.70 acres in Cheshire Twp,
Meadville, Pa . One brother preceded him
In other court matters, Judge Ronald
in death, He is survived by his wife, Ruby R. calhoun has ordered that Roy L,
Plumber, whom he married on June 30, Denney and Wayne Baird, DBA Gallipolis
1941, in Gallipolis,
Auto Wrecking, Rt. 1, build and maintain a
Dr. Bossard was a member of Grace fence of height not less than six feet around
Unitied Methodist Church.
their jtmkyard. The fence may have an
Funeral services will be 2 p.m., opening for driveway purposes not to
·
Tuesday at Grace United Methodist exceed 60 feet.
Church with Rev, Paul Hawks officiating.
lylyers Transportation Inc., has been
Burial will be in Mound Hill Cemetery.
awarded a $2,191.55 judgment plus six pet.
Friends may call at the Waugh-Halley-. interest from July 23, 1971 from Bill
Wood Funeral from 2-4 and 1·9 p.m., on Russell, aka William Russell.
Monday .
Masonic services will be held at 7:30
,
p.m., Monday at the funeral home by
Morning Dawn Lodge.
The hodY'JVilllie in state at the church
one hour prior to the services.

Alert Officer
Spots Suspect

Car Stolen, Wrecked ·
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia-Meigs
Post State Highway Patrol late Saturday
was investigating a stolen vehicle report
involvibg a car owned by Professor Uoyd
G. Carr of Rio Grande College.
A patrol spokesman said Dr. Carr was
forced out of his car by an unidentified
person -apparently a hitchhiker Friday night at the intersection o( Rt, 35
and Rt. 588. Carr's auto was found later
wrecked and abandoned on Rt. 35, one mile

west of Rio Grande.
Maurice F. Alverson, 44, Gallipolis,
was charged with failure to yield the right
of way following a two car accident at I :10
p.m. Friday on Rt. 7, one mile north of
Gallipolis.
Officers said Alverson turned his car
into the path of an auto operated by
Ramona K, Compton, 26, Pomeroy. There
was moderate damage to both vehicles.

, on Main Street in the Middle Block

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
5

r '

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Continuous Service On
Frldayi 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.

-·we

McClURE'S ' diiiytile £
4th &amp; Locus I

·m-5241

· 15 CENTS

POMEROY - Alertness of Pomeroy
Police Chief Jed Webster was credited
here Saturday with leading to the capture
of Walter Voss, 46, Milan, Ohio, wantied by
Monroeville authorities for strong armed
robbery and grand larceny,
Assisting in Voss's apprehension were
David Sheets of the Sheriff's Department
and Steve Hartenbach.
Webster received a call from
Monroeville authorities Friday at 10 a.m.,
stating ':hey had a warrant for the arrest of
Voss and gave a description of him and the
car he was driving.
Webster was at home when he saw the
car being driven past his house. Webster
lmmediately pursued and asked the
sheriff's department for assistance.
Voss was apprehended on SR 338
between Antiquity and Letart Falls. Voss
offered no resistance. He was lodged in
Meigs Cowtty . jail at 2 p.m. Authorities
from Monroeville arrived Friday night
and returned Voss to Huron County.

shells and six boxes of 22 rifle shells. Nine
of the 10 guns taken were recovered. Also
confiscated were between $100 and $200
worth of groceries, cigarettes and
miscellaneous items believed taken in a
burglary rriday night of Folden's Store
near Wellston.
·
It was the third time within li months
lila! Stewart's Hardware had been robbed.
Entry was made by breaking a side
window.
Murray and Williams were being
questioned late Saturday evening by
Sheriff Denver A. Walker and Prosecuting
Attorney Hamlin C. King.
It was the second major robbery in two
weeks involving firearms in Gallia County.
On Oct. 14, $2,500 worth of guns and ammunition was taken in a burglary at Bob
Saunders Quaker State Service Center in
Gallipolis. A similar entry was made.
Agent' Herman Henry of the Bureau of
Criminal Investigation, London, Ohio is
checking both crimes.
In another Saturday incident, felony
warrants charging aggravated assault
have been filed against two Iormer Rio
Grande College students for the early
Saturday morning beating of Roger
· Stevens, 19, College Park, Md., a student
at the college.
,
According to a college spokesman,
Stevens was on the front porch at Holzer

'

Hall when(Continued
he was approached
by the two .
on page 2)

Holiday Inn
Announced
GALLIPOLIS - Announcement was
made Satur&lt;jay that ground will be broken
north of hrlre Monday for a 100-unit
Holiday Inn.
Bob Rees, local auto dealer and a
director of the First National Bank, said
all contracts have been approved with
Holiday Inns Inc., Memphis, Tenn., for the
construction of the $1,300,000 facility.
The L-shaped structure will be located
· on a nine and one-half acre site in Addison
Twp., behind Curnutte's Carryout near the
Gallipolis Bypass. Rodney McCorkle of
Jackson is the prime contractor,
The Holiday Inn will have' a large
dining room, meeting room, bar, lom1ge
and swimming pool in addition to its 100
rooms.
Under current plans; - the facility
should be completed in nine to 12 months .
Rees said "We have a lot of confidence
in Gallia County." The announcement
came as no surprise, since Rees and his
associates have been known to be working
on the project over a year.

A NEW HOME NURSING SERVICE is underway through Veterans Memorial
Hospital in Meigs County, Among personnel involved, from the left, are Donald
Diener, hospital ~dministrator, who will serve as director; ~s Sandra Lewi£,
secretary; Mrs. Edna Russell, R.N., coordinator, and Scott Lucas, assistant administrator who will serve as finance officer.

Hospital Launches
Ho· me Nursi·ng Plan
POMEROY -,A new service department that will provide skilled home nursing services has been initiated at
Veterans Memorial Hospital through a
$29,920 feder,al grant.
Heading the new service is Qonald
Diener, hospitai administrator, as
director, and Mrs. Edna Russell, R.N.,
Middleport, coordinator. The program is
designed to reduce patients' days In the
hospilaL
Working through referrals from
doctors - any doctor licensed in the State
of Ohio - personnel of the new service will
make home visits to perform specialized
nursing duties for patients who might
otherwise have to remain hospitalized.
Mrs . Russell, full time employe, and Mrs.
Elizabeth Smith , R .N., Reedsville ,
working 20 hours each week, will make the
visits expected to average approximately
one hour .
The nurses will not provide routine
nursing duties but will do only special
work outlined by the doctor making the
referraL Cost to the patient will be $10 per
visit which frequently will be covered by
Medicare or other insurance plan.
Surrounding counties alreody have, or
will have, similar programs which are of a
long range nature designed to reduce
patient days and thereby free hospilal

beds for acute cases. The overall object
also is to cut costs of hospitalization to the
patient which may lead to lower insurance
rates.
The local program has been f1111ded for
one year by the Appalachian Regional
Commission through the Ohio Valley
Health Services, Athens.
The local hospital is providing servlees in kind valued at $2,400 in order tJ
participate.
Although under the control of the
hospital's board through D&lt;ener, the administrator, the program also has an
advisory council. Its members are Diener,
Scott Lucas, assistant administrator, who
is program finance director; Mrs. Russell,
Dr. R. R. Pickens, Chief of Staff, Hug~
Custer, the Rev. Arthur Lund, Mrs.
George Hobstetter, Jr., and . Dale Dutton.
Several more members are e&gt;epected to be
named lmmediately to the council which
will meet at least every three months.
Miss Sandra Lewis of Middleport,
secretary, will do the paper work in the
program.
Money collectied thrQugh the home
visits will go back to the Regional Planning Commission which is merely
providing insurance that the hospital will
not operate at a loss by carrying out the
home service project.

. I

Ma Williamson Busy at Age 80

BY KATIE CROW
RUTLAND - Friday proved to be
quite an exciting day in the life of Garnet
Williamson, affectionately known as Ma .
Friday marked h~r 80th birthday.
Being 80 is one thing, but to do what this
lady does at 80 is something else,
Mrs, Williamson owns and operates an
Allis Chatmers Agency in Rutland. She
STUDENT HURT
sells tractors, keeping track of an in·
MIDDLEPORT -: The Middleport ventory that would stagger a yowtger
Emergency Squad was called to Meigs merch3ot. Last week she "took in·
High School, Rock Springs, at 2:54 p.m. v~ntory." This week she admitted "taking
Friday for Doug Burns who received a things a little easier."
back injury wheri he tripped and fell in the
In addition to running her business,
auditorium preceding a pep rally. He was she rises early to quilt a little before going
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital to work, After work what does she do? She
where he was treated and released.
starts quilting again or paints tablecloths
or pillow cases.
iruNTER HURT
Mrs. Williamson and her late husband,
HUNTINGTON - Haskell Bloomer,
Shelton Rd., Rt. I, Thurman, was listied in Lorain, opened the Allis Chatmers Agency
fair condition at the Cabell-Huntington in 1937. Mr, Williamson firf in 2953 and she
Hospital Saturday evening where he was has carried on the business,
Mrs. Williamson says with pride:
admitted following a hunting accident.
"there
isn't a person I have dealt with that
Bloomer reportedly suffered severe
wounds of the neck and face, He was first I couldn't deal with again." And this: "I
treated at the Holzer Medical Center and don't know what people would do without
friends. I have such wonderful neighbors,
later transferred to Huntington.
lite
best in the world."
••·~v~.- . . ..:..........._... ,..,,., . ~,..·,···· ···· · · · ~·"' ·o;o;···~Jo·~.,........... ,
One neighbor, Mrs. Merle (Freda)
Davis, who thin.ks the world of Mrs.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Williamson, said "Ma works like a young
Extended Oblo Weather Outlook for
woman . She even overhauls machinery.
Monday tbroogb WedDesday: '
When anyone has sickness in the neighWarm : Moll!lay thro...~ Wednesday
with chance of showers · Moaday and bOrhood or trouble, Ma is always the first
one there and she doesn't go empty han·
TUesday, Highs in the upper IGs 'and the
lower 70s. Overnight lows io.the 40s and ded. "
Mrs. Williamson, who has no children,
lower 50s.
maintains she has more kids than most
-xx.:
;•:-.;-.'!o'O...•;:;o;,•o•
.,.,.x 1;3·'·~4!-«~·:..x.;:;::.:.:.:..:.:«&gt;..-.:.x!;~o"&lt;-»:a:
. . .«o..o,;!-0» ..·~:«&lt;-:.:&gt;. •:..~~9."«•
;;&gt;.&lt;;•
folks , Everyone admires and respects her,
but most of all, they love her.
COFCTOMEET '
How did Ma become what she is?
POMEROY - The Pomer~y Chamber Maybe because she always quits work in
of Commerce will meet Monday at 12:30 time to read her Bible before going to bed .
p.m. at Bowers Restaurant.
Trilmte to Mrs. Williamson was paid

by the Rutland Fire Dept. Friday evening.
The siren was sounded and firemen went
to Mrs. Williamson 'shomeon a fire truck.
There, joined by representatives of the
firemen's auxiliary, they presented Mrs.

Williamson a large decoratied birthday
cake topped with a replica of a tractor.
After the group sang "Happy Birthday,"
she was taken to dinner by Mr ..and Mrs.
Arnold Grate,

!~"?:O!i-S~:.,,:O:•.•;o!o:o:•:o!•!•:•,• :O:-.o;o!y;o!-;-;-;o,-.-.!•!-!•!•!•!•

SANDWICHES

I

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

.

We don 't make

Hamburgers with per sonality . Tenderloins with
tasle appeal.

Families

10 Guns and Ammunition
Stolen; 2 Suspects eld

··create'' em!

Alll)ccounts Insured Uo _To $20,000.00

Than 11,000
THREE SECTIONS

Member Federal Reserve System
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Reaching More

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Vallev

NATIONAL BANK
POMEROY

Your Invited Guest

CITY ICE &amp;FUEL CO.
POINT PLEASANT, W. VA.

MIDDLEPO~T, OHIO

JlM STARKEY, 1628\li Chatham Av~ .• GaWpollB, scans back issue of The
Dally Trlb1111e on the Gallia CoWity District Library's mlcrofUm machine, This is
only one of numerous Improvements made by IQ!:alllbrary facilities the past two
years. GaUia voters W'ill be asked to apjX'ove renewal of a two-tenths mill
operating levr on Nov. 2. See John McKean's colwnn on page 24 today roncernlng
the locallihrary.
.

'

-

,.., , .' "' ''' '" '

MA WILLIAMSON

...

w.

�'
,..

_

3- TheSundayTimes - Sertinei,Swlday.Oct. 24. 1!171
2- The Swlday Times - Sentinel, Suncb , Oct. Jllt'll

1~--

Possible
.
Shooting
Probed ·

Old Windmill
Transplanted

.

.

-··--

RIO GRANDE - The sun catches the
shiny top of the old fashioned windmill and
reflects across the rolling green field near
Rio Grande. The 30-f.oot high windmill
extends its 26-foot blades to the wind as
they turn gently in the wind.
The windmill was built in Mt. Vernon,
Ohio by James A. Bean, a well-known
collector, who this past summer sold it to
the Bob Evans Farms Inc. It was brought
here and set in the center of a large field on
a base of multi-colored stones worn
smooth by the waters of Raccoon Creek.
There it was reconstructed by Carter and
Evans of Gallipolis .
The oldest windmills come from
England and Wales where they served a
purpose in everyday life. The mills were
used for grinding grain into flour and meal
and other feed , for people and animals .
The shaft in the center of the mill is attached to another shaft which in turn is
attached to the arms of the mill, causing
the first shaft to move up and down as the
wind turns the arms. In this way, grain
was ground into meal or other products for
general use.
Plans for the future of the Welsh
"indmill at Bob Evans Farms are not
complete ; however, in the future it may
contain a gift shop.
This old-fashioned mill consists of
many parts, all very old, and come from
many parts of the world. It contains stone
burs made in France, a ·sacker which dates
back to the Civil War which pioneers used
to fill bags. The old mill is a relic of the
past which will neve r be forgotten . Bob
Evans' Farms is proud to be able to
preserve parts of the past for today's and
future generations.

,

,._______ ....I
•

l

I

-~
-~

GLENN ELIJOTT, stariding beside the windmlll bought and assembled this
summer by Evans Enterprises, manages the Sausage Shop located near Rio
Grande.

Ten Guns

a specialist. Warrants have been issued •~r
the assailants' arrest. The incident is in
charge of Rio Grande Marshall Ralph Wall
and ·Gallipolis Solicitor R. W. Jenkins.
two
Deputies Friday
returned
Columbus residents from Putman County,
W. Va., to face auto theft charges here.
John Robert Justus, 20, and a 17-year
old juvenile were charged with the theft of
a 1966 Pontiac GTO owned by Bruce
Melton. A third suspect, John Straight, 18,
remains in Putman County.
They were apprehended last Sunday

1Continued from page I)

forme r students, whose names are being
withheld pending their arrest. One took
Stevens' pen and began writing on his body
or sturt. Stevens asked to have his pen
back . At this point. he was struck viciously
about the face, knocked to the pavement
and kicked unmercifully in the face and
head. Stevens suffered extensive injuries
in the facial area . He has been transferred
t&lt;J a Cincinnati Hospital for consultation by

Ga!(lpolis City limits must be
confined.
The purpose of the immediate
enforcement of this ordinance is
due to a recent reported case of
rabies. Wednesday, October 20,
a dog died infected with the
vir us.

morning after failing to pay for gasoline at
a truck stop at Pliny, W. Va.
According to the Putman County
sheriff's department, the trio pulled into
the truck stop for gasoline but failed to
pay. In their haste to leave, they lost
control of Melton's car and struck a semi
parked near the entrance to the truck stop.

.

NELSONVILLE - The TriCoun ty Technical College,
moving in a major new direction in career training, will
operat.e a Health Training Institut.e to relieve acute shortages · of technicians felt
nationwide and in Southeast.ern
Ohio, according to a recent
manpower study by the Ohio
Valley Health Services, Inc.
The new Health Training
Institute will use as its base the
highly successful School of
Practical Nursing that has been
operating since 1968 with 101
L.P.N.'s having graduated and
nearly 100 · per cent of these
, employed in area health cent.ers.
The practical nursing
program was developed
through the leadership of Mrs.
Patricia Torres who has been
promoted to Direct&lt;Jr of Health
Careers. Under Mrs. Torres'

direction the School of Nursing
has gained a Statewide
reputation of educational excellence. As the new Health
Career Director, Mrs. Torres '
first assignments will be to
develop the curriculum and
development guidance and
information literature for
persons Interested in health

careers.
To replace Mrs. Torres as
Coordinator of the School o[
Practical Nursin g, Mrs.
Margaret Hubble of Ne1• •• , 1lle
ha s been promoted fr ,

r----------------- ·
I

~i

SUNil,\ '
TIMES.SEI'&lt;l'INH

I

:

P~lll .. htll t¥tty SUMI~ by lhl 0~10 I

.-,u., _publ"fllfll

Ct.

GALU~OLI
PAIL' fRitUirif
.H Thltlf Au .. O tl! l~&gt;tllt , O~la . 11411

tf

Puou.nn twltJ ,..,kilt., tvtlllnl t~ctll' I

~ 11 Utlllr. S.~onoi Cltn POIIfllt Pt la t l
GlltiPOI I , O h ll, _,ill .

"THI!: OAI LV .JEHT INEL
Ill (OIIrl Sl ,, ~ ......... , , 0, dltt ,
~ulll .ltH to;try WH~d'f I Yiflln . UctOI

hhorffr. lrottrH"

'

I
I
I
I

._..,o d nl mt•llno 1

mflltr II l"etnf"Y · 01\lo , Pe~~ot Olflct.
n:UU OF SU.SOtfiiTIOH
CfH it r dtlly Mid ,-SIII'IUY, lok ptr

position of basic instructor, a
position she has held since the
opening of the school.
The Health Training Institute,
when fully developed, may offer
15 to 20 health training careers,
including one year diploma and
two year associate degree
programs. The initial programs
planned for next fall include a
combination of the practical
nursing program, registered
nurse, medical records and
medical secretary technology,
radiology technology and
physical therapy assistant .
These programs were selected
on the basis of a survey of
manpower needs of southeastern Ohio made by the Ohio
Valley Health Services and by
National and State shortages.
The proposed registered
nurse program wm be a two
year associate degree program.
Astuden t may either build from
the one year P.N. program to
the R.N. , or enroll directly as a
R.N . student.
Other programs that may be
included later are : Public
Health
Nurse,
Hospital
Dietition , Ambulance and
Heli co pt e r Emergency
Assistant, Dental Technician,
Dental Assistant , Inhalation
Therapist, Surgical Technician,
Occupational Therapist, and
Medical Equipment
Technician . A wide scope of
wo rkshops, seminars, and
evening schools for allied health
workers and the general public
will
also
be
offered

I

11

i

·I
I.

I

I .

I

I
I

I

~

MEIGS.THEAIR£:
Tonight, Mon. a. Tues.
October 24-15•26

PHARMACIST

"'

- - - ---

Mft50~
1\!

I ~

D!l!V!·IN
, , •

·~

100 PM

·7 PM

TO

P01,VT PLIASANT STOll ONI,. Yl

MEN'S

ronlght, Oct. 24

Double Feature
THE OWL AND

HECK'S REG.
'6.99

LOCAL officials have been very active in the UNICEF
program down through the years. According to a UNICEF fact
sheet, aid from this program goes to 112 countries with a child
population of more than 700 million, out of a total world child
population of 1,344 million .

- PLUS" LADV · 1N CAR
WITH GLASSES

AND A GUN"
01 i ver' Reed

"R"

2501 .
Jackson
Ave.

'Point Pleasant's IP.~rling Drug Stnre"
!

.

•

Band Seniors, Parents Recognized
TUPPERS PLAINS
Seniors of the Eastern High
School band were recognized
along with their parents Friday
night when the band, directed
by Charles Willis, presented a
halftime show at the EasternMiller game.
"Eastern turns in to TV" was

++++
NATIONAL UNICEF Day will be observed on Oct. 31.
Pi-esident Nixon and government officials all the way down to the
local level urge citizens to support this program. UNICEF's motto
is "A Future for Every Child."

+++ +
FOLLOWING the Oct. 15 assembly on drugs at Gallia
Academy High School, students had a better idea, or greater
understanding of what drug abuse is a ll about.
AS PART of an expanded program in the fight against drugs,

RESTORES C4onproNion .
IMPitOVES ...... tfllalo 1CV

INCREASES onvlne,......

STEEL
SHELVING

++++
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times .... David Rice named winner of Tribune
carrier contest .... Dr. Charles E. Davis inaugurated lOth
IJWfil!ent of Rio Grand~ College .... New RU5 nears compleLi~
ll\ 'Rqdney area .... Josme Thomas, Centerville, named !951 R1o
&lt;1railde Copege Homecoming Queen .... Rio Grande Bluemen
defeat Cheshire Bobcats 26-14 to claim six-man ·county football
crown .... Wellston hands GARS first SEOAL loss, 7-S, takes over
undisputed first place in title race.

9x24x48

HECK'S
REG. '5.99

HECK~ss

Opportunities
Session Planned

$ 99

REG.

1.49

pOMEROY - The annual
~rogram to inform students and
parents of post high school
education opportunities will be
held at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the
Meigs High School under the
sponsorship of the school's
guidance department.
This year, Mrs. June Lee,
guidance counselor of Rio
Grande College, will represent
four-year degree granting

GAL

1

AUTOMOTIVE
.
.

I

REBUILT SPARK PLUGS
SO OFI

' - 00

HECK'S
REG.

·,1.48

'

GARBAGE CAN
•

HECK'S REG.
'2.29

co ll eges. She will answer
questions pertaining to admission procedures, financial
and the courses of study. Frank
Lownhour, dean of students at
the Tri-County Technical
School, will be on hand to advise
those students who are interested in a two year program
leading to an associate degree.
Lee Glass, intern supervisor of
the Tri-County Joint VocatiQnal

20GAL

'1~·

ROASTING PAN

PITCHER

.LOAF PAN
VACUUM
REG. '5.59
SQUARE CAKE PAN HOSE KIT
PIE PAN
10 PIECE
HECK'S REG. 11.09
BEVERAGE SET
YOUR

HECK'S REG.

CPOICE

'1.88

t-17

12..96 .

5

$

.95
sq. yd.

ano up

Padding
and Labor
INCLUDED

Minimum 2QSq. Yds .
Nylon. Polyester, Acrilan , Herculon. Over 500
colors and patterns to se lect from . Come in
today and make your selection.

INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPET
NOT
INCLUDED IN THIS SPECIAL!
. WE ALSO HAVE .. .

e ARMSTRONG VINYL QU8KERTONE
.LINOLEUM. !I ~ 12 WIDTHS ·
e ARliSTRONG VINYL CUSHION
FLUUK LINOLEUM

TOASTER

$}

51

$139

G.-E.
HECK'S REG.

u•

88

POMEROY - Drummer Phil
Moon and the trumpet and
trombone sections were
featured when the Meigs High
School Band presented its
haHtime show at the AthensMeigs game in Athens Friday
night.
.
A semi-I'OCk number "Totem
Pole" was featured for the
instrumental sections and Moon
who moved to the front of the
band formation
to be
highlighted for the presentation.

Brenda Taylor was the
lea tured majorette for the
band's first formation which
was a large diamond which
later moved into four smaller
diamonds and then returned to
the bigger diamond to conclude
the forma tion . "Rock Ala
Bach" was the name of the
selection.
The band entered across field
playing "Waiting for the Robert
E. Lee" and closed the show
with the fight song .

'-''"'..

TOY BUYS

t

5

RliULAR

'"'n' " seas
Boys will lov• these ex·
citinq SSP racing e.rs.
Each·comes with ih own
pow•r T-stick, Bi9 selec-

12-loot loot FAT TRACK
oval strip has two 180
degr•• curves plus 5 Fat

NON TOXIC MODELING COMPOUND

Treck joiners and 2 rub.
ber bond p&lt;~&lt;k•.
(Cor~ Extra)

tion oll6 difloront models to choose from .

PLAYDOHFOVRPACK~----~
REGULAR 14&lt;

Pook ol four o-ounu
can~td.y.UOw,bN•

and whito, HoiM'l of
cre~fiv·e fun.

[I

2 Sl •.
Sic PIG.

HOT WHEELS

STUNT RIDERS

1iiiJ

PIG.

MAnEL

MATrEL

CARS -

96e

TRUCKS

LIMIT

3

KIDS CAN HAVE A PARTY WITH A

:ev•erCIIge Dispenser

Miniature dispensers for 'Coke',

'Kool Aid' or 'Popsi', With bev·
I toaoa and glasses or c;ups.

IT'S MURPHY 15

FOR

• THE LATEST TOYS
THE MARXWRITER

TOY TYPEWRITER

GALUPOUS - Thirty-two
persons were examined Friday
during the semi annual Orthopedic Clinic sponsored by the
Gallia County and city health
departments and the Gallia
County Crippled Children's
Association .
Dr. Donald M. Thaler, orthopedic surgeon at the Holzer .
Medical Center, referred six
persons for X-rays, six for
special shoes and four for
therapy .
·others participating were
Mrs. Grace Roberts, occupational therapist, Ohio Elks
Association; Robert Fannin of
the Columbus Orthopedic
ftppliance Co., and David
Altmaier of .Stark-Aitmaier
Shoe Co.
PREFERRED HOURS
PORTSMOUTH - Whenever
possible, Portsmouth Receiving
Hospital prefers that patients
be admitted between the ·hours
of 8-a.m. and 3 p.m., Monday
through Friday. Based on staff
availability between those
hours, it will be better able to
serve the needs of patients,
according to Sheldon Rogers,
M.D., Superintendent.

SSP RACERS

BIG "0"' TRACE

83

9

TILL

BE SURE SANTA BRINGS

FAT TRACK OVAL FOR SIZZLERS* OWNERS

32 Examined
REG.
2FOR

Percussion, Brass Lead

OPEN
EVERY
MONDAY

School, will spea~ on adult
education evening classes for
anyone interested.
Mrs . J ames Vennari and
Harold Sauer, counselors of the
Meigs High School, will host the
program after which refreshments will be served . Parents
and studen~ are urged to takeadvantage of this opportunity to
enlighten themselves concerning post high school
education.

CARPET
SPECIAL

A!JTOMOtl\'t OtrT.

salute to the television ·show,
"Hawaii Five 0." The line
includes Debbie Jeffers, head
maj orette, and Jan Holter,
Cheryl Kuhn, Louann Newell
and Vicki Spencer. Tributes to
"Dragnet" and other television
shows and commercials
rounded out the show.

McCormick (Lane ) a junior
from Jackson, and Jake Bapst
I Merriman) a freshman from
Beaver. Reservations for any of
the three nights of "The Importance of Being Earnest" can
be made by contacting Rio
Grande College at 245-5353.

MON., TUES., WED.!
3 BIG DAYS

RACINE - Voters of the
Southern Local School District
will decide on a new three mill
tax levy when they go to the
pclls on Nov. 2. Ralph Sayre,
superintendent, gave the
following reasons for the use of
funds .
l. The State Legislature about
six years ago voted a resolution
to qi~c~QLinue, _i9e per~o nal
property tax, but to do it qver a
long period of lAne. Example :
In 19'12 the personal property
lax will continue to decreaqe,
and by 1973 there will not be any
income at all from personal
property lax in Southern Local
District, or in the entire state of
Ohio.
The facts are: in 1972
Southern Local School District
will lose an estimate of $24,000
from personal property tax. The
three new mills would bring in
an estimate of $21,000 per year
to offset what is being lost by
personal property tax.
The three mills is needed just
to maintain what the district
already has.
Three mills would be 30c per
$100 valuation. Example: $3 per
$1 ,000, or $1 5 per $5,000
valuation .

UNDERSTAND Coach Jim Osborne's GAHS basketball team
has a scrimmage lined up with Licking Valley (near Newa rk ) on
Saturday, Nov . 13, one day after the footba ll team completes its
1971 schedule. Licking Valley finished lOth in the 1970 Class AA
UP! ratings with a 17-1 mark.

EA''FR t111t~

QUIETS noioy """"'
e~oo•·REDUC:1a
oil•
•••

Explai•n

++++

BETTE!! ... 11111181

LONGER ..... W.

the theme of the show with
seniors being recognized on the
final number, the Partridge
Family's "1 Think I Love You."
The seniors are Melanie Dean,
Mary Jo Wolfe, Sherry McCain,
Julia Holter , and Rick King.
The majore tte line was
featured in a routine during the

from Rio Grande, and Linda
Hubler . ( Cecily CardewJ a
sophomore from New Madison .
Other members are Karen
Kovach (Miss Prism) a junior
from Amherst; David Matheny
(Dr. Chausable ) a sophomore
fr om New Straitsville: Pat

New Levy

++++
the Gallipolis City Schools will send John Longley, assistant
GAHS guidance director, to a twJi-daY orientation workshop in
Athens on Nov. 3and 4. The workshop will include explanations of
the casual approach to bahavior , small group discussions on the
use of new materials, demonstrations of teaching techniques, and
approaches to developing teaching plans for units on beha vior.

RIO GRANDE - Oscar
Hilde's "The Importance of
I eing Earnest," a case of two
c ouble-li ves and the problems
t 1ey cause, comes to South! astern Ohio next month as the
f .rst Rio Grande College
' 'heatre production of the
;eason. Dates are Nov. 6 ~8 in
Community Hall, with an 8 p.m.
curtain time.
"The Importance of Being
E&amp;rnest" will be presented inthe-round, a theatre concept
utilized by the College Theatre
in past seasons.
First presented in 1895, five
years before Wilde's death,
"The Importance of Being
Earnest" uses a nine·member
cas t. Among the major
characters are : Earl Thomas
(Algernon ) a junior from
Cheshire; Lewis Hendrickson
(Jack Worthing ) a freshman
from Mansfield ; Jean Stewart
(Lady Brechnell) a senior from
Gallipolis;
Evie Taylor
(Gwendolen Fairfax), a senior

HOWARD E. KING, 54, HUNTINGTON, was arrested on charges rl. driving while intoxicated and resisting and abusing an officer following a tractor-trailer accident Friday night
on SR 33, one-half mile north of Pomeroy, the Meigs County sheriff's department reported .
King was traveling north on 33when the rig, above, he was driving went off the road in a curve.
The cab struck and broke off a power pole, stopping on its side. The trailer, loaded wilh mining
machinery, turned over. The 1969 tractor-trailer was leased by the Case Driveway Co. , Inc. of
Huntin~ton. Kin~ was not injured. He was lod_ged in Meigs County Jail in lieu of bond. There
was heavy damage to the truck.

++++

'4''

facing the village. Candidates village together with the
will also be given the op- general appearance of the town.
portunity to express their Candidates for mayor are
Charles Pyles, incumbent;
opinions on the issues.
Issues to be discussed are the Herb White, and James Roush .
annexation of a tract of land Running for village council are
which is now being considered ·Lynn Hart, Glen Rizer and
by the Meigs County Com- Delores Gene Lyons.
missioners, the air pollution An invitation to att.end the
from the plants directly across meeting is also extended the
from Racine on the West Meigs County Commissioners.
Virginia side, and drainage and members of village council and
condition of the streets in the the board of public affairs:.

Wilde Drama Comes to Rio

++++

Color)

. , FRUTH
PHARMACY

I

THE United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) 25th annual
campaign will be in full swing locally next weekend. UNICEF'S
main purose in 1946 was to save young lives. To that basic, unchanging goal has been added one: to help insure that young lives
and talents in a de'veloping worls will not be wasted.

C.P.O. SHIRTS

9:00 A.M. TILL 10:00 P.M.
SEVEN DAYS AWEEK
I Rl

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

SUNDAY ONLY

,

George Sega l

Dot1'1 Mor'lkey Around

/

'--------.,.j

C

" GP"

1

ANGEL

Barbra Streisand

Colorcartoon :

.

BURY ME AN

THE PUSSYCAT

HUSBANDS
!Technic01or)
Ben Gazzar,a
Peter Falk

.

THE MAN CALLED
SLEDGE

I

ATTORNEY Lewis C. Warden has sent a t'Opy of the Harvard
Law School Bulletin, in which three books are reviewed by him to
friends in Gallia County.
'
. THE BboKS reviewed are: The Gun and Glory of Granite
,Hendley by New Conquest; A Bait of Perjury by Wallace Savage;
and ASecond Birthday by William Stringfellow. All of the authors
are graduates of the Harvard Law School.
Warden, a former Gallipolis attorney and · Common Pleas
Court judge, is now project. editor for the Lawyers Cooperative
Publishing Co., of Rochester, N.Y., and is located at Gainesville,
Fla. He is himself the author of two noveis, a biography of
Blackstone, and most recently, "Landlord and Tenant. " He was
recently included in the Directory .of British and American
Writers published by the St. James Press in London, England.

I

Offered at Nelsonville

RACINE - Three issues
facing the village of Racine will
be discussed al Candidates'
Night Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at
the village Town House. Interested citizens and several
candidates have requested
candidates night. All residents
of the village and candidates
are asked to attend .
The meeti ng will give
residents an o pportunity to get
answers to the three issues

++++

•

'

i

AREA residents are reminded that Eastern Standard Time
wiU return at 2 a.m., on Sunday, Oct. 31. Residents should turn
their clocks back one hour before retiring for the night one week
from today.

Tonight lhru

The reported rabid animal ~ounds) .
Wednesday
was located between Third and
Boster stated that if any , . . - - - - - - - - - . . . . ,
Fourth Ave. ·on Grape St.
persons has been bitten by a dog
The animal was a mixed fitting this description within
collie-shepherd, approximately the last two weeks or has seen
Jlh-years old, with long-hair, this dog fighting with any other
reddish orange in color, animals, to please notify the
medium weight 1about 35- City Health Dept. He asked that man alanI Ollkulao,oouclon
if any one in the Grape St. area
sees any animal acting strange
or any disposition change in any
anfmal, also please notify the
Health Department.
panovis1orH!l techn ~ color ®
Boster stated that during the from warner brm .
investigation from the owners o k1nney le1S1.1re ser-.-1ce
of the dog that a skunk was .' - - - - - - - - - - - '
CARTOON
around their vicinity approximately two weeks before
•
the dog showed any symptoms
simultaneously with the of rabies . Boster asked the
associate degree and one year cooperation of the public in
having their dogs confined until
programs.
The initial stages of the further investigation in finding
Health Training Institute will be the carrier of the virus.
housed in the existing Technical
College buildings. A new
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Tonight Only
building or a wing of the new
POMEROY - Sidney Eugene
college will be the location of Ellis, 18, Middleport, Rt. I and
the Health Training Institute Vicki Sue Harrison, 17, MidJames Garner
when the college's current dleport, Rt. I.
in
building plans are complete.
Three and one-half millipn
dollars is now budgeted to the
Technical College from the library, a student recreation
Regents and an additional area and offices. The building
$450,000 is in the proposal stage unit will be constructed with the
(R)
from the Ohio Valley Health concept of a core curriculum for
Services 1972 budget. President students preparing themselves
DIXIE PEABODY IN
Light hopes to begin building for the allied health carrers.
plans within a month. An adPersons interested in purditional one and one-half million suing a health career or
in construction funds is organization wanting speakers
programmed for the 1975-76 or information, are encouraged
biennium for health training. to wrire to: Health ·Careers
(R)
The programs now ,being Director, Tri-County Technical
planned will be presented to the College, Route I, Nelsonville,
CARTOON
various cooperating agencies Ohio 45764.
for ' their approval. The Ohio
State Board of Nursing and
various
allied
medical
associations wUI be involved in
the planning along wlth the
School of Nursing's Advisory
Committee.
The health training·portion of
the new technical college will
contain six to eight classrooms,
three teaching laboratories, one
clinical laboratory, a medical

Candidates· Will Talk

BY HOBART Wll.SON. JR.

JAGGER BECOMES DAD
Following the collision, the trio fled on
LONDON (UP! ) - The wife
foot but were apprehended a few minutes of Mick Jagger of the Rolling
later. Melton's car was taken from a Stones has given birth to a girl,
parkin g lot at Rio Grande College.
friends of the couple said today.

Health Tech Training
I

I

MISHAP WAS MINOR
GALUPOUS - City police
investlgared a minor traffic
mishap at 3:14p.m. Friday on
Third Ave . in front of Milstead's
Bakery.
Officers said John W.
Stapleton, Gallipolis, pulled
from an alley and struck a car
operated by Lillian Ellen
Saunders, 54, Gallipolis. There
was minor damage. No citation
was issued .

Rabies Watch Ordered
GALUPOUS - James T.
Boster ,
Gallipolis
City
Sanitarian, announced
Saturday Section 505.01 of the
City Ordinances governing the
status of permitting dogs to run
at large will be enforced. That
me"!" all dogs within the

! Dateline
!
Gallia

POMEROY - Under investigation by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Dept. is a shooting
accident reported to have oceurred at the Hi-7 Club on SR 7
Friday evening.
The Sheriff's Dept. received a
caU from Veterans Memorial
Hospit;ol that Charles Prunty;
32, Gallipolis, IJI. I, was at the
hospital for treatment of a
gunshot wound in his left ann
near the wrist. ·
Prunty told officers that be
had accidently shot hirnseH
while at home and that be had
been driven to the Hi 7 Club by
ll'ivate car and from the HI 7 to
the hospital.
The sheriff's department
later received a caU from the
Gallipolis Police Dept . Informing them that Helen
Prunty, 43, Gallipolis, Rt.l, who
bad ~n cut about the face with
a brOken beer bottle, had stated
that she shot her husband,
Charles Prunty, during an
altercation at the club.
She was lodged in Gallia
County Jail, but was reported to
have been released Saturday
morning .
•

l

... -------. .
I
".
-------)--~----:----~-

Eduulionol fun. Typoo all letters, numerals, punctuation
marb. Boasts carriage return
and ribbon revene.

7

86

eTHE LOWEST PRICES

OR REBOUND

FUJf GAMES
ICI UG, $5 .99

REO.
$9.11

HEW GAMES
TO PLAY

-s
fer
"DON'T GO OVERBOARD"
Try to got 11ilon on dtol
(E) "WING IT"
Knock down tho torgeli to win.
(F) "ANTS IN THE PANTS"
Ma~e t~~nh jump into the pants

.

Gomo1 of •I iII I«
•g•s I 0 end up.

SHOP US AND SEE

FUN FOR ALL AGES

IDI

I:~PACT

413
UIH

TAKE UNTIL
DEC.22nd
TO PAY

GIFT FOR BUDDING MUSlCIANS

USE OUR

TOY GUITAR

EASY
LAYAWAY
PLAN
NOW!

't46

~

m.

.'2"

Groat gilt for •mall loll
singers. Stur~y plestic ~ui­
tar has 6 drings. 29 /J "

long. With pick.

SMALL
DOWN PAYMENT
HOLDS YOUR CHOICE

·
AT MURPHY'S
CHARGE tTl

BOTH STdRES IN GALLIPOLIS - ·OPEN MONDAYS AND FRIDAY$ TILL 9 .

.

G. C. MURPHY CO. • First Quality Always
.,

-I

�'
,..

_

3- TheSundayTimes - Sertinei,Swlday.Oct. 24. 1!171
2- The Swlday Times - Sentinel, Suncb , Oct. Jllt'll

1~--

Possible
.
Shooting
Probed ·

Old Windmill
Transplanted

.

.

-··--

RIO GRANDE - The sun catches the
shiny top of the old fashioned windmill and
reflects across the rolling green field near
Rio Grande. The 30-f.oot high windmill
extends its 26-foot blades to the wind as
they turn gently in the wind.
The windmill was built in Mt. Vernon,
Ohio by James A. Bean, a well-known
collector, who this past summer sold it to
the Bob Evans Farms Inc. It was brought
here and set in the center of a large field on
a base of multi-colored stones worn
smooth by the waters of Raccoon Creek.
There it was reconstructed by Carter and
Evans of Gallipolis .
The oldest windmills come from
England and Wales where they served a
purpose in everyday life. The mills were
used for grinding grain into flour and meal
and other feed , for people and animals .
The shaft in the center of the mill is attached to another shaft which in turn is
attached to the arms of the mill, causing
the first shaft to move up and down as the
wind turns the arms. In this way, grain
was ground into meal or other products for
general use.
Plans for the future of the Welsh
"indmill at Bob Evans Farms are not
complete ; however, in the future it may
contain a gift shop.
This old-fashioned mill consists of
many parts, all very old, and come from
many parts of the world. It contains stone
burs made in France, a ·sacker which dates
back to the Civil War which pioneers used
to fill bags. The old mill is a relic of the
past which will neve r be forgotten . Bob
Evans' Farms is proud to be able to
preserve parts of the past for today's and
future generations.

,

,._______ ....I
•

l

I

-~
-~

GLENN ELIJOTT, stariding beside the windmlll bought and assembled this
summer by Evans Enterprises, manages the Sausage Shop located near Rio
Grande.

Ten Guns

a specialist. Warrants have been issued •~r
the assailants' arrest. The incident is in
charge of Rio Grande Marshall Ralph Wall
and ·Gallipolis Solicitor R. W. Jenkins.
two
Deputies Friday
returned
Columbus residents from Putman County,
W. Va., to face auto theft charges here.
John Robert Justus, 20, and a 17-year
old juvenile were charged with the theft of
a 1966 Pontiac GTO owned by Bruce
Melton. A third suspect, John Straight, 18,
remains in Putman County.
They were apprehended last Sunday

1Continued from page I)

forme r students, whose names are being
withheld pending their arrest. One took
Stevens' pen and began writing on his body
or sturt. Stevens asked to have his pen
back . At this point. he was struck viciously
about the face, knocked to the pavement
and kicked unmercifully in the face and
head. Stevens suffered extensive injuries
in the facial area . He has been transferred
t&lt;J a Cincinnati Hospital for consultation by

Ga!(lpolis City limits must be
confined.
The purpose of the immediate
enforcement of this ordinance is
due to a recent reported case of
rabies. Wednesday, October 20,
a dog died infected with the
vir us.

morning after failing to pay for gasoline at
a truck stop at Pliny, W. Va.
According to the Putman County
sheriff's department, the trio pulled into
the truck stop for gasoline but failed to
pay. In their haste to leave, they lost
control of Melton's car and struck a semi
parked near the entrance to the truck stop.

.

NELSONVILLE - The TriCoun ty Technical College,
moving in a major new direction in career training, will
operat.e a Health Training Institut.e to relieve acute shortages · of technicians felt
nationwide and in Southeast.ern
Ohio, according to a recent
manpower study by the Ohio
Valley Health Services, Inc.
The new Health Training
Institute will use as its base the
highly successful School of
Practical Nursing that has been
operating since 1968 with 101
L.P.N.'s having graduated and
nearly 100 · per cent of these
, employed in area health cent.ers.
The practical nursing
program was developed
through the leadership of Mrs.
Patricia Torres who has been
promoted to Direct&lt;Jr of Health
Careers. Under Mrs. Torres'

direction the School of Nursing
has gained a Statewide
reputation of educational excellence. As the new Health
Career Director, Mrs. Torres '
first assignments will be to
develop the curriculum and
development guidance and
information literature for
persons Interested in health

careers.
To replace Mrs. Torres as
Coordinator of the School o[
Practical Nursin g, Mrs.
Margaret Hubble of Ne1• •• , 1lle
ha s been promoted fr ,

r----------------- ·
I

~i

SUNil,\ '
TIMES.SEI'&lt;l'INH

I

:

P~lll .. htll t¥tty SUMI~ by lhl 0~10 I

.-,u., _publ"fllfll

Ct.

GALU~OLI
PAIL' fRitUirif
.H Thltlf Au .. O tl! l~&gt;tllt , O~la . 11411

tf

Puou.nn twltJ ,..,kilt., tvtlllnl t~ctll' I

~ 11 Utlllr. S.~onoi Cltn POIIfllt Pt la t l
GlltiPOI I , O h ll, _,ill .

"THI!: OAI LV .JEHT INEL
Ill (OIIrl Sl ,, ~ ......... , , 0, dltt ,
~ulll .ltH to;try WH~d'f I Yiflln . UctOI

hhorffr. lrottrH"

'

I
I
I
I

._..,o d nl mt•llno 1

mflltr II l"etnf"Y · 01\lo , Pe~~ot Olflct.
n:UU OF SU.SOtfiiTIOH
CfH it r dtlly Mid ,-SIII'IUY, lok ptr

position of basic instructor, a
position she has held since the
opening of the school.
The Health Training Institute,
when fully developed, may offer
15 to 20 health training careers,
including one year diploma and
two year associate degree
programs. The initial programs
planned for next fall include a
combination of the practical
nursing program, registered
nurse, medical records and
medical secretary technology,
radiology technology and
physical therapy assistant .
These programs were selected
on the basis of a survey of
manpower needs of southeastern Ohio made by the Ohio
Valley Health Services and by
National and State shortages.
The proposed registered
nurse program wm be a two
year associate degree program.
Astuden t may either build from
the one year P.N. program to
the R.N. , or enroll directly as a
R.N . student.
Other programs that may be
included later are : Public
Health
Nurse,
Hospital
Dietition , Ambulance and
Heli co pt e r Emergency
Assistant, Dental Technician,
Dental Assistant , Inhalation
Therapist, Surgical Technician,
Occupational Therapist, and
Medical Equipment
Technician . A wide scope of
wo rkshops, seminars, and
evening schools for allied health
workers and the general public
will
also
be
offered

I

11

i

·I
I.

I

I .

I

I
I

I

~

MEIGS.THEAIR£:
Tonight, Mon. a. Tues.
October 24-15•26

PHARMACIST

"'

- - - ---

Mft50~
1\!

I ~

D!l!V!·IN
, , •

·~

100 PM

·7 PM

TO

P01,VT PLIASANT STOll ONI,. Yl

MEN'S

ronlght, Oct. 24

Double Feature
THE OWL AND

HECK'S REG.
'6.99

LOCAL officials have been very active in the UNICEF
program down through the years. According to a UNICEF fact
sheet, aid from this program goes to 112 countries with a child
population of more than 700 million, out of a total world child
population of 1,344 million .

- PLUS" LADV · 1N CAR
WITH GLASSES

AND A GUN"
01 i ver' Reed

"R"

2501 .
Jackson
Ave.

'Point Pleasant's IP.~rling Drug Stnre"
!

.

•

Band Seniors, Parents Recognized
TUPPERS PLAINS
Seniors of the Eastern High
School band were recognized
along with their parents Friday
night when the band, directed
by Charles Willis, presented a
halftime show at the EasternMiller game.
"Eastern turns in to TV" was

++++
NATIONAL UNICEF Day will be observed on Oct. 31.
Pi-esident Nixon and government officials all the way down to the
local level urge citizens to support this program. UNICEF's motto
is "A Future for Every Child."

+++ +
FOLLOWING the Oct. 15 assembly on drugs at Gallia
Academy High School, students had a better idea, or greater
understanding of what drug abuse is a ll about.
AS PART of an expanded program in the fight against drugs,

RESTORES C4onproNion .
IMPitOVES ...... tfllalo 1CV

INCREASES onvlne,......

STEEL
SHELVING

++++
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times .... David Rice named winner of Tribune
carrier contest .... Dr. Charles E. Davis inaugurated lOth
IJWfil!ent of Rio Grand~ College .... New RU5 nears compleLi~
ll\ 'Rqdney area .... Josme Thomas, Centerville, named !951 R1o
&lt;1railde Copege Homecoming Queen .... Rio Grande Bluemen
defeat Cheshire Bobcats 26-14 to claim six-man ·county football
crown .... Wellston hands GARS first SEOAL loss, 7-S, takes over
undisputed first place in title race.

9x24x48

HECK'S
REG. '5.99

HECK~ss

Opportunities
Session Planned

$ 99

REG.

1.49

pOMEROY - The annual
~rogram to inform students and
parents of post high school
education opportunities will be
held at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the
Meigs High School under the
sponsorship of the school's
guidance department.
This year, Mrs. June Lee,
guidance counselor of Rio
Grande College, will represent
four-year degree granting

GAL

1

AUTOMOTIVE
.
.

I

REBUILT SPARK PLUGS
SO OFI

' - 00

HECK'S
REG.

·,1.48

'

GARBAGE CAN
•

HECK'S REG.
'2.29

co ll eges. She will answer
questions pertaining to admission procedures, financial
and the courses of study. Frank
Lownhour, dean of students at
the Tri-County Technical
School, will be on hand to advise
those students who are interested in a two year program
leading to an associate degree.
Lee Glass, intern supervisor of
the Tri-County Joint VocatiQnal

20GAL

'1~·

ROASTING PAN

PITCHER

.LOAF PAN
VACUUM
REG. '5.59
SQUARE CAKE PAN HOSE KIT
PIE PAN
10 PIECE
HECK'S REG. 11.09
BEVERAGE SET
YOUR

HECK'S REG.

CPOICE

'1.88

t-17

12..96 .

5

$

.95
sq. yd.

ano up

Padding
and Labor
INCLUDED

Minimum 2QSq. Yds .
Nylon. Polyester, Acrilan , Herculon. Over 500
colors and patterns to se lect from . Come in
today and make your selection.

INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPET
NOT
INCLUDED IN THIS SPECIAL!
. WE ALSO HAVE .. .

e ARMSTRONG VINYL QU8KERTONE
.LINOLEUM. !I ~ 12 WIDTHS ·
e ARliSTRONG VINYL CUSHION
FLUUK LINOLEUM

TOASTER

$}

51

$139

G.-E.
HECK'S REG.

u•

88

POMEROY - Drummer Phil
Moon and the trumpet and
trombone sections were
featured when the Meigs High
School Band presented its
haHtime show at the AthensMeigs game in Athens Friday
night.
.
A semi-I'OCk number "Totem
Pole" was featured for the
instrumental sections and Moon
who moved to the front of the
band formation
to be
highlighted for the presentation.

Brenda Taylor was the
lea tured majorette for the
band's first formation which
was a large diamond which
later moved into four smaller
diamonds and then returned to
the bigger diamond to conclude
the forma tion . "Rock Ala
Bach" was the name of the
selection.
The band entered across field
playing "Waiting for the Robert
E. Lee" and closed the show
with the fight song .

'-''"'..

TOY BUYS

t

5

RliULAR

'"'n' " seas
Boys will lov• these ex·
citinq SSP racing e.rs.
Each·comes with ih own
pow•r T-stick, Bi9 selec-

12-loot loot FAT TRACK
oval strip has two 180
degr•• curves plus 5 Fat

NON TOXIC MODELING COMPOUND

Treck joiners and 2 rub.
ber bond p&lt;~&lt;k•.
(Cor~ Extra)

tion oll6 difloront models to choose from .

PLAYDOHFOVRPACK~----~
REGULAR 14&lt;

Pook ol four o-ounu
can~td.y.UOw,bN•

and whito, HoiM'l of
cre~fiv·e fun.

[I

2 Sl •.
Sic PIG.

HOT WHEELS

STUNT RIDERS

1iiiJ

PIG.

MAnEL

MATrEL

CARS -

96e

TRUCKS

LIMIT

3

KIDS CAN HAVE A PARTY WITH A

:ev•erCIIge Dispenser

Miniature dispensers for 'Coke',

'Kool Aid' or 'Popsi', With bev·
I toaoa and glasses or c;ups.

IT'S MURPHY 15

FOR

• THE LATEST TOYS
THE MARXWRITER

TOY TYPEWRITER

GALUPOUS - Thirty-two
persons were examined Friday
during the semi annual Orthopedic Clinic sponsored by the
Gallia County and city health
departments and the Gallia
County Crippled Children's
Association .
Dr. Donald M. Thaler, orthopedic surgeon at the Holzer .
Medical Center, referred six
persons for X-rays, six for
special shoes and four for
therapy .
·others participating were
Mrs. Grace Roberts, occupational therapist, Ohio Elks
Association; Robert Fannin of
the Columbus Orthopedic
ftppliance Co., and David
Altmaier of .Stark-Aitmaier
Shoe Co.
PREFERRED HOURS
PORTSMOUTH - Whenever
possible, Portsmouth Receiving
Hospital prefers that patients
be admitted between the ·hours
of 8-a.m. and 3 p.m., Monday
through Friday. Based on staff
availability between those
hours, it will be better able to
serve the needs of patients,
according to Sheldon Rogers,
M.D., Superintendent.

SSP RACERS

BIG "0"' TRACE

83

9

TILL

BE SURE SANTA BRINGS

FAT TRACK OVAL FOR SIZZLERS* OWNERS

32 Examined
REG.
2FOR

Percussion, Brass Lead

OPEN
EVERY
MONDAY

School, will spea~ on adult
education evening classes for
anyone interested.
Mrs . J ames Vennari and
Harold Sauer, counselors of the
Meigs High School, will host the
program after which refreshments will be served . Parents
and studen~ are urged to takeadvantage of this opportunity to
enlighten themselves concerning post high school
education.

CARPET
SPECIAL

A!JTOMOtl\'t OtrT.

salute to the television ·show,
"Hawaii Five 0." The line
includes Debbie Jeffers, head
maj orette, and Jan Holter,
Cheryl Kuhn, Louann Newell
and Vicki Spencer. Tributes to
"Dragnet" and other television
shows and commercials
rounded out the show.

McCormick (Lane ) a junior
from Jackson, and Jake Bapst
I Merriman) a freshman from
Beaver. Reservations for any of
the three nights of "The Importance of Being Earnest" can
be made by contacting Rio
Grande College at 245-5353.

MON., TUES., WED.!
3 BIG DAYS

RACINE - Voters of the
Southern Local School District
will decide on a new three mill
tax levy when they go to the
pclls on Nov. 2. Ralph Sayre,
superintendent, gave the
following reasons for the use of
funds .
l. The State Legislature about
six years ago voted a resolution
to qi~c~QLinue, _i9e per~o nal
property tax, but to do it qver a
long period of lAne. Example :
In 19'12 the personal property
lax will continue to decreaqe,
and by 1973 there will not be any
income at all from personal
property lax in Southern Local
District, or in the entire state of
Ohio.
The facts are: in 1972
Southern Local School District
will lose an estimate of $24,000
from personal property tax. The
three new mills would bring in
an estimate of $21,000 per year
to offset what is being lost by
personal property tax.
The three mills is needed just
to maintain what the district
already has.
Three mills would be 30c per
$100 valuation. Example: $3 per
$1 ,000, or $1 5 per $5,000
valuation .

UNDERSTAND Coach Jim Osborne's GAHS basketball team
has a scrimmage lined up with Licking Valley (near Newa rk ) on
Saturday, Nov . 13, one day after the footba ll team completes its
1971 schedule. Licking Valley finished lOth in the 1970 Class AA
UP! ratings with a 17-1 mark.

EA''FR t111t~

QUIETS noioy """"'
e~oo•·REDUC:1a
oil•
•••

Explai•n

++++

BETTE!! ... 11111181

LONGER ..... W.

the theme of the show with
seniors being recognized on the
final number, the Partridge
Family's "1 Think I Love You."
The seniors are Melanie Dean,
Mary Jo Wolfe, Sherry McCain,
Julia Holter , and Rick King.
The majore tte line was
featured in a routine during the

from Rio Grande, and Linda
Hubler . ( Cecily CardewJ a
sophomore from New Madison .
Other members are Karen
Kovach (Miss Prism) a junior
from Amherst; David Matheny
(Dr. Chausable ) a sophomore
fr om New Straitsville: Pat

New Levy

++++
the Gallipolis City Schools will send John Longley, assistant
GAHS guidance director, to a twJi-daY orientation workshop in
Athens on Nov. 3and 4. The workshop will include explanations of
the casual approach to bahavior , small group discussions on the
use of new materials, demonstrations of teaching techniques, and
approaches to developing teaching plans for units on beha vior.

RIO GRANDE - Oscar
Hilde's "The Importance of
I eing Earnest," a case of two
c ouble-li ves and the problems
t 1ey cause, comes to South! astern Ohio next month as the
f .rst Rio Grande College
' 'heatre production of the
;eason. Dates are Nov. 6 ~8 in
Community Hall, with an 8 p.m.
curtain time.
"The Importance of Being
E&amp;rnest" will be presented inthe-round, a theatre concept
utilized by the College Theatre
in past seasons.
First presented in 1895, five
years before Wilde's death,
"The Importance of Being
Earnest" uses a nine·member
cas t. Among the major
characters are : Earl Thomas
(Algernon ) a junior from
Cheshire; Lewis Hendrickson
(Jack Worthing ) a freshman
from Mansfield ; Jean Stewart
(Lady Brechnell) a senior from
Gallipolis;
Evie Taylor
(Gwendolen Fairfax), a senior

HOWARD E. KING, 54, HUNTINGTON, was arrested on charges rl. driving while intoxicated and resisting and abusing an officer following a tractor-trailer accident Friday night
on SR 33, one-half mile north of Pomeroy, the Meigs County sheriff's department reported .
King was traveling north on 33when the rig, above, he was driving went off the road in a curve.
The cab struck and broke off a power pole, stopping on its side. The trailer, loaded wilh mining
machinery, turned over. The 1969 tractor-trailer was leased by the Case Driveway Co. , Inc. of
Huntin~ton. Kin~ was not injured. He was lod_ged in Meigs County Jail in lieu of bond. There
was heavy damage to the truck.

++++

'4''

facing the village. Candidates village together with the
will also be given the op- general appearance of the town.
portunity to express their Candidates for mayor are
Charles Pyles, incumbent;
opinions on the issues.
Issues to be discussed are the Herb White, and James Roush .
annexation of a tract of land Running for village council are
which is now being considered ·Lynn Hart, Glen Rizer and
by the Meigs County Com- Delores Gene Lyons.
missioners, the air pollution An invitation to att.end the
from the plants directly across meeting is also extended the
from Racine on the West Meigs County Commissioners.
Virginia side, and drainage and members of village council and
condition of the streets in the the board of public affairs:.

Wilde Drama Comes to Rio

++++

Color)

. , FRUTH
PHARMACY

I

THE United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) 25th annual
campaign will be in full swing locally next weekend. UNICEF'S
main purose in 1946 was to save young lives. To that basic, unchanging goal has been added one: to help insure that young lives
and talents in a de'veloping worls will not be wasted.

C.P.O. SHIRTS

9:00 A.M. TILL 10:00 P.M.
SEVEN DAYS AWEEK
I Rl

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

SUNDAY ONLY

,

George Sega l

Dot1'1 Mor'lkey Around

/

'--------.,.j

C

" GP"

1

ANGEL

Barbra Streisand

Colorcartoon :

.

BURY ME AN

THE PUSSYCAT

HUSBANDS
!Technic01or)
Ben Gazzar,a
Peter Falk

.

THE MAN CALLED
SLEDGE

I

ATTORNEY Lewis C. Warden has sent a t'Opy of the Harvard
Law School Bulletin, in which three books are reviewed by him to
friends in Gallia County.
'
. THE BboKS reviewed are: The Gun and Glory of Granite
,Hendley by New Conquest; A Bait of Perjury by Wallace Savage;
and ASecond Birthday by William Stringfellow. All of the authors
are graduates of the Harvard Law School.
Warden, a former Gallipolis attorney and · Common Pleas
Court judge, is now project. editor for the Lawyers Cooperative
Publishing Co., of Rochester, N.Y., and is located at Gainesville,
Fla. He is himself the author of two noveis, a biography of
Blackstone, and most recently, "Landlord and Tenant. " He was
recently included in the Directory .of British and American
Writers published by the St. James Press in London, England.

I

Offered at Nelsonville

RACINE - Three issues
facing the village of Racine will
be discussed al Candidates'
Night Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at
the village Town House. Interested citizens and several
candidates have requested
candidates night. All residents
of the village and candidates
are asked to attend .
The meeti ng will give
residents an o pportunity to get
answers to the three issues

++++

•

'

i

AREA residents are reminded that Eastern Standard Time
wiU return at 2 a.m., on Sunday, Oct. 31. Residents should turn
their clocks back one hour before retiring for the night one week
from today.

Tonight lhru

The reported rabid animal ~ounds) .
Wednesday
was located between Third and
Boster stated that if any , . . - - - - - - - - - . . . . ,
Fourth Ave. ·on Grape St.
persons has been bitten by a dog
The animal was a mixed fitting this description within
collie-shepherd, approximately the last two weeks or has seen
Jlh-years old, with long-hair, this dog fighting with any other
reddish orange in color, animals, to please notify the
medium weight 1about 35- City Health Dept. He asked that man alanI Ollkulao,oouclon
if any one in the Grape St. area
sees any animal acting strange
or any disposition change in any
anfmal, also please notify the
Health Department.
panovis1orH!l techn ~ color ®
Boster stated that during the from warner brm .
investigation from the owners o k1nney le1S1.1re ser-.-1ce
of the dog that a skunk was .' - - - - - - - - - - - '
CARTOON
around their vicinity approximately two weeks before
•
the dog showed any symptoms
simultaneously with the of rabies . Boster asked the
associate degree and one year cooperation of the public in
having their dogs confined until
programs.
The initial stages of the further investigation in finding
Health Training Institute will be the carrier of the virus.
housed in the existing Technical
College buildings. A new
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Tonight Only
building or a wing of the new
POMEROY - Sidney Eugene
college will be the location of Ellis, 18, Middleport, Rt. I and
the Health Training Institute Vicki Sue Harrison, 17, MidJames Garner
when the college's current dleport, Rt. I.
in
building plans are complete.
Three and one-half millipn
dollars is now budgeted to the
Technical College from the library, a student recreation
Regents and an additional area and offices. The building
$450,000 is in the proposal stage unit will be constructed with the
(R)
from the Ohio Valley Health concept of a core curriculum for
Services 1972 budget. President students preparing themselves
DIXIE PEABODY IN
Light hopes to begin building for the allied health carrers.
plans within a month. An adPersons interested in purditional one and one-half million suing a health career or
in construction funds is organization wanting speakers
programmed for the 1975-76 or information, are encouraged
biennium for health training. to wrire to: Health ·Careers
(R)
The programs now ,being Director, Tri-County Technical
planned will be presented to the College, Route I, Nelsonville,
CARTOON
various cooperating agencies Ohio 45764.
for ' their approval. The Ohio
State Board of Nursing and
various
allied
medical
associations wUI be involved in
the planning along wlth the
School of Nursing's Advisory
Committee.
The health training·portion of
the new technical college will
contain six to eight classrooms,
three teaching laboratories, one
clinical laboratory, a medical

Candidates· Will Talk

BY HOBART Wll.SON. JR.

JAGGER BECOMES DAD
Following the collision, the trio fled on
LONDON (UP! ) - The wife
foot but were apprehended a few minutes of Mick Jagger of the Rolling
later. Melton's car was taken from a Stones has given birth to a girl,
parkin g lot at Rio Grande College.
friends of the couple said today.

Health Tech Training
I

I

MISHAP WAS MINOR
GALUPOUS - City police
investlgared a minor traffic
mishap at 3:14p.m. Friday on
Third Ave . in front of Milstead's
Bakery.
Officers said John W.
Stapleton, Gallipolis, pulled
from an alley and struck a car
operated by Lillian Ellen
Saunders, 54, Gallipolis. There
was minor damage. No citation
was issued .

Rabies Watch Ordered
GALUPOUS - James T.
Boster ,
Gallipolis
City
Sanitarian, announced
Saturday Section 505.01 of the
City Ordinances governing the
status of permitting dogs to run
at large will be enforced. That
me"!" all dogs within the

! Dateline
!
Gallia

POMEROY - Under investigation by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Dept. is a shooting
accident reported to have oceurred at the Hi-7 Club on SR 7
Friday evening.
The Sheriff's Dept. received a
caU from Veterans Memorial
Hospit;ol that Charles Prunty;
32, Gallipolis, IJI. I, was at the
hospital for treatment of a
gunshot wound in his left ann
near the wrist. ·
Prunty told officers that be
had accidently shot hirnseH
while at home and that be had
been driven to the Hi 7 Club by
ll'ivate car and from the HI 7 to
the hospital.
The sheriff's department
later received a caU from the
Gallipolis Police Dept . Informing them that Helen
Prunty, 43, Gallipolis, Rt.l, who
bad ~n cut about the face with
a brOken beer bottle, had stated
that she shot her husband,
Charles Prunty, during an
altercation at the club.
She was lodged in Gallia
County Jail, but was reported to
have been released Saturday
morning .
•

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I
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Eduulionol fun. Typoo all letters, numerals, punctuation
marb. Boasts carriage return
and ribbon revene.

7

86

eTHE LOWEST PRICES

OR REBOUND

FUJf GAMES
ICI UG, $5 .99

REO.
$9.11

HEW GAMES
TO PLAY

-s
fer
"DON'T GO OVERBOARD"
Try to got 11ilon on dtol
(E) "WING IT"
Knock down tho torgeli to win.
(F) "ANTS IN THE PANTS"
Ma~e t~~nh jump into the pants

.

Gomo1 of •I iII I«
•g•s I 0 end up.

SHOP US AND SEE

FUN FOR ALL AGES

IDI

I:~PACT

413
UIH

TAKE UNTIL
DEC.22nd
TO PAY

GIFT FOR BUDDING MUSlCIANS

USE OUR

TOY GUITAR

EASY
LAYAWAY
PLAN
NOW!

't46

~

m.

.'2"

Groat gilt for •mall loll
singers. Stur~y plestic ~ui­
tar has 6 drings. 29 /J "

long. With pick.

SMALL
DOWN PAYMENT
HOLDS YOUR CHOICE

·
AT MURPHY'S
CHARGE tTl

BOTH STdRES IN GALLIPOLIS - ·OPEN MONDAYS AND FRIDAY$ TILL 9 .

.

G. C. MURPHY CO. • First Quality Always
.,

-I

�,.

' I

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~-ThellwMja) Timea-Sentlnei,Sunday,Oct. 24,1971

GALLIPOLIS - The monthly
board meeting of the Community Mental Health and
Mental Retardation Board of
Gallia, Jackson, Meigs Counties
was held Thursday, October 21,
1971 in the Chamber of Commerce Building here.

Malcolm Orebaugh, Chairman, introduced the new board
members, Dr. Richard Simpson, Gallia County, Mrs. Russell
Brown, Mr. Tom Kelly, Meigs
County, and Rev: Glenn Biddle,
Jackson County, also Mrs. Jo
Ledwell, guest, Ohio University

Measle Shots Reminder Made

WAHAMA MAJORETTES - Members of the Wahama
Majorette Corps for the 1971-72 school year are, from left.

Frances Wreston, Vivian Woodrum, Karen Fruendi, Beverly
Knapp, head majorette ; Carolyn Barnette, Becky Paugh and
Linda VanMatre.- Photo by Sam Nichols III.

Mrs. Campbell Accepts WRAP Chairmanship
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Arlene
Campbell, one 'of the newest
members of the Gallipolis
Business and Professional
Women's Club, has accepted
the challenge of the newest
phase of the Ohio State
Federation Program, Women
Responsible for Accident
Prevention.
Mrs. Campbell, employed at
Smith Buick Co. as bookkeeper,
is from Charleston, W. Va.
The goal of this committee is
to reach as many drivers as
possible with the Defensive

wri tten by the State Highway
Patrol to be used this year.
These training courses are
approved by the State of Ohio
Highway Safety Department
and the Governor of Ohio has
commended the clubs for this
p~blic service. A $500 grant was
given by Allstate Insurance
Company for the continuance of
the Highway Safety Program.

Other members of the local
club serving on this committee
are Mrs. ·Jean Runyan, Mrs.
Laura Morris, Mrs. Laura
Driving Courses, one of which is Baker, Mrs. Cheryl Bush, Mrs.
in the planning stage. New Edna Vanco, Mrs. Patricia
instructor manuels are being Boyer and Mrs. Karen Frogale .

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

ARLENE CAMPBEU..

i Area Deaths i
I

former Violet Kathy Parks and

Samantha Beller

a

HUNTINGTON
Mrs.
Samantha Alice Beller, 90,
Crown City, died in St. Mary's
Hospital, Huntington, W. Va .,
Saturday morning following a
short illness.
She was born Oct. 2, 1881, in
Lawrence County, daughter of
the late Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Rose.
She married Otis Beller. He
preceded her in death in
January, 1963.
Children surviving are two
daughters, Mrs. · Sarah Hill ,
Mesa , Ariz.; Mrs. Vera Mays,
Milton, W. Va. , and one son,
Gene Beller, Crown City. Ten
grandchildren and seven greatgrandchildren survive.
She was a member of the
Baptist Temple .
Funeral services will lie held
2:30 p.m., Monday at the
Chapman Mortuary in Hunti ngton with Rev. Burl Taylor
officiating . Burial will be in
Woodmere Memorial Park in
Huntington . Friends ma y call at
the mortuary after 2 p.m.,
Sunday.

yea r ~old

daughter , Bonnie,

ward;

three sis ters , Mrs.

J, L. Kunze

POMEROY - The Rev . J.
Leslie Kunze , Lima, a pastor at
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church for approximately five
years, died Friday night at the
Lima Hospital foll owing a
lingering illness.
Among the survivors are his
wife, Edith , and four children,
David , Danny, Faith and
Rebecca .
Friends may call at the Siferd
Chapel in Lima beginning at 10
a.m. Sunday and on Monday.
Memorial se,rvices will be held
at the funeral home at 8 p.m.
Monday. This will be followed
by cremation. The family has
Oroille Caudill
requested in lieu of flowers
GALLIPOLIS - Funeral friends send a .donation to their
services . for PFC Orville respective churches in memory
Caudill, 20, Perrysburg, Ohio, of the Rev. Mr . Kunze.
who was killed in the Vietnam
War on Sept. 28, were held at the
Friends &amp; Neighbors Pen·
tecostal Church, Perrysburg
Heights on Oct. 9.
FORMAL WELCOME 1
PFC Caudill was a son-in-law
WASHINGTON (UP! )
of Florence Crawford Kemper President Tilo of Yugoslavia
Parks, a former Gallia Coun- will be accorded a formal
tian.
welcoming ceremony at the
Surviving besides his parents, White House next Thursday
Mr . and Mrs. Cecil Caudill, of when he begins his visit to the
Elk Horn , Ky. , are his wife, the United States.

WIN ANEW PINTO
DRAWl~
•
•
•
•
1

CHRISTMAS EVE AT 1:00 PM

REGISTER NOW TILL DEC. 24th
AT THE JONES BOYS ONLY
REGISTER AS OFTEN AS YOU LIKE.
NO PURCHASE REQUIRED
NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN

It!

c-

YOUR
ONE

JOKES.BOYS
01110'1 ,_..,._OUS MCOUNTDS!

SHOPPING CENTER

,..............;:.1.::..:37:...:PINE ST.-GALLIPOLIS

Fans See
2 Shows Nine Fined

IRONTON - With approximately 4,000 fans looking
on in perfect 'weather, the
Gallipolis and Ironton marching
high school bands staged two
outstanding halftime shows at
Tank Stadium here Friday
night.
The Blue Devil band under
the direction of Charle~ Rowe,
presented Stars and Stripes
Trio, America the Beautiful,
When Johnny Comes Marching
Home Again.
The Tiger band , under the
direction of Ralph L. Falls,
saluted all American veterans
With, "The Battle Hymn of the
Republic . This was followed by
a majorette feat...-e , In the Year
2525. The Ironton musicians
then presented "The Patton
theme in another salute to
veterans, followed by 25 or 6 to
4.

Perrysburg; a brother, EdDorothy Hall , Mr s. Wanda
Hurley and Mrs. Emma Row,
all of Perrysburg and two
sisters and four brothers who
live at home in Kentucky .
The body was brought back to
Perrysburg for burial in Fort
Meigs Cemetery. Mrs. Caudill's
mother has several cousins and
aunts living in Gallia County.

GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis City Health Department_ reminds parents of
preschool-age children that
they may have their children.
lmmu~ized against rubeola
(old-fashioned measles) and
rubella (3cday measles) on
October 26 and 28, at the
elementary school in their area.
Immunization will be offered to
these children only at the
designated time according to
the following schedule :
Tuesday, October 26, Clay
Elementary, 9:30 a.m. - 10:30.
Thursday, October 28, Green
Elementary, 11 a.m .• noon ;
Washington Elementary, 9:30
a.m. - 10:30 a .m ..; Rio Grande

Shop-a-Rama
Fee Raised
GALLIPOLIS _ Roger Hood,
president of the Gallipolis
Merchants Association announced Saturday that' participation fee in the 1971 Shop-ARama promotion will be $70.
Reason for the increase, Hood
said is due to the association's
effo~t to do a better job
promoting Gallipolis as a
leading shopping center in the
area. ·
EVANGELIST SCO'IT
Ten cash prizes will be
Today Is the final day to
awarded
shoppers this year on
hear Evangelist Carlyle
Scott at the Faith Baptist various days during the
Church, located on Rl. 35, six Christmas shopping season .
Merchants taking part in the
miles west of Gallipolis at the
1971
program are reminded that
Rodney Line. Rev. Scott will
preach at the ~:30 a.m. checks should be mailed or
Sunday School hour, the 10:30 taken to the Gallipolis Mermorning worship service, to chants Association on or before
the entire young people's Nov. I.
group at 6:30p.m., and at the
7:30 p.m. evening service.
The general pubtic is cordially invited. Joseph C.
INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE
Chapman is the pastor.
Won Lost

Local Bowling

K-C Jewelers

Accepts Report
GALLIPOLIS
The
Galhlpolis City Home Health
Advisory Board met at 1:30
p:m. 'ruesday,October 19, in the
Crest Room at Oscar's.
Members present were James
Boster, Virginia Killin, R.N .,
Alice Pasquale, R.N., Robert
Richards, Rev. Ronald Justice,
Barbara Betz, R.N., Herman
Dillon, L.P.T., Harriett Bullock,
R.N.,.D. Kenneth Morgan, City
Health Commissioner.
The nurses' report of patients
reL-eiving nursing care Under
the agency was given .by
Virginia Killin, R.N., Supervisor of the Agency. A report of
patients receiving physical
therapy under the agency was
given by Herman Dillon, L.P.T.
The new contract nurse , Mrs.
Frank Bullock, was introduced
by Virginia Killin. The next
meeting of the board will be
Jan. 18, 1972.

34

Royal Oak Park
Landmark

14

28

20

24

n

24

Mil ~ne

Farmers Bank

20

28

BY·Court
POMEROY - Nine defendants were fined and three
others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter were Vernon W. Mitchell, Cheshire and James F.
Schuster, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs each, speeding; Walter W.
Benson, Albany, Rt. 3, and
Kerth Allan Douglas, Albany,
Rt. 3, $5 and costs each, parking
on roadway; Susan L.
Shakanan, Athens, Lawrence
A. Mamxr, Athens, Robert C.
Kujala, Athens, and Paul J .
Guinther, RD, Rutland, were
each ordered to make
restitution, $50 each, each fined
$100 and costs, 60 days con·
finemenl,
confi nement
suspended, each placed on
probation for one year, report
address to court each month
during probation period ,
breaking and entering with
int~nl to steal; Edward E.
White~ Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
speedmg, assured clear
distance. Harold E. Dorst,
Henderson, W.Va., costs only,
sev~n days confmement,
driVIng u.nder suspensiOn.
Forfertmg bonds were George
A. Hoffman, Pom~roy •. $27,50:
exp1red operator s license,
Edd1e . Autherson , $100,
destructron of property, $25
disturbing the peace; Carol W.
Cline, Racine, Rt. 2, $27.50,
speeding.
SON IS GUEST
MIDDLEPORT
Bob
Bumgarner, son of Rev. Robert
Blllllgarner, pastor of Heath
United Methodist Church, was a
guest of the Pomeroy Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
Friday night for dinner and an
open meeting following it.
President C. E. Blakeslee.
presided. Ladies of the church
served dinner.

M

Larry's Ashland
16 32
High Team ll Gamesl
F irst, K-C Jewelers, 2636;

Landmark,

892 ;

providing thoae services
referral basfs. At the
time, there II" no ll8Y'chlllb
services In the three-ee~=:
The Board also ell
Drug Abuse Clirilc which
serve not only the three
ties, but the state. At
present time, ·
Kentucky is the closest
and the State of Ohio II
terested in developing a
for Ohio. This would be a
range projeCt for the 648
When It ill flilali2ed, it would
the first Drug Clinic in the
of Ohio.
The Board went on record
endorse the Gallla
Guiidlng Hands School .4
levy on the November
The 648 Board eon:~~
Mental Health &amp;
Retardation of Gallia, Jaclkilon
Meigs Counties is financed
percent by the counties and
percent by the State
ment of Mental Hygiene.

Second,

883; Third, K-C

Jewelers, 879 .

High Ind . (3 Gamesl - First,

WHQP~i ALE

FHA t lects Girl

CORNER OF SECOND &amp; SYCAMORE

~

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

~
~

t
.
§

WE ARE

~
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:S~

REESE FURNITURE IS NOW OPERATING AS
A PUBLIC WHOLESALE FURNITURE
OUTLET

~.:,.·_

Tired of paying those big obi retail prices

~~

don't have to. Public wholesale is all new

~
~

!i

~
·'

to this area. Never before available to this

!;:
;!

area; Never before available to the general

~."

;;
-·
;J·'
::
·,
·: :
•·
,;
:
::
.:
::
::
;

public. This is possible By.

1. Buying dire'ct in large volume..
2. Warehousing our furniture in our big
store.
3. Gearing our store for high volume low, low wholesale mark up.

New Shipment Just Arrived!

CARPET I
12x15
12x16
12x17
12x24

:~

·:.
::
;;
::: ·
·. ~

:&gt;

NIXON VET DAY SPEECH

Pr~s~::n~~?x~~~~a~~t~~~.ke

.

~~

ai~~,Y,~,~,~~~~~'·~ ,~~!.~~, ~~ ,t~ose

Nylon, 501 Nylon &amp;
Herculon

only
While Quantify
· Lasts

\

' II )

ON.· YOU

ALLSAVINGS GUARANTEED IN FU"Ll

GALLIPOLiS SAVIN~ .
AND LOAN COMPANY

a Veterans Day address to the
nation on radio Sunday night at
7:30p.m.
EDT, according to !he . ._ _,._
Opposite Post Offico Phon• 446-J832 GalliPolis
White House.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....

PACK CU Scout Troop 203 will
have a lck meeting at 7:30
p.m .,
Grace United
Methodil Church All boys
wear ~. lloween · costumes.
Refresh ents will be served.
Paren lease attend. All Dens
are in~ ed also.
ANN AL Halloween party of
the G . ia Chapter of the OCSEA ~Eastern A e 7 30 p
· tume and vmask
·• : are·
m. c
oplior I, four prizes and
refreshments . Kiddi es
welco .
TUESD Y
ADDA ILLE Grade School
PTA wi meet at 7:30 p.m. Dr.
George avis, guest speaker,
will dis uss care of the eyes.
Refres ents will be s.erved by
the fi h grade mothers.
Everyor.e is welcome .
RIVERSIDE Study Club will
meet with Mrs. M. T. Epling ,
Sr. at I p.m.
ANN Jl'DSON Bible Class of
First Ba~tist Church will meet
in the fellowship room at 7:30

--

p.m.
PEMBROKE
CLUB will meet
• a .at 8 p.w, with Mrs. Gilbert P.
; ~ Bush, Hlrlliday Heights.
~

if

THE 1110 Grande Faculty
Wives Club annual Men and
~:. · Women's Fashion Show, 8 p.m.
• at the college dining - hall .
Fashions · from Amy's and
Haskins:ranner.
•. ·BAPTIST Ladies Fellowship
:•. will meet. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Maxwell Will be speaking and
..
. showing slides.
1

•

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~

Shop Your Friendly Public Wholesale Dealer
and Save $ $ $ ·
Use Your BankAmericard Charge
Monday thru Friday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. "•
c:,.t, .. r,bu 9 a.m. to 12 Noon ·

tSS

Chris Bucci; commissary,Barb
Sh .
·
t p tt
c opls ; equrpmen • a Y
Schoonover and health and
safe~·. Susan Gloss.
.,
Patrol 4 - "The GreasyGrimy Grasshopper." Leader,
Yvonne Zeoli; assistant, Karla
Kuhn; finance , Connie Newell;
d
C . N II
recor er,
onnre
ewe ;
transportation; Pam Beverly;
commissary, Julie Niehm ;
eqw'pmenl Sharon Swartz and
•
health and safety, LeSlie Smith.
The troop closed the meeting

4
Lassies held their October
meeting at the home of club
advisor, Mrs. Maude Persinger.
The meeting was opened with
Brenda Call leading the club
pledges and Becky Call leading
the group in singing. Devotions
were given by Carol Plymale.
Susan Mills, vice president,
conducted the meeting in the
absence of the president.
A Haiiowee'n party was
planned for Oct. 26 to be held at
the home of Mrs. Persinger.
Officers elected were,
president, Marjorie Gilliam;
vice president, Becky Call;
secretary, Wendy Bastiana ;
treasurer, Letty Walker; news
reporter, Dixie Martin;
recreation, Brend8 Call and
Gwen Gilliam; devotions, Carol
Plymale; song leader, Karl
Thomas, Cynthia Rupe and
safety, Kelly Thomas; health,
·Jane Simpkins; pledges, Beth
Thomas and Tami Smith, and
Clean-up, Maria Hanson.
Other members attending the
meeting were Carol Daily, Joy
Henderson, Jane Ann Kerr,
Ell en Frezee and assistant
leader, Mrs. Beulah Mills.

(' • A
.:&gt;petrs nnounce
Birth of A Son

se~ved to / h,";" atten1inF

TIT-L

_l ~

HI;ade-BIJ"own vv;eda'tn:g '
-

f

VINTON - Mr. and Mrs. Howard Glen, Vinton, announce the engagement and approaching marriage of
Jacqueline Jones to Phillip D. Saunders, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Haskell Saunders, Bidwell.
Miss Jones is a senior at North Gailia High School. Mr.
Saunders is stationed at Lakeland AFB, Texas. Wedding
plans are incomplete.

1

nned Ror Dec. 31

LEXINGTON - Mr.andMrs.
the Fayette county , Kentucky
Kenneth G. Wade, 2610 Clay's
Recreation and Parks board.
Mill Road, Lexington, Ky .,
Mr. Brown is a graduate of
announce the engagement of G II.
d
H' h Sch 0 I
their daughter, Sandra Jean, to a 18 Aca emy lg
John William Brown III, son of and Augusta Military Academy,
Mr. and Mrs. John William Ft. Defiance, Va ., and is a
h
senior at the University of
Brown, Jr., 418 4t Ave. , Kentucky.
Gallipolis.
Miss Wade is a 1968 graduate
The wedding will be an event
'of Lafayette High School, and of December 31 at the South
Elkhorn Baptist Church 10
attended the University of
Kentucky. She is employed by Lexington.

°

~

'huYSdary ClUb R as LUncheon

GALLIPOLIS _ Thursday
Club members met for the first
time this year at a luncheon at
Oscar's on Thursday, Oct 21
Mrs. Arthur Darnbrough, Mrs:
James Walker and Mrs. Gene
Welherholt were hostesses for
the event. The table was
decorated w1'th beaut1'ful Fall
flowers. At each place were the
programs with beautiful covers

Review Held B1J The m~~.~y~~s· ~~~~~~th=rh~~
philomathean Club pr:~ldent~ a~d m~~~~;s J:~~
',)'

GALLIPOLIS
The
Philomathean Club met with
Mrs. Billy Houck on Thursday
evening at her home on
Hillcrest Drive .
Miss Anne Bradbury gave the
review for the group.- She chose
five articles from "American
Heritage" and "Horizon. "
England 's Vietnam ; The
American Revolution, appeared
in the June issue of "American
Heritage," and was written by
Richard Kelchlllll who is an
editor for "American Heritage"
and an authority on the
American Revolution. His
premise is that England relied
on the loyalists to band with the
small army which England sent
to America. They did not do this
for the fear of reprisals,
secondly, the British never did
learn amhush fighting; thirdly,
the transportation of all
equipment across the ocean
became a formidable task and
fourthly, the colonists had
something to fight for after the
declaration was signed.
England would not give upfighting a losing cause and the
loss of the colonies became the
only answer.
The American Heritage for
February 1971 carried an article by Kenneth Davis, who is a
free lance writer on conservation, on the Deadly Dust
the story of DDT. He traces the
rise of the chemical until it was
thought to be a great boon to
mankind, then to the slow
realization that it had not been
tested enough and many harm·rul results were found. DDT
does not disintegrate and is still
to be found in the air . His article
is a plea for careful tesling of
products before they are placed
on the market.
Waller Karp wrote "The
Feminine Utopia" in "Horizon"

-.

Mrs. Marvin Griffin, 1715
.Chestnut Street, Gallipolis.

BYF MEETS
PATRIOT - The Salem
Senior BY~ mel at Nebo Church
last Sunday night for the · services and slides of the Holy
Land visited by David Jenkins .
The group visited Halley 's
Nursing Home on Oct. 10. songs
were sung and refreshments

] ones-Saunders
PI]/tU/On 'T'o Mar:r,

Tut1'a YV UfMj

1"-------------------.

~ ~~ti~:disa~h~~~~e~g~~e:n~
~

M" Sa--1

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Richard E. Speirs (formerly
Beverly Garlic) wish to announce the birth of a son, Chad
Christian, on Sept. 27 in Holzer
MediCal Center. ·The baby
weighed 6 lbs., 13 ounces.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Hoadley Garlic,
Jr., Gallipolis. The paternal
HOj\'IE ON LEAVE
grandparents are Mrs. Max
GALLi'POLIS - Airman 1st 'Martin, Columbus, and Mr. 0.
Class Hr#ry J. Griffin has been E. Speirs, Baltimore, Md.
· 1
home on leave after graduating
-I
from Goodfellow Air Force
Base i~ Texas in the Communications
School
of
.,.~.;::.-. &lt;'_..
Training. He is now being
, ~;=t~
..4
,::

A Lot of Easy To Clean, Lon&amp;·Wearing Commercial
Weaves. You Can Believe It!

Miss Jacqueline Jones

Stars." Leader • Sandi Brown ; ~'Ia
assistant, Lisa Groth; finance,
Sheila Cassidy; recorder,
Sheila Cassidy; transportation,

CREATIVE writer workshop by singing taps.
will be heldln the basement of
the Library~! 7:30 p.m. Bring

•
:

.I

who save. Be sure that It shines
1 1/

v~n

~'

~:'l.

This Group Includes
'

I.

;~ THURSDAy

Assorted Popular Sizes of Good

/

·Oom n·g
E ts

Robinson, Vera Snedaker, Faye
Thompson, Kitty Farrell, Betty
Jo Carter, Sherry Sprow,
Jennifer Ours, Janice Rose,
Libby Willis, Donna Craft,
Martha Willis, Lisa Saunders,
,Susan Russell, Sandy Dennis,
Laura Craft, Elizabeth Butler,
and Kiin Gilmore.
Refreshments of cake, punch,
nuts, mints and coffee were
served by the hostess.
Sending gifts were Sharon
Hamilton, Lynn Mayes, Ann
Johnson,. Jenny McCalla,
Beverly Heck, Pam and Becky
Saunders, Debbie Saunders,
Martha Childers, Kay Saunders, Carolyn Bull~r and Susan
Sprow.

Scout Council Held Meeting

~~~;~~e~ssi~~~Jy Kar;~w~~~:

:':'r"m~i~~~!~~~~=~;
~:
4-H Lassies Met
4646.
'
GALLIPOLIS _ The _H

"

·

BECKER ENLISTS
MIDDLEPORT - Randy
Becker, son of Don Becker and a 1971 gradof
Meigs
High
uate
School, has enlisted in the U. S.
Air Force. His address is A. B.
Randy Becker, SSAN 277423636;
CMR No . 5 593728; Flight 1644,
Lackland Air Force Base,
Texas, 78236.

selec:c~~

~,·
,.
•-; SUNDAY
~ REV . KEN~ETH Sanders,
~ Gallipolis, wqibeguest speaker
:Jt. at Victory Blflisl Church, 7:30
,
'• p.m. The pullic is invited.
::: REV. BIIL,E Payne will be
~ preaching .! Walnut Ridge
'X
;;} Church, 7:3!p. m. E;.vfryone is
.v welcome
·
·~ MONDAY I

PRIEZING PRICES.

for your home furnishings? Now you :

Month

Of

g: ~~~=

FURNITURE

DAN
AND SON

Bowen , 573 ; Second, Walker,
554; Th ird, Henderson, 544.
High Ind. Game First.
Bowen, 246 ; Second, C. Boyles,
213 ; Th ird, Goebel, 198.

GALLIPOLIS - On Oct. 14,
Girl Scout Troop No. 1111 mel at
the First Presbyterian Church
from 7:31).9 p.m. The troop
consists of 29 members.
Leaders are, Mrs. Bill Shaffer
and her assistant, Shawn
Bordeq.
The following officers were
elected:
Scribe, Tammi Stewart·
•
treasurer,
Pam McMahon;
Miss L:toJ'~rse A meet
Camporee chairman, Yvonne
Zeoli, and alternate, Julie
Niehm.
The following patrols were
formed: Patrol 1. Patrol
~
Th~
Leader, Tami Bush; assistant
Patrol, Darla Ward; finance
GALLIPOLIS
The manager, Lu Ann Evans;
Halloween &gt;eason will start off recorder , Terri Morgan;
right with t~e selecting of Miss transportation manager, Pam
Denise Am 1 for F.H.A. Oc- McMahon; commissary
lotxjr Girl the Month .
manager, Tammi Stewart;
,
Miss Am, l, daughter of Mr. equipment manager, Terri
• ·and. Mr.s. . o B.. Ameel, of Kuhn, and health and safely,
Gallipolis, an acllve member Mary Roderick. The name of
;• of Tr1-Hi-\ Gallian Edil&lt;lrial the Patrol is· "The Pink &amp;
~· Staff, libr!fy assistant •. a.nd . Purple Pean~t Polka-dotted
. • semor ~ot(. Demse 1s a JUmor Ping Pong Balls."
~; at Galha ~cademy and Vice- Patrol No. 2, "The Smiling
"· President/of GAHS Future Seven " _ Leader Rhond
'I H
k
f Am ·
•
a
faSs 0
Oc.,. tober G1rl f the Month by the recorder, Kathy Davis, trans:~ club me bers of the local portation, Collen
Clark·
;~ chapter.o eF.H.A.atlheOct. commissary, Ann McMahon:,
:-i 12 meeti
;,
·.
eqwpment, Ann McMahon and
S
Mrs . IIzabeth Clark is healthandsafety,Pam Slayton.
;j faculty a vtsor :
Patrol 3._ "The Seven Super-

GALLIPOLIS - A bridal
shower was given for Julia Ann
Craft, at the home of Mrs.
Melvin L. Craft.
Acolor scheme of pink, green
and white was used . throughout
the house. The table was centered with a three tier bride's
cake, which was made by the
bride's mother.
Games were played with
prizes going to Vera Snedaker,
Kitty Farrell, Elizabeth Rutler.
The door prize was won by
Linda Jeffers. Miss Craft
opened and ackn.owledged her
lovely gifts from ' the following,
Cindy Gilmore, Linda Jeffers,
Susy Thompson, Pauia Butler,
Barb Mills, )11arilyn Childers,
Alice
Amsbary,
Robin

'i

REESE OUTLET

If We Don't Save You Money We Don't Deserve
Your Business.

High Team Game - First. KJewe le rs ,

il

We Invite You to Shop Our 20,000 sq. ft. of Display Home
Furnishings &amp; Save as Never Before.

Second , Landmark, 2429 ; Third,
Farmers Bank, 2199 .
C

Elementary, 9:30 a.m. • 10:30
a:m.
Parents are strongly urged to
take advantage of this opportunity to have their children
protected against both types of
measles . Health department
personnel wouJd also like to
point out that stale immunization regulations require
that children must be ImmUnized against both types of
measles prior to entering
school. Naturally, there will be
no charge for the immunizations .

Department of Psychology.
Maxine Plwnmer, Executive
Director , presented to the
Board the professional staff
which Is available in the area to
provide services on a referral
basis to patients in Gallla,
Jackson, Meigs Counties. Mrs.
Plummer stated that a
psychologist and a psychiatrist
with supportive staff on ·a part
time basis will be available to
work in the three counties
through the 648 Board.
Mrs. Jo Ledwell, Psychologist
Department, Ohio University
outlined to the Board the
available staff from her
Department that would also
work with the three counties on
a continuing basis with the 648
Board.
The Board gave Mrs.
Plummer approval to continue
the developing of the services
for the counties. Mrs. Ledwell
will work as a consultant with
Mrs. Plwnmer and the Board in

Bridal Shower Given/
For julia Ann Craft

Girl Scouts
Met To Name
•
Patrol Units

MH&amp;MR Board· Meets
.

'

Our mink
'II d
Wt•• o more
for you than a
110,000 coat.

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

t th L'b
f
.d d
o e I rary or a gul e 1our
and movie.

announcements were made by
M
J h
B

urged to support the local Red
Cross program and vote for the
Library Levy and the Guiding
inthespringofl971. This article Hand School Levy. Mrs. Joe
is a discussion of woman's lib Moch of Portsmouth, a former
and he feels that the women who member of Thursday Club, was
want to work must be granted .a guest at the luncheon. After
equal pay and jobs with the the meeting the members went
men. But the whole society will - - - - - - - - - be better if most of the women disputed leader of his people.
stay home and bear and train This epic march has become for
c hildren. They can make the Chinese a historical Valley
themselves felt through the Forge and keeps their faith in
ballot by demanding all things Mao.
good for their children. He feels Gerald Carson wrote in
that the lib movement has failed American Heritage June 1971
in offering only equal work, for an article called The Sweet
the hope of all society is a child Extract Of Hokum . This is a
reared in love and taught the discussion of patent medicines
finer qualities of life.
with especial emphasis on Dr.
Mao's Long March by Correlli Samuel Hartman and Lydia
Barnet in "Horizon 1971" is the Pinkham . Their medicines
story of the communists of contained up to 50 pet. whiskey
China making a march from and the well-being felt from
north of Hong Kong to the taking the nostrll!ll was largely
border of Manchuria, a journey due to that ingredient. He
of 6,000 miles under hardships leaves the idea that with the
that were terrible to endure. well-being that ensued from the
Mao was the leader and from preparation could any one say
his ability to escape the armies that people were really cheated.
of Chiang and lead his troops to A discussion and social hour
safety, has made him the un- followed the report.

Tawney's!
THE
DIAMOND
CENTER

FREE INSTRUCTIONS on
use of your new machine.

FEATURES:

Does
Adjustable
z1g-zags.
makes § ]
1

bulton- '

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~sewson

LQJ buttonsl
Take It home in
Its own carrying
case now I

STONEHILL
ngagement Ring .... $175 .00
edding Ring .

. .. $75 .00

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
422 Second Ave.
Phon,e446·1615

00

Gallipolis

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27x45 .0VAL __ s2.99
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Open Til 8 p.m . Mon. &amp; Fri . Nights

FRENCH CITY
FABRIC SHOPPE
Simplicity, McCall s, Bufterlck. Vogue Patterns

COLORS: Pink, Avocado Green, Yellow, White. Turquoise, Tangerine,
Red, ltme, Royal , Topaz, Antique, Plum, Verdian Green, Brown .

2 Complete Floors of Fabrics &amp; Notions
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Ann Sauvage, Syracuse, Ohio

Hales Welcome
First Child

SPECIAL MEETINGS
A series of fellowship
meetings will begin on Nov . I at
the King's Chapel Church each
evening at 7:30p.m. The pastor,
Rev . Jack Rankin, invites
everyone to attend. A different
minister will be speaking each
evening.

Our Cosmetics Will Pamper Your Skin like
the s1o.ooo .coat Pampers Your Ego.

rr
h M
.l OUC -a- in

GALLIPOLIS - The October Club in the distribution of
meeting of the Gallia Service literature concerning the
Unit of the Seal of Ohio Girl Guiding Hand and library levies
Scout Council was held at the in the upcoming election. The
Presbyterian Church Wed- remainder of the meeting
nesday, Oct. 20. Mrs. John consisted of Buzz groups on the
Groth, Service Unit Director , · various program levels.
asked leaders to sign in names
All of the leaders were
of their troop product sales reminded to vote on the first
chairman and the girls Tuesday in November.
represen ling the troop on
camporee council and Local
Planning Board.
Shirley Leach, Council field
director, presented the latest
Council news.
Ruth Ann McMahon and
Cookie Johnston, Service Unit
VINTON - Mr . and Mrs.
Product Sales Chairman, Harvey Earl Hale, Wellston,
handed out samples of the 1972 wish to announce the birth of
Girl Scout Calendars and gave their first child, a daughter,
the deadline dales and other Rebecca Yvonne. The baby
pertinent information for the weighed 8 lbs. , 4 ozs. Maternal
grandmother is Mrs. Marjorie
calendar sale .
Nancy Smith gave in- Branscomb, Wellston. Paternal
structions for those troops grandmother is Mrs. Rosalee
helping the Junior Women 's Hale, Vinton .

Sinqer Sales. &amp; Service

446-9255

58 CoUrt

Gallipcm
5 t NC.IR DEALER

�,.

' I

.

'

'

~-ThellwMja) Timea-Sentlnei,Sunday,Oct. 24,1971

GALLIPOLIS - The monthly
board meeting of the Community Mental Health and
Mental Retardation Board of
Gallia, Jackson, Meigs Counties
was held Thursday, October 21,
1971 in the Chamber of Commerce Building here.

Malcolm Orebaugh, Chairman, introduced the new board
members, Dr. Richard Simpson, Gallia County, Mrs. Russell
Brown, Mr. Tom Kelly, Meigs
County, and Rev: Glenn Biddle,
Jackson County, also Mrs. Jo
Ledwell, guest, Ohio University

Measle Shots Reminder Made

WAHAMA MAJORETTES - Members of the Wahama
Majorette Corps for the 1971-72 school year are, from left.

Frances Wreston, Vivian Woodrum, Karen Fruendi, Beverly
Knapp, head majorette ; Carolyn Barnette, Becky Paugh and
Linda VanMatre.- Photo by Sam Nichols III.

Mrs. Campbell Accepts WRAP Chairmanship
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Arlene
Campbell, one 'of the newest
members of the Gallipolis
Business and Professional
Women's Club, has accepted
the challenge of the newest
phase of the Ohio State
Federation Program, Women
Responsible for Accident
Prevention.
Mrs. Campbell, employed at
Smith Buick Co. as bookkeeper,
is from Charleston, W. Va.
The goal of this committee is
to reach as many drivers as
possible with the Defensive

wri tten by the State Highway
Patrol to be used this year.
These training courses are
approved by the State of Ohio
Highway Safety Department
and the Governor of Ohio has
commended the clubs for this
p~blic service. A $500 grant was
given by Allstate Insurance
Company for the continuance of
the Highway Safety Program.

Other members of the local
club serving on this committee
are Mrs. ·Jean Runyan, Mrs.
Laura Morris, Mrs. Laura
Driving Courses, one of which is Baker, Mrs. Cheryl Bush, Mrs.
in the planning stage. New Edna Vanco, Mrs. Patricia
instructor manuels are being Boyer and Mrs. Karen Frogale .

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

ARLENE CAMPBEU..

i Area Deaths i
I

former Violet Kathy Parks and

Samantha Beller

a

HUNTINGTON
Mrs.
Samantha Alice Beller, 90,
Crown City, died in St. Mary's
Hospital, Huntington, W. Va .,
Saturday morning following a
short illness.
She was born Oct. 2, 1881, in
Lawrence County, daughter of
the late Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Rose.
She married Otis Beller. He
preceded her in death in
January, 1963.
Children surviving are two
daughters, Mrs. · Sarah Hill ,
Mesa , Ariz.; Mrs. Vera Mays,
Milton, W. Va. , and one son,
Gene Beller, Crown City. Ten
grandchildren and seven greatgrandchildren survive.
She was a member of the
Baptist Temple .
Funeral services will lie held
2:30 p.m., Monday at the
Chapman Mortuary in Hunti ngton with Rev. Burl Taylor
officiating . Burial will be in
Woodmere Memorial Park in
Huntington . Friends ma y call at
the mortuary after 2 p.m.,
Sunday.

yea r ~old

daughter , Bonnie,

ward;

three sis ters , Mrs.

J, L. Kunze

POMEROY - The Rev . J.
Leslie Kunze , Lima, a pastor at
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church for approximately five
years, died Friday night at the
Lima Hospital foll owing a
lingering illness.
Among the survivors are his
wife, Edith , and four children,
David , Danny, Faith and
Rebecca .
Friends may call at the Siferd
Chapel in Lima beginning at 10
a.m. Sunday and on Monday.
Memorial se,rvices will be held
at the funeral home at 8 p.m.
Monday. This will be followed
by cremation. The family has
Oroille Caudill
requested in lieu of flowers
GALLIPOLIS - Funeral friends send a .donation to their
services . for PFC Orville respective churches in memory
Caudill, 20, Perrysburg, Ohio, of the Rev. Mr . Kunze.
who was killed in the Vietnam
War on Sept. 28, were held at the
Friends &amp; Neighbors Pen·
tecostal Church, Perrysburg
Heights on Oct. 9.
FORMAL WELCOME 1
PFC Caudill was a son-in-law
WASHINGTON (UP! )
of Florence Crawford Kemper President Tilo of Yugoslavia
Parks, a former Gallia Coun- will be accorded a formal
tian.
welcoming ceremony at the
Surviving besides his parents, White House next Thursday
Mr . and Mrs. Cecil Caudill, of when he begins his visit to the
Elk Horn , Ky. , are his wife, the United States.

WIN ANEW PINTO
DRAWl~
•
•
•
•
1

CHRISTMAS EVE AT 1:00 PM

REGISTER NOW TILL DEC. 24th
AT THE JONES BOYS ONLY
REGISTER AS OFTEN AS YOU LIKE.
NO PURCHASE REQUIRED
NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN

It!

c-

YOUR
ONE

JOKES.BOYS
01110'1 ,_..,._OUS MCOUNTDS!

SHOPPING CENTER

,..............;:.1.::..:37:...:PINE ST.-GALLIPOLIS

Fans See
2 Shows Nine Fined

IRONTON - With approximately 4,000 fans looking
on in perfect 'weather, the
Gallipolis and Ironton marching
high school bands staged two
outstanding halftime shows at
Tank Stadium here Friday
night.
The Blue Devil band under
the direction of Charle~ Rowe,
presented Stars and Stripes
Trio, America the Beautiful,
When Johnny Comes Marching
Home Again.
The Tiger band , under the
direction of Ralph L. Falls,
saluted all American veterans
With, "The Battle Hymn of the
Republic . This was followed by
a majorette feat...-e , In the Year
2525. The Ironton musicians
then presented "The Patton
theme in another salute to
veterans, followed by 25 or 6 to
4.

Perrysburg; a brother, EdDorothy Hall , Mr s. Wanda
Hurley and Mrs. Emma Row,
all of Perrysburg and two
sisters and four brothers who
live at home in Kentucky .
The body was brought back to
Perrysburg for burial in Fort
Meigs Cemetery. Mrs. Caudill's
mother has several cousins and
aunts living in Gallia County.

GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis City Health Department_ reminds parents of
preschool-age children that
they may have their children.
lmmu~ized against rubeola
(old-fashioned measles) and
rubella (3cday measles) on
October 26 and 28, at the
elementary school in their area.
Immunization will be offered to
these children only at the
designated time according to
the following schedule :
Tuesday, October 26, Clay
Elementary, 9:30 a.m. - 10:30.
Thursday, October 28, Green
Elementary, 11 a.m .• noon ;
Washington Elementary, 9:30
a.m. - 10:30 a .m ..; Rio Grande

Shop-a-Rama
Fee Raised
GALLIPOLIS _ Roger Hood,
president of the Gallipolis
Merchants Association announced Saturday that' participation fee in the 1971 Shop-ARama promotion will be $70.
Reason for the increase, Hood
said is due to the association's
effo~t to do a better job
promoting Gallipolis as a
leading shopping center in the
area. ·
EVANGELIST SCO'IT
Ten cash prizes will be
Today Is the final day to
awarded
shoppers this year on
hear Evangelist Carlyle
Scott at the Faith Baptist various days during the
Church, located on Rl. 35, six Christmas shopping season .
Merchants taking part in the
miles west of Gallipolis at the
1971
program are reminded that
Rodney Line. Rev. Scott will
preach at the ~:30 a.m. checks should be mailed or
Sunday School hour, the 10:30 taken to the Gallipolis Mermorning worship service, to chants Association on or before
the entire young people's Nov. I.
group at 6:30p.m., and at the
7:30 p.m. evening service.
The general pubtic is cordially invited. Joseph C.
INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE
Chapman is the pastor.
Won Lost

Local Bowling

K-C Jewelers

Accepts Report
GALLIPOLIS
The
Galhlpolis City Home Health
Advisory Board met at 1:30
p:m. 'ruesday,October 19, in the
Crest Room at Oscar's.
Members present were James
Boster, Virginia Killin, R.N .,
Alice Pasquale, R.N., Robert
Richards, Rev. Ronald Justice,
Barbara Betz, R.N., Herman
Dillon, L.P.T., Harriett Bullock,
R.N.,.D. Kenneth Morgan, City
Health Commissioner.
The nurses' report of patients
reL-eiving nursing care Under
the agency was given .by
Virginia Killin, R.N., Supervisor of the Agency. A report of
patients receiving physical
therapy under the agency was
given by Herman Dillon, L.P.T.
The new contract nurse , Mrs.
Frank Bullock, was introduced
by Virginia Killin. The next
meeting of the board will be
Jan. 18, 1972.

34

Royal Oak Park
Landmark

14

28

20

24

n

24

Mil ~ne

Farmers Bank

20

28

BY·Court
POMEROY - Nine defendants were fined and three
others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter were Vernon W. Mitchell, Cheshire and James F.
Schuster, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs each, speeding; Walter W.
Benson, Albany, Rt. 3, and
Kerth Allan Douglas, Albany,
Rt. 3, $5 and costs each, parking
on roadway; Susan L.
Shakanan, Athens, Lawrence
A. Mamxr, Athens, Robert C.
Kujala, Athens, and Paul J .
Guinther, RD, Rutland, were
each ordered to make
restitution, $50 each, each fined
$100 and costs, 60 days con·
finemenl,
confi nement
suspended, each placed on
probation for one year, report
address to court each month
during probation period ,
breaking and entering with
int~nl to steal; Edward E.
White~ Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
speedmg, assured clear
distance. Harold E. Dorst,
Henderson, W.Va., costs only,
sev~n days confmement,
driVIng u.nder suspensiOn.
Forfertmg bonds were George
A. Hoffman, Pom~roy •. $27,50:
exp1red operator s license,
Edd1e . Autherson , $100,
destructron of property, $25
disturbing the peace; Carol W.
Cline, Racine, Rt. 2, $27.50,
speeding.
SON IS GUEST
MIDDLEPORT
Bob
Bumgarner, son of Rev. Robert
Blllllgarner, pastor of Heath
United Methodist Church, was a
guest of the Pomeroy Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
Friday night for dinner and an
open meeting following it.
President C. E. Blakeslee.
presided. Ladies of the church
served dinner.

M

Larry's Ashland
16 32
High Team ll Gamesl
F irst, K-C Jewelers, 2636;

Landmark,

892 ;

providing thoae services
referral basfs. At the
time, there II" no ll8Y'chlllb
services In the three-ee~=:
The Board also ell
Drug Abuse Clirilc which
serve not only the three
ties, but the state. At
present time, ·
Kentucky is the closest
and the State of Ohio II
terested in developing a
for Ohio. This would be a
range projeCt for the 648
When It ill flilali2ed, it would
the first Drug Clinic in the
of Ohio.
The Board went on record
endorse the Gallla
Guiidlng Hands School .4
levy on the November
The 648 Board eon:~~
Mental Health &amp;
Retardation of Gallia, Jaclkilon
Meigs Counties is financed
percent by the counties and
percent by the State
ment of Mental Hygiene.

Second,

883; Third, K-C

Jewelers, 879 .

High Ind . (3 Gamesl - First,

WHQP~i ALE

FHA t lects Girl

CORNER OF SECOND &amp; SYCAMORE

~

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

~
~

t
.
§

WE ARE

~
~

:S~

REESE FURNITURE IS NOW OPERATING AS
A PUBLIC WHOLESALE FURNITURE
OUTLET

~.:,.·_

Tired of paying those big obi retail prices

~~

don't have to. Public wholesale is all new

~
~

!i

~
·'

to this area. Never before available to this

!;:
;!

area; Never before available to the general

~."

;;
-·
;J·'
::
·,
·: :
•·
,;
:
::
.:
::
::
;

public. This is possible By.

1. Buying dire'ct in large volume..
2. Warehousing our furniture in our big
store.
3. Gearing our store for high volume low, low wholesale mark up.

New Shipment Just Arrived!

CARPET I
12x15
12x16
12x17
12x24

:~

·:.
::
;;
::: ·
·. ~

:&gt;

NIXON VET DAY SPEECH

Pr~s~::n~~?x~~~~a~~t~~~.ke

.

~~

ai~~,Y,~,~,~~~~~'·~ ,~~!.~~, ~~ ,t~ose

Nylon, 501 Nylon &amp;
Herculon

only
While Quantify
· Lasts

\

' II )

ON.· YOU

ALLSAVINGS GUARANTEED IN FU"Ll

GALLIPOLiS SAVIN~ .
AND LOAN COMPANY

a Veterans Day address to the
nation on radio Sunday night at
7:30p.m.
EDT, according to !he . ._ _,._
Opposite Post Offico Phon• 446-J832 GalliPolis
White House.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....

PACK CU Scout Troop 203 will
have a lck meeting at 7:30
p.m .,
Grace United
Methodil Church All boys
wear ~. lloween · costumes.
Refresh ents will be served.
Paren lease attend. All Dens
are in~ ed also.
ANN AL Halloween party of
the G . ia Chapter of the OCSEA ~Eastern A e 7 30 p
· tume and vmask
·• : are·
m. c
oplior I, four prizes and
refreshments . Kiddi es
welco .
TUESD Y
ADDA ILLE Grade School
PTA wi meet at 7:30 p.m. Dr.
George avis, guest speaker,
will dis uss care of the eyes.
Refres ents will be s.erved by
the fi h grade mothers.
Everyor.e is welcome .
RIVERSIDE Study Club will
meet with Mrs. M. T. Epling ,
Sr. at I p.m.
ANN Jl'DSON Bible Class of
First Ba~tist Church will meet
in the fellowship room at 7:30

--

p.m.
PEMBROKE
CLUB will meet
• a .at 8 p.w, with Mrs. Gilbert P.
; ~ Bush, Hlrlliday Heights.
~

if

THE 1110 Grande Faculty
Wives Club annual Men and
~:. · Women's Fashion Show, 8 p.m.
• at the college dining - hall .
Fashions · from Amy's and
Haskins:ranner.
•. ·BAPTIST Ladies Fellowship
:•. will meet. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Maxwell Will be speaking and
..
. showing slides.
1

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~

Shop Your Friendly Public Wholesale Dealer
and Save $ $ $ ·
Use Your BankAmericard Charge
Monday thru Friday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. "•
c:,.t, .. r,bu 9 a.m. to 12 Noon ·

tSS

Chris Bucci; commissary,Barb
Sh .
·
t p tt
c opls ; equrpmen • a Y
Schoonover and health and
safe~·. Susan Gloss.
.,
Patrol 4 - "The GreasyGrimy Grasshopper." Leader,
Yvonne Zeoli; assistant, Karla
Kuhn; finance , Connie Newell;
d
C . N II
recor er,
onnre
ewe ;
transportation; Pam Beverly;
commissary, Julie Niehm ;
eqw'pmenl Sharon Swartz and
•
health and safety, LeSlie Smith.
The troop closed the meeting

4
Lassies held their October
meeting at the home of club
advisor, Mrs. Maude Persinger.
The meeting was opened with
Brenda Call leading the club
pledges and Becky Call leading
the group in singing. Devotions
were given by Carol Plymale.
Susan Mills, vice president,
conducted the meeting in the
absence of the president.
A Haiiowee'n party was
planned for Oct. 26 to be held at
the home of Mrs. Persinger.
Officers elected were,
president, Marjorie Gilliam;
vice president, Becky Call;
secretary, Wendy Bastiana ;
treasurer, Letty Walker; news
reporter, Dixie Martin;
recreation, Brend8 Call and
Gwen Gilliam; devotions, Carol
Plymale; song leader, Karl
Thomas, Cynthia Rupe and
safety, Kelly Thomas; health,
·Jane Simpkins; pledges, Beth
Thomas and Tami Smith, and
Clean-up, Maria Hanson.
Other members attending the
meeting were Carol Daily, Joy
Henderson, Jane Ann Kerr,
Ell en Frezee and assistant
leader, Mrs. Beulah Mills.

(' • A
.:&gt;petrs nnounce
Birth of A Son

se~ved to / h,";" atten1inF

TIT-L

_l ~

HI;ade-BIJ"own vv;eda'tn:g '
-

f

VINTON - Mr. and Mrs. Howard Glen, Vinton, announce the engagement and approaching marriage of
Jacqueline Jones to Phillip D. Saunders, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Haskell Saunders, Bidwell.
Miss Jones is a senior at North Gailia High School. Mr.
Saunders is stationed at Lakeland AFB, Texas. Wedding
plans are incomplete.

1

nned Ror Dec. 31

LEXINGTON - Mr.andMrs.
the Fayette county , Kentucky
Kenneth G. Wade, 2610 Clay's
Recreation and Parks board.
Mill Road, Lexington, Ky .,
Mr. Brown is a graduate of
announce the engagement of G II.
d
H' h Sch 0 I
their daughter, Sandra Jean, to a 18 Aca emy lg
John William Brown III, son of and Augusta Military Academy,
Mr. and Mrs. John William Ft. Defiance, Va ., and is a
h
senior at the University of
Brown, Jr., 418 4t Ave. , Kentucky.
Gallipolis.
Miss Wade is a 1968 graduate
The wedding will be an event
'of Lafayette High School, and of December 31 at the South
Elkhorn Baptist Church 10
attended the University of
Kentucky. She is employed by Lexington.

°

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'huYSdary ClUb R as LUncheon

GALLIPOLIS _ Thursday
Club members met for the first
time this year at a luncheon at
Oscar's on Thursday, Oct 21
Mrs. Arthur Darnbrough, Mrs:
James Walker and Mrs. Gene
Welherholt were hostesses for
the event. The table was
decorated w1'th beaut1'ful Fall
flowers. At each place were the
programs with beautiful covers

Review Held B1J The m~~.~y~~s· ~~~~~~th=rh~~
philomathean Club pr:~ldent~ a~d m~~~~;s J:~~
',)'

GALLIPOLIS
The
Philomathean Club met with
Mrs. Billy Houck on Thursday
evening at her home on
Hillcrest Drive .
Miss Anne Bradbury gave the
review for the group.- She chose
five articles from "American
Heritage" and "Horizon. "
England 's Vietnam ; The
American Revolution, appeared
in the June issue of "American
Heritage," and was written by
Richard Kelchlllll who is an
editor for "American Heritage"
and an authority on the
American Revolution. His
premise is that England relied
on the loyalists to band with the
small army which England sent
to America. They did not do this
for the fear of reprisals,
secondly, the British never did
learn amhush fighting; thirdly,
the transportation of all
equipment across the ocean
became a formidable task and
fourthly, the colonists had
something to fight for after the
declaration was signed.
England would not give upfighting a losing cause and the
loss of the colonies became the
only answer.
The American Heritage for
February 1971 carried an article by Kenneth Davis, who is a
free lance writer on conservation, on the Deadly Dust
the story of DDT. He traces the
rise of the chemical until it was
thought to be a great boon to
mankind, then to the slow
realization that it had not been
tested enough and many harm·rul results were found. DDT
does not disintegrate and is still
to be found in the air . His article
is a plea for careful tesling of
products before they are placed
on the market.
Waller Karp wrote "The
Feminine Utopia" in "Horizon"

-.

Mrs. Marvin Griffin, 1715
.Chestnut Street, Gallipolis.

BYF MEETS
PATRIOT - The Salem
Senior BY~ mel at Nebo Church
last Sunday night for the · services and slides of the Holy
Land visited by David Jenkins .
The group visited Halley 's
Nursing Home on Oct. 10. songs
were sung and refreshments

] ones-Saunders
PI]/tU/On 'T'o Mar:r,

Tut1'a YV UfMj

1"-------------------.

~ ~~ti~:disa~h~~~~e~g~~e:n~
~

M" Sa--1

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Richard E. Speirs (formerly
Beverly Garlic) wish to announce the birth of a son, Chad
Christian, on Sept. 27 in Holzer
MediCal Center. ·The baby
weighed 6 lbs., 13 ounces.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Hoadley Garlic,
Jr., Gallipolis. The paternal
HOj\'IE ON LEAVE
grandparents are Mrs. Max
GALLi'POLIS - Airman 1st 'Martin, Columbus, and Mr. 0.
Class Hr#ry J. Griffin has been E. Speirs, Baltimore, Md.
· 1
home on leave after graduating
-I
from Goodfellow Air Force
Base i~ Texas in the Communications
School
of
.,.~.;::.-. &lt;'_..
Training. He is now being
, ~;=t~
..4
,::

A Lot of Easy To Clean, Lon&amp;·Wearing Commercial
Weaves. You Can Believe It!

Miss Jacqueline Jones

Stars." Leader • Sandi Brown ; ~'Ia
assistant, Lisa Groth; finance,
Sheila Cassidy; recorder,
Sheila Cassidy; transportation,

CREATIVE writer workshop by singing taps.
will be heldln the basement of
the Library~! 7:30 p.m. Bring

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who save. Be sure that It shines
1 1/

v~n

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~:'l.

This Group Includes
'

I.

;~ THURSDAy

Assorted Popular Sizes of Good

/

·Oom n·g
E ts

Robinson, Vera Snedaker, Faye
Thompson, Kitty Farrell, Betty
Jo Carter, Sherry Sprow,
Jennifer Ours, Janice Rose,
Libby Willis, Donna Craft,
Martha Willis, Lisa Saunders,
,Susan Russell, Sandy Dennis,
Laura Craft, Elizabeth Butler,
and Kiin Gilmore.
Refreshments of cake, punch,
nuts, mints and coffee were
served by the hostess.
Sending gifts were Sharon
Hamilton, Lynn Mayes, Ann
Johnson,. Jenny McCalla,
Beverly Heck, Pam and Becky
Saunders, Debbie Saunders,
Martha Childers, Kay Saunders, Carolyn Bull~r and Susan
Sprow.

Scout Council Held Meeting

~~~;~~e~ssi~~~Jy Kar;~w~~~:

:':'r"m~i~~~!~~~~=~;
~:
4-H Lassies Met
4646.
'
GALLIPOLIS _ The _H

"

·

BECKER ENLISTS
MIDDLEPORT - Randy
Becker, son of Don Becker and a 1971 gradof
Meigs
High
uate
School, has enlisted in the U. S.
Air Force. His address is A. B.
Randy Becker, SSAN 277423636;
CMR No . 5 593728; Flight 1644,
Lackland Air Force Base,
Texas, 78236.

selec:c~~

~,·
,.
•-; SUNDAY
~ REV . KEN~ETH Sanders,
~ Gallipolis, wqibeguest speaker
:Jt. at Victory Blflisl Church, 7:30
,
'• p.m. The pullic is invited.
::: REV. BIIL,E Payne will be
~ preaching .! Walnut Ridge
'X
;;} Church, 7:3!p. m. E;.vfryone is
.v welcome
·
·~ MONDAY I

PRIEZING PRICES.

for your home furnishings? Now you :

Month

Of

g: ~~~=

FURNITURE

DAN
AND SON

Bowen , 573 ; Second, Walker,
554; Th ird, Henderson, 544.
High Ind. Game First.
Bowen, 246 ; Second, C. Boyles,
213 ; Th ird, Goebel, 198.

GALLIPOLIS - On Oct. 14,
Girl Scout Troop No. 1111 mel at
the First Presbyterian Church
from 7:31).9 p.m. The troop
consists of 29 members.
Leaders are, Mrs. Bill Shaffer
and her assistant, Shawn
Bordeq.
The following officers were
elected:
Scribe, Tammi Stewart·
•
treasurer,
Pam McMahon;
Miss L:toJ'~rse A meet
Camporee chairman, Yvonne
Zeoli, and alternate, Julie
Niehm.
The following patrols were
formed: Patrol 1. Patrol
~
Th~
Leader, Tami Bush; assistant
Patrol, Darla Ward; finance
GALLIPOLIS
The manager, Lu Ann Evans;
Halloween &gt;eason will start off recorder , Terri Morgan;
right with t~e selecting of Miss transportation manager, Pam
Denise Am 1 for F.H.A. Oc- McMahon; commissary
lotxjr Girl the Month .
manager, Tammi Stewart;
,
Miss Am, l, daughter of Mr. equipment manager, Terri
• ·and. Mr.s. . o B.. Ameel, of Kuhn, and health and safely,
Gallipolis, an acllve member Mary Roderick. The name of
;• of Tr1-Hi-\ Gallian Edil&lt;lrial the Patrol is· "The Pink &amp;
~· Staff, libr!fy assistant •. a.nd . Purple Pean~t Polka-dotted
. • semor ~ot(. Demse 1s a JUmor Ping Pong Balls."
~; at Galha ~cademy and Vice- Patrol No. 2, "The Smiling
"· President/of GAHS Future Seven " _ Leader Rhond
'I H
k
f Am ·
•
a
faSs 0
Oc.,. tober G1rl f the Month by the recorder, Kathy Davis, trans:~ club me bers of the local portation, Collen
Clark·
;~ chapter.o eF.H.A.atlheOct. commissary, Ann McMahon:,
:-i 12 meeti
;,
·.
eqwpment, Ann McMahon and
S
Mrs . IIzabeth Clark is healthandsafety,Pam Slayton.
;j faculty a vtsor :
Patrol 3._ "The Seven Super-

GALLIPOLIS - A bridal
shower was given for Julia Ann
Craft, at the home of Mrs.
Melvin L. Craft.
Acolor scheme of pink, green
and white was used . throughout
the house. The table was centered with a three tier bride's
cake, which was made by the
bride's mother.
Games were played with
prizes going to Vera Snedaker,
Kitty Farrell, Elizabeth Rutler.
The door prize was won by
Linda Jeffers. Miss Craft
opened and ackn.owledged her
lovely gifts from ' the following,
Cindy Gilmore, Linda Jeffers,
Susy Thompson, Pauia Butler,
Barb Mills, )11arilyn Childers,
Alice
Amsbary,
Robin

'i

REESE OUTLET

If We Don't Save You Money We Don't Deserve
Your Business.

High Team Game - First. KJewe le rs ,

il

We Invite You to Shop Our 20,000 sq. ft. of Display Home
Furnishings &amp; Save as Never Before.

Second , Landmark, 2429 ; Third,
Farmers Bank, 2199 .
C

Elementary, 9:30 a.m. • 10:30
a:m.
Parents are strongly urged to
take advantage of this opportunity to have their children
protected against both types of
measles . Health department
personnel wouJd also like to
point out that stale immunization regulations require
that children must be ImmUnized against both types of
measles prior to entering
school. Naturally, there will be
no charge for the immunizations .

Department of Psychology.
Maxine Plwnmer, Executive
Director , presented to the
Board the professional staff
which Is available in the area to
provide services on a referral
basis to patients in Gallla,
Jackson, Meigs Counties. Mrs.
Plummer stated that a
psychologist and a psychiatrist
with supportive staff on ·a part
time basis will be available to
work in the three counties
through the 648 Board.
Mrs. Jo Ledwell, Psychologist
Department, Ohio University
outlined to the Board the
available staff from her
Department that would also
work with the three counties on
a continuing basis with the 648
Board.
The Board gave Mrs.
Plummer approval to continue
the developing of the services
for the counties. Mrs. Ledwell
will work as a consultant with
Mrs. Plwnmer and the Board in

Bridal Shower Given/
For julia Ann Craft

Girl Scouts
Met To Name
•
Patrol Units

MH&amp;MR Board· Meets
.

'

Our mink
'II d
Wt•• o more
for you than a
110,000 coat.

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

t th L'b
f
.d d
o e I rary or a gul e 1our
and movie.

announcements were made by
M
J h
B

urged to support the local Red
Cross program and vote for the
Library Levy and the Guiding
inthespringofl971. This article Hand School Levy. Mrs. Joe
is a discussion of woman's lib Moch of Portsmouth, a former
and he feels that the women who member of Thursday Club, was
want to work must be granted .a guest at the luncheon. After
equal pay and jobs with the the meeting the members went
men. But the whole society will - - - - - - - - - be better if most of the women disputed leader of his people.
stay home and bear and train This epic march has become for
c hildren. They can make the Chinese a historical Valley
themselves felt through the Forge and keeps their faith in
ballot by demanding all things Mao.
good for their children. He feels Gerald Carson wrote in
that the lib movement has failed American Heritage June 1971
in offering only equal work, for an article called The Sweet
the hope of all society is a child Extract Of Hokum . This is a
reared in love and taught the discussion of patent medicines
finer qualities of life.
with especial emphasis on Dr.
Mao's Long March by Correlli Samuel Hartman and Lydia
Barnet in "Horizon 1971" is the Pinkham . Their medicines
story of the communists of contained up to 50 pet. whiskey
China making a march from and the well-being felt from
north of Hong Kong to the taking the nostrll!ll was largely
border of Manchuria, a journey due to that ingredient. He
of 6,000 miles under hardships leaves the idea that with the
that were terrible to endure. well-being that ensued from the
Mao was the leader and from preparation could any one say
his ability to escape the armies that people were really cheated.
of Chiang and lead his troops to A discussion and social hour
safety, has made him the un- followed the report.

Tawney's!
THE
DIAMOND
CENTER

FREE INSTRUCTIONS on
use of your new machine.

FEATURES:

Does
Adjustable
z1g-zags.
makes § ]
1

bulton- '

holes.
~sewson

LQJ buttonsl
Take It home in
Its own carrying
case now I

STONEHILL
ngagement Ring .... $175 .00
edding Ring .

. .. $75 .00

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
422 Second Ave.
Phon,e446·1615

00

Gallipolis

LARGE SELECTION.

•

'

I

~

POLYESTER KNIT

'3''
yd.

Reg . 5.99 yd.

•2''

Reg. 3.98

BONDED ACRYLIC PLAIDS
REG. 14.49

LOG CABIN

20% OFF

THROW RUGS
eNON SUP

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45" Reg . 98c yd. to 2.98

100% VISCOSE RAYON

24x34 ----------·11.99
2~x~s ______ ;_ ___ 13.99
4x6 ----------- '8.99
·BATH SETS--~---- 12.99

27x45 SHAG-- 13.99
27x45 .0VAL __ s2.99
27x45 -----· s2.99
3'x5' ------'6.99

Open Til 8 p.m . Mon. &amp; Fri . Nights

FRENCH CITY
FABRIC SHOPPE
Simplicity, McCall s, Bufterlck. Vogue Patterns

COLORS: Pink, Avocado Green, Yellow, White. Turquoise, Tangerine,
Red, ltme, Royal , Topaz, Antique, Plum, Verdian Green, Brown .

2 Complete Floors of Fabrics &amp; Notions
We Do Custom Dress Makins

b- - - 1

Gallipolis

PERM PRESS
yd. PRINTS

The area's finest selection of holiday fabrics
and trims are awaiting you at French City
Fabric Sl)oppe.
·

LARGE SEI,.ECTION OF COLORS ...

412-414 Second Ave.

yd.
3.49 yd.

LOOKING AHEAD TO THE
HOLIDAYS!

eMACHINE DRYABLE

k Boutiq~

'-------------------llill

This quality machine
at this low price!

Of Gallipolis

.

Ann Sauvage, Syracuse, Ohio

Hales Welcome
First Child

SPECIAL MEETINGS
A series of fellowship
meetings will begin on Nov . I at
the King's Chapel Church each
evening at 7:30p.m. The pastor,
Rev . Jack Rankin, invites
everyone to attend. A different
minister will be speaking each
evening.

Our Cosmetics Will Pamper Your Skin like
the s1o.ooo .coat Pampers Your Ego.

rr
h M
.l OUC -a- in

GALLIPOLIS - The October Club in the distribution of
meeting of the Gallia Service literature concerning the
Unit of the Seal of Ohio Girl Guiding Hand and library levies
Scout Council was held at the in the upcoming election. The
Presbyterian Church Wed- remainder of the meeting
nesday, Oct. 20. Mrs. John consisted of Buzz groups on the
Groth, Service Unit Director , · various program levels.
asked leaders to sign in names
All of the leaders were
of their troop product sales reminded to vote on the first
chairman and the girls Tuesday in November.
represen ling the troop on
camporee council and Local
Planning Board.
Shirley Leach, Council field
director, presented the latest
Council news.
Ruth Ann McMahon and
Cookie Johnston, Service Unit
VINTON - Mr . and Mrs.
Product Sales Chairman, Harvey Earl Hale, Wellston,
handed out samples of the 1972 wish to announce the birth of
Girl Scout Calendars and gave their first child, a daughter,
the deadline dales and other Rebecca Yvonne. The baby
pertinent information for the weighed 8 lbs. , 4 ozs. Maternal
grandmother is Mrs. Marjorie
calendar sale .
Nancy Smith gave in- Branscomb, Wellston. Paternal
structions for those troops grandmother is Mrs. Rosalee
helping the Junior Women 's Hale, Vinton .

Sinqer Sales. &amp; Service

446-9255

58 CoUrt

Gallipcm
5 t NC.IR DEALER

�,.

'

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'

•
6- Tlie SundayTtmes-Sentinei,Siinday Oc.Ut,ll'/1

Gala Night on Broadway Delivered ·
A gala night on Broadway
was promised and delivered at
Saturday evening's opening
presentation by the Tri-County
Community
Co nc ert
Association at · th e Gallia
High
School
Academy
auditorium .
Each member of the Cllst of
"Three on Broadway," Ronald
Rogers, baritone; Jan McArl,
soprano, and Richard Otto,
pianist, introduced the portions
.of the program in turn, giving a
capsule history of the
progressive eras of musical

•

•

comedy and their composers.
Otto initially established his
l&lt;llent as a solo performer with
the opening n"mber, "Carousel
Waltz /' from "Carousel. " He

was joined by Rogers and Miss
McArt, dazzlingly gowned in
brocade-trimmed yellow with' a
colorful , full-length plumed
cape, in· the rousing overture
" Another Opening, Another
Show" from " Kiss Me, Kate."

The first half of the program
~a nged from the romantic era of
operetta and the patriotic

bining their talents, provided a
beautiful blend of mus ical
entertainment. Individually, it
was difficult to rank any one
abo•e the others. But it seemed
that the audience of over 600
association members, thei r
guests and members of neighboring associations, one of the
largest Comm4nity Concert
audiences in recent years,
would have voted their
preference for the rich baritone
voice of Mr . Rogers.
0utslanding numbers by
way. ~~
Rogers
included the humoro.us
The three artists, in com-

fervor of Cohan musicals lo,lhe
sophislicialed melodies and
Juries of Ker n, Gershwin,
Youmans, Porter and Berlin.
Afmig with Miss McArl 's
va riety of beautiful costumes, a
number of props also helped
created the atmosphere for the
different types of numbers,
ran ging from her twirling
parasol for "Life Upon the
Wicked State" to straw hats and
canes for the duet number,
"Give My Regards to Broad-

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SUPER MARKETS

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252 THIRD AVEN!JE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Saunders
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Saunders Celebrate
Silver Anniversary
GALUPOUS - Mr. and Mrs . Harold Saunders, Route
218, will celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary on Oct. 31
with open house from 2-5 p.m .
They are the parents of six children, Ken, Brent, Eric,
Debbie, Winston, and Kim. All relatives, friends and neigh~
bors are invited to attend,

VINTON - First and second graders eat breakfast
which they prepared on Thursday at the Vinton Elementary
School.

Grades One and Two
Ask What 's Cooking
VINTON - The first and
second grades at the Vinton
Elementary School have been
studying the need for eating
diffe renf kinds of foods. This
health unit acquainted the
youngsters with the many kinds
of foods needed for growth, for
energy to work and play, and
for good health . As a climax to
this unit, Mrs. Guthrie, first
grade teacher, and Mrs. Metcalf, second grade teacher,

planned a class breakfast at
school.
The classes planned a menu
consisting of cereal, buttered
toast with jelly, o'range juice
and mille Food committees,
serving committees, and cleanup committees were formed .
Then Thursday, Oct. 21, the
children on the committees
prepared and served breakfast
in the school cafeteria with a
little assistance from their
teachers.

COLLECI'ORS FOR THE UNICEF PROJEcr which will begin on Oct . 31 are from I;,
Mrs. Forest Mullins, Mrs. Harold Black, president of Church Women United, Mrs. William J .
Brown, Mr . Thomas P. Price, chairman of UNICEF, Mrs. James Beverly and Mrs . William
Shaw. They have many poSters and various other materials on UNICEF .

Immunization
Schedule Given

Mrs. Gary Cropper

Preschoolers
GALLIPOUS - The Gallia
County Health Department
again reminds parents of
preschoolers of the measles
clinics to be held co Wednesday,
Oct. 27 at all elementary schools
in Gallia County .
Health department personnel
feel that it--is of the utmost
importance that parents bring
their preschoolers to the
elementary school in their area
for immunizations.
Two types of measles vaccines will be available, one is
the Rubeola vaccine, which
protects children against the socalled "regular" or "len-day"
measles, and the other is a
combined rubeola-rubella
vaccine which protects children
against both regular measles
and rubella (3-day measles).
Both vaccines are quite effective in providing lasting
immunity. At present , no
booster dose is required. There
will be no charge for the immunizations .
The preschool schedule is as
follows :
Addaville and Hannan Trace,
8:30a.m.. 9:30a.m.
Cheshire and Guiding Hand,
10 a .m. - 11 a.m.
Vinton and Cadmus, 12:30
p.m. • I :30 p.m.
Bidwell and ThurmanCenterville, 2 p.m. · 3 p.m.
A thought for today : Greek
poet Minnermus said, "We are
all clever at envying a famous
man while he is ye t alive, and
at praising him when he is
dead ."

lu111 cnt of the " Lotharit "
bachelor on his wedding eve,
"Where is the Life that Late I
Led?" from. "Kiss Me, Kate,"
to the powerfully moving
"Suliloguy" Irom "Carousel."
Another entertaining and well•
received solo by Mr . Rogers
· was "The Lees of Virginia"
from the newer hit "1776."
Miss McArl's versatility as a
smger-actor was revealed in ~~r
Got Rhtyhm," belled out a Ia
Ethel Merman, and in her
richly lyrJcal '·Night and Day"
by Cole Porter.
Probably the hit number of
the evening, at least to this
wri ter' was her sparkling solo
"Glitter and be Gay " from
Bernstein's "Candide." With
great comic abandon, Miss
McArt flung mounds of jewelry
upon herself as her voice
ranged ·from the mock
melanc holy of a minor key to
the soaring gaiety of the chorus.
· Otto distinguished himself as
the excellent accompanist he is
in this demanding number, and
proved himself again in his solo
presentations which included
Gershwin 's 3d Prelude, medlies
fr om "No, No, Nanette" and
·"West Side Story," and other
numbers.
Followin g their encore,
" There' s No Busin ess Like
Show Business," Rogers gave a
fi11al curtain speec!J in which
he expressed his great affection
for this area (having appeared
here before with the American
Wind Symphony ) and the
grou p's appreciation for the
outstanding reception they
received from the audience.
Members of the audience were
invited to come onstage to meet
the , artists following the con-

t:e~t.

A r ec~ ption honoring the
three artists was given later by
Mr. and Ml)s. A. Kimball Suiter
and Mr . and Mrs. L. R. Ford,
Jr ., at \he ·Su (ter home .
Members of the association's
board of direCtors and other
guests attended the reception.
..- - - - - - - - - •

Carolina
Catch a sparkle
from the morning sun.
Hold the magic
ola sudden breeze.
Keep those moments alive.
They're yours lor a lifetime
with a diamond
engagement ring trom
Orange Blossom.

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
404 Second Ave .
·
"'--G·a-ll.ip•o•li•s•,•O•h•io_. .

WE RESERVE
THE RIGMT TO

LIMIT QUANTITIES

La~hey-Cropper

ON ALL ITEMS IN THIS

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU

OCT. ll3, 1971 .

NONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

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JUUA HINEMAN

COME IN AND SEE THE NEW FALL
HOME FURNISHINGS FASHIONS!

DANNY MORRIS

Morris, Bidwell, and Daniel
Morris, Kentucky. Danny is a
junior at North Gallia High
School where he is a member of
the Beta Club. He played little
league and pony league
baseball. As a freshman he
played basketball and is now a
member of the reserve squad on
the North Gallia basketball
team.
He is a member of the Bidwell
Methodist Church and treasurer
of the Bidwell Youth Fellowship.
He is also a member of the
Clark Chapel Youth Group.
Danny is the assistant steward
in Harris Grange and a member
of both the Pomona and State
Granges.
He worked.four years with the
4-H club and was a boy scout for
two years. He has been a
Colwnbus Dispatch carrier in
Bidwell for four years and on
the Dispatch honor roll for three
years. He helps his younger
brother deliver the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune in Bidwell.

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CALIFORNIA VALENCIA

0

Now at the Peak of their Goodness

each

88
Size
HI-C

6 Flavors
1-Qt. 14-oz. Cans
'

THOROFARE VANILLA

ICE CREAM
Gal; Pkg.

America's f i r s t newspaper, " Publick Occurrences
Both Forreign and Domestick ." was· iss ued in Boston
in 1690.

NIBLETS
WHOLE KERNEL

CORN
12-oz. Vac Pack Can
MRS. FILBERT'S
SOFT WHIPPED

MARGARINE~:~~

JOV
LIQUID

DETERGENT
1-Pt ..
6·oz

Bot. ·

5lc

1-lb.
I

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GAIN
DETERGENT
3-lb.

1-oz.

age .

,Pkg.

2lc
'

l·lb.
Pkg .

INSPIRED by a n c i en t
tapestries, this modern

v er~

sion of the fabled cloth wa &lt;
rendered in a late day ensemble of subslantiol chi c
by Elinor Simmons for Mnl colm Sturr. Sapphire and
~ merald green m·c the colO!'&lt;

IDEAL
DOG FOOD
15l&gt;-oz. 1 8 C ;
Can

1-lb.
5-oz.
Can

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CHEER '.
DETERGEJ(
5-tb,

4-oz.

$145

Pkg.

COMET·CLEANSER

IN LNING ROOM, BEDROOM AND
DINING ROOM FURNITURE!

;;;;;.;.;i:,C;;;ses,
A nnounced At GHS

Romona Elects 1971
Prince and Princess
GALLIPOLIS - Each year a
Prince and Princess are elected
from the County Granges to
attend the State Grange meets.
They are elected by the work
they have done for the grange .
The Pomona Grange of Gallia
County elected Miss Julia An•
Hineman and Danny Morris as
princess and prince for 1971.
Miss Hineman , daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence N.
Hineman, Crown City, is a
member of the FHA, Beta Club,
the band, andp. member of the
Pomona and ~e rcervill e
Granges. She is a member of
the Victory Baptist Church. Her
hobby is playing the piano. She
attends Hannan Trace High
School where she is a junior .
Morris is the son of Wanda

ExChanged Vows

MARY CHRISTENSEN is fitted at Carl's Shoe Store with
a pair of suede Granny boots to compliment the outfit she will
wear at the annual Style Show, "What to do Until Spring

WHITNEY ·
PINK SALMON
~~~·

. 95c

.

BOLD
DETERG~NT
10-lb.
11-oz.

$2"'9
D

· Pkg,

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HANOVER

Cut Green Beans
3-lb.
1-oz.
Can

mixed in tlw inlr iralP IXI t. tcrh of the black wo11l :n1d

59c
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tlrTylit· hl P! I(~ · d [:1 hrir•, ·

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POINT PLEASANT - Miss daughter 's wedding a sleeveless
Judith Willene Lathey and yellow silk crepe dress with
Garey Wayne Cropper ex- matching lace coat and yellow ·
changed weddtng vows tn accessones. She wore a corsage
Trinity United Methodist of white orchids.
Church in Point Pleasant The bridegroom's mother was GALUPOUS - Malcolm B.
August 15, at 2:3ll in the af- attired in an aqua crepe dress Orebaugh, Director of Guidance
U.rnoon.
with lace appliques and mal- Counseling, Gallia Academy
She is Ute daughter of Mr . and ching accessories. She also High School, announces the
Mrs . AdMan La they of Vernon wore a corsage of white orchids. beginning of a new "mini
Road, Letart, and the Immediately following the course" program.
bfldegroom is the son of Mr. wedding, a reception was held
Students at Gallia Academy
apd Mrs. John Cropper of in the church social rooms with High School are presently enFlemingsburg, Ky. ·
members of the Martha Circle joying a new educational opThe Rev . Charles Thompson serving as hostesses.
portunity based strictly on their
read the' vows for the double A round table, covered with a personal desire to learn . All the
ring ceremony before an altar pink floor length cloth with a students with a study hall
banked with baskets of white white lace overlay, held a five- scheduled during the day may
gladioli, pompon mwns, palms tier wedding cake topped with a now elect to attend a "mini
and candelabra.
bride and groom. The cake was course" at that time.
Pre-nuptial music and the made of both white alilr The "mini course" ·subjects
processional were presented by chocolate in alternating layers. have been suggested by . the
Mrs. Paul Powell, organist. The Separate tables each with cloths student body and are taught for
traditional recessional music of pink and white lace, held the a duration of one to 10 days.
was from " The Christian beverages which included There are no tests or credits
Wedding."
punch, tea and coffee. The given and the students may
All an outward symbol of their tables were cen tered with either attend because of interest
wedding vows being solem- arrangements of white mwns in the subject, or remain in their
nlzed, the bride and bridegroom and pink snapdragons.
regular . study halls .. Course
~ch lighted a candle and from Aides assisting with the mstruci!On will be g1ven by
this they united the flames to reception were: Vickie Haddix, vari~us members of the comlight a third candle, ex- Connie Silcott, Joyce Bean, all mu~ity,
teachers,
adtingulshing those they held.
of Weston ; Bernita Meadows of mimstralors and the students
The bride entered the church Letart ; and Mrs . Pearl themselves. The purpose of the
with her father in a gown, Reynolds of Middleport. Mrs. new program is to make the
designed by Alfred Angelo, Robert Bumgarner , aunt of the curriculwn much m~re flexible
made from white bridal silk bride, of Middleport, also m meetmg the more lffimed1ate
organi:B with a camelot bodice, assisted during the wedding and
fashioned from venice lace with with the reception.
layers of btldal silk forming the The new Mrs. Cropper is a
flowing ski'rt. The .sleeves made graduate of Wahama High
of lace and silk were long and School and is a senior at
full endUll! in pointed cuffs of Glenville State College. She Is a
member of Kappa Delta Pi
lace over lthe hands.
Her mantilla and veil were Sorority.
bordered with matching lace Mr. Cropper is a graduate of
and iridescent pearls. The veil Flemingsburg High School and
formed a long chapel train and Morehead University where he
was oullined in matching venice received a degree in Business
lace.
Administration . He is a
Sunday, October 24 - Art
She cartled a bouquet of while member of Delta Tau Delta Appreciation - slides and
orchids, 1 stephanotis and Fraternity and is presently narration.
· ·
greener~. Her only jewelry was assistant manager of the
Sunday, Oct. 24 - Parenta neacklace, which was a gift Southern States Cooperative in Child Workshop will be held at 3
from the brldesroom.
Beckley where they will reside. p.m. Titled Halloween Masks.
Mrs. Frank Capehart III,. For a wedding trip to Olegby
Sunday, Oct. 31 - Slides on
sister of the bride of Winfield Park, Wheeling, the bride wore . American.Art will be shown at 3
was the honor attendant. She a dress of frosty coral lace with p.m.
was attired in a floor length white accessories and an orchid
Riverby is open to the· public
gown made of candy pink silk corsage .
from 1-5 p.m. on Saturday and
organi:B. The fitted slightly Out of town guests were : Mr. Sunday. These activities are
empire bodice featured a scoop ·Rodney Shrout, Louisville; Mr. free and everyone is invited to
neckline. It was styled with long and Mrs . Lynn McCauley, attend.
sheer full sleeves. She wore a ..Clarksburg ; Miss Sharon
headpiece of matching .flowers Sayre, Cottageville; Mr. and
of misty pfuk silk organza and Mrs . Joe E. Sanders , Flemingsburg; Mr. and Mrs.
the veil was secured at the back Flemingsburg, Ky.; Mr. and Robert Richardson and Zack,
and from !here fell sweeping to Mrs. Larry Coffey, Maysville, 'Pai·kersburg.
.
Ute floor . She carried a bouquet Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. Datrell Susan Kesterson, Parkersof pink carnations with ribbon Rankin, Maysville, Ky.; Mr. burg; Miss VIcki Haddox,
streamers, tied with lover's and Mrs. Clyde Cropper, Lays Weston ; Mrs. Frank Kesterson,
knots.
Uck, Ky.
·Parkersburg; Mr. and Mrs.
Bridesmaids were Nell Gerri Steele, Bristol. Va. : George Taylor, Mansfield;
Cropper, : sister . of the Miss Nell Cropper, Flem- Carol Kesterson, ~arkers~urg;
bridegroom, Flemingsburg, ingsburg ; Iva C. Terrlll , f\lchard and Maxme Aldr1dg~,
Ky.; Janel Kesterson Me- Louisville, Ky. ; Mrs. Donnie Charlestort; Mr. and Mrs. Olm
Cauley, Clarksburg and Barron, Parkersburg;\ Mr . and Hill, Orma, W. Va.
Patricia Thompson Johnson of Mrs. William Barron and sons,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry
New Haven . Their dresses and Reed and Roger, Parkersburg ; l{esterson, Parkersburg; Mrs.
bouquets we(e styled !den- Mr , Ethel La they , Parker- James Miller and Leigh Ann,
tically wi\h the honor at- sburg ; Miss Connie Silcott, Parkersburg; Mr. a~d Mrs.
'tendanf's, but were In misty Weston .
Buddy Cropper, Mays Lick,
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Crop- Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. James A.
aqua.
per,
Flemingsburg; Clara . Muelannix, Georgetown, Ky .;
John
.Cropper
of
Flemingsburg was best man for Cropper, Lexington, Ky .; Miss Mrs. Guy R~ynolds, M1d·
his brother. Groomsmen were Joyce ijean, Weston; Mr. and dleport;· Rev . and Mrs. Robert
Buford Conley; Hlllsboro, Ky.; Mrs . Buford Conely, Hillsboro, Bumgarner ,' Middlep.ort;
Rodney Sh~out and Carlos Ky .; Richard Clevenger, . Rodney Shrout, Louisville, Ky.;
, Terrell, both of Louisvllle, Ky. Maysville, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Capehart
Mrs. Lathey selected for her John Cropper and Timmy , III, Winfield .

needs of our young people.
During the week of Oct . 26-29
the military services will be
conducting a series of "mini
courses ." These courses are to

ALI GOWI, assistant professor of biology at Rio
Grande College, and his son, Jack, pick out fashions at
Haskins-Tanner for the Faculty Women's Club Style Show.
They are one of the father-son combinations that will model
at Thursday 's event.
be educational and informative.
These "mini courses:· wmdeat
With the role of the military
services in our country's history
and defenses. They will also
explain the various programs
offered by the services. Many
more courses are presently
being scheduled.

POLI.Y'S POINTERS
Broken Zipper Tab?

Use a Paper Clip

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

Seen and Heard

:::::::::.::::::::::;.:::.:::::::::::::::=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Cousins who visited with
Mr .
and
Mrs.
Amos
Waugh, Vinton, recently were,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Smeltzer , Clara Lucille
Smeltzer, Mr. and Mrs. Clale
Lindemood, Mr. and Mrs . Paul
Frouce, Jeff, Jean , ·and Jo
Ellen, Mr. and Mrs. Harlan
Devoe, Mark Alan, Lisa and
Lynn, Lillie Holley, Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde .Linder'nood, Mrs.
Angelina Anderson, and Mr.
and Mrs. William Smeltzer.

two

classiu

DEAR POLLY - 1 dearly love my dog but am un,, able to clear up the do ggy odors in my house . He is '
1:! kept outside as much as possible but , because my
,. house has been broken into so many times. I have
t1 to leave him inside while I am away at work. Can ',
11 someone help me ' -M. 0 .
.,

s uper

boo t

to command an

lmp reB ive p o~ •I• Oro 1n any
fema le's w.Hdr o be ! Butt on ·
tn mm ed bo o t w111'1 fronr
del &lt;11lm9 in N•~y . Br ow n
Antiqued and Bla c k g lov e
luther. 116.95 . Classic llilo rtd
boot m Brown or Black leathtr
uppers. ~2~ .9~ .

By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY- Whenever the tab breaks on a zipper I
have found that a paper clip is handy to use when there
are no safety pins aro und .
When 1 use a long-sleeve pattern but want to make
the sleeves short , I do not like to cut the pattern off as
there may be a future need for long sleeves on another
dress, I think a stapler and staples do a better job of
holding it in the proper place than tape which nps the
pattern when removed- JAG!

~ ur e

STEWART ON BOARD
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
John J . Gilligan Friday announced the appointment of
Dana Stewart, a Lancaster
banker, to a three year term on
the State Banking Board.
Stewart, past president of the
Fairfield County Bankers
Association, will succeed
Willard T. Webb, whose term
expired.

.

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,~:;::~:t~'"ii~W~~:wu.,w~m;tmm~~:ut§ID!illfu0M:"fWDmr'E:;;;~·i.J2&amp;lliihl.o0~.

PLA YTEX

DEAR POLLY - We have a long extension cord on our
t e 1e p h o n e which was
always in the way so I put
two cup hooks on the floor
toe strip. They are about a
yard apart and the hook
openings face out. I loop
the ·long cord from one to
the other and ·they unloop !
easily when the long length
is needed . These hooks
could be put under a shelf
if you have one for your
""
phone.-MRS. J . G.
DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with companies who
give you a "send in " coupon and leave such a small space
for your name and address that you have to write it on a
separate piece of paper and attach that to the coupon .
Why can't they make them large enough to begin with ?MRS . L. C.

theallnew

introduces

Living·
Stagless
Long Line
Stretch Bra
Now! A long line without stays ...
without bones .. ~
for really comfortable
midriff control

DEAR POLLY- I am answering 'Alma who has trouble
with her bottle of glue sealing over. I buy the large
economy size and, after using it, I put a straight pin in
the hole and it never seals over for me.-MARIAN
DEAR POLLY and Alma- After throwing away several
nearly new bottles of glue I started inserting a nail about
the s\;le of the glue bottle opening into the top. The small
amount of glue remaining in the bottle neck will not hold
the nail so tightly thai it cannot be extracted with a bit
of effort. - JERRY
·

· Unique "stay less" des ign let s.:vou sit,
bend freely without di scomfort
• Underarm stretch panels adj ust
wi th every movement
• Double side and back panels for
superio r midriff cont rol ...
exclu sive 2'1 wuistba nd keeps bra
in place ... won 't r ide up
.

DEAR POLLY - My electrician gave me the following
Pointer: PJug the cord into an appliance before plugging it
into the ou'!Iet and remove the cord from the outlet before
removing it from the appliance . Following this method
there is less chance of shorting out an appliance.ORPHA

• Beauti ful lace cups ... look perfect
under clinging fab rics . .. extra
sof Lnyl on tricot lining for
comfo rtabl e sup \)Ort
• Adj ustable soft T ricot strap s . ..
support without cutting or

TINTED LIP
GLOSS

binding

• Machine Wa shable ...
no stays to tear material
34-40 B, 34-44 C, $9.95
34-44 D, $10.95

"Glaze of Color"
A Q!lslenlng wet look .,
w:ear alone or over lipsticks. Why not slip into somethln\]

DEPARTMENT

more beautiful like . .. Slip 0 ' Pink, Slip 0' Melon ,
Slip 0 ' Coral, Slip 0' Mauve, Slip 0 ' Rose or Slip O'
Bronze, $2.00.

STORE

MERLE NORMAN COSMETIC STUDIO

302 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio .

'

JUANITA'S BEAUTY SHOPPE·
Mrs. C. Leon Saunders

Owner &amp; ()pe.-.tor

I

Ctl)lc r 111nd i:.lllk lliU t ic; N)' lon, spnn,\cx. Cujlllnllll:! : 10111'1 N}'l{ln. 1.- ,,,nt ltnn. l: ,
ft)llon , 1111andl•:&lt;, E xclu)lh'tl o,· oth.l'!l' l•in&gt;~t ir..
'

40

lt7 1 .,- llflliftNAf n,)N ..I. 1'\..A"f'l'rl( COIU'Oftl\l'ION

1''-INTCO IN U.!I .A.

\(l_li ~;.. ,.,,111m .

lo:lnlltlt•,: ltn )'O n,. c•lllOI\

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6- Tlie SundayTtmes-Sentinei,Siinday Oc.Ut,ll'/1

Gala Night on Broadway Delivered ·
A gala night on Broadway
was promised and delivered at
Saturday evening's opening
presentation by the Tri-County
Community
Co nc ert
Association at · th e Gallia
High
School
Academy
auditorium .
Each member of the Cllst of
"Three on Broadway," Ronald
Rogers, baritone; Jan McArl,
soprano, and Richard Otto,
pianist, introduced the portions
.of the program in turn, giving a
capsule history of the
progressive eras of musical

•

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comedy and their composers.
Otto initially established his
l&lt;llent as a solo performer with
the opening n"mber, "Carousel
Waltz /' from "Carousel. " He

was joined by Rogers and Miss
McArt, dazzlingly gowned in
brocade-trimmed yellow with' a
colorful , full-length plumed
cape, in· the rousing overture
" Another Opening, Another
Show" from " Kiss Me, Kate."

The first half of the program
~a nged from the romantic era of
operetta and the patriotic

bining their talents, provided a
beautiful blend of mus ical
entertainment. Individually, it
was difficult to rank any one
abo•e the others. But it seemed
that the audience of over 600
association members, thei r
guests and members of neighboring associations, one of the
largest Comm4nity Concert
audiences in recent years,
would have voted their
preference for the rich baritone
voice of Mr . Rogers.
0utslanding numbers by
way. ~~
Rogers
included the humoro.us
The three artists, in com-

fervor of Cohan musicals lo,lhe
sophislicialed melodies and
Juries of Ker n, Gershwin,
Youmans, Porter and Berlin.
Afmig with Miss McArl 's
va riety of beautiful costumes, a
number of props also helped
created the atmosphere for the
different types of numbers,
ran ging from her twirling
parasol for "Life Upon the
Wicked State" to straw hats and
canes for the duet number,
"Give My Regards to Broad-

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SUPER MARKETS

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252 THIRD AVEN!JE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Saunders
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Saunders Celebrate
Silver Anniversary
GALUPOUS - Mr. and Mrs . Harold Saunders, Route
218, will celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary on Oct. 31
with open house from 2-5 p.m .
They are the parents of six children, Ken, Brent, Eric,
Debbie, Winston, and Kim. All relatives, friends and neigh~
bors are invited to attend,

VINTON - First and second graders eat breakfast
which they prepared on Thursday at the Vinton Elementary
School.

Grades One and Two
Ask What 's Cooking
VINTON - The first and
second grades at the Vinton
Elementary School have been
studying the need for eating
diffe renf kinds of foods. This
health unit acquainted the
youngsters with the many kinds
of foods needed for growth, for
energy to work and play, and
for good health . As a climax to
this unit, Mrs. Guthrie, first
grade teacher, and Mrs. Metcalf, second grade teacher,

planned a class breakfast at
school.
The classes planned a menu
consisting of cereal, buttered
toast with jelly, o'range juice
and mille Food committees,
serving committees, and cleanup committees were formed .
Then Thursday, Oct. 21, the
children on the committees
prepared and served breakfast
in the school cafeteria with a
little assistance from their
teachers.

COLLECI'ORS FOR THE UNICEF PROJEcr which will begin on Oct . 31 are from I;,
Mrs. Forest Mullins, Mrs. Harold Black, president of Church Women United, Mrs. William J .
Brown, Mr . Thomas P. Price, chairman of UNICEF, Mrs. James Beverly and Mrs . William
Shaw. They have many poSters and various other materials on UNICEF .

Immunization
Schedule Given

Mrs. Gary Cropper

Preschoolers
GALLIPOUS - The Gallia
County Health Department
again reminds parents of
preschoolers of the measles
clinics to be held co Wednesday,
Oct. 27 at all elementary schools
in Gallia County .
Health department personnel
feel that it--is of the utmost
importance that parents bring
their preschoolers to the
elementary school in their area
for immunizations.
Two types of measles vaccines will be available, one is
the Rubeola vaccine, which
protects children against the socalled "regular" or "len-day"
measles, and the other is a
combined rubeola-rubella
vaccine which protects children
against both regular measles
and rubella (3-day measles).
Both vaccines are quite effective in providing lasting
immunity. At present , no
booster dose is required. There
will be no charge for the immunizations .
The preschool schedule is as
follows :
Addaville and Hannan Trace,
8:30a.m.. 9:30a.m.
Cheshire and Guiding Hand,
10 a .m. - 11 a.m.
Vinton and Cadmus, 12:30
p.m. • I :30 p.m.
Bidwell and ThurmanCenterville, 2 p.m. · 3 p.m.
A thought for today : Greek
poet Minnermus said, "We are
all clever at envying a famous
man while he is ye t alive, and
at praising him when he is
dead ."

lu111 cnt of the " Lotharit "
bachelor on his wedding eve,
"Where is the Life that Late I
Led?" from. "Kiss Me, Kate,"
to the powerfully moving
"Suliloguy" Irom "Carousel."
Another entertaining and well•
received solo by Mr . Rogers
· was "The Lees of Virginia"
from the newer hit "1776."
Miss McArl's versatility as a
smger-actor was revealed in ~~r
Got Rhtyhm," belled out a Ia
Ethel Merman, and in her
richly lyrJcal '·Night and Day"
by Cole Porter.
Probably the hit number of
the evening, at least to this
wri ter' was her sparkling solo
"Glitter and be Gay " from
Bernstein's "Candide." With
great comic abandon, Miss
McArt flung mounds of jewelry
upon herself as her voice
ranged ·from the mock
melanc holy of a minor key to
the soaring gaiety of the chorus.
· Otto distinguished himself as
the excellent accompanist he is
in this demanding number, and
proved himself again in his solo
presentations which included
Gershwin 's 3d Prelude, medlies
fr om "No, No, Nanette" and
·"West Side Story," and other
numbers.
Followin g their encore,
" There' s No Busin ess Like
Show Business," Rogers gave a
fi11al curtain speec!J in which
he expressed his great affection
for this area (having appeared
here before with the American
Wind Symphony ) and the
grou p's appreciation for the
outstanding reception they
received from the audience.
Members of the audience were
invited to come onstage to meet
the , artists following the con-

t:e~t.

A r ec~ ption honoring the
three artists was given later by
Mr. and Ml)s. A. Kimball Suiter
and Mr . and Mrs. L. R. Ford,
Jr ., at \he ·Su (ter home .
Members of the association's
board of direCtors and other
guests attended the reception.
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Carolina
Catch a sparkle
from the morning sun.
Hold the magic
ola sudden breeze.
Keep those moments alive.
They're yours lor a lifetime
with a diamond
engagement ring trom
Orange Blossom.

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
404 Second Ave .
·
"'--G·a-ll.ip•o•li•s•,•O•h•io_. .

WE RESERVE
THE RIGMT TO

LIMIT QUANTITIES

La~hey-Cropper

ON ALL ITEMS IN THIS

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU

OCT. ll3, 1971 .

NONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

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JUUA HINEMAN

COME IN AND SEE THE NEW FALL
HOME FURNISHINGS FASHIONS!

DANNY MORRIS

Morris, Bidwell, and Daniel
Morris, Kentucky. Danny is a
junior at North Gallia High
School where he is a member of
the Beta Club. He played little
league and pony league
baseball. As a freshman he
played basketball and is now a
member of the reserve squad on
the North Gallia basketball
team.
He is a member of the Bidwell
Methodist Church and treasurer
of the Bidwell Youth Fellowship.
He is also a member of the
Clark Chapel Youth Group.
Danny is the assistant steward
in Harris Grange and a member
of both the Pomona and State
Granges.
He worked.four years with the
4-H club and was a boy scout for
two years. He has been a
Colwnbus Dispatch carrier in
Bidwell for four years and on
the Dispatch honor roll for three
years. He helps his younger
brother deliver the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune in Bidwell.

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CALIFORNIA VALENCIA

0

Now at the Peak of their Goodness

each

88
Size
HI-C

6 Flavors
1-Qt. 14-oz. Cans
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THOROFARE VANILLA

ICE CREAM
Gal; Pkg.

America's f i r s t newspaper, " Publick Occurrences
Both Forreign and Domestick ." was· iss ued in Boston
in 1690.

NIBLETS
WHOLE KERNEL

CORN
12-oz. Vac Pack Can
MRS. FILBERT'S
SOFT WHIPPED

MARGARINE~:~~

JOV
LIQUID

DETERGENT
1-Pt ..
6·oz

Bot. ·

5lc

1-lb.
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GAIN
DETERGENT
3-lb.

1-oz.

age .

,Pkg.

2lc
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l·lb.
Pkg .

INSPIRED by a n c i en t
tapestries, this modern

v er~

sion of the fabled cloth wa &lt;
rendered in a late day ensemble of subslantiol chi c
by Elinor Simmons for Mnl colm Sturr. Sapphire and
~ merald green m·c the colO!'&lt;

IDEAL
DOG FOOD
15l&gt;-oz. 1 8 C ;
Can

1-lb.
5-oz.
Can

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1Pkg.

CHEER '.
DETERGEJ(
5-tb,

4-oz.

$145

Pkg.

COMET·CLEANSER

IN LNING ROOM, BEDROOM AND
DINING ROOM FURNITURE!

;;;;;.;.;i:,C;;;ses,
A nnounced At GHS

Romona Elects 1971
Prince and Princess
GALLIPOLIS - Each year a
Prince and Princess are elected
from the County Granges to
attend the State Grange meets.
They are elected by the work
they have done for the grange .
The Pomona Grange of Gallia
County elected Miss Julia An•
Hineman and Danny Morris as
princess and prince for 1971.
Miss Hineman , daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence N.
Hineman, Crown City, is a
member of the FHA, Beta Club,
the band, andp. member of the
Pomona and ~e rcervill e
Granges. She is a member of
the Victory Baptist Church. Her
hobby is playing the piano. She
attends Hannan Trace High
School where she is a junior .
Morris is the son of Wanda

ExChanged Vows

MARY CHRISTENSEN is fitted at Carl's Shoe Store with
a pair of suede Granny boots to compliment the outfit she will
wear at the annual Style Show, "What to do Until Spring

WHITNEY ·
PINK SALMON
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. 95c

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BOLD
DETERG~NT
10-lb.
11-oz.

$2"'9
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HANOVER

Cut Green Beans
3-lb.
1-oz.
Can

mixed in tlw inlr iralP IXI t. tcrh of the black wo11l :n1d

59c
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tlrTylit· hl P! I(~ · d [:1 hrir•, ·

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POINT PLEASANT - Miss daughter 's wedding a sleeveless
Judith Willene Lathey and yellow silk crepe dress with
Garey Wayne Cropper ex- matching lace coat and yellow ·
changed weddtng vows tn accessones. She wore a corsage
Trinity United Methodist of white orchids.
Church in Point Pleasant The bridegroom's mother was GALUPOUS - Malcolm B.
August 15, at 2:3ll in the af- attired in an aqua crepe dress Orebaugh, Director of Guidance
U.rnoon.
with lace appliques and mal- Counseling, Gallia Academy
She is Ute daughter of Mr . and ching accessories. She also High School, announces the
Mrs . AdMan La they of Vernon wore a corsage of white orchids. beginning of a new "mini
Road, Letart, and the Immediately following the course" program.
bfldegroom is the son of Mr. wedding, a reception was held
Students at Gallia Academy
apd Mrs. John Cropper of in the church social rooms with High School are presently enFlemingsburg, Ky. ·
members of the Martha Circle joying a new educational opThe Rev . Charles Thompson serving as hostesses.
portunity based strictly on their
read the' vows for the double A round table, covered with a personal desire to learn . All the
ring ceremony before an altar pink floor length cloth with a students with a study hall
banked with baskets of white white lace overlay, held a five- scheduled during the day may
gladioli, pompon mwns, palms tier wedding cake topped with a now elect to attend a "mini
and candelabra.
bride and groom. The cake was course" at that time.
Pre-nuptial music and the made of both white alilr The "mini course" ·subjects
processional were presented by chocolate in alternating layers. have been suggested by . the
Mrs. Paul Powell, organist. The Separate tables each with cloths student body and are taught for
traditional recessional music of pink and white lace, held the a duration of one to 10 days.
was from " The Christian beverages which included There are no tests or credits
Wedding."
punch, tea and coffee. The given and the students may
All an outward symbol of their tables were cen tered with either attend because of interest
wedding vows being solem- arrangements of white mwns in the subject, or remain in their
nlzed, the bride and bridegroom and pink snapdragons.
regular . study halls .. Course
~ch lighted a candle and from Aides assisting with the mstruci!On will be g1ven by
this they united the flames to reception were: Vickie Haddix, vari~us members of the comlight a third candle, ex- Connie Silcott, Joyce Bean, all mu~ity,
teachers,
adtingulshing those they held.
of Weston ; Bernita Meadows of mimstralors and the students
The bride entered the church Letart ; and Mrs . Pearl themselves. The purpose of the
with her father in a gown, Reynolds of Middleport. Mrs. new program is to make the
designed by Alfred Angelo, Robert Bumgarner , aunt of the curriculwn much m~re flexible
made from white bridal silk bride, of Middleport, also m meetmg the more lffimed1ate
organi:B with a camelot bodice, assisted during the wedding and
fashioned from venice lace with with the reception.
layers of btldal silk forming the The new Mrs. Cropper is a
flowing ski'rt. The .sleeves made graduate of Wahama High
of lace and silk were long and School and is a senior at
full endUll! in pointed cuffs of Glenville State College. She Is a
member of Kappa Delta Pi
lace over lthe hands.
Her mantilla and veil were Sorority.
bordered with matching lace Mr. Cropper is a graduate of
and iridescent pearls. The veil Flemingsburg High School and
formed a long chapel train and Morehead University where he
was oullined in matching venice received a degree in Business
lace.
Administration . He is a
Sunday, October 24 - Art
She cartled a bouquet of while member of Delta Tau Delta Appreciation - slides and
orchids, 1 stephanotis and Fraternity and is presently narration.
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greener~. Her only jewelry was assistant manager of the
Sunday, Oct. 24 - Parenta neacklace, which was a gift Southern States Cooperative in Child Workshop will be held at 3
from the brldesroom.
Beckley where they will reside. p.m. Titled Halloween Masks.
Mrs. Frank Capehart III,. For a wedding trip to Olegby
Sunday, Oct. 31 - Slides on
sister of the bride of Winfield Park, Wheeling, the bride wore . American.Art will be shown at 3
was the honor attendant. She a dress of frosty coral lace with p.m.
was attired in a floor length white accessories and an orchid
Riverby is open to the· public
gown made of candy pink silk corsage .
from 1-5 p.m. on Saturday and
organi:B. The fitted slightly Out of town guests were : Mr. Sunday. These activities are
empire bodice featured a scoop ·Rodney Shrout, Louisville; Mr. free and everyone is invited to
neckline. It was styled with long and Mrs . Lynn McCauley, attend.
sheer full sleeves. She wore a ..Clarksburg ; Miss Sharon
headpiece of matching .flowers Sayre, Cottageville; Mr. and
of misty pfuk silk organza and Mrs . Joe E. Sanders , Flemingsburg; Mr. and Mrs.
the veil was secured at the back Flemingsburg, Ky.; Mr. and Robert Richardson and Zack,
and from !here fell sweeping to Mrs. Larry Coffey, Maysville, 'Pai·kersburg.
.
Ute floor . She carried a bouquet Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. Datrell Susan Kesterson, Parkersof pink carnations with ribbon Rankin, Maysville, Ky.; Mr. burg; Miss VIcki Haddox,
streamers, tied with lover's and Mrs. Clyde Cropper, Lays Weston ; Mrs. Frank Kesterson,
knots.
Uck, Ky.
·Parkersburg; Mr. and Mrs.
Bridesmaids were Nell Gerri Steele, Bristol. Va. : George Taylor, Mansfield;
Cropper, : sister . of the Miss Nell Cropper, Flem- Carol Kesterson, ~arkers~urg;
bridegroom, Flemingsburg, ingsburg ; Iva C. Terrlll , f\lchard and Maxme Aldr1dg~,
Ky.; Janel Kesterson Me- Louisville, Ky. ; Mrs. Donnie Charlestort; Mr. and Mrs. Olm
Cauley, Clarksburg and Barron, Parkersburg;\ Mr . and Hill, Orma, W. Va.
Patricia Thompson Johnson of Mrs. William Barron and sons,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry
New Haven . Their dresses and Reed and Roger, Parkersburg ; l{esterson, Parkersburg; Mrs.
bouquets we(e styled !den- Mr , Ethel La they , Parker- James Miller and Leigh Ann,
tically wi\h the honor at- sburg ; Miss Connie Silcott, Parkersburg; Mr. a~d Mrs.
'tendanf's, but were In misty Weston .
Buddy Cropper, Mays Lick,
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Crop- Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. James A.
aqua.
per,
Flemingsburg; Clara . Muelannix, Georgetown, Ky .;
John
.Cropper
of
Flemingsburg was best man for Cropper, Lexington, Ky .; Miss Mrs. Guy R~ynolds, M1d·
his brother. Groomsmen were Joyce ijean, Weston; Mr. and dleport;· Rev . and Mrs. Robert
Buford Conley; Hlllsboro, Ky.; Mrs . Buford Conely, Hillsboro, Bumgarner ,' Middlep.ort;
Rodney Sh~out and Carlos Ky .; Richard Clevenger, . Rodney Shrout, Louisville, Ky.;
, Terrell, both of Louisvllle, Ky. Maysville, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Capehart
Mrs. Lathey selected for her John Cropper and Timmy , III, Winfield .

needs of our young people.
During the week of Oct . 26-29
the military services will be
conducting a series of "mini
courses ." These courses are to

ALI GOWI, assistant professor of biology at Rio
Grande College, and his son, Jack, pick out fashions at
Haskins-Tanner for the Faculty Women's Club Style Show.
They are one of the father-son combinations that will model
at Thursday 's event.
be educational and informative.
These "mini courses:· wmdeat
With the role of the military
services in our country's history
and defenses. They will also
explain the various programs
offered by the services. Many
more courses are presently
being scheduled.

POLI.Y'S POINTERS
Broken Zipper Tab?

Use a Paper Clip

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Seen and Heard

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Cousins who visited with
Mr .
and
Mrs.
Amos
Waugh, Vinton, recently were,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Smeltzer , Clara Lucille
Smeltzer, Mr. and Mrs. Clale
Lindemood, Mr. and Mrs . Paul
Frouce, Jeff, Jean , ·and Jo
Ellen, Mr. and Mrs. Harlan
Devoe, Mark Alan, Lisa and
Lynn, Lillie Holley, Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde .Linder'nood, Mrs.
Angelina Anderson, and Mr.
and Mrs. William Smeltzer.

two

classiu

DEAR POLLY - 1 dearly love my dog but am un,, able to clear up the do ggy odors in my house . He is '
1:! kept outside as much as possible but , because my
,. house has been broken into so many times. I have
t1 to leave him inside while I am away at work. Can ',
11 someone help me ' -M. 0 .
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s uper

boo t

to command an

lmp reB ive p o~ •I• Oro 1n any
fema le's w.Hdr o be ! Butt on ·
tn mm ed bo o t w111'1 fronr
del &lt;11lm9 in N•~y . Br ow n
Antiqued and Bla c k g lov e
luther. 116.95 . Classic llilo rtd
boot m Brown or Black leathtr
uppers. ~2~ .9~ .

By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY- Whenever the tab breaks on a zipper I
have found that a paper clip is handy to use when there
are no safety pins aro und .
When 1 use a long-sleeve pattern but want to make
the sleeves short , I do not like to cut the pattern off as
there may be a future need for long sleeves on another
dress, I think a stapler and staples do a better job of
holding it in the proper place than tape which nps the
pattern when removed- JAG!

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STEWART ON BOARD
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
John J . Gilligan Friday announced the appointment of
Dana Stewart, a Lancaster
banker, to a three year term on
the State Banking Board.
Stewart, past president of the
Fairfield County Bankers
Association, will succeed
Willard T. Webb, whose term
expired.

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,~:;::~:t~'"ii~W~~:wu.,w~m;tmm~~:ut§ID!illfu0M:"fWDmr'E:;;;~·i.J2&amp;lliihl.o0~.

PLA YTEX

DEAR POLLY - We have a long extension cord on our
t e 1e p h o n e which was
always in the way so I put
two cup hooks on the floor
toe strip. They are about a
yard apart and the hook
openings face out. I loop
the ·long cord from one to
the other and ·they unloop !
easily when the long length
is needed . These hooks
could be put under a shelf
if you have one for your
""
phone.-MRS. J . G.
DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with companies who
give you a "send in " coupon and leave such a small space
for your name and address that you have to write it on a
separate piece of paper and attach that to the coupon .
Why can't they make them large enough to begin with ?MRS . L. C.

theallnew

introduces

Living·
Stagless
Long Line
Stretch Bra
Now! A long line without stays ...
without bones .. ~
for really comfortable
midriff control

DEAR POLLY- I am answering 'Alma who has trouble
with her bottle of glue sealing over. I buy the large
economy size and, after using it, I put a straight pin in
the hole and it never seals over for me.-MARIAN
DEAR POLLY and Alma- After throwing away several
nearly new bottles of glue I started inserting a nail about
the s\;le of the glue bottle opening into the top. The small
amount of glue remaining in the bottle neck will not hold
the nail so tightly thai it cannot be extracted with a bit
of effort. - JERRY
·

· Unique "stay less" des ign let s.:vou sit,
bend freely without di scomfort
• Underarm stretch panels adj ust
wi th every movement
• Double side and back panels for
superio r midriff cont rol ...
exclu sive 2'1 wuistba nd keeps bra
in place ... won 't r ide up
.

DEAR POLLY - My electrician gave me the following
Pointer: PJug the cord into an appliance before plugging it
into the ou'!Iet and remove the cord from the outlet before
removing it from the appliance . Following this method
there is less chance of shorting out an appliance.ORPHA

• Beauti ful lace cups ... look perfect
under clinging fab rics . .. extra
sof Lnyl on tricot lining for
comfo rtabl e sup \)Ort
• Adj ustable soft T ricot strap s . ..
support without cutting or

TINTED LIP
GLOSS

binding

• Machine Wa shable ...
no stays to tear material
34-40 B, 34-44 C, $9.95
34-44 D, $10.95

"Glaze of Color"
A Q!lslenlng wet look .,
w:ear alone or over lipsticks. Why not slip into somethln\]

DEPARTMENT

more beautiful like . .. Slip 0 ' Pink, Slip 0' Melon ,
Slip 0 ' Coral, Slip 0' Mauve, Slip 0 ' Rose or Slip O'
Bronze, $2.00.

STORE

MERLE NORMAN COSMETIC STUDIO

302 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio .

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JUANITA'S BEAUTY SHOPPE·
Mrs. C. Leon Saunders

Owner &amp; ()pe.-.tor

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Ctl)lc r 111nd i:.lllk lliU t ic; N)' lon, spnn,\cx. Cujlllnllll:! : 10111'1 N}'l{ln. 1.- ,,,nt ltnn. l: ,
ft)llon , 1111andl•:&lt;, E xclu)lh'tl o,· oth.l'!l' l•in&gt;~t ir..
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40

lt7 1 .,- llflliftNAf n,)N ..I. 1'\..A"f'l'rl( COIU'Oftl\l'ION

1''-INTCO IN U.!I .A.

\(l_li ~;.. ,.,,111m .

lo:lnlltlt•,: ltn )'O n,. c•lllOI\

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3 Ribbons A warded

Rosalie Reese

RACINE - Ribbons for·
arrangement.s carrying out the
"Black Magic" theme were
awarded to Mrs. Robert Kuhn,
Mrs . Wilson Carpente;, .Mrs.
Bert Grimm when the Bend 0'
the River Garde!\ Club met
recently at !be home of Mrs.
Grella Simpson.
Additional shrubbery for the
Lelart Cemetery was discussed.
A therapy program was also
discussed, and the fall regional
meeting to be held in Gallipolis

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KISSING CAPTAIN - Terry Moles, right, prepares to

kiss the 1971 homecoming queen at Kyger Creek High School,
Miss Rosalie Reese, daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Herman
Reese, Cheshire. Moles is a co-captain of the 1971 Bobcat
football team . Bill Roush, left, another senior captain
presented the queen with flowers while the third senior
captain, Dan Swisher, served as her escort.

CHESHIRE - Miss Rosalie
Reese, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Herman Reese, Cheshire,
was crowned homecoming
queen Friday night at Kyger
Creek High School climaxing a
week of activities.
Miss Reese, escorted by
Bobcat C&lt;H:!aptain Dan Swisher,
represented the senior class.
Her attendants were Miss
Shelley 'Hall, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Jay Hall, Jr ., and Miss
Sheila Springer, daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas L.
Springer, Rt. I, Gallipolis.
Other members of the court
were Miss Terry Hall, daughter
of Mr . and Mrs. Jay Hall, Jr. ,
the junior class attendant ; Miss
Kandy Gindlesberger, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Gindlesberger, was the sophomore
attendant and Miss Kim Taylor,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry
L. Taylor, Rt. I, Gallipolis, was
the freshman attendant.
Escort.s were Mike Haskins,
George Curry, Mark Miller,
Greg McCarty and Mike
Johnson .
The queen was crowned by
Terry Moles, co-captain of the
Kyger Creek Bobcats. Bill

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Roush, _another co-captain,
presented Miss Reese with
flowers.
Homecoming activities begin
at 7:15p.m. with a parade. The
20 unit parade was led by the
Kyger Creek Cheerleaders.
Floats were provided by the
French Club, FHA, sophomore
class, Art Club, Latin Club, high
school choir, Industrial Arts
department, jbnior class,
Library Club, Keyette Club,
SE!venth grade, freshman class
and FFA.
First place trophy was
presented to !be FFA. The
winning float featured a plow
depicting the Bobcats plowing
over the Alexander Spartans,
their opponent.s for the evening .
The Industrial Arts float won
second place honors while the
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Automobiles were furnished
by Dr. Evan Roderick, Smith
Buick, Jim Mink, Don Watts
Volkswagen, Inc. , Richard
Haggerty, Dick Kuhn, Russell
Well, and Willard Smith.
Although the school spirit was
somewhat dampened by Kyger
Creek's 17~ Joss to Alexander,
the homecoming dance followed
the game with music provided
by "The Fox" a rock group .

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QUEEN AND HER &lt;X&gt;URT - Miss Rosalie Reese,
center, reigned over the annual homecoming dance Friday

124 Improvement is Expecte

POMEROY ·
Encouragement in the upgrading
of State Route 124 to Salem
Center, the area of Meigs
County where Ohio Power Co.
coal mining operations are to be

Seven Arrested
PT. PLEASANT - A Point
Pleasant man, Gerald Ray
Buckalew, 19, Route 2, arrested .
by City Police on a DW! charge,
was one of seven booked at the
Mason County jail the past 24
hour period .
State Police charged in·
toxication when they arrested
Charles W. Bays, 35, Route 2,
Gallipolis; Gene Walters, 37,
Gallipolis; Eddie K. Lanham,
Point Pleasant; Larry Allen
Stephens, 20, Mt. Alto .
Robert J. Edmonds, 23, Apple
Grove and William E. Speqrs,
27, Huntington, were' ar~ested
by the Sheriff's Department and
each was charged with intoxication.

centered, is provided in a letter
from State Highway Department Division Engineer Max R.
Farley.
Farley's letter was addressed
to Pomeroy Attorney Frank W.
Porter in answer to his queries
on the upgrading of the route. It
states:
"We have your letter of
August 18, 1971, concerning the
upgrading and improving of
State Route 124 from Salem
Center to the Route 7 Bypass in
Meigs County.
"At the present time to
program a project of this nature

we must program it for the use
of Federal-Aid funds. ln order
to qualify for Federal funds we
must prepare an engineering
report to justify location and
design criteria. Alter the
engineering report is prepared
and approved and a location
hearing held and approved for
the entire length, we would
break it down into construction
size project.s.
" We have obtained in·
formation from the Ohio Power
Company concerning the
conveyor belt line and their
proposed mining operation. Our '

survey crew will be working in
the area in the near future to
obtain control survey information .
· "We will proceed with
planning this project as fast as
our work load will pennit. Due
to several recent established
requirements for highway
projects it is impossible to
estimate the date of construction until a location
hearing is held and approved.
"Your interest in this highway is appreciated and we will
keep you informed of the
progress."

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Thoughts

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DR!VE MONDAY
Wealth hastily gotten will
NEW HAVEN - Sponsored
dwi11d le. but he who goth·
by
the New Haven Woman 's
en little by little will in·
Society of Christian Service of
cHase it -Proverbs 13.· 11.
" ·~
United Methodist Church and

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SOUTHERN ATHLETIC BOOSTERS really do need a
new food booth. The present booth, located at the football
stadium in Racine, is very lacking in space. However, the
women members never let the poor facilities stop them when
it comes to selling food and making money . At all home
games you will find them at the spot doing their bit. Working
away at the last home game were, 1-r, front row, Alice Wolfe,
Ruth Ann Hill and Grace Hoffman; back row , Dorothy
Salser, Dorothy Smith, Pauline Wolfe, Betty Theiss and Pat
White .

We have no more right to
consume happiness without
The temperature in Ken- producin g it. than to con·
tucky's Mammoth Cave sume wealth without proneve r var ies f r ·o m 54 de · ducing it.-George Bernard
Shaw.
grees .

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••

the New Haven Woman's Club,
the annual UNICEF drive will
be conducted Monday, October
25, from 6 to 9 p.m. in New
Haven.

W~LL

:: Funeral Held In Syracuse
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SYRACUSE
Funeral
services for the late Mrs .
Maggie Diddle, 79, were held
Monday at 2 p.m. at the
Syracuse
First
United
Presbyterian Chur~h with the
Rev s. Linson Stebbins and
Dwight Zavitz officiating. Intennent was at Beech Grove
Cemetery. Ewing Funeral
Home was in charge.
Out-of-town relatives and
friends attending the services
were Mrs. Della Starkey, Mr.
and Mrs. Mac Findlay, Mr . and
Mrs. Ronald Miller, Mr. and
Mrs. LaM"ence seuars, all of
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs. Dick
Sta rkey, Jenny and Sandy,
Wooster ; Mrs . 'Alice Flanagan,
Ambrose Louis Flanagan, Mr .
and Mrs. R. B. O'Kelly, Mr. and
Mrs. Daryl Brown, Parkersburg; Mrs. C. F. Brown, Mrs .

Gene Cook, Mrs. Beulah
Radcliff, Mrs. Carrol Brown
and Mrs. Joe Cook, Mineral
Wells, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs .
William
Oiler,
James
Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Osborne, Lancaster; Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Cundiff, Wallbridge,
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Holmes, Mrs. Phyllis Louise
-Edwards, Richland, Va .; Mt .
and Mrs . George Walton,
Steubenville; Mrs . Virginia
Parent and Linda , Wellsburg,
W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Cook and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Cook and family,
East Liverpool ; Mr. and Mrs.
Bernard Cook, Bradbury ; Mr .
and Mrs. Gene Miller, Middleport; Mr . and Mrs. Pearl
searles, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
searles, Kyger, and Mrs. Betty
Martin, Pomeroy.

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Against Fire, Theft &amp; Lou With A •••

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GRANTS ANNOUNCED
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
Labor Department has announced a grant of $1.65 million
to Ohio for public service jobs
for areas of high unemploymen t. Alloc~tions included :
Cincinnati, $238,000; Youngstown, $75,400 ; Canfield, $39,600;
Struthers, $62,400 ; Girard,
$41,400 ; Niles , $88,900; Newark,
$42,500 ; Lorain County.,
$361 ,900 ; Alliance, $74 ,500 ;
Massillon, $101 ,800 ; Mansfield,
$50,000; Brown County, $52,000 ;
and Pike Coun ty, ~.600 .

''

PAY RAISED
"' ' YOUNGSTOWN ( UPI )- The
'' •' Youngstown
Board
of
'' •' Education has been ordered to
"I• increasestartlng pay levels for
; ; cil_y- teachers from $6,750 to
:; $7,000 effective Jan. 1972. The
q Friday order from Mahoning
I• Cotmty · Common Pleas Court
Judge Sidney Rigelhaupt, came
', •' after lhe board and the Youngs'town Education Association
,, (YEA) . failed to reach
agreement on wages in a new
master contract.

Sin.ce 1859

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To SatisfyOr Money Bon

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Married Last May
MIDDLEPORT - Wedding
vows were exchanged by Miss
Wilma
Faye
Reynolds,
,daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
R.oland Reynolds, Albany, and
Mr. John Roy Coleman, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Bethel Coleman of
Albany, formerly of Middleport,
in an afternoon ceremony at the
Albany Methodist Church, May
22.
The Rev. Cllfford Coleman of
McArthur, brother of the
bridegroom, officiated at !be
double ring ceremony performed before an altar
decorated with daisies and
snapdragons . Nuptial music
,. was provided by II!J:s. Ronald
: Mot!er, organist, and Mrs .
Clifford Coleman, vocalist.
Given in marriage by_ her
father, the bride was attired in a
gown of bridal satin with an
overlay of lace. It was fashioned
witb a hooped skirt, scalloped at

!be bottom, bateau neckline,·
and long lace sleeves. She wore
a mantilla train of illusion and
lace with a face blusher, and
carried a bouquet of carnations
centered with an orchid.
The bride's attendants were
Miss Blinda Reynolds, her
sister, the maid of honor; Miss
lirenda Goodwin, Miss Melody
McComas,
Albany ,
the
bridesmaids; Miss Lisa Henson
and Miss Lorraine Henson,
Albany, nieces of the bride, the
flower girls.
The maid of honor wore a
floor·lengtb gown of lavender
crepe fashioned _ with a fittedbodice, longfullsleeves,and
an A-line skirt. The other attendant.s were in gowns of
similar design in dotted swiss.
They wore headbands of carnations and carried nosegays of
white carnations with purple
asters. The flower girls carried

RUTLAND - A "Christmas
Everywhere" flower shoW will
be staged Nov. 13 and 14 at the
United Methodist O!urch here
by the Rutland Garden Club.
The show will be open to the
public from 2 to 6 p.m. Satur·
day, Nov . 13 and from 1to 4 p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 14. Mrs. Roy
Snowden is chairman.
The show will offer three
sections, artistic, educational
and horticulture. The first eight
clasSes in the artistic division
are open to garden club
members only. The invitational
class is open to everyone. The
junior artistic section is also
open to any junior.
The Rutland Friendly Garden
Qub has been invited to participate In the show. The eight
classes in the artistic division
open to the Rutland club and the
Rutland Frieridly Gardeners
include "Holiday Greeting," a
wreath or swag; "Welcome,"
for a hall table; ''Gracious
Living", for a mantel;
"Peace-This Holy Night,"
featuring a Madonna; "Ught
with ·Joy," using a candle or
candles; "At Home," for a
dinner table; "The Hwnble
Stable," with driftwood, and
"Spreading the Christmas
Spirit," using baubles and-or
The · .Invitational class,
"Olristmas Festivities", your
favorite arrangement, Is open
to the public also. The Junior
artistic section is open to any
Junior and includes two
'"
classes: "Santa lsCommg,
arrangement in a toy, and
''Caroling,", your favorite.
Christmas arrangement.
In the horticulture division
anyone may enter specimens of

·To Soften Sorrow •
Baskets · · ·
Sprays - - - Vases

"PLANT"
'

YOUR
MONEY

here and watch I
"bloom''! Earn at our
passbook rate of

43!.%
ON
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

Meip Co.

et'anch

Meigs County Bronch of

Dudley'S Florist

'842 ~cond
Phone 446·

Serving: Gallipolis,
Pomeroy, Middleport
&amp; Mason Co., W, Va .

Gollipoli•

Class Continues Lunch Project
MIDDLEPORT - Several
donations to Class 12 of Heath
United Methodist Church in
memory of Robert W. Harris,
Sr. will be used for the school
lunch project which he sup-

ported through the class for
many years .
Meeting Thursday night at
!be church, donations were
acknowledged from the Gen~
Harris family, Mrs. Norma
Hecox and Mr. and ¥rs. Roy
_Tracy.
Mrs. Emerson
Jones,
. .
president, announced World
chid corsage from her brtdal Wide Community Day to be
bouquet for the couple's trip to observed on Nov. 5at the Mount
England and then on to Gaela, Moriah Baptist Church in
Italy where the groom IS -Middleport. It was reported that
slationed with the U. S. Navy. !be pecans will be shipped next
The new Mrs . Coleman IS a week and that they will sell for
graduate of the Alexan~er High $2.25 a pound.
School and the Techmcal In- Announced at the meeting
stitute at Nelsonville. Prior to was the church Halloween party
her marriage she was employed to be staged Wednesday night.
as a secretarial aide in the The masked family affair is for
Alexander school.
the Salem Center Rutland and
Mr . Coleman graduated Mlddleport Churdhes.
from Middleport High School Women of the Bible and had two years at Ohio Keturah the second wife of
University before enlisting in Abraha~ and mother of his six
!be U. S. Navy.
sons, Deborah, and Rebecca,
Mr . and Mrs. Clarence wife of Isaac, were discussed by
Francher, Columbus; Mrs . Mrs. James Jividen who took
Mary Reynolds, Gallipolis; and material from "Unique World
Mrs. John L. Coleman, Vmton, of Women " by Mrs. Eugenia
grandparents of the couple, Price . future programs on
were among the guest.s at the Bible women will be taken from
wedding.
the study book, "All the Women

1

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

BELL BOTTOMS
The look is wide and
wild-the fabric is midwale
cotton corduroy in rich
colors that blend beautifully
with the new shirts. Basic

what's groovy

jeans construction that

It's fun fashion for you all the
way. New moe styl ing with
the look your go-group
goes for.

is traditionally Levi's .

IN NAVY AND BROWN

Slide into a pair or

WE STILL HAVE
MANY WONDERFUL
BARGAINS FROM FIRE SALEI

two-today!

$AVEi

Levfs

,----,.~~
-~

BAHR
CLOTHIERS

THE SHOE 101

MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO

Where Shoes are Sensibly Priced

·

accounts Insured up tq_
$20,000.01
I

of the Bible."
A poem, "Be Still and Know
that I Am God" opened the ~~~?:~e~~~ brightest sharpest picture ever seen on a Hire tub~-25" picture measured diagonally;
c1
meeting. Mrs. Jack Bechtle
5 sq.in. picture • Super-Screen Hi-Brite Magi o_or
gave devotions using "Love" as
cture tube for the brightest, sharpest, most true-to-hie
her theme. She read scripture
picture in Philco history • Super-Balanced Cosfrom St. Mark and a poem,
"Beautiful Things to Do"
Color Circuit (Pat. Pend.) for even more realistic
concluding with a meditation on
tones ; greater color fidelity in background scenes
love.
Philco A.C.T. with panel ON-dicator • 26,500-volt DynaMrs . Jividen's step-mother
chassis • Automatic Color Balance control • Cowas a guest at the meeting.
Cable input.
Mrs. L . IV. McComas, Mrs.
Jane Gilkey, Mrs . Mary
Rinehart, and Mrs. Norman
Wayland were hostesses. The
Halloween theme was carried
0.
out in the !able decorations.

CORDUROY

Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, ~io
Member Federal Home Loan

Member Federal Savings II
Loan· Insurance Carp. •"I

Ensley. Early American. Genuine Maple
and selected solids ; simulated drawers and
rail. 31o/e" high, 35-15/16" wide, 20Y2'' deep;

[1@\\JOo~r

&amp;

t!ank.
'

basket.s of carnations .
Master J. T. Coleman of
McArth~r, . nephew of the .
groom, was the ringbearer.
Best man was Mr. Mike Gardner, Middleport, and the ushers
were Mr. Larry Gladwell, Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., and Mr.
Garland Reynolds, Albany.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Reynolds wore an orchid
polyester knit witb white ac·
cessories. Mrs. Coleman was in
a turquoise dress and had beige
ac*ssories. Both mothers had
orchid corsages. Guests were
registered by Miss Janice
Tippie, Albany .
A reception honoring the
couple was held at the Tennessee Gas Co. social hall,
Albany. The orchid and white
color scheme of the wedding
was carried out in the
decorations. The three tiered
cake, a gift of Mrs. Ju~nita
Potts,
featured
p1llar
separators and w~ding bell
accent with the traditional bride
and groom replica on the second
tier. Mr-s. Pott.s, Mrs. Erma
Guess, Miss Marie Taylor, and
Miss Carol Quivey served as
hostesses.
The bride changed into an
orchid dress and wore !be or-

the following : Qass 1, Pine·
short needle; 2, Pine, long
needle; 3, Spruce; 4, Yew; 5,
American Holly; 6, Arborvitae;
aass 7, flowering houseplants
for competition, Class 8,
Foliage houseplants for com·
petition .
A special section for junior
hOrticulture will include class 'il==~
9-Evergreen specimens I
which may be Pine, Yew or
Juniper.
The educational section will
include a display of garden
pamphlets, a display of plants
in'different types of soil, display
of fall. bulbs and a display of
pest control which will not be
judged.
All entries must be staged by
11 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 13 and
no exhibits are to be removed
before 4 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 14.
Oral judging will be at I p.m.
by an accredited judge from the
Ohio Association of Garden
latch
Clubs. A Best of Show award
will be given.
onto

The AlheM Coilnty S.villttl

\

Serving: Gallipolis,
Pomeroy, Middleport
&amp; Mason Co .• W.Va .

POMEROY - Wedding vows were exchanged by Miss Judy Lynn Vineyard and Mr. Fred
Eugene Davis in a double-ring ceremony on Saturday, Sept. 18, at ·the Danville Wesleyan
Church. The ceremony was performed at 1p.m. by the Rev. Lawrence Sullivan .
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Vineyard, Langsville, and the groom
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Davis, Langsville. The new Mrs. Davis is a senior at the
Rantoul High School, Rantoul, lli. The groom is a 1969 graduate of Meigs High School, a 1971
graduate of Ohio Institute of Technology, and is presently serving in the U.S. Air Force at
Chanute Air Force Base, Rantoul, lli. The couple reside at Rantoul.

Mr. and Mrs. john Roy Coleman

Sympathy Flowers

100 PIECES

1:

Dudley's Aorist

judy Vineyard, Fred Davis Wedded September 18

glitter.

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With A

Lobster is relatively rich
in protein and has almost 62
per cent of the nutritive
value of beef , according to
Enc yclopaedia Britannica.

night at Kyger Q-eek High School. Her court ll'l~!!lllll;rl!'ll'ere
left to right, Kim Taylor, Kandy Gindlesberger, Sheila
Springer, Shelley Hall and Terry Hall.
'

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Cheer The Sick

From

G;r~~g~~n~l~y\~~;s~~~~~Rt.
Eshenailr.

2nd GROWING SEASON?
Mr. and Mrs. Tom McNeal
of Centerpoint have sweet
potato or yam plants
blooming. The harvest is
normally complete at Ibis
time of year.
The early harvest apple
tree has yielded one crop of
apples as per usual and now
has small apples growing
toward the second crop of this
year- Fresh apple sauce for
Thanksgiving? Perhaps, If
the frost doesn't come .

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Q~e~n

was announced.
Members responded to roll
call by naming their most
beautiful time of the year. Mrs.
Letha · Morris gave devotions
and Mrs. Grimm read "Slender
Brown Cat Tails." Refresh- ·
ments were served by Mrs.
Simpson and Mrs, Morris.

N. 2nd AVE.

MIDDLEPORT

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3 Ribbons A warded

Rosalie Reese

RACINE - Ribbons for·
arrangement.s carrying out the
"Black Magic" theme were
awarded to Mrs. Robert Kuhn,
Mrs . Wilson Carpente;, .Mrs.
Bert Grimm when the Bend 0'
the River Garde!\ Club met
recently at !be home of Mrs.
Grella Simpson.
Additional shrubbery for the
Lelart Cemetery was discussed.
A therapy program was also
discussed, and the fall regional
meeting to be held in Gallipolis

'.

Crowned

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KISSING CAPTAIN - Terry Moles, right, prepares to

kiss the 1971 homecoming queen at Kyger Creek High School,
Miss Rosalie Reese, daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Herman
Reese, Cheshire. Moles is a co-captain of the 1971 Bobcat
football team . Bill Roush, left, another senior captain
presented the queen with flowers while the third senior
captain, Dan Swisher, served as her escort.

CHESHIRE - Miss Rosalie
Reese, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Herman Reese, Cheshire,
was crowned homecoming
queen Friday night at Kyger
Creek High School climaxing a
week of activities.
Miss Reese, escorted by
Bobcat C&lt;H:!aptain Dan Swisher,
represented the senior class.
Her attendants were Miss
Shelley 'Hall, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Jay Hall, Jr ., and Miss
Sheila Springer, daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas L.
Springer, Rt. I, Gallipolis.
Other members of the court
were Miss Terry Hall, daughter
of Mr . and Mrs. Jay Hall, Jr. ,
the junior class attendant ; Miss
Kandy Gindlesberger, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Gindlesberger, was the sophomore
attendant and Miss Kim Taylor,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry
L. Taylor, Rt. I, Gallipolis, was
the freshman attendant.
Escort.s were Mike Haskins,
George Curry, Mark Miller,
Greg McCarty and Mike
Johnson .
The queen was crowned by
Terry Moles, co-captain of the
Kyger Creek Bobcats. Bill

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Roush, _another co-captain,
presented Miss Reese with
flowers.
Homecoming activities begin
at 7:15p.m. with a parade. The
20 unit parade was led by the
Kyger Creek Cheerleaders.
Floats were provided by the
French Club, FHA, sophomore
class, Art Club, Latin Club, high
school choir, Industrial Arts
department, jbnior class,
Library Club, Keyette Club,
SE!venth grade, freshman class
and FFA.
First place trophy was
presented to !be FFA. The
winning float featured a plow
depicting the Bobcats plowing
over the Alexander Spartans,
their opponent.s for the evening .
The Industrial Arts float won
second place honors while the
~~~~.

Automobiles were furnished
by Dr. Evan Roderick, Smith
Buick, Jim Mink, Don Watts
Volkswagen, Inc. , Richard
Haggerty, Dick Kuhn, Russell
Well, and Willard Smith.
Although the school spirit was
somewhat dampened by Kyger
Creek's 17~ Joss to Alexander,
the homecoming dance followed
the game with music provided
by "The Fox" a rock group .

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QUEEN AND HER &lt;X&gt;URT - Miss Rosalie Reese,
center, reigned over the annual homecoming dance Friday

124 Improvement is Expecte

POMEROY ·
Encouragement in the upgrading
of State Route 124 to Salem
Center, the area of Meigs
County where Ohio Power Co.
coal mining operations are to be

Seven Arrested
PT. PLEASANT - A Point
Pleasant man, Gerald Ray
Buckalew, 19, Route 2, arrested .
by City Police on a DW! charge,
was one of seven booked at the
Mason County jail the past 24
hour period .
State Police charged in·
toxication when they arrested
Charles W. Bays, 35, Route 2,
Gallipolis; Gene Walters, 37,
Gallipolis; Eddie K. Lanham,
Point Pleasant; Larry Allen
Stephens, 20, Mt. Alto .
Robert J. Edmonds, 23, Apple
Grove and William E. Speqrs,
27, Huntington, were' ar~ested
by the Sheriff's Department and
each was charged with intoxication.

centered, is provided in a letter
from State Highway Department Division Engineer Max R.
Farley.
Farley's letter was addressed
to Pomeroy Attorney Frank W.
Porter in answer to his queries
on the upgrading of the route. It
states:
"We have your letter of
August 18, 1971, concerning the
upgrading and improving of
State Route 124 from Salem
Center to the Route 7 Bypass in
Meigs County.
"At the present time to
program a project of this nature

we must program it for the use
of Federal-Aid funds. ln order
to qualify for Federal funds we
must prepare an engineering
report to justify location and
design criteria. Alter the
engineering report is prepared
and approved and a location
hearing held and approved for
the entire length, we would
break it down into construction
size project.s.
" We have obtained in·
formation from the Ohio Power
Company concerning the
conveyor belt line and their
proposed mining operation. Our '

survey crew will be working in
the area in the near future to
obtain control survey information .
· "We will proceed with
planning this project as fast as
our work load will pennit. Due
to several recent established
requirements for highway
projects it is impossible to
estimate the date of construction until a location
hearing is held and approved.
"Your interest in this highway is appreciated and we will
keep you informed of the
progress."

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Thoughts

.• .•
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DR!VE MONDAY
Wealth hastily gotten will
NEW HAVEN - Sponsored
dwi11d le. but he who goth·
by
the New Haven Woman 's
en little by little will in·
Society of Christian Service of
cHase it -Proverbs 13.· 11.
" ·~
United Methodist Church and

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SOUTHERN ATHLETIC BOOSTERS really do need a
new food booth. The present booth, located at the football
stadium in Racine, is very lacking in space. However, the
women members never let the poor facilities stop them when
it comes to selling food and making money . At all home
games you will find them at the spot doing their bit. Working
away at the last home game were, 1-r, front row, Alice Wolfe,
Ruth Ann Hill and Grace Hoffman; back row , Dorothy
Salser, Dorothy Smith, Pauline Wolfe, Betty Theiss and Pat
White .

We have no more right to
consume happiness without
The temperature in Ken- producin g it. than to con·
tucky's Mammoth Cave sume wealth without proneve r var ies f r ·o m 54 de · ducing it.-George Bernard
Shaw.
grees .

••
••

the New Haven Woman's Club,
the annual UNICEF drive will
be conducted Monday, October
25, from 6 to 9 p.m. in New
Haven.

W~LL

:: Funeral Held In Syracuse
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SYRACUSE
Funeral
services for the late Mrs .
Maggie Diddle, 79, were held
Monday at 2 p.m. at the
Syracuse
First
United
Presbyterian Chur~h with the
Rev s. Linson Stebbins and
Dwight Zavitz officiating. Intennent was at Beech Grove
Cemetery. Ewing Funeral
Home was in charge.
Out-of-town relatives and
friends attending the services
were Mrs. Della Starkey, Mr.
and Mrs. Mac Findlay, Mr . and
Mrs. Ronald Miller, Mr. and
Mrs. LaM"ence seuars, all of
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs. Dick
Sta rkey, Jenny and Sandy,
Wooster ; Mrs . 'Alice Flanagan,
Ambrose Louis Flanagan, Mr .
and Mrs. R. B. O'Kelly, Mr. and
Mrs. Daryl Brown, Parkersburg; Mrs. C. F. Brown, Mrs .

Gene Cook, Mrs. Beulah
Radcliff, Mrs. Carrol Brown
and Mrs. Joe Cook, Mineral
Wells, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs .
William
Oiler,
James
Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Osborne, Lancaster; Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Cundiff, Wallbridge,
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Holmes, Mrs. Phyllis Louise
-Edwards, Richland, Va .; Mt .
and Mrs . George Walton,
Steubenville; Mrs . Virginia
Parent and Linda , Wellsburg,
W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Cook and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Cook and family,
East Liverpool ; Mr. and Mrs.
Bernard Cook, Bradbury ; Mr .
and Mrs. Gene Miller, Middleport; Mr . and Mrs. Pearl
searles, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
searles, Kyger, and Mrs. Betty
Martin, Pomeroy.

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GRANTS ANNOUNCED
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
Labor Department has announced a grant of $1.65 million
to Ohio for public service jobs
for areas of high unemploymen t. Alloc~tions included :
Cincinnati, $238,000; Youngstown, $75,400 ; Canfield, $39,600;
Struthers, $62,400 ; Girard,
$41,400 ; Niles , $88,900; Newark,
$42,500 ; Lorain County.,
$361 ,900 ; Alliance, $74 ,500 ;
Massillon, $101 ,800 ; Mansfield,
$50,000; Brown County, $52,000 ;
and Pike Coun ty, ~.600 .

''

PAY RAISED
"' ' YOUNGSTOWN ( UPI )- The
'' •' Youngstown
Board
of
'' •' Education has been ordered to
"I• increasestartlng pay levels for
; ; cil_y- teachers from $6,750 to
:; $7,000 effective Jan. 1972. The
q Friday order from Mahoning
I• Cotmty · Common Pleas Court
Judge Sidney Rigelhaupt, came
', •' after lhe board and the Youngs'town Education Association
,, (YEA) . failed to reach
agreement on wages in a new
master contract.

Sin.ce 1859

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Married Last May
MIDDLEPORT - Wedding
vows were exchanged by Miss
Wilma
Faye
Reynolds,
,daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
R.oland Reynolds, Albany, and
Mr. John Roy Coleman, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Bethel Coleman of
Albany, formerly of Middleport,
in an afternoon ceremony at the
Albany Methodist Church, May
22.
The Rev. Cllfford Coleman of
McArthur, brother of the
bridegroom, officiated at !be
double ring ceremony performed before an altar
decorated with daisies and
snapdragons . Nuptial music
,. was provided by II!J:s. Ronald
: Mot!er, organist, and Mrs .
Clifford Coleman, vocalist.
Given in marriage by_ her
father, the bride was attired in a
gown of bridal satin with an
overlay of lace. It was fashioned
witb a hooped skirt, scalloped at

!be bottom, bateau neckline,·
and long lace sleeves. She wore
a mantilla train of illusion and
lace with a face blusher, and
carried a bouquet of carnations
centered with an orchid.
The bride's attendants were
Miss Blinda Reynolds, her
sister, the maid of honor; Miss
lirenda Goodwin, Miss Melody
McComas,
Albany ,
the
bridesmaids; Miss Lisa Henson
and Miss Lorraine Henson,
Albany, nieces of the bride, the
flower girls.
The maid of honor wore a
floor·lengtb gown of lavender
crepe fashioned _ with a fittedbodice, longfullsleeves,and
an A-line skirt. The other attendant.s were in gowns of
similar design in dotted swiss.
They wore headbands of carnations and carried nosegays of
white carnations with purple
asters. The flower girls carried

RUTLAND - A "Christmas
Everywhere" flower shoW will
be staged Nov. 13 and 14 at the
United Methodist O!urch here
by the Rutland Garden Club.
The show will be open to the
public from 2 to 6 p.m. Satur·
day, Nov . 13 and from 1to 4 p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 14. Mrs. Roy
Snowden is chairman.
The show will offer three
sections, artistic, educational
and horticulture. The first eight
clasSes in the artistic division
are open to garden club
members only. The invitational
class is open to everyone. The
junior artistic section is also
open to any junior.
The Rutland Friendly Garden
Qub has been invited to participate In the show. The eight
classes in the artistic division
open to the Rutland club and the
Rutland Frieridly Gardeners
include "Holiday Greeting," a
wreath or swag; "Welcome,"
for a hall table; ''Gracious
Living", for a mantel;
"Peace-This Holy Night,"
featuring a Madonna; "Ught
with ·Joy," using a candle or
candles; "At Home," for a
dinner table; "The Hwnble
Stable," with driftwood, and
"Spreading the Christmas
Spirit," using baubles and-or
The · .Invitational class,
"Olristmas Festivities", your
favorite arrangement, Is open
to the public also. The Junior
artistic section is open to any
Junior and includes two
'"
classes: "Santa lsCommg,
arrangement in a toy, and
''Caroling,", your favorite.
Christmas arrangement.
In the horticulture division
anyone may enter specimens of

·To Soften Sorrow •
Baskets · · ·
Sprays - - - Vases

"PLANT"
'

YOUR
MONEY

here and watch I
"bloom''! Earn at our
passbook rate of

43!.%
ON
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

Meip Co.

et'anch

Meigs County Bronch of

Dudley'S Florist

'842 ~cond
Phone 446·

Serving: Gallipolis,
Pomeroy, Middleport
&amp; Mason Co., W, Va .

Gollipoli•

Class Continues Lunch Project
MIDDLEPORT - Several
donations to Class 12 of Heath
United Methodist Church in
memory of Robert W. Harris,
Sr. will be used for the school
lunch project which he sup-

ported through the class for
many years .
Meeting Thursday night at
!be church, donations were
acknowledged from the Gen~
Harris family, Mrs. Norma
Hecox and Mr. and ¥rs. Roy
_Tracy.
Mrs. Emerson
Jones,
. .
president, announced World
chid corsage from her brtdal Wide Community Day to be
bouquet for the couple's trip to observed on Nov. 5at the Mount
England and then on to Gaela, Moriah Baptist Church in
Italy where the groom IS -Middleport. It was reported that
slationed with the U. S. Navy. !be pecans will be shipped next
The new Mrs . Coleman IS a week and that they will sell for
graduate of the Alexan~er High $2.25 a pound.
School and the Techmcal In- Announced at the meeting
stitute at Nelsonville. Prior to was the church Halloween party
her marriage she was employed to be staged Wednesday night.
as a secretarial aide in the The masked family affair is for
Alexander school.
the Salem Center Rutland and
Mr . Coleman graduated Mlddleport Churdhes.
from Middleport High School Women of the Bible and had two years at Ohio Keturah the second wife of
University before enlisting in Abraha~ and mother of his six
!be U. S. Navy.
sons, Deborah, and Rebecca,
Mr . and Mrs. Clarence wife of Isaac, were discussed by
Francher, Columbus; Mrs . Mrs. James Jividen who took
Mary Reynolds, Gallipolis; and material from "Unique World
Mrs. John L. Coleman, Vmton, of Women " by Mrs. Eugenia
grandparents of the couple, Price . future programs on
were among the guest.s at the Bible women will be taken from
wedding.
the study book, "All the Women

1

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

BELL BOTTOMS
The look is wide and
wild-the fabric is midwale
cotton corduroy in rich
colors that blend beautifully
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WE STILL HAVE
MANY WONDERFUL
BARGAINS FROM FIRE SALEI

two-today!

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BAHR
CLOTHIERS

THE SHOE 101

MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO

Where Shoes are Sensibly Priced

·

accounts Insured up tq_
$20,000.01
I

of the Bible."
A poem, "Be Still and Know
that I Am God" opened the ~~~?:~e~~~ brightest sharpest picture ever seen on a Hire tub~-25" picture measured diagonally;
c1
meeting. Mrs. Jack Bechtle
5 sq.in. picture • Super-Screen Hi-Brite Magi o_or
gave devotions using "Love" as
cture tube for the brightest, sharpest, most true-to-hie
her theme. She read scripture
picture in Philco history • Super-Balanced Cosfrom St. Mark and a poem,
"Beautiful Things to Do"
Color Circuit (Pat. Pend.) for even more realistic
concluding with a meditation on
tones ; greater color fidelity in background scenes
love.
Philco A.C.T. with panel ON-dicator • 26,500-volt DynaMrs . Jividen's step-mother
chassis • Automatic Color Balance control • Cowas a guest at the meeting.
Cable input.
Mrs. L . IV. McComas, Mrs.
Jane Gilkey, Mrs . Mary
Rinehart, and Mrs. Norman
Wayland were hostesses. The
Halloween theme was carried
0.
out in the !able decorations.

CORDUROY

Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, ~io
Member Federal Home Loan

Member Federal Savings II
Loan· Insurance Carp. •"I

Ensley. Early American. Genuine Maple
and selected solids ; simulated drawers and
rail. 31o/e" high, 35-15/16" wide, 20Y2'' deep;

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t!ank.
'

basket.s of carnations .
Master J. T. Coleman of
McArth~r, . nephew of the .
groom, was the ringbearer.
Best man was Mr. Mike Gardner, Middleport, and the ushers
were Mr. Larry Gladwell, Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., and Mr.
Garland Reynolds, Albany.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Reynolds wore an orchid
polyester knit witb white ac·
cessories. Mrs. Coleman was in
a turquoise dress and had beige
ac*ssories. Both mothers had
orchid corsages. Guests were
registered by Miss Janice
Tippie, Albany .
A reception honoring the
couple was held at the Tennessee Gas Co. social hall,
Albany. The orchid and white
color scheme of the wedding
was carried out in the
decorations. The three tiered
cake, a gift of Mrs. Ju~nita
Potts,
featured
p1llar
separators and w~ding bell
accent with the traditional bride
and groom replica on the second
tier. Mr-s. Pott.s, Mrs. Erma
Guess, Miss Marie Taylor, and
Miss Carol Quivey served as
hostesses.
The bride changed into an
orchid dress and wore !be or-

the following : Qass 1, Pine·
short needle; 2, Pine, long
needle; 3, Spruce; 4, Yew; 5,
American Holly; 6, Arborvitae;
aass 7, flowering houseplants
for competition, Class 8,
Foliage houseplants for com·
petition .
A special section for junior
hOrticulture will include class 'il==~
9-Evergreen specimens I
which may be Pine, Yew or
Juniper.
The educational section will
include a display of garden
pamphlets, a display of plants
in'different types of soil, display
of fall. bulbs and a display of
pest control which will not be
judged.
All entries must be staged by
11 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 13 and
no exhibits are to be removed
before 4 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 14.
Oral judging will be at I p.m.
by an accredited judge from the
Ohio Association of Garden
latch
Clubs. A Best of Show award
will be given.
onto

The AlheM Coilnty S.villttl

\

Serving: Gallipolis,
Pomeroy, Middleport
&amp; Mason Co .• W.Va .

POMEROY - Wedding vows were exchanged by Miss Judy Lynn Vineyard and Mr. Fred
Eugene Davis in a double-ring ceremony on Saturday, Sept. 18, at ·the Danville Wesleyan
Church. The ceremony was performed at 1p.m. by the Rev. Lawrence Sullivan .
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Vineyard, Langsville, and the groom
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Davis, Langsville. The new Mrs. Davis is a senior at the
Rantoul High School, Rantoul, lli. The groom is a 1969 graduate of Meigs High School, a 1971
graduate of Ohio Institute of Technology, and is presently serving in the U.S. Air Force at
Chanute Air Force Base, Rantoul, lli. The couple reside at Rantoul.

Mr. and Mrs. john Roy Coleman

Sympathy Flowers

100 PIECES

1:

Dudley's Aorist

judy Vineyard, Fred Davis Wedded September 18

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Lobster is relatively rich
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night at Kyger Q-eek High School. Her court ll'l~!!lllll;rl!'ll'ere
left to right, Kim Taylor, Kandy Gindlesberger, Sheila
Springer, Shelley Hall and Terry Hall.
'

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'

Cheer The Sick

From

G;r~~g~~n~l~y\~~;s~~~~~Rt.
Eshenailr.

2nd GROWING SEASON?
Mr. and Mrs. Tom McNeal
of Centerpoint have sweet
potato or yam plants
blooming. The harvest is
normally complete at Ibis
time of year.
The early harvest apple
tree has yielded one crop of
apples as per usual and now
has small apples growing
toward the second crop of this
year- Fresh apple sauce for
Thanksgiving? Perhaps, If
the frost doesn't come .

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Q~e~n

was announced.
Members responded to roll
call by naming their most
beautiful time of the year. Mrs.
Letha · Morris gave devotions
and Mrs. Grimm read "Slender
Brown Cat Tails." Refresh- ·
ments were served by Mrs.
Simpson and Mrs, Morris.

N. 2nd AVE.

MIDDLEPORT

n

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Renewal o Levy Urged

Personality
Profile , ,
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
POMEROY - Ins Kelton has
always loved to paint but it wasn't until
two years ago that she enrolled for
forma l art training .
It was while Iris and her husband,
Aaron, were living in Aberdeen, Ohio,
that she decided it was either now or
never and immediately stgned up for a
course at the Germann Artist School at
Ripley .
A year Ia ter she began
correspondence study with the Famous
Artist.&lt;; School and now has the course
over half completed.
Her talent IS well displayed in the
numerous paintings which adorn the
walls of every room in the Kelton home
at Minersville.
"Paintings, like books, are fr1epd,"
Iris commented, as she pointed out
favorite paintings many depic:ing
people, places and things sigmficant in
the life of the Keltons .
One is a kneeling 01! pastel of the
Keltons' son, Jay , who d1ed of polio as a
teenager. Another IS a gold vase of
roses, a pipe and a lighter, the gifts
exchanged by Iris' parent.s, Mr. and
Mrs. Jay Myers , on the1r golden
wedding anniversary .
Silhouettes of two granddaughters,
the picture of a covered bridge located
near the childhood home of Mr. Kelton,
a campsite, all captured on canvas
have spec1al meaning for the Keltons.
Aaron, a construction worker at the
Gavin Plant, is enthusiastic about his
wife's hobby and it was really he who
encouraged her to take the Famous
Artist.&lt;; Course. He hopes some time in
the future to build a room onto their
home for use as a studio.
Mrs. Kelton has sold a number of
her paintings and has given away many
for gilts. This fall lor the first time she
exhibited several of her works in the

::.

POMEROY - Mrs. Howard
3irchfield, a member of the
board of directors of the Meigs
County Tuberculosis and Health
Association, was guest speaker
at a recent meeting of the
Women 's Auxiliary Of the
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Birchfield urged support
of the .65 tuberculosis levy
renewal to be voted on Nov. 2
and reported on the various
aspect.&lt;; of funding for the care
and treatment of the disease.

~Baptist
.,

Iris Kelton
Me1gs County Fair art show.
The Keltons' tw o daughters,
Kaaron Austin of Richmond, Va ., and
Rhea Loz1er of Pnnceton, N.J. share in
their mother's enthusiasm lor art as do
their children, Julie and Mary Austin,
and Jay and Joan Loz1er. Mr. and Mrs.
Kelton have two foster sons in the
Episcopal Home for Boys at Celina,
Kansas.
The Keltons retur~d to Pomeroy
last May after 11 years absence.
Iris is a member of the Grace
Episcopal Church and the Churc'•
Women. She is a past Sunday school
teacher, a past PTA president, a past
pres1dent of the Polio Foundation of

Meigs County, a member of the
Maysville, Ky . Federation of Women's
Club, a member of the Women's Eagle
Auxiliary 1382, Richmond, Va., and
active in the Meigs Historical Society,
the Winding Trail Garden Club, the
Magnolia Club, the Meigs County
Agriculture Society, and the lnternatwnal Camping Club. She shares
her husband's interest in Citizens Band
Radio activity .
While Iris says she enjoys service
and social organization work, her first
love is painting.
" If I'm nervous or upset about
anything , my best therapy is to sit down
and paint," she commented .

Club 0 tcers Installed
JUdging and exhibiltng will be
given in preparation for the
Christmas flower show .
Fo urte en arrangements
depicting "Autumn Splendor"
were displayed along with
spec1men exhibits of marigolds,
mun1s and dahlias . Receiving
blue ribbons lor artistic
ar rangements were Mrs .
Thompson, Mrs. Thoma, Mrs.
Terrell, two, Mrs . Uoyd Moore ,
two, and Mrs. Lewis. Red
rtbbons went to Mrs. Heaton,
Mrs. Moore, Mrs. Thomas, Mrs.
Lewis Shields, and Mrs. Aaron
Kelton.
Receiving blue ribbons for
specimens were Mrs: Thomp·
son for chrysanthemums, Mrs.
Moore lor chrysanthemums and
dahlias;
Mrs .
Terrell,
marigolds, and Mrs. Kelton,
African violets. The two
Rutland guests judged the
arrangements and specimens.
Mrs. Heaton gave the garden
calendar suggesting that now is
the time to plant narcissus,
crocus and tulips, mulch leaves
with the rotary mower, then put
the leaves on a compost pile or
use as mulch around shrubs and
tender plant.s, plant trees that
have been balled or burlaped,
dig dahlias, prune away broken
branches, evergreen twigs and
limbs.
Mrs. Moore's program was
entitled " Fall Plantin~ of

setting the concrete ornaments
and t h·~ Fulton Thompson
Tractor Co. lor use of truck and
labor m moving the concrete
p1eces to the home. The project
will be a continuing one with
additions to be made each year .
The Region 11 meeting Oct. 30
at Gallipolis was discussed . Six
members will attend . Mrs. Don
Thomas will prov1de the Green
Thwnb Notes for Oct. 25. A
rummage sale was planned
later this year.
The Christmas Dower show
was discussed and plans were
made to brmg items to the
November meeting to be used in
creating a Mexican theme
display.
The club endorsed the .65 mill
tuberculosis levy renewal to be
voted on in the Nov. 2 electwn.
Mrs. Herschel Rose was ac·
cepted as a new member .
Guests were Mrs. Ed1th
Williamson of the Rutland
Garden Club and Mrs. B11l
Williamson. A display of dned
materials was shown by Mrs.
Thompson . Included were
yucca seed pods, miniature
gladioli, green briar bush ,
faciated wild beet, poppy seed
pods , curled wistena, and
honeysuckle.
Mrs. Thompson and Mrs .
Lewis reported on their
demonstration at a meeting of
the Middleport Amateur
Gardeners. Mrs. Earl Thoma
reviewed the club by-laws and it
was noted that at the November
meeting a program on the art of

Bulbs." She commented on the
many colors of tulips, even
green , and noted that bulbs
must have sufficient cold to
bloom well . For best landscape
design, she suggested that
single colors be used in
groupings.
Mrs. Shields was appointed
librarian and awards chairman

She spoke of the school testing
program, the free skin testing
available to any resident at the
Meigs County Department of
Health office, the role of Mrs.
Jane Brown , tuberculosis nurse
who goes to the residents of
several active tijbercular
patients to supervise meditation
and care.
At ihe conclusion of. her talk,
Mrs. Birchfield distributed fact
sheets and urged support by the
Auxiliary members.
Mrs. A. E. Wheeler presided

Readings included "No
Human Hands" by Mrs. Couch;
"Flawless Worship" by Mrs.
Joseph Cook; "Man or
Machine" by Mrs . Robert
Kuhn; "A Sample of Jesus" by
Mrs. L. P. Sterrett: " If I Were

In His Place" by Mrs. Couch;
"Modern Parable No. I" by
Mrs. William Wat.son; "Modern
Parable No. 2" by Mrs. Cook;
"Rejection or Response" by
Mrs.
Oliver
Michael;
"Missionaries in · our Home
Field" by Mrs. Ivan Walker;
"To Their True Humanity" by
Mrs .
George
Skinner;
"Ministry to Students in
Okinawa" by Mrs. Harry
Bailey; and "Ministry to
Student.&lt;; in Japan" by Mrs.
Walker. Mrs. Couch concluded

Activities Planned
MIDDLEPORT
Arrangements to furnish
refreshments for "the Mid·
dleport First Baptist youth
groups during December were
made when the Busy Bee Class
met at the home of Mrs. A. R.
Pullen.
The class also agreed to
prepare a luncheon for the
planned development meeting.
Mrs. Lillian McGhee, Mrs.
Elizabeth Slavin , and Mrs .
James Souders were appointed
to the nominating committee.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mr:;. Agnes
Wh1te and M1ss Kathryn
lor the club. Games were
played with one on leaf
identification being iliOn by Mrs.
Terrell and on flowers by Mrs.
Bill Williamson.
A dessert course was served
by Mrs. Terrell who was
assisted by Mrs. ,Charles Legar
and Mrs . Joe Struble. The
Halloween theme was earned
out in the decorations.

Right
in style in
Jarman

at the meeting during which
time a report on the bazaar was
given. Mrs. Jessie White, Mrs.
Freida Mossman, Mrs. Jariice
Daniels, Mrs. Ina Massar, Mrs.
Mary Pickens, and Mrs. Hazel
Smith, are the committee
members for the bazaar now in
progress.
A report on the recent district
meeting held at the Good
Samaritan Medical Center,
Zanesville was given by Mrs.
Louise Bearhls and Mrs. Nettie
Hayes.

Society Meets

POMEROY - "The Person in
An Impersonal World" was the
program topic used by Mrs.
Ellen Couch at a recent meeting
of the Women's Missionary
Society of the Pomeroy First
Baptist Church.

·.: .

POMEROY - lnstallatwn of
officers highlighted a meeting
of the Winding Trail Garden
Club Wednesday night at the
home of Mrs. John Terrell.
Mrs. Robert Lewis conducted
the installation for Mrs. Robert
Thompson, president; Mrs.
Clarence
Hea ton,
vice
president; Mrs. Charles Hayes,
secretary, and Mrs. Lloyd
Moore, treasurer .
In the ceremony Mrs. Lewis
compared a flower ar.
rangemen t to a garden club,
suggesting the club as the
contai ner , the officer s the
needle holder, the board
members as the framework ,
committee members as
secondary lines, color o m the
arrangement as personalities of
the members, and the various
shapes, sizes, and textures of
the Dowers and foliage as the
capabilities of the members.
''It takes a container, the
holder and good material to
make a flower arrangement, so
it takes the combined effort.&lt;; of
all members to have a suc·
cessful club with happy
members," she said.
A report was given by Mrs.
Terrell on the civic planting at
the Me1gs County Home . More
trees and bulbs will be planted
th1s week and a fall cleanup has
been planned for after frost. A
note of appreciation was read
from Mrs Mildred Jacobs,
supenntendent of the Home,
and the residents. Assistance
from several sources includmg
the Legar Monument Co. for

11-The SUnday Times. Sentinel, Sunday. Oct. 24, 1971

Werner. Mrs. Leora Sigman
presided at the meeting which
opened with the class song.
Members gave Bible verses for
roll call.
The group sang " Happy
Birthday " to Mrs. Beulah
White, Mrs. Fielding Hawkins,
Mrs. Charles Sauer, and Mrs.
Harry Houdashelt. Refreshments were served by Mrs.
Pullen, Mrs. Hawkins, and Mrs.
Harold Chase to those named
and Mrs. Frances Bearhs, Mrs.
Charles Edwards, Mrs . Alice
Freeland, Mrs . Elizabeth
Gardner, Mrs. Dana Hamm,
Mrs. Ethel Hughes, Mrs. Eva
Hartley, Mrs. Ruth Johnson,
Mrs. Nora Jordan, Mrs. Lettie
Roush, Mrs. B. F. Parmalee,
Mrs. Jacob Turner, Mrs. G. G.
Werner ,
Mrs ,
Isabelle
Winebrenner, and a guest, Mrs.
Elsie Turner.

Committees named were
Mrs. Helen Deiner, director of
the Candystripers with MrS·
Mary Artis, assistant; Mrs.
Bearhs, Mrs. White and Mrs.
Daniels snack bar . and gift
'
shop; Mrs. Fay Sauer, Mrs.
BerthaB arker, Mrs . Leona
Karr, Mis. Pickens, program;
Mrs. Sibley Slack, Mrs. Daniels,
Dowers· Mrs. FranCes Nelson,
'
refreshments
,
Mrs. Sauer, Mrs. Daniels,
Mrs. Slack, Mrs. Louis
McElhinny, and Mrs. Lucille
Leifheit were appointed to work
with organizations on supplying
toys for the children entering
the hospital.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Ruth Morris, Mrs. Eliza
Powell, Mrs. Jestie Molden,
Mrs. Nelson, Mrs. White, and
Mrs. Sauer with Mrs. Pauline
Halliday contributing. Besides
those famed others attending
were Mrs. Ruby Tucker, Miss
·Sandra Jones, Mrs. Arthur
Combs, and Mrs. Louis
Grueser.
November hostesses will be
Mrs. Pickens, Mrs. Emma Jean
Crow, Mrs. ciara Burris, and
Mrs. Hazel Smith.

with "The Ministry to Factory
Workers in Thiaiand".
Mrs. Cook presided at the
meeting which opened with the
theme song, "They Will Know
We Are Christians by Our
Love". Mrs. Kuhn had the
opening prayer and accompanied the group singing.
Mrs. Sterrett read a resume on
Nancy Demott, daughter of a
former pastor, and the Ohio
Baptist scholarship student this
fall .
Also presented was a letter
from the Baptist Home of Ohio
thanking the Society for cancelled stamps. The white cross
quota was accepted and announced were . the Baptist
Women'sDayofPrayer,Nov.l,
Fresh, Dried
and World Community Day,
or Artificial
Nov. 5. Mrs. Couch dedicated
the love gilt offering.
Fall Dowers centered the
Serving: Gallipolis,
refreshment table. Hostesses
Pomeroy, Middleport
were Mrs. Skinner and Mrs.
&amp; Mason co., w. Va .
;S~te=r~r!et~t.;__ _ _ _ _ _ _~::::::::::;
1

Beautiful
Fall Rower
Arrangements

Dudley's Florist

VOTE
NOVEMBER 2nd

Howard Caldwell Jr.
FOR

EASTERN LOCAL BOARD OF EDUCATION

________ ______ __........,.
...._

Pd . Pol. Adv.

"'"'

You're

... AND WE DARE TO PREDICT THAT THIS
DELIGHTFUL LITTLE FOLDING ROCKING
CHAIR WILL ,BECOME AN HEIRLOOM GEMI

Never has such a lovely decorator choir been
priced so low! The gracious lines of this con·
venient folding rocker ore enhanced by a warm,

lends special charm, · Come see it, rock in it!

Com~unity

Corner By Charlene Hoeflich
•

&lt;

•

POMEROY - How nice of Shirley Hamm, a vocal music
teacher, wvoilmteer her time to direct Meigs County's 400 girl I
scouts In a Christmas slng I
The da(tfor the sing hasn't yet been set but again tbis year it
will be presented around the &lt;llristm8s tree on the Pomeroy
village parking lot. Mrs. Hamm, wife of science teacher Robert
Hauun; ·Racine RD, was soprano soloist of the Capital University
Choir just a few years ago.
THE DAY WHEN PAPAWS were plentiful seem to have
passed. In fact, ask mo~t any kid what a papaw is and he's apt to
111swer anything but "fruit."
Anyway, Margaret Eskew went on a papaw hunting expedition the other day, came back loaded, and the family had a
dandy papaw party.
·
Margaret was one of several local residents who took in the
Pumpkin Slow at Circleville this past week. From what we hear,
the festival gets bigger and better with each passing year.

RtPIIriJ *59.95
IUY IT IIOWI

judgeS

School Was
Oct. 12-13

'

JOHN ZERKLE

Auxiliary, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
post home .

'
"•

Iii

~-------

BlAST!

A Relaxing
Reading Chair

We feature a

•
•

complete line of

'"

•

Tune-Up Specials

Jarman Shoes

'

8 CYUNDER '15.95
6 CYLI"DER •13.95

'

•

This lnclud!ls points. plugs,
condenser, check plug -.yirlng,
battery, anti -freeze.

·,

. ' if I have to go ',
. take me to The·
Shop
....,_

- ·-

~

Cha~r

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

Open
Dick Vaughan
992-337~

" ...,._.

Also announced was the !50th
anniversary of the organization
of the mission program of the
General Episcopal Omrch and
the Rev. Mr. Plattenburg asked
that each baptised member of
the congregation contribute $10
to be designated for a mission of
their choice. The Rev. Mr . and
Mrs. Plattenburg have served
in the Brazilian mission.
Mrs. Plattenburg presided at
the business meeting in the
absence ~f Mrs . Thereon
Jolmson. Reports were given by
Mrs. Paul Chapman, secretary,
and Mrs. David Miller,
treasurer.
Present for the party and
meeting besides those named
were Mrs. Carl Will, Mrs. 0. B.
Stout, Mrs. Dale Dutton, Mrs.
A. R. Knight, Mrs. Leo Story,
Mrs. James Titus, Miss Helen
l.ochary, Vinceni Knight, Jr,
Others presenting gifts were
Mrs. Theodore Reed, Jr., Mrs.
Fred Crow, and Mrs. Carolyn
Smith.

__,.,
·· ~"'

Katie Crow'

i
POMEROY - It isn't often a married couple celebrates ti9
years of wedded bliss but this is exactly what Mr. and Mrs.
William Wolfe of Five Points will do next Friday.
Congratulations!
THANKS TO lola Bartrum lor the lovely gift. It was very
much appreciated. Thanks a million.
WE HAVE BEEN beseiged by Halloweeners this past week.
The youngsters have been throwing corn and soapln~ a fel)'
windows. If this is all the mischi~f they ·do;'then we won't com·
plain.
,
After all , kids do have to have a little fun. As long as they kee
it clean, okay,

omo

RESIDENTS are asked w contact their state
representatives in regard to the 2'h per cent premium tax on
domestic insurance until a more extensive study of the tax is
made.
The issue is up for vote Tuesday. If the rate Increase is
passed, it means that insurance companies will have to pass the
increase on to the customer and this means YOU.
Don't wait. Contact your representative now, if you agree!
HERE AND THERE - John Eichinger, a senior at Southern
High School, very busy keeping up with all activities at school Kenny Grover being presented a cupcake with a candle on his
birthday recently- Kenny Koehler's puppy drinking coffee from
a cup and looking up as if to say, "It was good to the last drop."

gardening tips for November.
Members will respond to roll
IN SECOND WEEK
call by naming an annual.
RUTLAND - The Rutland
"Witches
Fright,"
and
Freewill Baptist Church on
50TH CELEBRATED
arrangements suitable for
Salem
Street is in it.s second
POMEROY - The golden
Halloween will be brought by
members for judging. Mrs. wedding anniversary of Mr. week of revival with services
Fetty will have the devotional and Mrs. William Grueser nightly at 7:30..Evanflelist
period. Installation of officers was observed with a dinner Dorothy Overton speaking to a
will be held. Mrs. Harold Wolfe party Sunday at their home. crowded church each evening.
is president. All members are
Flowers, gifts and cards Extra chairs now are OJ! hand to
were presented to the couple. accommodate the expected
urged to attend.
A congratulatory call was overflow. There is special
each
evening.
received from Mr. and Mrs. singing
Leo Smith and family of Evangelist Overton invites
Barrlen Springs, Mich., who everyone to attend.
Bolin, Region II Director elect, were unable to attend. At·
was installation officer for Mrs. tending were Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Bender's installation as Harold Blackston, Bob,
TWO-DAY SALE
Washington County Contact Sherrie and Bruce, Mr. and
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
Chairman.
Mrs. Dale Smith, Mr. and Pythian Sisters Temple 153 will
Mrs. Bolin was presented a Mrs. Amos Leonard, and
hold a rummage sale in the Fry
gift by Mrs. John Broughton, Mrs. Ethel Grueser.
building, MiD St., Middleport,
outgoing contact chairman for
Thursday
and
Friday .
Washington County. Mrs. Bolin
Resident.&lt;; wishing to contribute
will be installed as Region II
may call Opal Biggs, 992-3526
Director at the fall regional
for pickup service.
meeting at the Washington
ATIENDED SCHOOL
Elementary School in Gallipolis
RUTLAND - Mrs. Joe Bolin ,
on Saturday, Oct .' 30. Her a member of the Rutland
garden club duties began Oct. 1, Friendly Gardeners, and the
the beginning of a garden club new Region 11 Director-elect of
MEETING POSTPONED
year.
the Ohio Association of Garden
POMEROY - The regular
Clubs attended a meeting for
regional directors held at At- October meeting of the WildDINNER TONIGHT
wood Lake, near New wood Garden Club has been
POMEROY- A covered dish Philadelphia, ·last week. A postponed from Oct. 'll to Nov. 4
dinner will be held at 5:30 this school of instruction was held and will be held in the social
evening at the Pomeroy Church and the regional directors were room of the Columbus and
of Christ. Those attending are to given the many publications Southern Ohio Electric Co. At
bring the.ir favorite covered they will sell to garden club that time, Miss Joanna Distler,
dish and their table service. At members during thelr two year home economist, will present a
Christmas demonstration.
7:30 p.m. a 35 minute film in term of office.
color, "Silent Witness," will be
shown.
What a wonderful way to say

&lt;

NEW

•

•

'RECAP
SNOw TIRES
•

&lt;

•13.50
.

BIRTH ANNOUNCED
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. Terry Ohlluger, former
resident.&lt;; now of Philo, are
announcing the birth of a seven
pound, 15 ounce son, Jon
Wayne, Friday night, Oct. 22, at
the Bethesda Hospital in
ZanesvUle. Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. RusseU Wilson of
near Pomeroy and.Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Ohlinger, Pomeroy,
Mr. an,d Mrs. Ohlinger also
have a three-year-old son, Jay.

Merry

SOCIETY TO MEET
MIDDLEPORT - A boam
meeting of the Meigs County '
Cancer Society will be held at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
society's office on Coal St.

TO YOUR FAVORITE PEOPL£!
Now! 13 the time to
arrange for your

""--'~....- Christm., Gift Portrail Silting.
' This wll l'"usure you g1ving us sufll clent lime to do our yery best for vcu

VISIT PARENTS
RACINE - Carroll Cleland of
Nashville, Tenn. visited over
the ·weekend with his parent.&lt;; in
Racine. He is a student at the
Auto-Diesel School in Nashville.

It 's tater !han you think! 1+1\ay we suggest th at you call or come 10 for an
appointment
TODAY! Open Evenings by Appointmen1 .

GROVER'S STUDIO
Phone 99l-247S
lSS N. Second Ave.

Middleport

On the field ·it's cleats.
After the game it's

PEDWIN®I BOOTS
The snoot. A side z1p boot with a blunt snoot toe, taller heel and
buckled. strap. Free-moving leather makes it a natural
for your jeans. Try them . Pedwin shows you
how to play it off the field.

Complete
Line of

Pedwin

Boots

and
Shoes

Time for a Change -

ELECT

Delmar A. ea·naday

~

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I'

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FILTER, GREASE
JOB FOR ONLY •8.50

Plus Studding

- -- - ·

Government Inspected
Cut To Your Specifications

"CENTER STAGE'!,.:...This
nttractive twosome was designed by Morton Myles for
Malcolm Charles. The wool
felt · skirt is deep autumn
green, the buccaneer blous~
is or while satin,

BY WINTER'S

"custom meat cutting"

Dale Lillie
992-6346

..

..

The Shop

- -· .....

Katie's Korner By

Ruthnd Women Meet Oct. 27th

Seroices Conducted Wednesday

IF EU:CTED
.
I WILL SERVE YOU 24 HOURS ADAY.

FAs hion -keyed tu harmonize with yuur newest
sui ts and blazers ! Twu warm leather colors, gi nge r and brass - got toge th e r to make this
Jarman straight-tip one of today's smartest styles.
Come in and lry a pair.

'

Ladies Attended Marietta Event

.

Mason Rescue Squad for its
ambulance service. They also
made plans to sponsor the
Junior Girl Scouts.
Refreshments were served w
Mrs . Richard Fowler, Mrs.
Robert Stewart, Mrs. Edward ·
Ryan, Mrs. Larry Noble 1 Mrs.
Mary Berry, Mrs. Sammy
Hoffman,
Mrs .
Nolan
Swackhamer, Mrs. Phyllis
Knopp, Mrs . Joseph Lish, Mrs.
Homer Noble , Mrs. Robert '
Baumgarner and the hostesses,
Mrs. Roush and Mrs. Lewis.

Mrs. Edward Baer. Miniature
flags were also used in ' the
decorations.
Gifts were presented to Mrs.
Hartillger in a decorated basket
prepared · by Mrs. James
Ila,iley.Shealso received a vase
of' Dowers from Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Fugate.
Hostesses for the party were
Mrs. Bailey, Mrs. Aaron Kelton,
Mrs. Rome Williamson, Mrs.
Fred Crow and Mrs. Gibbs.
During the regular business
meeting of the gro]lp, plans
were made for a dinner to be
served on Nov. 21 when a
celebration in observance of the
100th anniversary of the
ctedication of the church will be
held.
The Rt. Rev. John Cnmun,
Bishop of th~ Diocese of Southern Ohio will attend and
following the dinner will conduct the confinnation service.
All
rectors
of the
willformer
be invited
along
withchurch
local

FOR MAYOR
OF MIDDLEPORT

Sewing Demonstrated

METS PUT 2 ON WAIVERS
NEW YORK (UPI)-Bob
Aspromonte and Donn Clenden.
on .were put on waivers Friday
by the New York Mets to make
room for rookies Dennis
Saunders and Billy Cotton, who
played for the Memphis team ,
in th~ : ·;urida League last

the ~riginallJ~aws adopted in
1921 by the organization · which
stated: "No pne shaD wear a
hat."
A second corsage 'with appropriate remarks was given to
Mrs. Hartinger by the Rev.
Stanley Platten burg, and a
third was presented to her by
Mrs. Lorna Seth. Also giving a
tribute to Mrs. Hartinger for
her role in the church program
was Mrs. Patrick Lochary.
An elephant replica cake
symbolic of Mrs. Hartinger's
political affiliation and inscribed "The Spirit of '76",
indicative of the honoree's age,
was presented by Mrs. Gibbs.
A luncheon was served on
tables decorated in the patriotic
colors with blue accent
streamers on white cloths and
red vases of white chrysanthemums from the garden of

Social Calendar

MlDDlEPOIH

Pleasant ·Ridge Road
POMEROY, OHIO

a

POMEROY - In patriotic
setting depicting "The Spirit of
'76," Grace Episcopal Church
Women honored a lq~~S-iime
active member, Mrs. J. E. D.
Hartinger, on her birthday
anniversary Thursday.
The surprise party featured
tributes to Mrs. Hartinger by
several memb~s as they were
presented by Mrs. Charles
Gibbs, chainnan.
Humorously tagging her as a
devotee of the women's Ub
movement, Mrs. Everett Hayes
reminisced on Mrs. Hartinger's
days as Meigs County recorder
and then presented her with a
corsage from Miss Eleanor
Robson, inrombent recorder.
Events of the church women
and Mrs. H11rtinger's con·
tributlons through the years
were related by Mrs. H. 0.
Ewing who referred w one of

on ore

A NEW FEATURE of the annual Halloween party of the
Pomeroy Elementary School to be staged Thursday night will be
a Oea market. Proceeda from tbe market will be reserved for the
annual spring trip of the Safety Patrol.
Hc.Q._ _ _ _ _ _I)"&lt;&lt;_"'&lt;!!_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,
Parents of children at the school are asked to contribute a ,
ministers.
couple of items for the sale, either something in good condition or
I
new, The project Is good and the safety patrol chlldren provide a
tremendous service in all kinda of weather.
Due to the carnival oo Thursday night, the art class will he
RUTLAND - The Rutland
held on Tuesday. Orders for art supplies are still being taken.
Friendly Gardeners will meet
~UNDAY
WEDNESDAY
Meanwhile, for the next two or three weiika aU supplies, with the
HYMN SING, Stiversville AMERICAN Legion Wednesday, October 'll, at 7:30
exception of pencils, wUl be furniabed. For th011e parents who find
p.m. at the borne of Mrs.
It a hardllhlp to purchase the oU pslnls and supplies, bring your Community Church, 2 p.m. Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett Post
128, 7:30Wednesday at the hall. Richard Fetty, Jr., when a
chUdren anyway. Something wUl be worked out.to see that they Sunday. Singers welcome.
HALLOWEEN CARNIVAL
POMEROY ·Middleport Lions paper on "Winter Annuals"
have the needed materials.
Friday, 7 p.m. at Syracuse Club, regular meeting, noon prepared by Mrs. Bill Brown
will be given and Mrs, James
Elementary School. Games, fun Wednesday.
CONCERN FOR THE SENIOR citizens of Meigs County has
house, prizes, country kitchen.
OHIO VALLEY Commandry Carpenter will have an
led to plans for the orglllllzaUon of a Golden Key Uterary Club.
Prizes for best costumes; 24, Knight.&lt;; Templar, 7:30p.m. educational display of winter
Emphasis wUl be oil reaching the·elderly and either reading sponsored by PTA.
Wednesday night. Sword and annual seeds.
wthem or seeing that they get the books they want. Already the
Mrs. Homer Parker will give
SKATING PARTY, Sunday, 2 belt will be requested of all
XI Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority has pledged
knights a.nd the officers.
assistance with the project but other groups need to show an in- to 5 p. m. at Skate-A-Way Rink,
Route 7, by Pomeroy Potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m. All
terest before the program can really get rolling.
Elementary School Safety Sir Knight.&lt;;, their ·ladies and
Mrs. Pearl Welker is heading the project for the sorority and
Patrol. Public invited,
children invited.
RUTLAND _ Mrs. Joe Bolin
Mrs. VIlma Pikkoja, Meigs librarian, lB vitally interested in
.THURSDAY
MONDAY
and Mrs. Homer Parker,
seeing the Golden Key Uterary Club get active.
INSPECTION when Meigs HOLIDAY Handicraft Club, members of the Rutland
Mrs. Pikkoja was in Columbus Thursday for an orientation Chapier, Order of DeMolay Thursday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Friendly Gardeners Club, at.
meeting preparatory to her trip to Washington, D. C. and the meets 7:30 p. m. Monday at Bookmobile Headquarters.
tended the October fall meeting
White House Conference on Aging. She reports that repeatedly in Middleport Masonic Temple.
THURSDAY,, 7:30 p.m . ."1 of the Washington County.
the meetings it was stressed that personal touch ill necessary if All DeMolays and Master Tuppers Pl~ws Method1st Garden Clubs recently at the
senior citizens are to have their personal dignity and feeling of Masons invited.
Church meetmg for anyone Marietta Library where Mrs.
human worth restored.
RUTLAND Garden Club, 7:30 interested in continuing Girl
p. m. Monday, home of Miss Scout program. Neighborhood .
Ruby Diehl. Installation of chairmen will be present.
1
officers and each member to
MIDDLEPORT - Funeral and Mrs. Cllfford L. Russell, take two wrapped gifts for
services for Walter Burns Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell, Athens Medical Health Center
NEW HAVEN -Parents of
Harris were conducted at 10 John Russell, Anderson, Ind.; in November; bulb exchange.
chlldren In New Haven are
a.m. Wednesday at the Sacred Gordon Harris, Robert Harris,
MEIGS
BAND
Boosters,
being reminded of the 10 p.m.
Heart Catl)ollc Church, Mrs. Maxine Bollheimer, Mrs.
Monday
8
p.m.
at
the
Meigs
curfew by Pollee Chief Tom
Smith,
Robert
Pomeroy. The Rev, Fr. William Harry
High
School.
Parson.
Folsom of Nelsonville officiated Croushore, Columbus; Mr. and
MEIGS TEMPLE Pythian
Chief Parsons s~ld chlldren
wllb burial in lhl! Sacred Heart Mrs. Ben Swartz, Gl0111ler; Mr.
Sisters
staff
and
officers,
7:30
under the age of 18 should be
and Mrs. Francis Biron, Milton,
• Cemetery.
RUTLAND -Mrs. ·Joe Bolin,
p.m.
Monday,
social
rooms,
off the streets no later than a member of the Rutland
Out~f-town relatives and W. Va. ; Mr. and Mrs. Vitus
Columbus
and
Southern
Ohio
the curfew lime. Parents wUI Friendly Gardeners, attended
HarUey,
Jr.,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Art
friends here for the service
Electric
Co.,
Middleport.
be held responsible for any the Ohio Association of Garden
were Mr. and Mrs . Chester A. Hartley, Harley Hartley,
TUESDAY
Halloween
pranks that may Clubs Exhibitors and Judges
Herman
Lynch,
a.nd
Clay
Russell, Indianapolis, Ind.; Mr.
DREW WEBSTER Post 39 be committed causing School 2 held at the North
Hinlde, Point Pleasant, W.Va.;
Ladies
Auxiliary, Tuesday, 7:30 destrlr~lon. ·
and W. H. Ford and Edward
Ramada Inn in Columbus
p.m. at haD; Mrs. Russell
Lemaster, Ironton.'
October 12-13. The school
SON BORN
Moore,
education
and
covered color in flower
LANGSVILLE - Mr. and
scholarship chainnan in charge
arranging, plant identification,
Mrs. Wallace Fetty of
of program.
chrysanthemums, dahlias,
Langsville are announcing the
EASTERN Athletic Boosters
gladiolus, practice judging of
REPORT ERRED
birth of a son on Sept. 15 at the
Tuesday Night at the Movies at
both flower arrangements and
POMEROY - Mrs. Paul 8 p.m. at the high school.
Holzer Medical Center. The
specimen
flowers and tips in
seven pound, 13 OWlce Infant Casci hosted a meeting of the Eastern-Miller game film will
understanding flower show
' has been named Michael Todd. Past Presidents of Drew be shown. Refreshments.
practices.
Mr. and Mrs. Fetty have two Webster Post 39, American Everyone welcome.
Horticulture was taught
daughten, Teresa and Cynthia. Legion Auxiliary WedneSday
PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy
Tuesday, with an evening
Grandparents are Mrs. Clarice night rather than Mrs. Ellen Chapter 186, OES, 7:30 p.m.
session
on practice judging;
Longstreth of Gallipolis, and Couch as was erroneously Tuesday at temple; Marjorie
flower arranging was WedMrs. Dolly Davis of Miami, W. reported in an account of the Crow, hostess.
nesday morning il'nd lectures
meeting Friday.
Va.
JUNIOR American Legion
were given at 9 a.m. daily by
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett PO;St
authorities in their respective
128, 6:30 p.m. Tuesday evening
fields.
at the hall.
Mrs. Gilbert (Aida) Cullen of
OffiOETA PHI Chapter, Beta
Marietta, an accredited
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
O.A.G .C. judge, is the state
· Tuesday night at the home of
chairman for the. Judges' and
Mrs. Kenneth McCullough.
Exhibitors' Schools and Clinics.
~e is well known in this area,
Cultural report on · Prise and
having
judged many local
essays
by
Bever!)'
Long.
•
Hostesses Mrs . McCullough,
flower shows. Mrs. Bolin had to
Mrs. Charles Gloeckner, Miss
make a flower arrangement for
Lynn Daniels.
judging at the school in the
green color class.
RACINE American Legion

, Pd. Pol. AdY.

MASON - Members of the
Mason Mothers Club benefited
from sew1ng instructions
received Wednesday evemng
when they met for a regular
meeting at the home of Mrs .
John Lewis in Mason with Mrs.
Gary Roush assisting cohostess.
Mrs. Robert Baumgarner of
Middleport pre sente d
demonstations of sewing in
zippers, hems and waist bands.
A hand made blue and green
afagan was donated to the club
by Mrs. Margaret Rosenberger
in a fund raising project. The
winner will be announ ced
December 18.
In other action . the club
agreed to donate $50 to the

er

VOTE FOR AND ELECT

richly finished wood frame and elegant tapestly
upholstery •. A graceful carved design on bock

_..____._._._..~-·---·-

••

folds up for con.,enient Ito rage

&lt;

BAKER FURNITURE

&lt;'•

Jack's Ashland.·Service Station

MIDDLEPORT, 0~10

•

Beech &amp; Locust

•

&lt;

Middleport, 0.

Mayor of Pomeroy

I

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CHAPMAN'S SHOES

"The ·Taxpayers Candidate"
'Pd.

Pol . Adv.

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MAIN ST.

POMEROY, OHIO

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Renewal o Levy Urged

Personality
Profile , ,
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
POMEROY - Ins Kelton has
always loved to paint but it wasn't until
two years ago that she enrolled for
forma l art training .
It was while Iris and her husband,
Aaron, were living in Aberdeen, Ohio,
that she decided it was either now or
never and immediately stgned up for a
course at the Germann Artist School at
Ripley .
A year Ia ter she began
correspondence study with the Famous
Artist.&lt;; School and now has the course
over half completed.
Her talent IS well displayed in the
numerous paintings which adorn the
walls of every room in the Kelton home
at Minersville.
"Paintings, like books, are fr1epd,"
Iris commented, as she pointed out
favorite paintings many depic:ing
people, places and things sigmficant in
the life of the Keltons .
One is a kneeling 01! pastel of the
Keltons' son, Jay , who d1ed of polio as a
teenager. Another IS a gold vase of
roses, a pipe and a lighter, the gifts
exchanged by Iris' parent.s, Mr. and
Mrs. Jay Myers , on the1r golden
wedding anniversary .
Silhouettes of two granddaughters,
the picture of a covered bridge located
near the childhood home of Mr. Kelton,
a campsite, all captured on canvas
have spec1al meaning for the Keltons.
Aaron, a construction worker at the
Gavin Plant, is enthusiastic about his
wife's hobby and it was really he who
encouraged her to take the Famous
Artist.&lt;; Course. He hopes some time in
the future to build a room onto their
home for use as a studio.
Mrs. Kelton has sold a number of
her paintings and has given away many
for gilts. This fall lor the first time she
exhibited several of her works in the

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POMEROY - Mrs. Howard
3irchfield, a member of the
board of directors of the Meigs
County Tuberculosis and Health
Association, was guest speaker
at a recent meeting of the
Women 's Auxiliary Of the
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Birchfield urged support
of the .65 tuberculosis levy
renewal to be voted on Nov. 2
and reported on the various
aspect.&lt;; of funding for the care
and treatment of the disease.

~Baptist
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Iris Kelton
Me1gs County Fair art show.
The Keltons' tw o daughters,
Kaaron Austin of Richmond, Va ., and
Rhea Loz1er of Pnnceton, N.J. share in
their mother's enthusiasm lor art as do
their children, Julie and Mary Austin,
and Jay and Joan Loz1er. Mr. and Mrs.
Kelton have two foster sons in the
Episcopal Home for Boys at Celina,
Kansas.
The Keltons retur~d to Pomeroy
last May after 11 years absence.
Iris is a member of the Grace
Episcopal Church and the Churc'•
Women. She is a past Sunday school
teacher, a past PTA president, a past
pres1dent of the Polio Foundation of

Meigs County, a member of the
Maysville, Ky . Federation of Women's
Club, a member of the Women's Eagle
Auxiliary 1382, Richmond, Va., and
active in the Meigs Historical Society,
the Winding Trail Garden Club, the
Magnolia Club, the Meigs County
Agriculture Society, and the lnternatwnal Camping Club. She shares
her husband's interest in Citizens Band
Radio activity .
While Iris says she enjoys service
and social organization work, her first
love is painting.
" If I'm nervous or upset about
anything , my best therapy is to sit down
and paint," she commented .

Club 0 tcers Installed
JUdging and exhibiltng will be
given in preparation for the
Christmas flower show .
Fo urte en arrangements
depicting "Autumn Splendor"
were displayed along with
spec1men exhibits of marigolds,
mun1s and dahlias . Receiving
blue ribbons lor artistic
ar rangements were Mrs .
Thompson, Mrs. Thoma, Mrs.
Terrell, two, Mrs . Uoyd Moore ,
two, and Mrs. Lewis. Red
rtbbons went to Mrs. Heaton,
Mrs. Moore, Mrs. Thomas, Mrs.
Lewis Shields, and Mrs. Aaron
Kelton.
Receiving blue ribbons for
specimens were Mrs: Thomp·
son for chrysanthemums, Mrs.
Moore lor chrysanthemums and
dahlias;
Mrs .
Terrell,
marigolds, and Mrs. Kelton,
African violets. The two
Rutland guests judged the
arrangements and specimens.
Mrs. Heaton gave the garden
calendar suggesting that now is
the time to plant narcissus,
crocus and tulips, mulch leaves
with the rotary mower, then put
the leaves on a compost pile or
use as mulch around shrubs and
tender plant.s, plant trees that
have been balled or burlaped,
dig dahlias, prune away broken
branches, evergreen twigs and
limbs.
Mrs. Moore's program was
entitled " Fall Plantin~ of

setting the concrete ornaments
and t h·~ Fulton Thompson
Tractor Co. lor use of truck and
labor m moving the concrete
p1eces to the home. The project
will be a continuing one with
additions to be made each year .
The Region 11 meeting Oct. 30
at Gallipolis was discussed . Six
members will attend . Mrs. Don
Thomas will prov1de the Green
Thwnb Notes for Oct. 25. A
rummage sale was planned
later this year.
The Christmas Dower show
was discussed and plans were
made to brmg items to the
November meeting to be used in
creating a Mexican theme
display.
The club endorsed the .65 mill
tuberculosis levy renewal to be
voted on in the Nov. 2 electwn.
Mrs. Herschel Rose was ac·
cepted as a new member .
Guests were Mrs. Ed1th
Williamson of the Rutland
Garden Club and Mrs. B11l
Williamson. A display of dned
materials was shown by Mrs.
Thompson . Included were
yucca seed pods, miniature
gladioli, green briar bush ,
faciated wild beet, poppy seed
pods , curled wistena, and
honeysuckle.
Mrs. Thompson and Mrs .
Lewis reported on their
demonstration at a meeting of
the Middleport Amateur
Gardeners. Mrs. Earl Thoma
reviewed the club by-laws and it
was noted that at the November
meeting a program on the art of

Bulbs." She commented on the
many colors of tulips, even
green , and noted that bulbs
must have sufficient cold to
bloom well . For best landscape
design, she suggested that
single colors be used in
groupings.
Mrs. Shields was appointed
librarian and awards chairman

She spoke of the school testing
program, the free skin testing
available to any resident at the
Meigs County Department of
Health office, the role of Mrs.
Jane Brown , tuberculosis nurse
who goes to the residents of
several active tijbercular
patients to supervise meditation
and care.
At ihe conclusion of. her talk,
Mrs. Birchfield distributed fact
sheets and urged support by the
Auxiliary members.
Mrs. A. E. Wheeler presided

Readings included "No
Human Hands" by Mrs. Couch;
"Flawless Worship" by Mrs.
Joseph Cook; "Man or
Machine" by Mrs . Robert
Kuhn; "A Sample of Jesus" by
Mrs. L. P. Sterrett: " If I Were

In His Place" by Mrs. Couch;
"Modern Parable No. I" by
Mrs. William Wat.son; "Modern
Parable No. 2" by Mrs. Cook;
"Rejection or Response" by
Mrs.
Oliver
Michael;
"Missionaries in · our Home
Field" by Mrs. Ivan Walker;
"To Their True Humanity" by
Mrs .
George
Skinner;
"Ministry to Students in
Okinawa" by Mrs. Harry
Bailey; and "Ministry to
Student.&lt;; in Japan" by Mrs.
Walker. Mrs. Couch concluded

Activities Planned
MIDDLEPORT
Arrangements to furnish
refreshments for "the Mid·
dleport First Baptist youth
groups during December were
made when the Busy Bee Class
met at the home of Mrs. A. R.
Pullen.
The class also agreed to
prepare a luncheon for the
planned development meeting.
Mrs. Lillian McGhee, Mrs.
Elizabeth Slavin , and Mrs .
James Souders were appointed
to the nominating committee.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mr:;. Agnes
Wh1te and M1ss Kathryn
lor the club. Games were
played with one on leaf
identification being iliOn by Mrs.
Terrell and on flowers by Mrs.
Bill Williamson.
A dessert course was served
by Mrs. Terrell who was
assisted by Mrs. ,Charles Legar
and Mrs . Joe Struble. The
Halloween theme was earned
out in the decorations.

Right
in style in
Jarman

at the meeting during which
time a report on the bazaar was
given. Mrs. Jessie White, Mrs.
Freida Mossman, Mrs. Jariice
Daniels, Mrs. Ina Massar, Mrs.
Mary Pickens, and Mrs. Hazel
Smith, are the committee
members for the bazaar now in
progress.
A report on the recent district
meeting held at the Good
Samaritan Medical Center,
Zanesville was given by Mrs.
Louise Bearhls and Mrs. Nettie
Hayes.

Society Meets

POMEROY - "The Person in
An Impersonal World" was the
program topic used by Mrs.
Ellen Couch at a recent meeting
of the Women's Missionary
Society of the Pomeroy First
Baptist Church.

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POMEROY - lnstallatwn of
officers highlighted a meeting
of the Winding Trail Garden
Club Wednesday night at the
home of Mrs. John Terrell.
Mrs. Robert Lewis conducted
the installation for Mrs. Robert
Thompson, president; Mrs.
Clarence
Hea ton,
vice
president; Mrs. Charles Hayes,
secretary, and Mrs. Lloyd
Moore, treasurer .
In the ceremony Mrs. Lewis
compared a flower ar.
rangemen t to a garden club,
suggesting the club as the
contai ner , the officer s the
needle holder, the board
members as the framework ,
committee members as
secondary lines, color o m the
arrangement as personalities of
the members, and the various
shapes, sizes, and textures of
the Dowers and foliage as the
capabilities of the members.
''It takes a container, the
holder and good material to
make a flower arrangement, so
it takes the combined effort.&lt;; of
all members to have a suc·
cessful club with happy
members," she said.
A report was given by Mrs.
Terrell on the civic planting at
the Me1gs County Home . More
trees and bulbs will be planted
th1s week and a fall cleanup has
been planned for after frost. A
note of appreciation was read
from Mrs Mildred Jacobs,
supenntendent of the Home,
and the residents. Assistance
from several sources includmg
the Legar Monument Co. for

11-The SUnday Times. Sentinel, Sunday. Oct. 24, 1971

Werner. Mrs. Leora Sigman
presided at the meeting which
opened with the class song.
Members gave Bible verses for
roll call.
The group sang " Happy
Birthday " to Mrs. Beulah
White, Mrs. Fielding Hawkins,
Mrs. Charles Sauer, and Mrs.
Harry Houdashelt. Refreshments were served by Mrs.
Pullen, Mrs. Hawkins, and Mrs.
Harold Chase to those named
and Mrs. Frances Bearhs, Mrs.
Charles Edwards, Mrs . Alice
Freeland, Mrs . Elizabeth
Gardner, Mrs. Dana Hamm,
Mrs. Ethel Hughes, Mrs. Eva
Hartley, Mrs. Ruth Johnson,
Mrs. Nora Jordan, Mrs. Lettie
Roush, Mrs. B. F. Parmalee,
Mrs. Jacob Turner, Mrs. G. G.
Werner ,
Mrs ,
Isabelle
Winebrenner, and a guest, Mrs.
Elsie Turner.

Committees named were
Mrs. Helen Deiner, director of
the Candystripers with MrS·
Mary Artis, assistant; Mrs.
Bearhs, Mrs. White and Mrs.
Daniels snack bar . and gift
'
shop; Mrs. Fay Sauer, Mrs.
BerthaB arker, Mrs . Leona
Karr, Mis. Pickens, program;
Mrs. Sibley Slack, Mrs. Daniels,
Dowers· Mrs. FranCes Nelson,
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refreshments
,
Mrs. Sauer, Mrs. Daniels,
Mrs. Slack, Mrs. Louis
McElhinny, and Mrs. Lucille
Leifheit were appointed to work
with organizations on supplying
toys for the children entering
the hospital.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Ruth Morris, Mrs. Eliza
Powell, Mrs. Jestie Molden,
Mrs. Nelson, Mrs. White, and
Mrs. Sauer with Mrs. Pauline
Halliday contributing. Besides
those famed others attending
were Mrs. Ruby Tucker, Miss
·Sandra Jones, Mrs. Arthur
Combs, and Mrs. Louis
Grueser.
November hostesses will be
Mrs. Pickens, Mrs. Emma Jean
Crow, Mrs. ciara Burris, and
Mrs. Hazel Smith.

with "The Ministry to Factory
Workers in Thiaiand".
Mrs. Cook presided at the
meeting which opened with the
theme song, "They Will Know
We Are Christians by Our
Love". Mrs. Kuhn had the
opening prayer and accompanied the group singing.
Mrs. Sterrett read a resume on
Nancy Demott, daughter of a
former pastor, and the Ohio
Baptist scholarship student this
fall .
Also presented was a letter
from the Baptist Home of Ohio
thanking the Society for cancelled stamps. The white cross
quota was accepted and announced were . the Baptist
Women'sDayofPrayer,Nov.l,
Fresh, Dried
and World Community Day,
or Artificial
Nov. 5. Mrs. Couch dedicated
the love gilt offering.
Fall Dowers centered the
Serving: Gallipolis,
refreshment table. Hostesses
Pomeroy, Middleport
were Mrs. Skinner and Mrs.
&amp; Mason co., w. Va .
;S~te=r~r!et~t.;__ _ _ _ _ _ _~::::::::::;
1

Beautiful
Fall Rower
Arrangements

Dudley's Florist

VOTE
NOVEMBER 2nd

Howard Caldwell Jr.
FOR

EASTERN LOCAL BOARD OF EDUCATION

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Pd . Pol. Adv.

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You're

... AND WE DARE TO PREDICT THAT THIS
DELIGHTFUL LITTLE FOLDING ROCKING
CHAIR WILL ,BECOME AN HEIRLOOM GEMI

Never has such a lovely decorator choir been
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lends special charm, · Come see it, rock in it!

Com~unity

Corner By Charlene Hoeflich
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POMEROY - How nice of Shirley Hamm, a vocal music
teacher, wvoilmteer her time to direct Meigs County's 400 girl I
scouts In a Christmas slng I
The da(tfor the sing hasn't yet been set but again tbis year it
will be presented around the &lt;llristm8s tree on the Pomeroy
village parking lot. Mrs. Hamm, wife of science teacher Robert
Hauun; ·Racine RD, was soprano soloist of the Capital University
Choir just a few years ago.
THE DAY WHEN PAPAWS were plentiful seem to have
passed. In fact, ask mo~t any kid what a papaw is and he's apt to
111swer anything but "fruit."
Anyway, Margaret Eskew went on a papaw hunting expedition the other day, came back loaded, and the family had a
dandy papaw party.
·
Margaret was one of several local residents who took in the
Pumpkin Slow at Circleville this past week. From what we hear,
the festival gets bigger and better with each passing year.

RtPIIriJ *59.95
IUY IT IIOWI

judgeS

School Was
Oct. 12-13

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JOHN ZERKLE

Auxiliary, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
post home .

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BlAST!

A Relaxing
Reading Chair

We feature a

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Jarman Shoes

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8 CYUNDER '15.95
6 CYLI"DER •13.95

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This lnclud!ls points. plugs,
condenser, check plug -.yirlng,
battery, anti -freeze.

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. take me to The·
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~

Cha~r

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

Open
Dick Vaughan
992-337~

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Also announced was the !50th
anniversary of the organization
of the mission program of the
General Episcopal Omrch and
the Rev. Mr. Plattenburg asked
that each baptised member of
the congregation contribute $10
to be designated for a mission of
their choice. The Rev. Mr . and
Mrs. Plattenburg have served
in the Brazilian mission.
Mrs. Plattenburg presided at
the business meeting in the
absence ~f Mrs . Thereon
Jolmson. Reports were given by
Mrs. Paul Chapman, secretary,
and Mrs. David Miller,
treasurer.
Present for the party and
meeting besides those named
were Mrs. Carl Will, Mrs. 0. B.
Stout, Mrs. Dale Dutton, Mrs.
A. R. Knight, Mrs. Leo Story,
Mrs. James Titus, Miss Helen
l.ochary, Vinceni Knight, Jr,
Others presenting gifts were
Mrs. Theodore Reed, Jr., Mrs.
Fred Crow, and Mrs. Carolyn
Smith.

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Katie Crow'

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POMEROY - It isn't often a married couple celebrates ti9
years of wedded bliss but this is exactly what Mr. and Mrs.
William Wolfe of Five Points will do next Friday.
Congratulations!
THANKS TO lola Bartrum lor the lovely gift. It was very
much appreciated. Thanks a million.
WE HAVE BEEN beseiged by Halloweeners this past week.
The youngsters have been throwing corn and soapln~ a fel)'
windows. If this is all the mischi~f they ·do;'then we won't com·
plain.
,
After all , kids do have to have a little fun. As long as they kee
it clean, okay,

omo

RESIDENTS are asked w contact their state
representatives in regard to the 2'h per cent premium tax on
domestic insurance until a more extensive study of the tax is
made.
The issue is up for vote Tuesday. If the rate Increase is
passed, it means that insurance companies will have to pass the
increase on to the customer and this means YOU.
Don't wait. Contact your representative now, if you agree!
HERE AND THERE - John Eichinger, a senior at Southern
High School, very busy keeping up with all activities at school Kenny Grover being presented a cupcake with a candle on his
birthday recently- Kenny Koehler's puppy drinking coffee from
a cup and looking up as if to say, "It was good to the last drop."

gardening tips for November.
Members will respond to roll
IN SECOND WEEK
call by naming an annual.
RUTLAND - The Rutland
"Witches
Fright,"
and
Freewill Baptist Church on
50TH CELEBRATED
arrangements suitable for
Salem
Street is in it.s second
POMEROY - The golden
Halloween will be brought by
members for judging. Mrs. wedding anniversary of Mr. week of revival with services
Fetty will have the devotional and Mrs. William Grueser nightly at 7:30..Evanflelist
period. Installation of officers was observed with a dinner Dorothy Overton speaking to a
will be held. Mrs. Harold Wolfe party Sunday at their home. crowded church each evening.
is president. All members are
Flowers, gifts and cards Extra chairs now are OJ! hand to
were presented to the couple. accommodate the expected
urged to attend.
A congratulatory call was overflow. There is special
each
evening.
received from Mr. and Mrs. singing
Leo Smith and family of Evangelist Overton invites
Barrlen Springs, Mich., who everyone to attend.
Bolin, Region II Director elect, were unable to attend. At·
was installation officer for Mrs. tending were Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Bender's installation as Harold Blackston, Bob,
TWO-DAY SALE
Washington County Contact Sherrie and Bruce, Mr. and
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
Chairman.
Mrs. Dale Smith, Mr. and Pythian Sisters Temple 153 will
Mrs. Bolin was presented a Mrs. Amos Leonard, and
hold a rummage sale in the Fry
gift by Mrs. John Broughton, Mrs. Ethel Grueser.
building, MiD St., Middleport,
outgoing contact chairman for
Thursday
and
Friday .
Washington County. Mrs. Bolin
Resident.&lt;; wishing to contribute
will be installed as Region II
may call Opal Biggs, 992-3526
Director at the fall regional
for pickup service.
meeting at the Washington
ATIENDED SCHOOL
Elementary School in Gallipolis
RUTLAND - Mrs. Joe Bolin ,
on Saturday, Oct .' 30. Her a member of the Rutland
garden club duties began Oct. 1, Friendly Gardeners, and the
the beginning of a garden club new Region 11 Director-elect of
MEETING POSTPONED
year.
the Ohio Association of Garden
POMEROY - The regular
Clubs attended a meeting for
regional directors held at At- October meeting of the WildDINNER TONIGHT
wood Lake, near New wood Garden Club has been
POMEROY- A covered dish Philadelphia, ·last week. A postponed from Oct. 'll to Nov. 4
dinner will be held at 5:30 this school of instruction was held and will be held in the social
evening at the Pomeroy Church and the regional directors were room of the Columbus and
of Christ. Those attending are to given the many publications Southern Ohio Electric Co. At
bring the.ir favorite covered they will sell to garden club that time, Miss Joanna Distler,
dish and their table service. At members during thelr two year home economist, will present a
Christmas demonstration.
7:30 p.m. a 35 minute film in term of office.
color, "Silent Witness," will be
shown.
What a wonderful way to say

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NEW

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BIRTH ANNOUNCED
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. Terry Ohlluger, former
resident.&lt;; now of Philo, are
announcing the birth of a seven
pound, 15 ounce son, Jon
Wayne, Friday night, Oct. 22, at
the Bethesda Hospital in
ZanesvUle. Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. RusseU Wilson of
near Pomeroy and.Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Ohlinger, Pomeroy,
Mr. an,d Mrs. Ohlinger also
have a three-year-old son, Jay.

Merry

SOCIETY TO MEET
MIDDLEPORT - A boam
meeting of the Meigs County '
Cancer Society will be held at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
society's office on Coal St.

TO YOUR FAVORITE PEOPL£!
Now! 13 the time to
arrange for your

""--'~....- Christm., Gift Portrail Silting.
' This wll l'"usure you g1ving us sufll clent lime to do our yery best for vcu

VISIT PARENTS
RACINE - Carroll Cleland of
Nashville, Tenn. visited over
the ·weekend with his parent.&lt;; in
Racine. He is a student at the
Auto-Diesel School in Nashville.

It 's tater !han you think! 1+1\ay we suggest th at you call or come 10 for an
appointment
TODAY! Open Evenings by Appointmen1 .

GROVER'S STUDIO
Phone 99l-247S
lSS N. Second Ave.

Middleport

On the field ·it's cleats.
After the game it's

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BY WINTER'S

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Dale Lillie
992-6346

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Katie's Korner By

Ruthnd Women Meet Oct. 27th

Seroices Conducted Wednesday

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'

Ladies Attended Marietta Event

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Mason Rescue Squad for its
ambulance service. They also
made plans to sponsor the
Junior Girl Scouts.
Refreshments were served w
Mrs . Richard Fowler, Mrs.
Robert Stewart, Mrs. Edward ·
Ryan, Mrs. Larry Noble 1 Mrs.
Mary Berry, Mrs. Sammy
Hoffman,
Mrs .
Nolan
Swackhamer, Mrs. Phyllis
Knopp, Mrs . Joseph Lish, Mrs.
Homer Noble , Mrs. Robert '
Baumgarner and the hostesses,
Mrs. Roush and Mrs. Lewis.

Mrs. Edward Baer. Miniature
flags were also used in ' the
decorations.
Gifts were presented to Mrs.
Hartillger in a decorated basket
prepared · by Mrs. James
Ila,iley.Shealso received a vase
of' Dowers from Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Fugate.
Hostesses for the party were
Mrs. Bailey, Mrs. Aaron Kelton,
Mrs. Rome Williamson, Mrs.
Fred Crow and Mrs. Gibbs.
During the regular business
meeting of the gro]lp, plans
were made for a dinner to be
served on Nov. 21 when a
celebration in observance of the
100th anniversary of the
ctedication of the church will be
held.
The Rt. Rev. John Cnmun,
Bishop of th~ Diocese of Southern Ohio will attend and
following the dinner will conduct the confinnation service.
All
rectors
of the
willformer
be invited
along
withchurch
local

FOR MAYOR
OF MIDDLEPORT

Sewing Demonstrated

METS PUT 2 ON WAIVERS
NEW YORK (UPI)-Bob
Aspromonte and Donn Clenden.
on .were put on waivers Friday
by the New York Mets to make
room for rookies Dennis
Saunders and Billy Cotton, who
played for the Memphis team ,
in th~ : ·;urida League last

the ~riginallJ~aws adopted in
1921 by the organization · which
stated: "No pne shaD wear a
hat."
A second corsage 'with appropriate remarks was given to
Mrs. Hartinger by the Rev.
Stanley Platten burg, and a
third was presented to her by
Mrs. Lorna Seth. Also giving a
tribute to Mrs. Hartinger for
her role in the church program
was Mrs. Patrick Lochary.
An elephant replica cake
symbolic of Mrs. Hartinger's
political affiliation and inscribed "The Spirit of '76",
indicative of the honoree's age,
was presented by Mrs. Gibbs.
A luncheon was served on
tables decorated in the patriotic
colors with blue accent
streamers on white cloths and
red vases of white chrysanthemums from the garden of

Social Calendar

MlDDlEPOIH

Pleasant ·Ridge Road
POMEROY, OHIO

a

POMEROY - In patriotic
setting depicting "The Spirit of
'76," Grace Episcopal Church
Women honored a lq~~S-iime
active member, Mrs. J. E. D.
Hartinger, on her birthday
anniversary Thursday.
The surprise party featured
tributes to Mrs. Hartinger by
several memb~s as they were
presented by Mrs. Charles
Gibbs, chainnan.
Humorously tagging her as a
devotee of the women's Ub
movement, Mrs. Everett Hayes
reminisced on Mrs. Hartinger's
days as Meigs County recorder
and then presented her with a
corsage from Miss Eleanor
Robson, inrombent recorder.
Events of the church women
and Mrs. H11rtinger's con·
tributlons through the years
were related by Mrs. H. 0.
Ewing who referred w one of

on ore

A NEW FEATURE of the annual Halloween party of the
Pomeroy Elementary School to be staged Thursday night will be
a Oea market. Proceeda from tbe market will be reserved for the
annual spring trip of the Safety Patrol.
Hc.Q._ _ _ _ _ _I)"&lt;&lt;_"'&lt;!!_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,
Parents of children at the school are asked to contribute a ,
ministers.
couple of items for the sale, either something in good condition or
I
new, The project Is good and the safety patrol chlldren provide a
tremendous service in all kinda of weather.
Due to the carnival oo Thursday night, the art class will he
RUTLAND - The Rutland
held on Tuesday. Orders for art supplies are still being taken.
Friendly Gardeners will meet
~UNDAY
WEDNESDAY
Meanwhile, for the next two or three weiika aU supplies, with the
HYMN SING, Stiversville AMERICAN Legion Wednesday, October 'll, at 7:30
exception of pencils, wUl be furniabed. For th011e parents who find
p.m. at the borne of Mrs.
It a hardllhlp to purchase the oU pslnls and supplies, bring your Community Church, 2 p.m. Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett Post
128, 7:30Wednesday at the hall. Richard Fetty, Jr., when a
chUdren anyway. Something wUl be worked out.to see that they Sunday. Singers welcome.
HALLOWEEN CARNIVAL
POMEROY ·Middleport Lions paper on "Winter Annuals"
have the needed materials.
Friday, 7 p.m. at Syracuse Club, regular meeting, noon prepared by Mrs. Bill Brown
will be given and Mrs, James
Elementary School. Games, fun Wednesday.
CONCERN FOR THE SENIOR citizens of Meigs County has
house, prizes, country kitchen.
OHIO VALLEY Commandry Carpenter will have an
led to plans for the orglllllzaUon of a Golden Key Uterary Club.
Prizes for best costumes; 24, Knight.&lt;; Templar, 7:30p.m. educational display of winter
Emphasis wUl be oil reaching the·elderly and either reading sponsored by PTA.
Wednesday night. Sword and annual seeds.
wthem or seeing that they get the books they want. Already the
Mrs. Homer Parker will give
SKATING PARTY, Sunday, 2 belt will be requested of all
XI Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority has pledged
knights a.nd the officers.
assistance with the project but other groups need to show an in- to 5 p. m. at Skate-A-Way Rink,
Route 7, by Pomeroy Potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m. All
terest before the program can really get rolling.
Elementary School Safety Sir Knight.&lt;;, their ·ladies and
Mrs. Pearl Welker is heading the project for the sorority and
Patrol. Public invited,
children invited.
RUTLAND _ Mrs. Joe Bolin
Mrs. VIlma Pikkoja, Meigs librarian, lB vitally interested in
.THURSDAY
MONDAY
and Mrs. Homer Parker,
seeing the Golden Key Uterary Club get active.
INSPECTION when Meigs HOLIDAY Handicraft Club, members of the Rutland
Mrs. Pikkoja was in Columbus Thursday for an orientation Chapier, Order of DeMolay Thursday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Friendly Gardeners Club, at.
meeting preparatory to her trip to Washington, D. C. and the meets 7:30 p. m. Monday at Bookmobile Headquarters.
tended the October fall meeting
White House Conference on Aging. She reports that repeatedly in Middleport Masonic Temple.
THURSDAY,, 7:30 p.m . ."1 of the Washington County.
the meetings it was stressed that personal touch ill necessary if All DeMolays and Master Tuppers Pl~ws Method1st Garden Clubs recently at the
senior citizens are to have their personal dignity and feeling of Masons invited.
Church meetmg for anyone Marietta Library where Mrs.
human worth restored.
RUTLAND Garden Club, 7:30 interested in continuing Girl
p. m. Monday, home of Miss Scout program. Neighborhood .
Ruby Diehl. Installation of chairmen will be present.
1
officers and each member to
MIDDLEPORT - Funeral and Mrs. Cllfford L. Russell, take two wrapped gifts for
services for Walter Burns Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell, Athens Medical Health Center
NEW HAVEN -Parents of
Harris were conducted at 10 John Russell, Anderson, Ind.; in November; bulb exchange.
chlldren In New Haven are
a.m. Wednesday at the Sacred Gordon Harris, Robert Harris,
MEIGS
BAND
Boosters,
being reminded of the 10 p.m.
Heart Catl)ollc Church, Mrs. Maxine Bollheimer, Mrs.
Monday
8
p.m.
at
the
Meigs
curfew by Pollee Chief Tom
Smith,
Robert
Pomeroy. The Rev, Fr. William Harry
High
School.
Parson.
Folsom of Nelsonville officiated Croushore, Columbus; Mr. and
MEIGS TEMPLE Pythian
Chief Parsons s~ld chlldren
wllb burial in lhl! Sacred Heart Mrs. Ben Swartz, Gl0111ler; Mr.
Sisters
staff
and
officers,
7:30
under the age of 18 should be
and Mrs. Francis Biron, Milton,
• Cemetery.
RUTLAND -Mrs. ·Joe Bolin,
p.m.
Monday,
social
rooms,
off the streets no later than a member of the Rutland
Out~f-town relatives and W. Va. ; Mr. and Mrs. Vitus
Columbus
and
Southern
Ohio
the curfew lime. Parents wUI Friendly Gardeners, attended
HarUey,
Jr.,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Art
friends here for the service
Electric
Co.,
Middleport.
be held responsible for any the Ohio Association of Garden
were Mr. and Mrs . Chester A. Hartley, Harley Hartley,
TUESDAY
Halloween
pranks that may Clubs Exhibitors and Judges
Herman
Lynch,
a.nd
Clay
Russell, Indianapolis, Ind.; Mr.
DREW WEBSTER Post 39 be committed causing School 2 held at the North
Hinlde, Point Pleasant, W.Va.;
Ladies
Auxiliary, Tuesday, 7:30 destrlr~lon. ·
and W. H. Ford and Edward
Ramada Inn in Columbus
p.m. at haD; Mrs. Russell
Lemaster, Ironton.'
October 12-13. The school
SON BORN
Moore,
education
and
covered color in flower
LANGSVILLE - Mr. and
scholarship chainnan in charge
arranging, plant identification,
Mrs. Wallace Fetty of
of program.
chrysanthemums, dahlias,
Langsville are announcing the
EASTERN Athletic Boosters
gladiolus, practice judging of
REPORT ERRED
birth of a son on Sept. 15 at the
Tuesday Night at the Movies at
both flower arrangements and
POMEROY - Mrs. Paul 8 p.m. at the high school.
Holzer Medical Center. The
specimen
flowers and tips in
seven pound, 13 OWlce Infant Casci hosted a meeting of the Eastern-Miller game film will
understanding flower show
' has been named Michael Todd. Past Presidents of Drew be shown. Refreshments.
practices.
Mr. and Mrs. Fetty have two Webster Post 39, American Everyone welcome.
Horticulture was taught
daughten, Teresa and Cynthia. Legion Auxiliary WedneSday
PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy
Tuesday, with an evening
Grandparents are Mrs. Clarice night rather than Mrs. Ellen Chapter 186, OES, 7:30 p.m.
session
on practice judging;
Longstreth of Gallipolis, and Couch as was erroneously Tuesday at temple; Marjorie
flower arranging was WedMrs. Dolly Davis of Miami, W. reported in an account of the Crow, hostess.
nesday morning il'nd lectures
meeting Friday.
Va.
JUNIOR American Legion
were given at 9 a.m. daily by
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett PO;St
authorities in their respective
128, 6:30 p.m. Tuesday evening
fields.
at the hall.
Mrs. Gilbert (Aida) Cullen of
OffiOETA PHI Chapter, Beta
Marietta, an accredited
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
O.A.G .C. judge, is the state
· Tuesday night at the home of
chairman for the. Judges' and
Mrs. Kenneth McCullough.
Exhibitors' Schools and Clinics.
~e is well known in this area,
Cultural report on · Prise and
having
judged many local
essays
by
Bever!)'
Long.
•
Hostesses Mrs . McCullough,
flower shows. Mrs. Bolin had to
Mrs. Charles Gloeckner, Miss
make a flower arrangement for
Lynn Daniels.
judging at the school in the
green color class.
RACINE American Legion

, Pd. Pol. AdY.

MASON - Members of the
Mason Mothers Club benefited
from sew1ng instructions
received Wednesday evemng
when they met for a regular
meeting at the home of Mrs .
John Lewis in Mason with Mrs.
Gary Roush assisting cohostess.
Mrs. Robert Baumgarner of
Middleport pre sente d
demonstations of sewing in
zippers, hems and waist bands.
A hand made blue and green
afagan was donated to the club
by Mrs. Margaret Rosenberger
in a fund raising project. The
winner will be announ ced
December 18.
In other action . the club
agreed to donate $50 to the

er

VOTE FOR AND ELECT

richly finished wood frame and elegant tapestly
upholstery •. A graceful carved design on bock

_..____._._._..~-·---·-

••

folds up for con.,enient Ito rage

&lt;

BAKER FURNITURE

&lt;'•

Jack's Ashland.·Service Station

MIDDLEPORT, 0~10

•

Beech &amp; Locust

•

&lt;

Middleport, 0.

Mayor of Pomeroy

I

I'

CHAPMAN'S SHOES

"The ·Taxpayers Candidate"
'Pd.

Pol . Adv.

&lt;

MAIN ST.

POMEROY, OHIO

•

sea~ rill.

••

�----·~-------,- ,

12 - The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, OC\. 24, 1971

ientinel
'

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1971

Y.QL. VI NO. 39

PAGE 13

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MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO ' __.,.......,.....,......,....

PAMPERS.

30~s

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DAYTIME

~a
'·

'',_

;

'

VALVOLINE

.6
.,

•

THIS IS AN ARTIST'S conception of the proposed new
Middleport Fire Department Headquarters. The main
building will be steel with two 11&gt;-foot overhead doors and will
be large enough to handle four trucks (the department has
lllree now, but is looking toward expansion). The main
portion will also house a work shop. The block portion of the

. JUST ARRIVED
LARGE SHIPMENT

ALL CLIMATE

CHAIRS

•

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,.

4

LIMIT 6 QTS.
NEW YO ·5

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16 OZ. BOTTLE

SHAMPOO

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HEAVY

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LIMIT 2

BOBBIE BROOKS

SLACKS

STEPEO·

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LARGE

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ONLY

PLASTIC
WASTE
BASKETS
I
.

CEILING TILE, PLUMBING~-· SUPPLIES,
PANELING,· MOULDIN 5 .PLYW
.

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,•'

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'

Kissinger talked with Chou,
acting Foreign Minister Chi
Peng-fei, and a top-ranking
military leader, Yeh Chien-ying,
and II other Chinese officials.
Eight members of his own
delegation accompanied Kissin·ger-at-the talks.
The sources said that sufficient progress may have been
made during the talks to enable
the two sides to set a definite
date for Nixon's visit, the first
to Peking by a U.S. President.
It was not considered likely ,
however, that any announce-

and federal laws have been vio- persons involved in the dispute
lated," said Gilligan. "We are that violence serves no purpose
determined to insure that these and will not be tolerated," he
laws are enforced and we concluded.
Young said he asked for the
want to make it clear that violence and vandalism simply help because of the "wide distribution or the coal companwill not be tolerated ."
ies''
in his county.
Laws Enforced
"They 're not in any one area,
"We are determined that
state and federal laws will be they are throughout the county
enforced, particularly as they and Monday morning we will
apply to vandalism and vio- probably face a crisis," said
lence against persons," said Young . "We are taking precautionary measures to eliminate
Gilligan.
.
"To accomplish this, the law any thing possible happening ."
Paul Redinger, Dover, an atenforcement resources of the
state and the federal govern- torney for the non-union mines,
ment will be employed to the said they had agreed to "crank
degree necessary to insure that up" Monday.
Calls For Jury "
all laws are enforced," the
Sen.
Robert
Taft Jr., R-Ohio,
governor said .
Gilligan said the Highway Pa- this week called for a federal
trol would maintain aerial sur- grand jury investigation into
veillance in the areas and, if "roving bands of rioters" who
necessary, National Guard are "destroying property, engaging in extortion and threatplanes would also .be used.
"The State Highway Patrol ening people of our state and
will increase its surveillance must be stopped." ·
"Rioting has been on an unacj,ivities
along
state
highways, particularly at bor- precedented scale in this part
der crossings with neighboring of Ohio," said Taft. "Events
such as these cannot be perstates," said Gilligan.

The light, so to speak, is vis- and $1.5 million a day in lost
lble at the end of llle tunnel.
wages.
For the first time in lllree
For the 24 days of tbe strike,
weeks, a settlement to the coal that comes out to $4,800,000 a
strike appears imminent, per- , day in state tax revenues and
haps by the end of this week. $35.5 million in wages.
West Virginia Gov. Arch
Related industries suffered
Moore personally stepped into a the pinch. Railroads had to furnasty situation and,
rhaps Iough workers- the Norfolk &amp;
because of his pe tsten
a Western alone, has laid off 9,solid ground was establish
600 workers in its 14 states of
l Talks . / een
the operation, one-third of them in
~~s Coal Operators. West Virginia and Kentucky.
Association and the United
Last Wedn~sday, talks broke
Mine Workers Union on a new off . Both sides agreed they had
contract began in August. At reached an Impasse.
midnight, Sept. 30, 80,000
Each side blamed the other
miners in 20 states sticking to a for the failure of the negotialong standing tenet, "no con- tions to produce a new contract
tract, no work," left the pits. to replace the old one. Man-

union-busting demanda."
Moore stepped in and convinced both sides to meet in his
Charleston office Friday afternoon .
He said he had taken the inillative to get bargaining resurned in . the hope that tbe
presence of such talks in the
nation's largest coal-producing
state might be "the catalyst
Utat may solve these oulstanding differences."
. Apparently it did.
• According to Moore's announcement after the meeting
Friday, labor and management
.

The violence started Oct. 1.
Brakes were loosened on 34
Norfolk &amp; Western railcars and
they were sent careening down
the tracks at a mine near Cadiz, Ohio, which is about 20 mile
east of here .

•

Welcome
Assured

'

ments it had signed . n

ROGER TRACY, defeated Republican candidate for State Auditor, addressed a mock
Republican convention last week at Rio Grande CQllege. The convention selected a NixonReagan ticket for the upcoming mock presidential electiop at the college.

lO

Republicans Take
R ea U:!:) n Dump Agnew
e
urged Congressional leaders to Speaking at the mock
.give ." Nlxll.n and his ad- Democratic convention, Brown
criticized the Nixon Administration full support.
ministration's policy both at
Nixon received the con- home and abroad. He pointed
vention's
first-bal1ot out errors by the Nixon Adnomination, but the group made ministration, then opened the
an unusual- and illegal- lime to questions on current
choice of running mate in affairs.
California Gov . Ronald Reagan . The convention went only two
According to J . Sherman ballots in selecting a ticket of
Porter, assistant professor of Kennedy and Edward Muskie.
political science, the choice of
two men from the same state Chairmen for the conventions
Charles
Kramer,
would never be made, for Ar- were
ticle 12 prohibits electors from Democratic, and Carl Huntley,
voting for more than one man Republican. Kramer is a senior
from Chillicothe, while Huntley
from their own home stale.
In other words, if a Nixon- is a senior from Vinton.
Porter said that tne
Reagan ticket were actually
selected - dumping Vice November 2 election will be
President Agnew - electors based on popular vote only. He
from California would only be predicted that about 60 pet. of
able to vote for one of them in llle campus will vote in the
the Electoral College. That election, approximately the
could lead to the election of a same percentage of registered
Republican president and voters that go to the polls in a
national election.
Democratic vice-president.

Nursing Homes Told to Get
Inside National Standards

1

Strugg e

has been severely hit.
UMW accused management of
SAIGON (UPI)-Militant anIn West Virginia, the strike "deliberately and with premed- tigovernment students, angered
cost the state an average of itation seeking to prolo~g the because market vendors refused to honor their call for a
general strike Saturday, attempted to burn down.six main
food markets in Saigon.
They failed but other students
firebombed a U. S. Army truck
and an Army bus, badly
damaging them but causing no
known casualties.
UNITED NATIONS (UP!)- Sunday.
The students' sixth consecuThe United States went into the He and Secretary of State
week of decision in the China William p. Rogers assured ti~e day of violent protests
debate confident of a slender President Nixon Friday that the against the one-man "election
victory in its campaign to save pro-Nationalist campaign. victory" ol President Ng~yen
Van Thieu Oct. 3 followed a
a General Assembly seat for would be successful.
Nationalist China.
"We feel we ha~ a definite reported assassination attempt
The assembly is expected to majority," U.S. delegation Friday against Gen. Dang Van
wind up debate on the Chinese spokesman Nicholas L. . King Quang, one of Thieu's top aides.
'
representation issue Monday. said. "But definite could mean
South Vietnamese govern· Although it was possible for slender."
ment
sources said a man in the
voting to start Monday, diplo- " Slender" to many U.N.
malic observers thought it more delegates meant a margin of uniform of a lieutenant . in
llkely to begin on Tuesday.
Utree votes or less and most Vietnam's Air Force tried to
U.S. Ambassador George diplomats believed the outcome shoot Quang as he rode from
Bush, who quarterbacked the hinged on 10 or 12 undeclared the presidential palace to his
home af~r work Friday.
drive to retain a U.N. place for delegations.
Security guards in a jeep
Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalists, · With six speakers still to be
was so confident be ended his heard in the debate, 46 countries behind Quang's car knocked the
political campaign-type lobby- had gone on record in favor of man from his motorcycle as he
ing and went off ·for a weekend the Peking gove~nment and 24 aimed a pistol at the general,
of celebration of the United favored Taiwan . The decision an adviser on military and
Nations' 26th birthday.
rested with the 60 delegates that security affairs to Thieu, Ute
Bush went to Washington for chose not to speak in the six-dl!y sources said.
ll was the first known
a U.N. Day' lunch at Houston debate.

Hope on Taiwan

People's Republic of ( Communist) China has full sovereign
rights over it (Taiwan )," said
NCNA. "The fact that the
Chiang Kai-shek clique, long
repudiated by the Chinese
people, can still hang on in
Taiwan is wholly...lhe ~r~.ti!lll
of U.S. linperialism, which, in
order to achieve its criminal
aim or aggression, has acted in
such a self-eontradictory manner in total disregard of
international faith, trampling
upon the international agree-

and that a date may have been
fixed for Nixon 's visit.
The sources backed up their
assessment with a photograph,
published in the Peking
People's Daily, the official
Communist party newspaper,
showing Kissinger, Premier
Chou En-lai and other Chinese
officials at a banquet given to
welcome him.
The Chinese issued brief
announcements of his arrival,
that he had conferred with
Chou and that he was a guest
at the banquet, but they have
issued no other official reports
of Kissinger's visit.
On the day of his arrival,

WASHINGTON (UP!) -Six R
•
governors told President Nixon
Saturday that he could expect a
'' mo~t enthusiastic'' welcome in
Moscow although Soviet leaders
were aware it would not provide
an instant solution to all U.S.Sovtet differences.
u
'
The governors spent 70 '
minutes with Ute President RIO GRANDE _ The
The miners then went to the reporting on their two-week November 2 mock presidential
Empire Coal Co. mine near
swmg throu~h the Sovtet Unum election at Rio Grande College
here where they were met by
and Romama. They satd they has boiled down to another
about 100 law enforcement offihad long ~nversations with Nixon -Kennedy race, this time
cers and dispersed.
Sovtet Pren_ner Ale~et Kosygm with Nixon challenged by
On Monday they went further and Romantan President Ntco- Edward Kennedy. And Vice
south to the Ironton area where lae Ceausescu.
Prest'd en1Agnew wou ldn 't be m
·
.
k
dr'
they closed down a mine owned La.ter, Ntxon
, too a 1ve the picture . .
by State Sen. Oakley Collins, through the Maryland country- The two candidates were
R-lronton.
side to the presidential retreat nominated last week by mock
An organizer for the UMW
at Camp Davtd. Ramy weather conve~tions that featured a pair
has been charged with riot, inkept htm from gomg by of state political figures, Atty.
citing to riot and malicious dehellcopte~ as he usually does. Gen. William J. Brown and
struction of property in connecMrs. Ntxon accompanied htm Roger Tracy. Tracy speaking to
tion with the incidents.
for the weekend stay at the the mock Republican Conretreat and Wh~te House vention, outlined the progress
spokesmen satd thetr daughter made by the Nixon AdTrtcta , and her husband , Ed- ministration in the last two
;ard Cox, v.:ere ex~cted to JOin years. He pointed out a series of
moves on the domestic scene
had reached agreement on "90 em later '" the ay ·
per cent of a coal contract." .;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: that he called "signs of a
"I am pleased to report that
working Administration," and
we have W per cent of a coal
COLUMBUS (UPI) -The reiterated the President's
contractinourpockets," Moore Central Ohio Teachers desire for world peace. He
told newsmen, "and that ·bar- Association was told here the criticized
Congress
for
gaining teams have acceded to nation's schools have "never modifying many of the
myrequestandwillgobackinto demanded enough of students President 's proposals, and
bargaining at 2 p.m. Monday in at any level of American
Washington."
education."
'
"We are turning out func"I anticipate if we have gond, llonal illiterates who take
hard bargaining sessions, we Information from television
can have a coal contract ar- and radio rather than the
rived at by llle end of the week" printed page, " said Dr.
he added.
Daniel Fader, professor of
. "There isn 't any question in English at the University of
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Folmy mind."
lowing two nursing home fires
Michigan .
But that's not the only that left 21 elderly persons
problem in American dead, the administration asked
the nation's governors Saturday
education, Rader said.
"The most serious problem for stringent enforcement of
Is the Image of ourselves, federal-state standards to fulfill
wliat we think, what we are President Nixon's promise to
attempt to kill any government doing," Fader said of the make nursing homes "shining
official, although violent teachers.
symbols of comfort and conprotests before and after
"Professionalism will come cern ."
Thieu 's 'referendwn " have when we take full responNixon said in Nashua, N. H.,
been common.
slblUty lor the world as we last August he was sending
The sources were unable to find II."
2,000 inspectors by February,
confirm JVhether o·r not the
1973 to investigate nursing
1, '~~
man actually was a member of :::::::::::~=:=~:~=:4:=.-:::
hom'es.
·
South Vietnam's air force,
BELIEF: TO DEATH
In a Jetter to the governors,
which basically has lined up CLEVELAND (UP!) _ Mrs. Dr. Merlin K. DuVal assistant
behind Vice President Nguyen Jeffrey J. Neumann, 20, was a HEW secretary for health and
Cao Ky, who refused to run Jehovah's Witness. According
against Thieu.
to Jehovah's Witness doctrine it
Ky has retained his rank as is against God's law to accept
an air vice marshal and when blood. But after she gave birth
he appears in public is usually to a daughter three weeks ago,
ABBEVILLE, La. (UP! ) surrounded by armed air force complications set in _ making Dudley LeBlanc, the Louisiana
security ~uards.
blood transfusions her only Frenchman who brewed a
The htgh school students means of survival. Now patent medicine in a washtub in
visited each of Saigon's six because of her strong religiou~ his back yard 40 years ago,
mam food markets Saturday beliefs Charlene Neumann of named it Hadacol and made $24
morning to check the effective- Clevel~nd is dead.
million, died Friday. He was 77.
ness of their call Friday for a
LeBlanc, a state senator and
strike to protest Thieu's elecNEW FAME HALL
member of the legislature since
tion victory .
COLUMBUS . (UP!) - An 1924, was ·one of Louisiana 's
When they found them open Ohio high school basketball Hall most colorful political figures.
with vendors peddling meat, of Fame will be built in the city LeBlanc's Hadacol was a
fru.it and vegetables as usual, of Marion, the Ohio High School common fixture in medicine
they doused ·areas of the Basketball Coaches Association cabinets around llle nation in
markets with gasoline and announced here Friday. Harold the 1940's and became the butt
attempted to set them afire.
"Doc" Daugherty, head coach of numerous jokes.
No serious damage was done, at Euclid High School and
For example:
witnesses said, · and approxi- chairman of the Hall of Fame
" Why did they call it
mately 100 students involved committee, said it Is hop~ the Hadacol?"
left before police could arrest building would be ready for
"Because they Hadacol it
them .
dedication by June, 1973.
somethi ng: . ~~
The roving pickets last Saturday formed a 100 car caravan and first went to the James
Brothers mine where the tipple,
and mine buildings were
burned and cars and trucks overturned. Damage was estimated at $250,000,

Assassination Failed

~~n:/:~~~~~~~
~~~ ~~~~~~ta~~ds~ec~~~o~::::~ Sa~gon
19 other coal-producing states economic demands and the
·

Confident of UN Vote

ments or disclosure' of the
substance of llle talks would be
made until' after Kissinger
returns to Washington.
The talks in Peking did not
deter the New China News
Agency (NCNA) from continuing-attacks on.the United Stales
in dispatches monitored here.
The agency said Saturday that
"U.S. imperialism" is responsible for the maintenance of the
Nationalist Chinese government
of Generalissimo Chiang Kaishek.
"The government of the

" It must be evident to all mi tted in a free society.

By United Press International $200,000 a day in lost revenues strike" by making " impossible

••

~........,~······,

"It is clear that local, state

HONG KONG (UPI)-Dr.
Henry Kissinger, adviser to
"J.S. President Nixon, neared
ilie completion of his talks in
Peking with Communist Chinese officials Saturday. Diplomatic sources said the talks
were going-"very smoothly;-11 ~ · :
Kissinger arrived in Peking
last Wednesday on his second
visit to prepare for the historic
trip Nixon has said he will
make to the Chinese capital
before next May . When he
announced this trip·earlier this
monlll, Kissinger said he would
spend "up to four days" in
Peking.
There has been no official
word on the progress of talks
between Kissinger and the
Chinese officials. But diplomatic sources in this British
colony who have contacts in
Peking said the talks had been

Settlement in Coal Imminent

LIMIT 10

'····
TAPE PLAYER
8 TRACK

structure on the left will house a meeting room and shower
facilities. Firemen say that it would be an advantage to go
home in dry clothes after coming in off a fire run in wet and in
freezing temperatures: Middleport residents will vote on a
1.2 mill levy on Nov. 2 which would provide funds for the new
headquarters.

In Coal Fields to Stop
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
John J. Gilligan said Saturday
"violence and vandalism"
would not be tolerated in the
Eastern Ohio coal fields and
promised to do "everything in
our power to maintain order in
that area.
Gilligan met Saturday with
State Attorney General William
J. Brown, state Adjutant General Dana Stewart, Highway
Patrol Superintendent Roher!
Chartmonte, U.S. Attorney William Milligan and members of
their staffs.
· Tuscarawas CQunty Sheriff A.
J. Young called on Gilligart for
help after declaring a "state
.. qf .,m~e.rfll!ncy" in his county
late Friday following an announcement that 12 non - union
strip mines would reopen Monday.
The area has been llle scene
of numerous acts of violence
Oct. 1 when the United Mine
Workers Union struck the soft
coal industry .
A group of 50() pickets last
Saturday burned the James
Brothers Coal Co. at Mineral
City, Tuscarawas to the ground

weet

•
ID

progressing ''very smoothly"

Gilligan Says Violence

••

MOTOR OIL

.

.

1

they were " found to be
substandard in quality of care,"
HEW said.
The federal government is
limited in its authority to move
against substandard nursing
homes under the Medicaid
program of subsidized heallll
care for the needy of all ages,
and needs state cooperation in
using fund cutoff threats to
gain compliance.
" We are mos t anxious to
assist you, as well as to receive
assistance from you and yow·
staff, in a joint effort to
Improve the performance of
federal and state (nursing
home) responsibilities," DuVal
wrote the governors.
Du Val said llle letters,
carrying "at least psychological
clout if not legal clout" were
" A popular 1940s "Boogie prompted in part by nursing
Woogie " song also extolled the home fires in Salt Lake City,
virtues of Hadacol.
Utah , Sept. 15, which killed six
"I took 'Ha' for happy, 'Da' persons and last Tuesday night
for day, and 'Co' for company '- in Honesdale, Pa., which killed
and of course added 'I' for 15 patients. Neither home
LeBlanc," he once said, ex- served Medicare or Medicaid
plaining the odd name for his patients.
tonic.
The letter urged governors to
LeBlanc ran into legal dif- appoint nursing home ." ombudsficulties in the mid-1950's, after men" to review and follow up
~ellilig Hadacol to another on patient complaints.
patent medicine company for
DuVal also listed 19 nursing '
an undisclosed amount of cash. homes in Arizona, California,
He was indicted in May, 1957, · Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania
for federal income tax evasion and Texas certified this year
in connoction with the under Medicare. "I assume
operations of Hadacol. The that you will want to inspect
federal government also sued these homes as soon ,a s possible
LaBlanc for false adverti•ing. for compliance with Medicaid
Both cases were dismissed.
standards," he said.

science, pledged in the meantime to "provide you with as
much short-term help as
possible in the form of teams of
federal personnel. "
A federal cutoff of Medicare
payments to five nursing homes
in Ohio, Michigan and California takes effect Monday. A
sixth home under the same
threat 'in St. Petersburg, Fla.,
has been given 30 days to
correct fire safety deficiencies
cited by the Health, Education
and Welfare Department.
Certification under the Medlcare heallll insuranc~ program
for the aged was suspended for
the first five facilities because

Brewer of Hadacol Dies

..

�----·~-------,- ,

12 - The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, OC\. 24, 1971

ientinel
'

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1971

Y.QL. VI NO. 39

PAGE 13

,.

AT

I

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MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO ' __.,.......,.....,......,....

PAMPERS.

30~s

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I~

.

!

t;

54

DAYTIME

~a
'·

'',_

;

'

VALVOLINE

.6
.,

•

THIS IS AN ARTIST'S conception of the proposed new
Middleport Fire Department Headquarters. The main
building will be steel with two 11&gt;-foot overhead doors and will
be large enough to handle four trucks (the department has
lllree now, but is looking toward expansion). The main
portion will also house a work shop. The block portion of the

. JUST ARRIVED
LARGE SHIPMENT

ALL CLIMATE

CHAIRS

•

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,.

4

LIMIT 6 QTS.
NEW YO ·5

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LIMIT 2

BOBBIE BROOKS

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.

ONLY

PLASTIC
WASTE
BASKETS
I
.

CEILING TILE, PLUMBING~-· SUPPLIES,
PANELING,· MOULDIN 5 .PLYW
.

.

,•'

'

'

'

Kissinger talked with Chou,
acting Foreign Minister Chi
Peng-fei, and a top-ranking
military leader, Yeh Chien-ying,
and II other Chinese officials.
Eight members of his own
delegation accompanied Kissin·ger-at-the talks.
The sources said that sufficient progress may have been
made during the talks to enable
the two sides to set a definite
date for Nixon's visit, the first
to Peking by a U.S. President.
It was not considered likely ,
however, that any announce-

and federal laws have been vio- persons involved in the dispute
lated," said Gilligan. "We are that violence serves no purpose
determined to insure that these and will not be tolerated," he
laws are enforced and we concluded.
Young said he asked for the
want to make it clear that violence and vandalism simply help because of the "wide distribution or the coal companwill not be tolerated ."
ies''
in his county.
Laws Enforced
"They 're not in any one area,
"We are determined that
state and federal laws will be they are throughout the county
enforced, particularly as they and Monday morning we will
apply to vandalism and vio- probably face a crisis," said
lence against persons," said Young . "We are taking precautionary measures to eliminate
Gilligan.
.
"To accomplish this, the law any thing possible happening ."
Paul Redinger, Dover, an atenforcement resources of the
state and the federal govern- torney for the non-union mines,
ment will be employed to the said they had agreed to "crank
degree necessary to insure that up" Monday.
Calls For Jury "
all laws are enforced," the
Sen.
Robert
Taft Jr., R-Ohio,
governor said .
Gilligan said the Highway Pa- this week called for a federal
trol would maintain aerial sur- grand jury investigation into
veillance in the areas and, if "roving bands of rioters" who
necessary, National Guard are "destroying property, engaging in extortion and threatplanes would also .be used.
"The State Highway Patrol ening people of our state and
will increase its surveillance must be stopped." ·
"Rioting has been on an unacj,ivities
along
state
highways, particularly at bor- precedented scale in this part
der crossings with neighboring of Ohio," said Taft. "Events
such as these cannot be perstates," said Gilligan.

The light, so to speak, is vis- and $1.5 million a day in lost
lble at the end of llle tunnel.
wages.
For the first time in lllree
For the 24 days of tbe strike,
weeks, a settlement to the coal that comes out to $4,800,000 a
strike appears imminent, per- , day in state tax revenues and
haps by the end of this week. $35.5 million in wages.
West Virginia Gov. Arch
Related industries suffered
Moore personally stepped into a the pinch. Railroads had to furnasty situation and,
rhaps Iough workers- the Norfolk &amp;
because of his pe tsten
a Western alone, has laid off 9,solid ground was establish
600 workers in its 14 states of
l Talks . / een
the operation, one-third of them in
~~s Coal Operators. West Virginia and Kentucky.
Association and the United
Last Wedn~sday, talks broke
Mine Workers Union on a new off . Both sides agreed they had
contract began in August. At reached an Impasse.
midnight, Sept. 30, 80,000
Each side blamed the other
miners in 20 states sticking to a for the failure of the negotialong standing tenet, "no con- tions to produce a new contract
tract, no work," left the pits. to replace the old one. Man-

union-busting demanda."
Moore stepped in and convinced both sides to meet in his
Charleston office Friday afternoon .
He said he had taken the inillative to get bargaining resurned in . the hope that tbe
presence of such talks in the
nation's largest coal-producing
state might be "the catalyst
Utat may solve these oulstanding differences."
. Apparently it did.
• According to Moore's announcement after the meeting
Friday, labor and management
.

The violence started Oct. 1.
Brakes were loosened on 34
Norfolk &amp; Western railcars and
they were sent careening down
the tracks at a mine near Cadiz, Ohio, which is about 20 mile
east of here .

•

Welcome
Assured

'

ments it had signed . n

ROGER TRACY, defeated Republican candidate for State Auditor, addressed a mock
Republican convention last week at Rio Grande CQllege. The convention selected a NixonReagan ticket for the upcoming mock presidential electiop at the college.

lO

Republicans Take
R ea U:!:) n Dump Agnew
e
urged Congressional leaders to Speaking at the mock
.give ." Nlxll.n and his ad- Democratic convention, Brown
criticized the Nixon Administration full support.
ministration's policy both at
Nixon received the con- home and abroad. He pointed
vention's
first-bal1ot out errors by the Nixon Adnomination, but the group made ministration, then opened the
an unusual- and illegal- lime to questions on current
choice of running mate in affairs.
California Gov . Ronald Reagan . The convention went only two
According to J . Sherman ballots in selecting a ticket of
Porter, assistant professor of Kennedy and Edward Muskie.
political science, the choice of
two men from the same state Chairmen for the conventions
Charles
Kramer,
would never be made, for Ar- were
ticle 12 prohibits electors from Democratic, and Carl Huntley,
voting for more than one man Republican. Kramer is a senior
from Chillicothe, while Huntley
from their own home stale.
In other words, if a Nixon- is a senior from Vinton.
Porter said that tne
Reagan ticket were actually
selected - dumping Vice November 2 election will be
President Agnew - electors based on popular vote only. He
from California would only be predicted that about 60 pet. of
able to vote for one of them in llle campus will vote in the
the Electoral College. That election, approximately the
could lead to the election of a same percentage of registered
Republican president and voters that go to the polls in a
national election.
Democratic vice-president.

Nursing Homes Told to Get
Inside National Standards

1

Strugg e

has been severely hit.
UMW accused management of
SAIGON (UPI)-Militant anIn West Virginia, the strike "deliberately and with premed- tigovernment students, angered
cost the state an average of itation seeking to prolo~g the because market vendors refused to honor their call for a
general strike Saturday, attempted to burn down.six main
food markets in Saigon.
They failed but other students
firebombed a U. S. Army truck
and an Army bus, badly
damaging them but causing no
known casualties.
UNITED NATIONS (UP!)- Sunday.
The students' sixth consecuThe United States went into the He and Secretary of State
week of decision in the China William p. Rogers assured ti~e day of violent protests
debate confident of a slender President Nixon Friday that the against the one-man "election
victory in its campaign to save pro-Nationalist campaign. victory" ol President Ng~yen
Van Thieu Oct. 3 followed a
a General Assembly seat for would be successful.
Nationalist China.
"We feel we ha~ a definite reported assassination attempt
The assembly is expected to majority," U.S. delegation Friday against Gen. Dang Van
wind up debate on the Chinese spokesman Nicholas L. . King Quang, one of Thieu's top aides.
'
representation issue Monday. said. "But definite could mean
South Vietnamese govern· Although it was possible for slender."
ment
sources said a man in the
voting to start Monday, diplo- " Slender" to many U.N.
malic observers thought it more delegates meant a margin of uniform of a lieutenant . in
llkely to begin on Tuesday.
Utree votes or less and most Vietnam's Air Force tried to
U.S. Ambassador George diplomats believed the outcome shoot Quang as he rode from
Bush, who quarterbacked the hinged on 10 or 12 undeclared the presidential palace to his
home af~r work Friday.
drive to retain a U.N. place for delegations.
Security guards in a jeep
Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalists, · With six speakers still to be
was so confident be ended his heard in the debate, 46 countries behind Quang's car knocked the
political campaign-type lobby- had gone on record in favor of man from his motorcycle as he
ing and went off ·for a weekend the Peking gove~nment and 24 aimed a pistol at the general,
of celebration of the United favored Taiwan . The decision an adviser on military and
Nations' 26th birthday.
rested with the 60 delegates that security affairs to Thieu, Ute
Bush went to Washington for chose not to speak in the six-dl!y sources said.
ll was the first known
a U.N. Day' lunch at Houston debate.

Hope on Taiwan

People's Republic of ( Communist) China has full sovereign
rights over it (Taiwan )," said
NCNA. "The fact that the
Chiang Kai-shek clique, long
repudiated by the Chinese
people, can still hang on in
Taiwan is wholly...lhe ~r~.ti!lll
of U.S. linperialism, which, in
order to achieve its criminal
aim or aggression, has acted in
such a self-eontradictory manner in total disregard of
international faith, trampling
upon the international agree-

and that a date may have been
fixed for Nixon 's visit.
The sources backed up their
assessment with a photograph,
published in the Peking
People's Daily, the official
Communist party newspaper,
showing Kissinger, Premier
Chou En-lai and other Chinese
officials at a banquet given to
welcome him.
The Chinese issued brief
announcements of his arrival,
that he had conferred with
Chou and that he was a guest
at the banquet, but they have
issued no other official reports
of Kissinger's visit.
On the day of his arrival,

WASHINGTON (UP!) -Six R
•
governors told President Nixon
Saturday that he could expect a
'' mo~t enthusiastic'' welcome in
Moscow although Soviet leaders
were aware it would not provide
an instant solution to all U.S.Sovtet differences.
u
'
The governors spent 70 '
minutes with Ute President RIO GRANDE _ The
The miners then went to the reporting on their two-week November 2 mock presidential
Empire Coal Co. mine near
swmg throu~h the Sovtet Unum election at Rio Grande College
here where they were met by
and Romama. They satd they has boiled down to another
about 100 law enforcement offihad long ~nversations with Nixon -Kennedy race, this time
cers and dispersed.
Sovtet Pren_ner Ale~et Kosygm with Nixon challenged by
On Monday they went further and Romantan President Ntco- Edward Kennedy. And Vice
south to the Ironton area where lae Ceausescu.
Prest'd en1Agnew wou ldn 't be m
·
.
k
dr'
they closed down a mine owned La.ter, Ntxon
, too a 1ve the picture . .
by State Sen. Oakley Collins, through the Maryland country- The two candidates were
R-lronton.
side to the presidential retreat nominated last week by mock
An organizer for the UMW
at Camp Davtd. Ramy weather conve~tions that featured a pair
has been charged with riot, inkept htm from gomg by of state political figures, Atty.
citing to riot and malicious dehellcopte~ as he usually does. Gen. William J. Brown and
struction of property in connecMrs. Ntxon accompanied htm Roger Tracy. Tracy speaking to
tion with the incidents.
for the weekend stay at the the mock Republican Conretreat and Wh~te House vention, outlined the progress
spokesmen satd thetr daughter made by the Nixon AdTrtcta , and her husband , Ed- ministration in the last two
;ard Cox, v.:ere ex~cted to JOin years. He pointed out a series of
moves on the domestic scene
had reached agreement on "90 em later '" the ay ·
per cent of a coal contract." .;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: that he called "signs of a
"I am pleased to report that
working Administration," and
we have W per cent of a coal
COLUMBUS (UPI) -The reiterated the President's
contractinourpockets," Moore Central Ohio Teachers desire for world peace. He
told newsmen, "and that ·bar- Association was told here the criticized
Congress
for
gaining teams have acceded to nation's schools have "never modifying many of the
myrequestandwillgobackinto demanded enough of students President 's proposals, and
bargaining at 2 p.m. Monday in at any level of American
Washington."
education."
'
"We are turning out func"I anticipate if we have gond, llonal illiterates who take
hard bargaining sessions, we Information from television
can have a coal contract ar- and radio rather than the
rived at by llle end of the week" printed page, " said Dr.
he added.
Daniel Fader, professor of
. "There isn 't any question in English at the University of
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Folmy mind."
lowing two nursing home fires
Michigan .
But that's not the only that left 21 elderly persons
problem in American dead, the administration asked
the nation's governors Saturday
education, Rader said.
"The most serious problem for stringent enforcement of
Is the Image of ourselves, federal-state standards to fulfill
wliat we think, what we are President Nixon's promise to
attempt to kill any government doing," Fader said of the make nursing homes "shining
official, although violent teachers.
symbols of comfort and conprotests before and after
"Professionalism will come cern ."
Thieu 's 'referendwn " have when we take full responNixon said in Nashua, N. H.,
been common.
slblUty lor the world as we last August he was sending
The sources were unable to find II."
2,000 inspectors by February,
confirm JVhether o·r not the
1973 to investigate nursing
1, '~~
man actually was a member of :::::::::::~=:=~:~=:4:=.-:::
hom'es.
·
South Vietnam's air force,
BELIEF: TO DEATH
In a Jetter to the governors,
which basically has lined up CLEVELAND (UP!) _ Mrs. Dr. Merlin K. DuVal assistant
behind Vice President Nguyen Jeffrey J. Neumann, 20, was a HEW secretary for health and
Cao Ky, who refused to run Jehovah's Witness. According
against Thieu.
to Jehovah's Witness doctrine it
Ky has retained his rank as is against God's law to accept
an air vice marshal and when blood. But after she gave birth
he appears in public is usually to a daughter three weeks ago,
ABBEVILLE, La. (UP! ) surrounded by armed air force complications set in _ making Dudley LeBlanc, the Louisiana
security ~uards.
blood transfusions her only Frenchman who brewed a
The htgh school students means of survival. Now patent medicine in a washtub in
visited each of Saigon's six because of her strong religiou~ his back yard 40 years ago,
mam food markets Saturday beliefs Charlene Neumann of named it Hadacol and made $24
morning to check the effective- Clevel~nd is dead.
million, died Friday. He was 77.
ness of their call Friday for a
LeBlanc, a state senator and
strike to protest Thieu's elecNEW FAME HALL
member of the legislature since
tion victory .
COLUMBUS . (UP!) - An 1924, was ·one of Louisiana 's
When they found them open Ohio high school basketball Hall most colorful political figures.
with vendors peddling meat, of Fame will be built in the city LeBlanc's Hadacol was a
fru.it and vegetables as usual, of Marion, the Ohio High School common fixture in medicine
they doused ·areas of the Basketball Coaches Association cabinets around llle nation in
markets with gasoline and announced here Friday. Harold the 1940's and became the butt
attempted to set them afire.
"Doc" Daugherty, head coach of numerous jokes.
No serious damage was done, at Euclid High School and
For example:
witnesses said, · and approxi- chairman of the Hall of Fame
" Why did they call it
mately 100 students involved committee, said it Is hop~ the Hadacol?"
left before police could arrest building would be ready for
"Because they Hadacol it
them .
dedication by June, 1973.
somethi ng: . ~~
The roving pickets last Saturday formed a 100 car caravan and first went to the James
Brothers mine where the tipple,
and mine buildings were
burned and cars and trucks overturned. Damage was estimated at $250,000,

Assassination Failed

~~n:/:~~~~~~~
~~~ ~~~~~~ta~~ds~ec~~~o~::::~ Sa~gon
19 other coal-producing states economic demands and the
·

Confident of UN Vote

ments or disclosure' of the
substance of llle talks would be
made until' after Kissinger
returns to Washington.
The talks in Peking did not
deter the New China News
Agency (NCNA) from continuing-attacks on.the United Stales
in dispatches monitored here.
The agency said Saturday that
"U.S. imperialism" is responsible for the maintenance of the
Nationalist Chinese government
of Generalissimo Chiang Kaishek.
"The government of the

" It must be evident to all mi tted in a free society.

By United Press International $200,000 a day in lost revenues strike" by making " impossible

••

~........,~······,

"It is clear that local, state

HONG KONG (UPI)-Dr.
Henry Kissinger, adviser to
"J.S. President Nixon, neared
ilie completion of his talks in
Peking with Communist Chinese officials Saturday. Diplomatic sources said the talks
were going-"very smoothly;-11 ~ · :
Kissinger arrived in Peking
last Wednesday on his second
visit to prepare for the historic
trip Nixon has said he will
make to the Chinese capital
before next May . When he
announced this trip·earlier this
monlll, Kissinger said he would
spend "up to four days" in
Peking.
There has been no official
word on the progress of talks
between Kissinger and the
Chinese officials. But diplomatic sources in this British
colony who have contacts in
Peking said the talks had been

Settlement in Coal Imminent

LIMIT 10

'····
TAPE PLAYER
8 TRACK

structure on the left will house a meeting room and shower
facilities. Firemen say that it would be an advantage to go
home in dry clothes after coming in off a fire run in wet and in
freezing temperatures: Middleport residents will vote on a
1.2 mill levy on Nov. 2 which would provide funds for the new
headquarters.

In Coal Fields to Stop
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
John J. Gilligan said Saturday
"violence and vandalism"
would not be tolerated in the
Eastern Ohio coal fields and
promised to do "everything in
our power to maintain order in
that area.
Gilligan met Saturday with
State Attorney General William
J. Brown, state Adjutant General Dana Stewart, Highway
Patrol Superintendent Roher!
Chartmonte, U.S. Attorney William Milligan and members of
their staffs.
· Tuscarawas CQunty Sheriff A.
J. Young called on Gilligart for
help after declaring a "state
.. qf .,m~e.rfll!ncy" in his county
late Friday following an announcement that 12 non - union
strip mines would reopen Monday.
The area has been llle scene
of numerous acts of violence
Oct. 1 when the United Mine
Workers Union struck the soft
coal industry .
A group of 50() pickets last
Saturday burned the James
Brothers Coal Co. at Mineral
City, Tuscarawas to the ground

weet

•
ID

progressing ''very smoothly"

Gilligan Says Violence

••

MOTOR OIL

.

.

1

they were " found to be
substandard in quality of care,"
HEW said.
The federal government is
limited in its authority to move
against substandard nursing
homes under the Medicaid
program of subsidized heallll
care for the needy of all ages,
and needs state cooperation in
using fund cutoff threats to
gain compliance.
" We are mos t anxious to
assist you, as well as to receive
assistance from you and yow·
staff, in a joint effort to
Improve the performance of
federal and state (nursing
home) responsibilities," DuVal
wrote the governors.
Du Val said llle letters,
carrying "at least psychological
clout if not legal clout" were
" A popular 1940s "Boogie prompted in part by nursing
Woogie " song also extolled the home fires in Salt Lake City,
virtues of Hadacol.
Utah , Sept. 15, which killed six
"I took 'Ha' for happy, 'Da' persons and last Tuesday night
for day, and 'Co' for company '- in Honesdale, Pa., which killed
and of course added 'I' for 15 patients. Neither home
LeBlanc," he once said, ex- served Medicare or Medicaid
plaining the odd name for his patients.
tonic.
The letter urged governors to
LeBlanc ran into legal dif- appoint nursing home ." ombudsficulties in the mid-1950's, after men" to review and follow up
~ellilig Hadacol to another on patient complaints.
patent medicine company for
DuVal also listed 19 nursing '
an undisclosed amount of cash. homes in Arizona, California,
He was indicted in May, 1957, · Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania
for federal income tax evasion and Texas certified this year
in connoction with the under Medicare. "I assume
operations of Hadacol. The that you will want to inspect
federal government also sued these homes as soon ,a s possible
LaBlanc for false adverti•ing. for compliance with Medicaid
Both cases were dismissed.
standards," he said.

science, pledged in the meantime to "provide you with as
much short-term help as
possible in the form of teams of
federal personnel. "
A federal cutoff of Medicare
payments to five nursing homes
in Ohio, Michigan and California takes effect Monday. A
sixth home under the same
threat 'in St. Petersburg, Fla.,
has been given 30 days to
correct fire safety deficiencies
cited by the Health, Education
and Welfare Department.
Certification under the Medlcare heallll insuranc~ program
for the aged was suspended for
the first five facilities because

Brewer of Hadacol Dies

..

�,,.,

' .

U-The SUndayTime!. -Sentinei,Sunday,Oct. 24, 197;

OUDrops

su, 31-6

COLl)MBUS (UPI )-Sophomore Morris Bradshaw broke
loose. ·for two sp&lt;!ctacular 88
yard touchdown runs Saturday
to pace lith ranked Ohio State
to a surprisingly, easy 31-0 Big
Ten win over- Wisconsin.
led Ohio by scoring on runs of
The Buckeyes other scores
13 and two yards, catching a 12· came on a 48 yard run by sophyard scoring pass, and hitting omore tailback Elmer Upper!, a
Larry Young with a six-yard ..
touchdown toss. He added a two
point conversion pass to Don
Reinhard, and Dave Green
booted an extra point. Ohio also
tackled Don Strock in the end
zone for a safety .
Strock's new records include
386 yards of total offense, and a
78-yard scoring toss to Quinn, By United Press lnterna1iona I
oston Colt. 40 Pittsburgh 22
which he got off while being B
Boston U. 28 Rhode Island 7
tackled .
Dartmouth 16 Harvard 13
The 6-4 junior quarterback Penn St. 66 TCU 14
also unloaded a short pass West Virginia 43 Templ e 33
Tr in ity (Conn. ) 37
while being hit that Colobro
Rochester U. 21
turned into a 5!:-yard touchdown North Ca roli na A&amp; T 13 Howard
3
play by shrugging off: four Ohio
Georgia 34 Kentucky 0
tacklers. Strock's single game Ri chmond 20 Furman 0
passing record marked the fifth Cornell 31 Yale 10
time in six games that he Army l4 Virginia 9
inceton 31 Pen n 0
smashed that mark this year. Pr
Navy 15 Duke 14
/

'

·· . , ...

37-~29

,

Tilt

BLACKSBURG, Va. (UPI)Don Strock sQlashed four school
records as he-passed for three
touchdowns . and ;JJ6 yards
Saturday while pacing Virginia
Tech past Ohio University 37-29.
QuarterbacWStrockconnected
on 19 of ~I passes, including
scoring lOsses to Nick Colobro,
Jimmy Quinn and Don Reel; to
obliterate the: school's old single
-game reco,rds for passing
yardage, individual total offense, longest scoring play, and
season total offense.
Sophomore James Barber
lunged across for another Tech
score on a three-yard run, and
Nick Colobro added the final
tally on a two-yard dive. Dave
Strock, the quarterback's older
brother, kicked a 31-yard field
goal and four extra points.
Quarterback Dave Jeunger

'I

ROBERT BISSEU..
CHESTER
Robert
Eugeoe Bissell, 17, sou of Mr.
aod Mrs. Charles Bissell,
Chesler, left Suoday for
Falrmool, W. Va., where he
was Inducted into the U. S.
Marine Corps. He weol to the
Clarksburg airport Monday
where he left via plane for
Charleston, S. C. He Is now
stationed at Parris Island for
10 weeks training. Prior to his
enllstmeot, Bissell attended
Eastern Hlgb School.

Sy rac use 63 Hol y Cross 21
Wi ll iams 33 Tufts 6

Florida 27 Maryland 23

'
HE GOT IT -BIDOieaey,No. .,, a 171 Jb, Junior left elll
Of the Meigs Marauders, made the catd! of the season Friday
night at Athens when a long pass to him was batted Into the
air by one of two Athens defenders, Mike Green (12), or
RIITLAND - PIC!'URESQUE FORE51' ACRES PARK on tbe New Lima Road - the
favorite spot of numerous Meigs Countians who wish to "get away from it aU" occasionally will be tbe scene of anoUler trout fishing derby next weekend .
Some 600 rainbow trout will be placed in the park's lake this week in preparation for the
weekend . Fishing for Ule prized catches will begin at 6 a.m. both days and will continue until8
p.m. No fishing license is required to take part In the event being sponsored by the Leading
Creek Conservan cy Distr ict.
Four attendance prizes will be awarded over Ule weekend - perhaps, a bit of a consolation
to those who miss out on catching a trout. Admission charge is $2 each day .
REGISTRATION UP
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Voter
registration in both Franklin
County and the city of Columbus
set new records this year. In
Franklin County 350,123
residents registered eclipsing
the old mark of 340,377 set in
November, 1970. The Columbus
registration of 217,157 passed
the old mark of 178,218
B)' BRUCE BIOSSAT
registrations in 1967, the last
WASHINGTON tNEA &gt; mayoral election year.
Presently . only six of the 14 possible Democratic
presidential candidates · are serious factors in the 1972
race . Some of the six probably can have only negative
DEVINE (lN MAT
impact, meaning they can hurt somebody else but...not
WASHINGTON (UP f) - The
win nomination for themselves .
Three are in what one experienced party observer Americans for Democratic
calls Category One. candidates with either good or at Action said here Rep. Samuel L.
least some chance to take the prize . The names : Sen . Devine , R-Ohio, can be beaten
Edmund Muskie . Sen . Edward Kenned y. Sen . Hubert by newly enfranchised college
Humphrey.
·
students in his district. Included
The other three are in Category Two . prospects with
enough potential strength to be telling fac tors in the in his districts , the ADA said,
nomination struggle but not likely to win . The list : are Ohio Sta te University,
Mayor John Lindsay of New Yor k. Sen . Henry Jackson. Otterbein College, Ohio
Sen . George Mc'Govern.
Wesleyan and Denison and
No seasoned analysts in the Democratic party are Capital Universities with a total
perceiving any serious, in the sense of decisive , role in enrollment of 50,300.
the 1972 battle for any of the other eight current ly on
the roster of " mentioned " or active candidates.
That list includes : Senators Birch Bayh of Indiana.
Fred Harris of Oklahoma , William Proxmire of Wisconsin; U.S. Reps. Wilbur Mills of Arkansas , Shirley FRAZIER HOSPITALIZED
NEW YORK (UP!i-All-pro
Chisholm of New York . William Anderson of Tennessee :
former Sen . Eugene McCarthy. and Mayor Samuel guard Walt Frazier of the New
Yorty of Los Angeles .
York Knicks was admitted to
New sweeps of the country by professional political Roosevelt Hospital Friday to
appraisers turn up few surprises. Muskie still is the undergo a checkup for a
man to beat. Kennedy is widely believed to have a real stomach disorder.
chance but only if the party reac hes convention time
The Knicks immediately
next summer with no prominent front-runner .
signed
eight-year veteran Eddie
Checks on party leader sentiment provide hin ts that
Miles to help out at guard while
Humphrey may be fading somewhat .
Frazier
undetgoes tests.
It has become the stock thing to say but it is still
true : Muskie shows a continuing resilience that enables
him to ride out his difficulties and keep moving . The
newest lump-sum endorsement from the Missouri contingent, Gov . Warren Hearnes and Sens. Stuart SymingBUILDING DEMOCRACY
ton and Thomas Eagleton , is the sort of event that susATHENS ( UP! ) - VIce
tains the imoression of his forward motion.
Jackson's potential in the South and Southwest is an
President Splfo T. Agne~ flew
established part of the story . The general judgment is
home Saturday b eanng a
that it makes him a factor to be dealt with , but not
message to . President · Ntx~n
a likely winner. Any successful undercutting of his
that the Greek government IS
,southern strength by a mischievous Gov. George Wallace
"working day and night" to
would gravely diminish Jackson's impact on the race .
build a democracy.
McGovern stays low in the polls. But some politicians
think the dedication of his followers. es pecially young
ones, could drum out primary votes in pe rcentages .up
to twice that of his poll stat us.
Lindsay is , of course. the new and volatile element
in Category Two. His charism a and his proven ability to
campaign on the tube and on the sidewalk make hi m
a man all other bidders fear . He cou ld he particularly
hurtful to McGovern .
You can't find ·it for the others . Bayh and Harris
aren't catching on . Yo u need a telescope to spot Prox mtre, Congressman Anderson lformer nuclear submarine
commander !, and Sam Yorty.
Mills could have li mited effect in the South in states
th~t want to, hold awhile . McCarthy still has something
gomg, but Lt s elusive. Mrs. Ch1sholm, the black cand idate from New York, could win some delegates in a few
black areas and deprive the more liberal white cand idates of possi ble black support.
From the newest readings, if you were a cautious'
bettor you'd have to wager it's going to be either Muskie
or Kenned y, with Lindsay far back on the outside, tap'able
of a threatenmg burst. The others either won't count
seriously at all . or they can hurt Muskie without aiding
themselves .

BRUCE BIOSSAT

Of 14 Democrats

72 Nomination
Boils Down to ··6

NHL Standings

AHL Slandings

By United Press lnternationa I

East

New York
Boston
Montreal
, Toronto
Buftato
Detroit

4

.
Chicago

1

1

3 1 2

West

East

W.L.T. Pis.
4 1 1

Van couver

By United Press ln1erna1iO•lal

3
1
2
2

5 0

3 2
l 0
4 0

9

9 ,Boston

8 Springf ield
6 Nova Scot1a
Rochester
4
4 Providence
4
Cincinnat i
Hershey
Ba l timore

West

W.L.T.Pis.
3 0 1
3 1 1
3 2 0

7
7
6

J J 0
1 3 2.

6
4

W.L.T.Pis.

4 0 2 10
4 1 1 9
2 2 2 6
2 4 2 6
1 4 I
J
1 7 o 2

W.L.T. Pis.
1 0 12
Ptt tsb~rgh
5 1 0 10 Cleveland
Ml nnesota
3 1 1 7 Ri chmond
Lo&gt; Angeles
2 4 1 5
·Philadelphia
2 J o 4 Tidewater
Friday's Results
St . .Louis
2 4 0 4 Cleveland
2 Baltimore 2
Californ ia
0 5 2 2 Providence 4 Cincinnati 4
Frid.1y ' s Results
Boston at ROchester ....
Detroit s Toronto 2
( Ppd, strike by ushers I
Montreal 6 Vancouver 0
,
H
ershey
5 Springfte lq 2
Bosloo l Californ ia 1
!Only
games
scheduled !
!Onlv aames scheduled\
6

David Oldfield (25). 01eney dived !CII" the ball moments after
thla picture was taken and picked It off inches from the
ground. The Heroics dldn 't bring victory, however, as the
Bulldogs went on to win 3!-0.

asked the Commission to undertake a tl~rough Investigation of
the state's housing needs, to idenUfy the conatralnts and Jm.
pediments 'in the housing field, and to develop specific
legislative proposals for significant state involvement In meeting
Ohio's housing needs.
.
The Coounission has already held three meetings ol the entire
CHARLES JOHNSON
body, and numerous subcommittee meetings. To date we bave
POMEROY - Airman
focused on five sub6tantive areas : development, financial aids,
Charles F. Johnson, soo of
housing costs, hwnan components, and land use planning.
Mr. aod Mrs. Harry E.
We believe there is now the opportunity to constructively
Johnson of Rt. 3, Rose Hill,
begin meeting this critical need, the need to bridge the widening
Pomeroy, has completed Lebanon Levy Explained
gap
in Ohio.
Portland, Ohio
basic training at Lacklaod
The Commission would appreciate any comments or
Oct. 22, 1971
•
AFB, Tex., and Is assigned to
suggestions your readers might wisJl to make regarding our wock.
Kees ler AFB, Miss ., for To the Editor:
Many of my neighbors are concerned about the half-mill levy Only with the advice and help of lbe many individuals and groups
training io commuoicatlons
electronics systems. Airman for trustees of Lebanon township on the ballot, whether everyone· concerned with housing Jrablems In Ohio can the Commission
Johnson is a 1971 graduate knows what it's for , and so they asked me to explain it in the succeed.
Please direct suggestions and Information to me through the
newspaper.
of Meigs High School.
Since my understanding of it wasn't too clear, I talked with Commission, 8 East Long Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215.
James I. Huston, Chainnan
Warden Ours, one of the Commissioners, about it. He says he is
all for it because is it to pay for cleaning the cemeteries in
SERIOUS, NOT FATAL
Denied Truth, Given Blasphemy
NEW LEXINGTON , Ohio Lebanon Township.
Gallipolis, Ohio
1UP!) - Edgar Martindale, Should this levy not pass, the work would he discontinued
superintendent of the water because there is no other money appropriated for this. It will not
Oct. 19, 1971
wo rks here , said a major raise the taxes, but is a renewal of levy already in effect.
Dear Sir:
shortage in this community is
So we are hoping every one gets out to vote on the half mill
The vocal training section of our high school is in the process
serious but not as critical as levy, or our cemeteries will again be a wilderness of wild grapes, of readying a presentation which includes selectioru from "Jesus
other local officials in the honeysuckle and green briar vines lind other brush and bramble. Olri.st Superstar." Here Is a monumental travesty: the schools
community fear. Gov. John J.
We don't want to go hack to the «5 and 50s when you couldn't are denied use of Holy Scriptures which contain the truth, must
Gilliga n late Friday declared a tell where cemeteries were in some places. One near here bad its refrain from school-sponsored worship of God, but are allowed to
state of emergency in the fence down, and after a fire had burned the posts, and cattle got present in musical fonn, satanical untruth,
community to permit local in, monuments were destroyed by vandals.
ThisS&lt;Kalled rock opera puis together ideas which canno&gt;lle
officials to draw water from
We did what we could. Estella,Cozart and I went among the substantiated , from anybody's version of the Bible. It is
state-&lt;&gt;wned Clouse Lake.
neighbors, wrote to relatives living in other stati-o and in service blaspbemOWJ, profane, desecrating, irreverent, sacrilegious and
for donations to rebuild the fence and gates, and clean up the a:together without redeeming social value . It ts pollution of the
(Knobbs ) Cemetery for Decoration Day.
basest sort.
OUTBREAK QUELLED
By July 4th it was grown up again. So every one was happy
Some of the vocal group have wisely chosen not to participate
NEW YORK (UPI )- Guards when tbe levy was first passed and trustees mowed them every ,
in these particular numbers, and are to be commended for this
in the grim New York County month or so.
stand.
jail called The Tombs quelled
If our churches and cemeteries as well as our homes are kept
It is the prayer and wish of many that a change may he forthan outbreak of violence by
attractive
and
presentable
it
gives
a
good
Impression
of
our
corning
omitting these vulgarities from this forthcoming
homosexual inmates in 15
minutes Friday night without cornmuoity or neighborhood - And all who come our way can presentation. How muclt better it would be to thrill the listeners
with something like tl!,e following, from many denominations'
injuring any of Ule prisoners, enjoy them. Let's get together on \his.
Goldie
Clendenin
.
older
hymnals:
city authorities said Saturday.
"rve reached the land of com and wloe
Willi all Its rlcbes freely mine,
SOUTH POINT UPSET
Not Apathetic, Just Helpless
Where shines, undimmed, ooe blissful day,
SOUTH POINT - Coal Grove
Gallipolis,
Ohio
Where .n my We Is passed away. ·
upset ·defending Ohio Valley
Oct.
22,
1971
Conference champion South Dear Editor :
Ob, Bealab land, sweet Bealab land,
Point, 28-23 here Friday night.
~ on tbe !dcbest mooat I stBDd;
I disagree with Mr. lilennan Porter's Influence In his
The Hornets, now 4-2 on the
I look away llei'IISS tbe sea,
year, dropped the Pointers out editorial, Apathy Against Crime Must Be Removed Here," that
Where llll!IIBIOIII are prepared for me
of a tie for first place in the Gallia Countians are apathetic toward crime. They are not
And view tbe sblnlng Glory Shore,
OVC, and now sbare~ the league apathetic, they just do not get envolved because·they feel that it is
My
Heaven, my Home, forever more?"
lead with unbeateh Ironton St. useless on their part to try to do anything about crime, when so
Respectfully,
Joe
'·
many times a criminal, if apprehended, is not prosecuted and as a
Milly Dennis
&amp;uth Point dropped to 4-3 on result he goes unpunished and is set free to &lt;Xlmmit the same, or
the year.
worse, crime later on.
Chess Club is Proposed
Look what bas been going on throughout eastern and southGallipolis, Ohio
eastern Ohio the last few days:
Oct. 22, 1971
Lawless baods of United Mine workers pickets have roved To Oiess Players (Or would-be Players) :
· throughout \his section of the state committing acts of violence,
Serious Interest among some of my friends and acquaindestruction, and intimidation against law-abiding non-union tances .has suggested that a chess club in Gallipolis could or
miners and coal haulers, without any. interference from Gov. should be a genuine asset to both the youths and adults of the
Gilligan's state law enforcement officials and without any in· conununity.
terference from local Jaw enforcement officials.
I don' claim to be an expert or pro In cl!e8f IUlll I am sure that ·
There is something badly wrong when elected law en- numerous cltess players in this community or \1clnlty can beat
forcement officials will set idly by and allow a lawless mob to take the pants off me, but the heck of the whole situation 1s: (Where
to the public highways and use force and violence to suppress the are you?)
Constitutional rights of others.
·Of course, I'm joking, but I would like to see a well organized
I am wondering just how effective Mr. Porter's "volunteer and successful club organized here.
band of enformers which he calls a Committee of Gallla CounNeedless to say, any organization or club needs and demands
tlans" would have been In apprehending this band of outlaws.
. a beglrmlng. That's the main Jrablem.
The last few'days I have talked to a great nwnber of people,
I will try to begin the club lf I have eno1J8b response to thla
both urtion and non-union, ahout these roving U.M,W, pickets. request from serious people. Telephone me at 446-2688.
They have all expressed great concern about the constitutional
Respectfully,Freemon Locke, 12Air Port Rd.
-.. ~'
rights of us all if these incidents are allowed to continue unchallenged. Everyone, regardless of politics and whetber union or Not on the Green, Please
Rio Grande, Ohio
non-union, have condemned our governor and local law en· To Whom It May Concern :
forcement officials for failing to JI'Otect the Constitutional rights
Rio Grande College wishes to thank the residents of Rio
of these non-union nilners and coal haulers.
Grande for their interest and friendship toward our college. We
' The great majority of our people are honorable and law
want them to he proad of us as we are of them as law abiding
abiding and respect the rights of others wtio are Jivjng and
citlielll. That Is why we work so bard to keep the cans and broken
working within the framework of our Constitutional system of bottles picked up and all of our premises clean.
Jaws .
AIM, we are proud of oilr green campus in front ol Allen Hall
Our elected officials must be reminded that the responsible,
which has been called the VIllage 'Greea in some newspapers.
Jaw-abiding people have the right to expect them to honor their
This;is'nQI so- Ulls is stricUy Rio Grande College property. This
oaths of office and use whatever force and whatever means
area is 110 feet wide and 220 feet long - a place for social func.
necessary to bring this Jawles!iness to an end.'•
lions and relaxing - not for football games. Ol!r green turf baa
·
Marshall Burnett been greatly damaged by th~ games. Rio Grande College ha.•

Collltruettn Lellen al Opllllll., Ia IOIId lull, an
weleomed. The ediiGr n1 •• llle npc lo w Ia !ellen.
All !ellen mllll be Up I, wl1ll 1 liD lfhl w, aJUreap
laiiUII may be ated 1!pOII l'elj1NII.

k

:

Suggestions, Information Invited

THE NEW MEIGS INN - Tbe fonner Hotel Martin is
ge tting a face ·lifting by Joe Cook. The building is being
painted a cream color with a white trim. Th;e .back entrance
has also been remodeled . The painting islmiking a marked
improvrmen't.

Ohio College Wrapup.
NEW CONCORD, Ohio (UPI)
--::- Muskirigum's Jim Rockwell
went over on a one-yard run
with less than a minute left in
the game to lead Ule Muskies to
a 7-0win over Capital in an Ohio
Conference game as the
Muskies won their first game.
Dick Pollock kicked the extra
point.
WESTERVILLE, Ohio (UP! )
- JerryEiliottthrewtwofourth
quarter touchdown passes,
including a 53-yarder, Otterbein
defeated Marietta 22-10 in an
Ohio
Conference
game
Saturday.
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (UP! )
- Mark Heaton booted a 23yard field goal in the last period
to give Baldwin-Wallace a 10-7
win over Wittenberg in an Ohio
Conference game, after getting
a touchdown on Tom Graham's
95-yard first .quarter score in
the Ohio Conference game.
CLEVELAND (UP! I - Jim
Boland scored three touch·doWI18 as John Carroll romped
to a ~victo r y over Allegheny
Saturday to win the President 's
Athletic Conference title.
CRAWFORDSVILLE , Ind.
( UPI) - Chuck Lowe rushed for
two touchdowns Saturday as
Ohio Wesleyan chalked up their
third consecutive shutout , a 26-0
decision over Wabash .
FINDLAY, Ohio (UPI ) Steve Blackburn returned three
punts for touchdowns and Bill
Wilson scored three touchdowns

Virgi nia Tech 37 Ohio U. 29
Nort h Ca r olina 7 Wake Forest 3

Kent St. 24 Xavie r !Ohio) 13
• • Ohio
St. 31 Wiscon sin 6

as Findlay rolled to a 70-0 win
over Gra nd Valley (Mich. )
Stale Saturday.
·
OBERUN, Ohio (UPI I Denison fullback Bill Harris
carried :&gt;.'&gt; times for 180 yards
and scored three to uchdowns to
lead the Big Red to a 42·20 Ohio
Conference victory over Oberlin
Saturday .

Irish upset
By T rOlaDS
0

J

SOUTH BEND, Ind . (UP! )Edesel Garrison and Bruce
Dyer, two sure-handed ball
Hawks
from
Southern
Ca lifornia, sparked the un derdog Trojans tu a 28-14 upset
over No . 6 ranked Notre Dame
Saturday.
Southern California, an old
Notre Dame nemesis, handed
the Irish their first loss of the
season and ended their own
three-game losing streak .
Garrison, a junior split end,
hauled in two touchdown passes
of 31 and 24 yards, and another
42-yard reception set up still a
third Trojan touchdown.
Dye r , a senior defensive
back, intercepted lwo passes
thrown by Notre Dame's
so phomore quarterback, Cliff
Brown, and returned one of
them 53 yards for a touchdown .
All in all, the Trojans, win·
ning for only the third time in
seven games Ulis season, were
too much for the vaunted Irish,
beaten for the first time in six
starts this season, to handle:

SMU 18 Texas Tech 17

Amher st 35 Wesleya n 10
Coast Guard Jl Wor cester Tech

one yard ph•1ge by fullback
Rick Galbos and 41 yard field
goal by Fred Schram.
Wisconsin's only touchdown
came in the fourth period on a
12 yard run by substitute fullback Gary Lund.
Bradshaw's firsl88 yard run,
a modern Ohio State record
from scrimmage, came early in

Texas A&amp; M 10 Baylor 9
Ill inoi s 21 Purdue 7

Ok lahoma 54 Kansas St. 21
Northwestern 24 Indiana 14

Mi chigan St. 34 Iowa 3

Southern Ca I ifornia 28
Notre Dam e 14

Bucknell 33 Lafayette 0
Columbia 17 Rutgers 16

Colgate 42 Brown 32
Tennessee 10 Mi ssissip pi St. 7
Alabama 34 Houston 20
Aubur n 35 Clem son 13
Wil li am &amp; M ary 12
Virginia Military 7
Nebraska 41 Ok lahom a St . 13
Okla homa 75 Ka nsas St. 28
Brig ham Young 25 Tulsa 7
Ar ka nsa s 60 Nor th Texas St . 21
Iowa St. 40 Kansa s 16
Air For ce 17 Colorado St. 12
Delawa r e 47 West Chester 8
Carne gi e·Mellon 40
Franklin &amp; Mar shall ?
Wes tmin ster
tPa.)
13
Heidelberg 10
Cali fornia ( Pa . I 34 Shi ppen s.

BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
( UPI) - Reid Lamport threw
for two touchdowns Saturday as
Bowling Green picked up 303
yards against Miami, the nation's defensive leader, in a
33-17 Mid-American Conference

game.
Miami, in five games, had
given up an average of 143
yards per game, but sophomore
Lamport guided Ule young Falcons to 194 yards on the ground
and 109 yards in the air .

'

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UP! )
- Fullback Billy Taylor ran for
two touchdowns, hoth on louryard sprints, Saturday in setting a Michigan career record
and leading the third-ranked
Wolverines to a 35-7 victory
over Minnesota Saturday.

Lamport hit split end Roger
Wallace for a 3&amp;-yard scoring
pass to open the second half,
and later connected with Jerry Fields on a 15-yard scoring
play in the fow·th period.
Senior defensive back Julius

Taylor rushed for 166 yards
for a career total of 2,522,
eclipsing the previous record of
2,400 set by Ron Johnson from
1966 to 1968.

Casper Holds 3-Stroke Lead
NAPA , Calif. (UP!) _ Billy
Casper, shooting for his first
tourney title in 14 monUls,
birdied the second hole he
played in the Ulird round of the
150,000 Kaiser International
Open Saturday to maintain a
Ulree-stroke lead over Tommy
Aaron.
Casper, his game back in
hand again thafiks to a new set
of irons, went into the Ulird
round with a 12 under total of
132. He rolled in a 15-fool putt on

Miami 6 with eight seconds left
in the first half. A field goal
attempt failed.
His 127 yards in pass interceptions set a MAC ·record,
breaking the one set by Toledo's
Jim Nell in 1960 against Miami .
Fields gave Bowling Green a
13-0 halftime lead when he capped a 80-yard drive with a one-

climaxed a 33-yard drive.
Miami 'sonly touchdown came
in the fourth period when senior defensive halfback Tim Raybuck returned a punt for 50
yards .
Paul Miles, fourth in the nalion in rushin g, picked up 102
yards in 33 carries for the Faicons, while sophomore Bob Hit·
chens Jed the Miami rushing
game with 63 yards in 16 carries.
Bowling Green is 5-1 overall
and 4-1 in the conference, while
Miami fell to a 4-2 mark and
lost its second straight game
wiUlout a win in league play.

•
BANISH

~HOM,t,,
BLAn~

SOONERS ROMP
MANHATTAN,Kan . (UP!) Oklahoma's "Sooper" Sooners I
scored the first 10 times Uley I
touched the football and Greg I
Pruitt proved as hard to tackle 1
as a wisp of smoke Saturday as I
the Nation's No. 2-ranked I
----;;-football team crushed Kansas
state, 75-28.
I
Pruitt scored three touch- I
downs and romped 294 yards on I
only 17 carries as the Sooners I
rolled up 711 yards rushing, a 1
Big Eight Conference record. 1 DARWIN E. PETRIE
TARRASA, Spain (UPI)- I
Special Agent
Pakistan, the defending Olym- 1
Restdence
pic champion , defeated India, 2- 1
P. ~- Box _271
1, Friday in the finals of the 1 Galhpolts, Oh10 45631
first World Field Hockey I Telephone: 446-4153
Championship.
'
• _

i

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wiUl Fritz Seyferth plunging
over to make it 14-7. The
Gophers drove into Michigan
territory late in the first half,
but a field goal attempt by Mel
Anderson fell short with three
seconds left.
Michigan added another
touchdown in the fourth quarter
with Glenn Doughty going in
from the 11. The Gophers
fumbl ed the ball on the
following kickoff, but Michigan
recovered on the 16 of Minnesot.a.
Larry Cipa threw a five ya rd
touchdown pass to Larry
Gustafson to make it 35-7.

riA•;.••••••••••••••••••••IJll•••••••

FRENCH CITY BUILDERS
SUPPLY .

I

150 1st Ave.

DON'T MISS IT, BRING THE
FAMILY DSTAY ALL DAY

600 MORE TROUT WILL BE STOCKED OCT. 27th~
WING FOR PRIZES
DAYS

LOCATION: TAKE NEW LIMA RD., OFF RT. 124
IN ~UTLAND (AT THE POST OFFICE CORNER).

r

...

I

Gallipolis, Ohio

HOURS 6. A.M. TIL 8 ·P.M.

threeestablishedfootballflelds~ouse. If there is IUcba thing as a

Rio Grande Village Green then the newspaperS must be referrln!.
, Columbus, Ohio to the Rio Grande LitUe League Field.
. '
Oct. 22, 1971
·'
Rio Grande College ~aka that all Rio Grande VU)aae parents
Dear Sir:
.
urge their children and frlenda to please U$C the LltUe League
On. August 4, )911, Governor John Gilligan appointed a Field for all future 'football games,
'
Housin~ and Comrilirnity Develo~en(Advlsory Commission. He
• · W. F. Fadeley, Grounda Keepo'.r, Rio GL"aro~e College .

Livas opened the scoring when
he picked off a pass from Miami quarterback Stew Showalter and ran it 39 yards for a
score.
He picked off another pass on
his own 6 and returned it to the

Then the Wolverines drove
down the field in 11 plays before
Taylor took it over from the 4 at
8:44 of the first quarter.
He scored again after the
Wolverines recovered a Minnesota fumble on the Gopher 19..
Taylor ran all three plays in the
drive, the final coming at 13 :39.
The Gophers, who lost four
fumble s, tied it up 7-7 in the
second quarter when Curry
completed a 73-yard touchdown
pass to Honza at 4:20.1l was the
longest touchdown pass of his
career .
But on the next dri ve,
the par-three !50-yard second Michigan drove 79 yards to the I
hole at Stlverado to ptck up a
stroke ..
But Aaron, who started the
day three strokes off the pace
wtth a mne under score of 135,
btrdted the par-four thtrd hole to
keep pace wiUl Casper. Aaron
hasn 'l won a tttle smce Ule 1970
Atlanta Classic.
Mike Hill, another nonwiLULer, started the third round
five strokes behind Casper and
picked up two birds in the first
five holes of the third round to
move into a contending position .
• • -• 1 coat gives

The vittory boosted unbeaten
Michigan to 7-0 overall.
Taylor's first touchdown gave
the Wolves a 7-0 lead in the first
quarter. The second came in the
third quarter and put the game
out of reach, 21-7.
Minnesota drov e to the
Michigan 26 after taking the
opening kickoff, but a fourth
down pass from Craig Curry to
George Honza was ruled incomplete when Honza caught it
a step out of the end wne.

r----•••

OHIO COLLEGE
Ohio State 31 Wisconsin 6
Bowling Green 33 Miami 7
Kent State 24 Xavier 11
Baldwin-Wallace 10 Wittenberg
7
Muskingum 7 Capital 0
Denison 42 Oberlin 20
Ashland 22 Ohio Northern 7
Otterbein 22 Marietta 10
Central State:&gt;.'&gt; W. Virginia St.
College 0
Wooster 13 Kenyon 12
Mount Union 30 Hiram 20
Findlay 70 Grand Valley (Mich.
State 6
Ohio Wesleyan 26 Wabash 0
John Carroll 35 Allegheny 0
Virginia Tech 37 Ohio
University 29
13
Westminister
( Pa .)
Heidelberg 10

scoring. opportunities when
Lamka passes to wide receiver
Jimmy Lee Harris and tight
end Fred Pagac were dropped
when both receivers were deep
and in the open.
Rufus ''Roadrunner ''......
Ferguson, the Big Ten's leading
rusher going in the game,
picked up 152 yards in 23 carries
but was kept out of the end zone.

Michigan Makes 1t 7 In A Row ~:;1~:~~~~~~~~dr~e:~:h

burg6
Lycoming 25 Susquehanna 10

executed pitch out from quarterback Don Lamka. Bradshaw cut
to the sidelines and went the
rest of the way untouched.
Galbos, who . shifted to Ml·
back three weeks ago after regular John Bledsoe suffered a
leg injury, scored his touchdown following a 55 yard march
I'
in 10 plays.
Ohio State missed possible

after Wisconsin coughed up the
ball on miscues.
Lippert score on the first
play from scrimmage following
the recovery of a fwnble by
linebacker Stan White.
Bradshaw 's first touchdown
run, before 86,659 Homecoming
fans and a regional television
audience, came on a perfecUy

BG Surprises Miami, .33-17

23

Georg ia Tec h 24 Tulane 16
Mi ss issippi 28 Vanderbi lt 7

the second period, two minutes
affer Lippert's burst up the
middle for the first Buckeye
score.
His second touchdown, an 88
yard kickoff return, was the
longest for a score in the Big
Ten this year.
BothLippert'sscoreandBradshaw's first touchdown came

.

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�,,.,

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U-The SUndayTime!. -Sentinei,Sunday,Oct. 24, 197;

OUDrops

su, 31-6

COLl)MBUS (UPI )-Sophomore Morris Bradshaw broke
loose. ·for two sp&lt;!ctacular 88
yard touchdown runs Saturday
to pace lith ranked Ohio State
to a surprisingly, easy 31-0 Big
Ten win over- Wisconsin.
led Ohio by scoring on runs of
The Buckeyes other scores
13 and two yards, catching a 12· came on a 48 yard run by sophyard scoring pass, and hitting omore tailback Elmer Upper!, a
Larry Young with a six-yard ..
touchdown toss. He added a two
point conversion pass to Don
Reinhard, and Dave Green
booted an extra point. Ohio also
tackled Don Strock in the end
zone for a safety .
Strock's new records include
386 yards of total offense, and a
78-yard scoring toss to Quinn, By United Press lnterna1iona I
oston Colt. 40 Pittsburgh 22
which he got off while being B
Boston U. 28 Rhode Island 7
tackled .
Dartmouth 16 Harvard 13
The 6-4 junior quarterback Penn St. 66 TCU 14
also unloaded a short pass West Virginia 43 Templ e 33
Tr in ity (Conn. ) 37
while being hit that Colobro
Rochester U. 21
turned into a 5!:-yard touchdown North Ca roli na A&amp; T 13 Howard
3
play by shrugging off: four Ohio
Georgia 34 Kentucky 0
tacklers. Strock's single game Ri chmond 20 Furman 0
passing record marked the fifth Cornell 31 Yale 10
time in six games that he Army l4 Virginia 9
inceton 31 Pen n 0
smashed that mark this year. Pr
Navy 15 Duke 14
/

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·· . , ...

37-~29

,

Tilt

BLACKSBURG, Va. (UPI)Don Strock sQlashed four school
records as he-passed for three
touchdowns . and ;JJ6 yards
Saturday while pacing Virginia
Tech past Ohio University 37-29.
QuarterbacWStrockconnected
on 19 of ~I passes, including
scoring lOsses to Nick Colobro,
Jimmy Quinn and Don Reel; to
obliterate the: school's old single
-game reco,rds for passing
yardage, individual total offense, longest scoring play, and
season total offense.
Sophomore James Barber
lunged across for another Tech
score on a three-yard run, and
Nick Colobro added the final
tally on a two-yard dive. Dave
Strock, the quarterback's older
brother, kicked a 31-yard field
goal and four extra points.
Quarterback Dave Jeunger

'I

ROBERT BISSEU..
CHESTER
Robert
Eugeoe Bissell, 17, sou of Mr.
aod Mrs. Charles Bissell,
Chesler, left Suoday for
Falrmool, W. Va., where he
was Inducted into the U. S.
Marine Corps. He weol to the
Clarksburg airport Monday
where he left via plane for
Charleston, S. C. He Is now
stationed at Parris Island for
10 weeks training. Prior to his
enllstmeot, Bissell attended
Eastern Hlgb School.

Sy rac use 63 Hol y Cross 21
Wi ll iams 33 Tufts 6

Florida 27 Maryland 23

'
HE GOT IT -BIDOieaey,No. .,, a 171 Jb, Junior left elll
Of the Meigs Marauders, made the catd! of the season Friday
night at Athens when a long pass to him was batted Into the
air by one of two Athens defenders, Mike Green (12), or
RIITLAND - PIC!'URESQUE FORE51' ACRES PARK on tbe New Lima Road - the
favorite spot of numerous Meigs Countians who wish to "get away from it aU" occasionally will be tbe scene of anoUler trout fishing derby next weekend .
Some 600 rainbow trout will be placed in the park's lake this week in preparation for the
weekend . Fishing for Ule prized catches will begin at 6 a.m. both days and will continue until8
p.m. No fishing license is required to take part In the event being sponsored by the Leading
Creek Conservan cy Distr ict.
Four attendance prizes will be awarded over Ule weekend - perhaps, a bit of a consolation
to those who miss out on catching a trout. Admission charge is $2 each day .
REGISTRATION UP
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Voter
registration in both Franklin
County and the city of Columbus
set new records this year. In
Franklin County 350,123
residents registered eclipsing
the old mark of 340,377 set in
November, 1970. The Columbus
registration of 217,157 passed
the old mark of 178,218
B)' BRUCE BIOSSAT
registrations in 1967, the last
WASHINGTON tNEA &gt; mayoral election year.
Presently . only six of the 14 possible Democratic
presidential candidates · are serious factors in the 1972
race . Some of the six probably can have only negative
DEVINE (lN MAT
impact, meaning they can hurt somebody else but...not
WASHINGTON (UP f) - The
win nomination for themselves .
Three are in what one experienced party observer Americans for Democratic
calls Category One. candidates with either good or at Action said here Rep. Samuel L.
least some chance to take the prize . The names : Sen . Devine , R-Ohio, can be beaten
Edmund Muskie . Sen . Edward Kenned y. Sen . Hubert by newly enfranchised college
Humphrey.
·
students in his district. Included
The other three are in Category Two . prospects with
enough potential strength to be telling fac tors in the in his districts , the ADA said,
nomination struggle but not likely to win . The list : are Ohio Sta te University,
Mayor John Lindsay of New Yor k. Sen . Henry Jackson. Otterbein College, Ohio
Sen . George Mc'Govern.
Wesleyan and Denison and
No seasoned analysts in the Democratic party are Capital Universities with a total
perceiving any serious, in the sense of decisive , role in enrollment of 50,300.
the 1972 battle for any of the other eight current ly on
the roster of " mentioned " or active candidates.
That list includes : Senators Birch Bayh of Indiana.
Fred Harris of Oklahoma , William Proxmire of Wisconsin; U.S. Reps. Wilbur Mills of Arkansas , Shirley FRAZIER HOSPITALIZED
NEW YORK (UP!i-All-pro
Chisholm of New York . William Anderson of Tennessee :
former Sen . Eugene McCarthy. and Mayor Samuel guard Walt Frazier of the New
Yorty of Los Angeles .
York Knicks was admitted to
New sweeps of the country by professional political Roosevelt Hospital Friday to
appraisers turn up few surprises. Muskie still is the undergo a checkup for a
man to beat. Kennedy is widely believed to have a real stomach disorder.
chance but only if the party reac hes convention time
The Knicks immediately
next summer with no prominent front-runner .
signed
eight-year veteran Eddie
Checks on party leader sentiment provide hin ts that
Miles to help out at guard while
Humphrey may be fading somewhat .
Frazier
undetgoes tests.
It has become the stock thing to say but it is still
true : Muskie shows a continuing resilience that enables
him to ride out his difficulties and keep moving . The
newest lump-sum endorsement from the Missouri contingent, Gov . Warren Hearnes and Sens. Stuart SymingBUILDING DEMOCRACY
ton and Thomas Eagleton , is the sort of event that susATHENS ( UP! ) - VIce
tains the imoression of his forward motion.
Jackson's potential in the South and Southwest is an
President Splfo T. Agne~ flew
established part of the story . The general judgment is
home Saturday b eanng a
that it makes him a factor to be dealt with , but not
message to . President · Ntx~n
a likely winner. Any successful undercutting of his
that the Greek government IS
,southern strength by a mischievous Gov. George Wallace
"working day and night" to
would gravely diminish Jackson's impact on the race .
build a democracy.
McGovern stays low in the polls. But some politicians
think the dedication of his followers. es pecially young
ones, could drum out primary votes in pe rcentages .up
to twice that of his poll stat us.
Lindsay is , of course. the new and volatile element
in Category Two. His charism a and his proven ability to
campaign on the tube and on the sidewalk make hi m
a man all other bidders fear . He cou ld he particularly
hurtful to McGovern .
You can't find ·it for the others . Bayh and Harris
aren't catching on . Yo u need a telescope to spot Prox mtre, Congressman Anderson lformer nuclear submarine
commander !, and Sam Yorty.
Mills could have li mited effect in the South in states
th~t want to, hold awhile . McCarthy still has something
gomg, but Lt s elusive. Mrs. Ch1sholm, the black cand idate from New York, could win some delegates in a few
black areas and deprive the more liberal white cand idates of possi ble black support.
From the newest readings, if you were a cautious'
bettor you'd have to wager it's going to be either Muskie
or Kenned y, with Lindsay far back on the outside, tap'able
of a threatenmg burst. The others either won't count
seriously at all . or they can hurt Muskie without aiding
themselves .

BRUCE BIOSSAT

Of 14 Democrats

72 Nomination
Boils Down to ··6

NHL Standings

AHL Slandings

By United Press lnternationa I

East

New York
Boston
Montreal
, Toronto
Buftato
Detroit

4

.
Chicago

1

1

3 1 2

West

East

W.L.T. Pis.
4 1 1

Van couver

By United Press ln1erna1iO•lal

3
1
2
2

5 0

3 2
l 0
4 0

9

9 ,Boston

8 Springf ield
6 Nova Scot1a
Rochester
4
4 Providence
4
Cincinnat i
Hershey
Ba l timore

West

W.L.T.Pis.
3 0 1
3 1 1
3 2 0

7
7
6

J J 0
1 3 2.

6
4

W.L.T.Pis.

4 0 2 10
4 1 1 9
2 2 2 6
2 4 2 6
1 4 I
J
1 7 o 2

W.L.T. Pis.
1 0 12
Ptt tsb~rgh
5 1 0 10 Cleveland
Ml nnesota
3 1 1 7 Ri chmond
Lo&gt; Angeles
2 4 1 5
·Philadelphia
2 J o 4 Tidewater
Friday's Results
St . .Louis
2 4 0 4 Cleveland
2 Baltimore 2
Californ ia
0 5 2 2 Providence 4 Cincinnati 4
Frid.1y ' s Results
Boston at ROchester ....
Detroit s Toronto 2
( Ppd, strike by ushers I
Montreal 6 Vancouver 0
,
H
ershey
5 Springfte lq 2
Bosloo l Californ ia 1
!Only
games
scheduled !
!Onlv aames scheduled\
6

David Oldfield (25). 01eney dived !CII" the ball moments after
thla picture was taken and picked It off inches from the
ground. The Heroics dldn 't bring victory, however, as the
Bulldogs went on to win 3!-0.

asked the Commission to undertake a tl~rough Investigation of
the state's housing needs, to idenUfy the conatralnts and Jm.
pediments 'in the housing field, and to develop specific
legislative proposals for significant state involvement In meeting
Ohio's housing needs.
.
The Coounission has already held three meetings ol the entire
CHARLES JOHNSON
body, and numerous subcommittee meetings. To date we bave
POMEROY - Airman
focused on five sub6tantive areas : development, financial aids,
Charles F. Johnson, soo of
housing costs, hwnan components, and land use planning.
Mr. aod Mrs. Harry E.
We believe there is now the opportunity to constructively
Johnson of Rt. 3, Rose Hill,
begin meeting this critical need, the need to bridge the widening
Pomeroy, has completed Lebanon Levy Explained
gap
in Ohio.
Portland, Ohio
basic training at Lacklaod
The Commission would appreciate any comments or
Oct. 22, 1971
•
AFB, Tex., and Is assigned to
suggestions your readers might wisJl to make regarding our wock.
Kees ler AFB, Miss ., for To the Editor:
Many of my neighbors are concerned about the half-mill levy Only with the advice and help of lbe many individuals and groups
training io commuoicatlons
electronics systems. Airman for trustees of Lebanon township on the ballot, whether everyone· concerned with housing Jrablems In Ohio can the Commission
Johnson is a 1971 graduate knows what it's for , and so they asked me to explain it in the succeed.
Please direct suggestions and Information to me through the
newspaper.
of Meigs High School.
Since my understanding of it wasn't too clear, I talked with Commission, 8 East Long Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215.
James I. Huston, Chainnan
Warden Ours, one of the Commissioners, about it. He says he is
all for it because is it to pay for cleaning the cemeteries in
SERIOUS, NOT FATAL
Denied Truth, Given Blasphemy
NEW LEXINGTON , Ohio Lebanon Township.
Gallipolis, Ohio
1UP!) - Edgar Martindale, Should this levy not pass, the work would he discontinued
superintendent of the water because there is no other money appropriated for this. It will not
Oct. 19, 1971
wo rks here , said a major raise the taxes, but is a renewal of levy already in effect.
Dear Sir:
shortage in this community is
So we are hoping every one gets out to vote on the half mill
The vocal training section of our high school is in the process
serious but not as critical as levy, or our cemeteries will again be a wilderness of wild grapes, of readying a presentation which includes selectioru from "Jesus
other local officials in the honeysuckle and green briar vines lind other brush and bramble. Olri.st Superstar." Here Is a monumental travesty: the schools
community fear. Gov. John J.
We don't want to go hack to the «5 and 50s when you couldn't are denied use of Holy Scriptures which contain the truth, must
Gilliga n late Friday declared a tell where cemeteries were in some places. One near here bad its refrain from school-sponsored worship of God, but are allowed to
state of emergency in the fence down, and after a fire had burned the posts, and cattle got present in musical fonn, satanical untruth,
community to permit local in, monuments were destroyed by vandals.
ThisS&lt;Kalled rock opera puis together ideas which canno&gt;lle
officials to draw water from
We did what we could. Estella,Cozart and I went among the substantiated , from anybody's version of the Bible. It is
state-&lt;&gt;wned Clouse Lake.
neighbors, wrote to relatives living in other stati-o and in service blaspbemOWJ, profane, desecrating, irreverent, sacrilegious and
for donations to rebuild the fence and gates, and clean up the a:together without redeeming social value . It ts pollution of the
(Knobbs ) Cemetery for Decoration Day.
basest sort.
OUTBREAK QUELLED
By July 4th it was grown up again. So every one was happy
Some of the vocal group have wisely chosen not to participate
NEW YORK (UPI )- Guards when tbe levy was first passed and trustees mowed them every ,
in these particular numbers, and are to be commended for this
in the grim New York County month or so.
stand.
jail called The Tombs quelled
If our churches and cemeteries as well as our homes are kept
It is the prayer and wish of many that a change may he forthan outbreak of violence by
attractive
and
presentable
it
gives
a
good
Impression
of
our
corning
omitting these vulgarities from this forthcoming
homosexual inmates in 15
minutes Friday night without cornmuoity or neighborhood - And all who come our way can presentation. How muclt better it would be to thrill the listeners
with something like tl!,e following, from many denominations'
injuring any of Ule prisoners, enjoy them. Let's get together on \his.
Goldie
Clendenin
.
older
hymnals:
city authorities said Saturday.
"rve reached the land of com and wloe
Willi all Its rlcbes freely mine,
SOUTH POINT UPSET
Not Apathetic, Just Helpless
Where shines, undimmed, ooe blissful day,
SOUTH POINT - Coal Grove
Gallipolis,
Ohio
Where .n my We Is passed away. ·
upset ·defending Ohio Valley
Oct.
22,
1971
Conference champion South Dear Editor :
Ob, Bealab land, sweet Bealab land,
Point, 28-23 here Friday night.
~ on tbe !dcbest mooat I stBDd;
I disagree with Mr. lilennan Porter's Influence In his
The Hornets, now 4-2 on the
I look away llei'IISS tbe sea,
year, dropped the Pointers out editorial, Apathy Against Crime Must Be Removed Here," that
Where llll!IIBIOIII are prepared for me
of a tie for first place in the Gallia Countians are apathetic toward crime. They are not
And view tbe sblnlng Glory Shore,
OVC, and now sbare~ the league apathetic, they just do not get envolved because·they feel that it is
My
Heaven, my Home, forever more?"
lead with unbeateh Ironton St. useless on their part to try to do anything about crime, when so
Respectfully,
Joe
'·
many times a criminal, if apprehended, is not prosecuted and as a
Milly Dennis
&amp;uth Point dropped to 4-3 on result he goes unpunished and is set free to &lt;Xlmmit the same, or
the year.
worse, crime later on.
Chess Club is Proposed
Look what bas been going on throughout eastern and southGallipolis, Ohio
eastern Ohio the last few days:
Oct. 22, 1971
Lawless baods of United Mine workers pickets have roved To Oiess Players (Or would-be Players) :
· throughout \his section of the state committing acts of violence,
Serious Interest among some of my friends and acquaindestruction, and intimidation against law-abiding non-union tances .has suggested that a chess club in Gallipolis could or
miners and coal haulers, without any. interference from Gov. should be a genuine asset to both the youths and adults of the
Gilligan's state law enforcement officials and without any in· conununity.
terference from local Jaw enforcement officials.
I don' claim to be an expert or pro In cl!e8f IUlll I am sure that ·
There is something badly wrong when elected law en- numerous cltess players in this community or \1clnlty can beat
forcement officials will set idly by and allow a lawless mob to take the pants off me, but the heck of the whole situation 1s: (Where
to the public highways and use force and violence to suppress the are you?)
Constitutional rights of others.
·Of course, I'm joking, but I would like to see a well organized
I am wondering just how effective Mr. Porter's "volunteer and successful club organized here.
band of enformers which he calls a Committee of Gallla CounNeedless to say, any organization or club needs and demands
tlans" would have been In apprehending this band of outlaws.
. a beglrmlng. That's the main Jrablem.
The last few'days I have talked to a great nwnber of people,
I will try to begin the club lf I have eno1J8b response to thla
both urtion and non-union, ahout these roving U.M,W, pickets. request from serious people. Telephone me at 446-2688.
They have all expressed great concern about the constitutional
Respectfully,Freemon Locke, 12Air Port Rd.
-.. ~'
rights of us all if these incidents are allowed to continue unchallenged. Everyone, regardless of politics and whetber union or Not on the Green, Please
Rio Grande, Ohio
non-union, have condemned our governor and local law en· To Whom It May Concern :
forcement officials for failing to JI'Otect the Constitutional rights
Rio Grande College wishes to thank the residents of Rio
of these non-union nilners and coal haulers.
Grande for their interest and friendship toward our college. We
' The great majority of our people are honorable and law
want them to he proad of us as we are of them as law abiding
abiding and respect the rights of others wtio are Jivjng and
citlielll. That Is why we work so bard to keep the cans and broken
working within the framework of our Constitutional system of bottles picked up and all of our premises clean.
Jaws .
AIM, we are proud of oilr green campus in front ol Allen Hall
Our elected officials must be reminded that the responsible,
which has been called the VIllage 'Greea in some newspapers.
Jaw-abiding people have the right to expect them to honor their
This;is'nQI so- Ulls is stricUy Rio Grande College property. This
oaths of office and use whatever force and whatever means
area is 110 feet wide and 220 feet long - a place for social func.
necessary to bring this Jawles!iness to an end.'•
lions and relaxing - not for football games. Ol!r green turf baa
·
Marshall Burnett been greatly damaged by th~ games. Rio Grande College ha.•

Collltruettn Lellen al Opllllll., Ia IOIId lull, an
weleomed. The ediiGr n1 •• llle npc lo w Ia !ellen.
All !ellen mllll be Up I, wl1ll 1 liD lfhl w, aJUreap
laiiUII may be ated 1!pOII l'elj1NII.

k

:

Suggestions, Information Invited

THE NEW MEIGS INN - Tbe fonner Hotel Martin is
ge tting a face ·lifting by Joe Cook. The building is being
painted a cream color with a white trim. Th;e .back entrance
has also been remodeled . The painting islmiking a marked
improvrmen't.

Ohio College Wrapup.
NEW CONCORD, Ohio (UPI)
--::- Muskirigum's Jim Rockwell
went over on a one-yard run
with less than a minute left in
the game to lead Ule Muskies to
a 7-0win over Capital in an Ohio
Conference game as the
Muskies won their first game.
Dick Pollock kicked the extra
point.
WESTERVILLE, Ohio (UP! )
- JerryEiliottthrewtwofourth
quarter touchdown passes,
including a 53-yarder, Otterbein
defeated Marietta 22-10 in an
Ohio
Conference
game
Saturday.
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (UP! )
- Mark Heaton booted a 23yard field goal in the last period
to give Baldwin-Wallace a 10-7
win over Wittenberg in an Ohio
Conference game, after getting
a touchdown on Tom Graham's
95-yard first .quarter score in
the Ohio Conference game.
CLEVELAND (UP! I - Jim
Boland scored three touch·doWI18 as John Carroll romped
to a ~victo r y over Allegheny
Saturday to win the President 's
Athletic Conference title.
CRAWFORDSVILLE , Ind.
( UPI) - Chuck Lowe rushed for
two touchdowns Saturday as
Ohio Wesleyan chalked up their
third consecutive shutout , a 26-0
decision over Wabash .
FINDLAY, Ohio (UPI ) Steve Blackburn returned three
punts for touchdowns and Bill
Wilson scored three touchdowns

Virgi nia Tech 37 Ohio U. 29
Nort h Ca r olina 7 Wake Forest 3

Kent St. 24 Xavie r !Ohio) 13
• • Ohio
St. 31 Wiscon sin 6

as Findlay rolled to a 70-0 win
over Gra nd Valley (Mich. )
Stale Saturday.
·
OBERUN, Ohio (UPI I Denison fullback Bill Harris
carried :&gt;.'&gt; times for 180 yards
and scored three to uchdowns to
lead the Big Red to a 42·20 Ohio
Conference victory over Oberlin
Saturday .

Irish upset
By T rOlaDS
0

J

SOUTH BEND, Ind . (UP! )Edesel Garrison and Bruce
Dyer, two sure-handed ball
Hawks
from
Southern
Ca lifornia, sparked the un derdog Trojans tu a 28-14 upset
over No . 6 ranked Notre Dame
Saturday.
Southern California, an old
Notre Dame nemesis, handed
the Irish their first loss of the
season and ended their own
three-game losing streak .
Garrison, a junior split end,
hauled in two touchdown passes
of 31 and 24 yards, and another
42-yard reception set up still a
third Trojan touchdown.
Dye r , a senior defensive
back, intercepted lwo passes
thrown by Notre Dame's
so phomore quarterback, Cliff
Brown, and returned one of
them 53 yards for a touchdown .
All in all, the Trojans, win·
ning for only the third time in
seven games Ulis season, were
too much for the vaunted Irish,
beaten for the first time in six
starts this season, to handle:

SMU 18 Texas Tech 17

Amher st 35 Wesleya n 10
Coast Guard Jl Wor cester Tech

one yard ph•1ge by fullback
Rick Galbos and 41 yard field
goal by Fred Schram.
Wisconsin's only touchdown
came in the fourth period on a
12 yard run by substitute fullback Gary Lund.
Bradshaw's firsl88 yard run,
a modern Ohio State record
from scrimmage, came early in

Texas A&amp; M 10 Baylor 9
Ill inoi s 21 Purdue 7

Ok lahoma 54 Kansas St. 21
Northwestern 24 Indiana 14

Mi chigan St. 34 Iowa 3

Southern Ca I ifornia 28
Notre Dam e 14

Bucknell 33 Lafayette 0
Columbia 17 Rutgers 16

Colgate 42 Brown 32
Tennessee 10 Mi ssissip pi St. 7
Alabama 34 Houston 20
Aubur n 35 Clem son 13
Wil li am &amp; M ary 12
Virginia Military 7
Nebraska 41 Ok lahom a St . 13
Okla homa 75 Ka nsas St. 28
Brig ham Young 25 Tulsa 7
Ar ka nsa s 60 Nor th Texas St . 21
Iowa St. 40 Kansa s 16
Air For ce 17 Colorado St. 12
Delawa r e 47 West Chester 8
Carne gi e·Mellon 40
Franklin &amp; Mar shall ?
Wes tmin ster
tPa.)
13
Heidelberg 10
Cali fornia ( Pa . I 34 Shi ppen s.

BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
( UPI) - Reid Lamport threw
for two touchdowns Saturday as
Bowling Green picked up 303
yards against Miami, the nation's defensive leader, in a
33-17 Mid-American Conference

game.
Miami, in five games, had
given up an average of 143
yards per game, but sophomore
Lamport guided Ule young Falcons to 194 yards on the ground
and 109 yards in the air .

'

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UP! )
- Fullback Billy Taylor ran for
two touchdowns, hoth on louryard sprints, Saturday in setting a Michigan career record
and leading the third-ranked
Wolverines to a 35-7 victory
over Minnesota Saturday.

Lamport hit split end Roger
Wallace for a 3&amp;-yard scoring
pass to open the second half,
and later connected with Jerry Fields on a 15-yard scoring
play in the fow·th period.
Senior defensive back Julius

Taylor rushed for 166 yards
for a career total of 2,522,
eclipsing the previous record of
2,400 set by Ron Johnson from
1966 to 1968.

Casper Holds 3-Stroke Lead
NAPA , Calif. (UP!) _ Billy
Casper, shooting for his first
tourney title in 14 monUls,
birdied the second hole he
played in the Ulird round of the
150,000 Kaiser International
Open Saturday to maintain a
Ulree-stroke lead over Tommy
Aaron.
Casper, his game back in
hand again thafiks to a new set
of irons, went into the Ulird
round with a 12 under total of
132. He rolled in a 15-fool putt on

Miami 6 with eight seconds left
in the first half. A field goal
attempt failed.
His 127 yards in pass interceptions set a MAC ·record,
breaking the one set by Toledo's
Jim Nell in 1960 against Miami .
Fields gave Bowling Green a
13-0 halftime lead when he capped a 80-yard drive with a one-

climaxed a 33-yard drive.
Miami 'sonly touchdown came
in the fourth period when senior defensive halfback Tim Raybuck returned a punt for 50
yards .
Paul Miles, fourth in the nalion in rushin g, picked up 102
yards in 33 carries for the Faicons, while sophomore Bob Hit·
chens Jed the Miami rushing
game with 63 yards in 16 carries.
Bowling Green is 5-1 overall
and 4-1 in the conference, while
Miami fell to a 4-2 mark and
lost its second straight game
wiUlout a win in league play.

•
BANISH

~HOM,t,,
BLAn~

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MANHATTAN,Kan . (UP!) Oklahoma's "Sooper" Sooners I
scored the first 10 times Uley I
touched the football and Greg I
Pruitt proved as hard to tackle 1
as a wisp of smoke Saturday as I
the Nation's No. 2-ranked I
----;;-football team crushed Kansas
state, 75-28.
I
Pruitt scored three touch- I
downs and romped 294 yards on I
only 17 carries as the Sooners I
rolled up 711 yards rushing, a 1
Big Eight Conference record. 1 DARWIN E. PETRIE
TARRASA, Spain (UPI)- I
Special Agent
Pakistan, the defending Olym- 1
Restdence
pic champion , defeated India, 2- 1
P. ~- Box _271
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wiUl Fritz Seyferth plunging
over to make it 14-7. The
Gophers drove into Michigan
territory late in the first half,
but a field goal attempt by Mel
Anderson fell short with three
seconds left.
Michigan added another
touchdown in the fourth quarter
with Glenn Doughty going in
from the 11. The Gophers
fumbl ed the ball on the
following kickoff, but Michigan
recovered on the 16 of Minnesot.a.
Larry Cipa threw a five ya rd
touchdown pass to Larry
Gustafson to make it 35-7.

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HOURS 6. A.M. TIL 8 ·P.M.

threeestablishedfootballflelds~ouse. If there is IUcba thing as a

Rio Grande Village Green then the newspaperS must be referrln!.
, Columbus, Ohio to the Rio Grande LitUe League Field.
. '
Oct. 22, 1971
·'
Rio Grande College ~aka that all Rio Grande VU)aae parents
Dear Sir:
.
urge their children and frlenda to please U$C the LltUe League
On. August 4, )911, Governor John Gilligan appointed a Field for all future 'football games,
'
Housin~ and Comrilirnity Develo~en(Advlsory Commission. He
• · W. F. Fadeley, Grounda Keepo'.r, Rio GL"aro~e College .

Livas opened the scoring when
he picked off a pass from Miami quarterback Stew Showalter and ran it 39 yards for a
score.
He picked off another pass on
his own 6 and returned it to the

Then the Wolverines drove
down the field in 11 plays before
Taylor took it over from the 4 at
8:44 of the first quarter.
He scored again after the
Wolverines recovered a Minnesota fumble on the Gopher 19..
Taylor ran all three plays in the
drive, the final coming at 13 :39.
The Gophers, who lost four
fumble s, tied it up 7-7 in the
second quarter when Curry
completed a 73-yard touchdown
pass to Honza at 4:20.1l was the
longest touchdown pass of his
career .
But on the next dri ve,
the par-three !50-yard second Michigan drove 79 yards to the I
hole at Stlverado to ptck up a
stroke ..
But Aaron, who started the
day three strokes off the pace
wtth a mne under score of 135,
btrdted the par-four thtrd hole to
keep pace wiUl Casper. Aaron
hasn 'l won a tttle smce Ule 1970
Atlanta Classic.
Mike Hill, another nonwiLULer, started the third round
five strokes behind Casper and
picked up two birds in the first
five holes of the third round to
move into a contending position .
• • -• 1 coat gives

The vittory boosted unbeaten
Michigan to 7-0 overall.
Taylor's first touchdown gave
the Wolves a 7-0 lead in the first
quarter. The second came in the
third quarter and put the game
out of reach, 21-7.
Minnesota drov e to the
Michigan 26 after taking the
opening kickoff, but a fourth
down pass from Craig Curry to
George Honza was ruled incomplete when Honza caught it
a step out of the end wne.

r----•••

OHIO COLLEGE
Ohio State 31 Wisconsin 6
Bowling Green 33 Miami 7
Kent State 24 Xavier 11
Baldwin-Wallace 10 Wittenberg
7
Muskingum 7 Capital 0
Denison 42 Oberlin 20
Ashland 22 Ohio Northern 7
Otterbein 22 Marietta 10
Central State:&gt;.'&gt; W. Virginia St.
College 0
Wooster 13 Kenyon 12
Mount Union 30 Hiram 20
Findlay 70 Grand Valley (Mich.
State 6
Ohio Wesleyan 26 Wabash 0
John Carroll 35 Allegheny 0
Virginia Tech 37 Ohio
University 29
13
Westminister
( Pa .)
Heidelberg 10

scoring. opportunities when
Lamka passes to wide receiver
Jimmy Lee Harris and tight
end Fred Pagac were dropped
when both receivers were deep
and in the open.
Rufus ''Roadrunner ''......
Ferguson, the Big Ten's leading
rusher going in the game,
picked up 152 yards in 23 carries
but was kept out of the end zone.

Michigan Makes 1t 7 In A Row ~:;1~:~~~~~~~~dr~e:~:h

burg6
Lycoming 25 Susquehanna 10

executed pitch out from quarterback Don Lamka. Bradshaw cut
to the sidelines and went the
rest of the way untouched.
Galbos, who . shifted to Ml·
back three weeks ago after regular John Bledsoe suffered a
leg injury, scored his touchdown following a 55 yard march
I'
in 10 plays.
Ohio State missed possible

after Wisconsin coughed up the
ball on miscues.
Lippert score on the first
play from scrimmage following
the recovery of a fwnble by
linebacker Stan White.
Bradshaw 's first touchdown
run, before 86,659 Homecoming
fans and a regional television
audience, came on a perfecUy

BG Surprises Miami, .33-17

23

Georg ia Tec h 24 Tulane 16
Mi ss issippi 28 Vanderbi lt 7

the second period, two minutes
affer Lippert's burst up the
middle for the first Buckeye
score.
His second touchdown, an 88
yard kickoff return, was the
longest for a score in the Big
Ten this year.
BothLippert'sscoreandBradshaw's first touchdown came

.

"" '
'

�L
_17- Tbe Sunday Times-sentinel, Stmday, Oct. 24,1971

16- The Sunday Times -sentinel, Sunoo··. Oct. 24, 1911

£vo urth
~

MERCERVILLE - Combining an explosive ofrense with
a stingy defense, North Gallia 's
Pirates rolled to their .fourth
win in the last five starts here
Fridl&gt;y .night, 40-0 over the
Hannan Trace Wildcats .
Coach John Blake 's Pirates
now own a 4-3 record on the
'\easbn. Tom Belville's Wildcats
dropped to ll-7. North Gallia
took the opening kickoff, punted
but regained possession of the
ball on a Hannan Trace fumble.
Tony Glassburn , 171l-pound
senior, seeing his first action
since suffering a broken
collarbone in the second game
of the season against Eastern,
scored the first Pirate touchdown on a two-yard run . Jackie
Smith, another senior, added
the conversion.
The Pirates reached paydirt
for the second time after
recovering a Wildcat fumble at
the 12-yard line . Smith rambled
in for the score. Phil Hollen. baugh, junior fullback , ran the
extras for a 16-0 lead. Smith
brought the crowd to its feet
with a dazzling 68-yard run off
tackle with 8:46 remaining in
the second period. The attempt
for the conversion was stopped.
Fleet-footed Harvey Brown ,
one of the top scorers in the
Southern Valley Athletic
Conference, raced across the
white stripe with 2:27 left in the
second quarter. Brown took an
18-yard aerial from senior
quarterback John Eggleton.
Hollenbaugh picked up the two
point conversion to make the
score, 3().{1 at the half.
North Gallia scored again
with 1:49left in the third stanza
as Garnes took a touchdown
pass from Eggleton . Eggleton
ran the conversion .
With 1: J3left in the period, a
Hannan Trace player was
dropped in the end zone for a
safety.
The Pirates' second unit
offense went to work in the
fourth period . The second team
was led by David Grant and
Dave Dobbins. Grant passed to
Robert Casto for seven yards
and Dobbins gained 23 yards in
six attempts .
John Eggleton, again, did a
commendable job in leading the
Pirates. Eggleton completed
four of seven passes for 98

w
w/,l n
~

yards and one touchdown .
The Pirate defense received

another pat on the back for a job
well done. Led by Loren Neal ,
George Garnes. David! Grant
and Keith Saunders, the defense
he ld Hannan Trace to no yards
rushing and only 15 yards
passing .
With the .exception of one play
the last 11 minutes was played
between the Hannan Trace 10
yard line and their goalline.
Jackie Smith led the Pirate
offense with 118 yards in only
six carries.
Smith also caught two passes
for 68 yards and scored two

PT . PLEASANT - Pt.
Pleasant's Big Blacks rallied
for 20 points in the final period
to hand Ripley a 27-17 setback
here Friday night. The Blacks
are now 2-5 on the year. Steve
Miller , steve Evans, Mike
McGinnis, and Frank Doolittle
t..llied Pt. Pleasant touchdowns
and Evans kicked three extra
points .
Wahama was tied 6-0 by
Ravenswood. The Falcons are
now 5-0-2 on the yea r. The Red
Devils took a 6-0 halftime lead
on Dennis Miller's nine-yard
run in the second period. WHS
tied it up in the third period
when Randy Clark tallied from
the two on a pass from Mike
White .

• Trussed Roof wi th Plywood Roof Sheath ing

• Double Insu latio n Throug hout

JACKSON - In a traditional
Jackson County clash between
the Jackson fronmen and the
Wellston Golden Rockets
Friday night the Ironmen
downed the Rockets 29-20 in a
rip-roaring battle.
Playing without speedy
Kenny Valentine, the Ironmen
used the passing combination of
Eddie Hughes to Chris Ondera
for two touchdowns and substitute tailback Brad Thompson
to carry the running game as
they upped their SEOAL mark
to 2-3 while Wellston is 0-5 in
league action .
In the first period Hughes hit
Ondera with a 33 yard touchdown pass and Mike Buckley's
kick made it 1~.
The Ironmen struck early in

HEAIU&gt;N \!EETING - Chester Roush (22), senior
halfback for the Wahama White Falcons, looks like he is
about to collide head-&lt;Jn with a would-be Ravenswood tackler
Friday night. Roush, however, broke the tackle and scatted
for several more yards. The Falcons and the host Red Devils
battled to a !Hldeadlock - (Photo by Sam Nichols III )

S•nartans
Blank
'L'
Bobcats, 17-0
CHESHIRE - Coach Dave
George Curry, 16, Rt. I,
Snipe's Alexander Spartans Cheshire, son of George
scored a second period safety Curry, Sr., and Mrs. Yvonne
and added two fourth quarter Chapman, Rt. . I, Cheshire,
touchdowns in spoiling Kyger was listed in satisfactory
Creek's homecoming here condition Saturday at the
Friday night, !HI.
Holzer Medical Center where
The non-league loss dropped he was admitted after being
Kyger Creek's record to 4-2-1 on injured in the third period of
the year. It was Alexander 's action. Curry reportedly has
fourth straight victory afte r a pinched nerve in his neck.
three losses.
He is a 185 pound junior ofFailure to move the ball fensive end and lloebacker.
consistently hampered the Curry is the fourth Bobcat to
Bobcats all night.
be sidelined with major InKyger Creek took the opening juries this fall.
kickoff moving the ball from its
20 yard line to the Spartan 35
before being forced to punt. It pass. Alexander reached the
was the Bobcats' best and last scoreboard with 3:15 remaining
sustained drive of the evening. followin g a 27-yard punt by
The rest of the first period and Garland Reynolds. The ball
most of the second stanza landed at the one foot line. On
continued to be a comedy of the first play from scrimmage,
errors for both sides. In- KC's Lou Louden, a JuniOr
terceptions and fumbles were fullback, was dropped behind
the goalline for a safety by
the rule of the day.
Spartan
linebacker Paul Metts.
Bill Roush, senior end, intercepted a pass to kill an With five seconds left,
Alexander drive and Alexan- Alexander 's Greg Brooks fired
der's Bill Hart picked off a a 19-year pass to his left end
Glenn Smith aerial to stop a Danny Walsh but Walsh was
possible Bobcat score. Hart stopped Shy of the goalline as
grabbed the ball at the 16 yard time ran out. Thus Alexander
led 2-0 at the half.
line.
Midway through the second Playing ball control, the
quarter, Rick Smith recovered Spartans held onto the ball for
a Spartan fumble at the Bobcat approximately 10 of the 12
22-yard line stopping the Athens minutes in the third minute.
Countians in the midst of a Kyger Creek managed to run
drive. Kyger Creek returned the only three plays before punting
ball four plays later when Gary the ball away.
Whitlatch intercepted another Alexander scored its first

the second quarter on a one D. Patton, stole the ball out of
yard run by Steve Meadows for Steve Meadows' hands and
the TO and Meadows' con-- raced 71 yards for a touchdown
version run to hike the lead to with settles passing to Ray
15-0.
McKinness for the conversiort to
Late in the second stanza cut the Jackson lead to 21-14.
quarterback Danny Settles ~~
- dway in the fourth quarter
completed a 12-yard pass to Hu es cranked up and found
Eddie Martin for a Wellston TO Onde a with a 28 yard scoring
and the halftime score stood at pass and then ran the con15-0.
version to widen the gap to 29Brad Thompson scored from 14.
the two yard line in the third Settles put the final points on
period for the Ironmen to make the board late in the contest
it 21-0.
when he scored on a 13-yard
Just over two minutes later keeper for the Rockets .
Wellston's fine defensive end, J. The Jackson offense rolled up

eTh is Marl ette Sectional Home Features A Very Lar ge
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Upper fU. 7. Next Door to Auto Auction
Phone 446-9340
Gallipolis, Ohio

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Racine, Ohio
Ph . No . 9t'/.JI43 ·
Formerly the Racine Tire Shop

of the year.
Marauders given credit for a
good game was Bill Chaney, a
170 lb. junior end, who caught
two passes and played defense
in place of Larry Harmon, who
saw action but did not start, and
John Thomas, Tiny Williams,
Ron Smith, and Ted Lehew on
defense.
Eddie Young, 155 lb. senior
center, was injured early in the
second quarter and did not
return. Rick Gaul, 147lb. junior,
took his pl~ce .
The first_quarter and half of
the second were even. Neither
team penetrated far. Punting
exchanges were about even.
But mid-way in the second
quarter, Athens started a drive
from its own 37. Coach Gerald

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ATHENS' Stu Smith (40) hits Meigs tailback Mark
Williams (331 headon in this action shot of Friday's BulldogMarauder grid contest at Athens. The Bulldogs won 31-0 to

FORDHAM GAME
HIGHLIGHT
NEW YORK (UP! )-Fordham and South Carolina will be
18.0. Faulk 2-33, 16-5, Broderick
just two of the 37 college
t-3, 3.0.
PUNT RET. : Meigs. Faulk 5· basketball. teams to appear in
53. 10.6. Athens, Smith 1-8, 8.0,
Hand ley 2-3. l.S.
·
INDIVt DUAL SCORING :

Meigs Athens

First Downs
by Rushing
by Passing
·IIV•Pe(lalty, .

7

13

3
3
t

9
4

0

boys went the
remaining 63 yards in 10 plays
with Don Wood, a 190 lb. junior
fullback, tBking it over from six
yards out. Gary Snow's kick for
the extras was blocked by Tiny
Williams, only ,the second kick
Snow has missed this-year. With
6:39left in the half, Athens had
drawn first blood and led 6-0. It
fired them up like a rocket
leaving the moon pad at Cape
Canaveral.
On Meigs' second play , Green
intercepted his first of two
passes on the Meigs 45. From
here, the Bulldogs went 45 yards
in six plays, repleatedly
blowing away the Meigs front
line. All were running plays.
Wood again took it over, this
time from two yards out to
make it 12-0. Mark Handley,

Total Yards
Pass Aft.

9
'

Meigs, none. Athens, TO's;
Wood , two, runs of six and two;
7 Scott , 37 yard pass from Green ;
4 Sca rmack, eight yard run . FG.

4

0 two on run ; Snow. two on two

Pass Camp .
Interceptions by
Total Fumbles

0

Fumbles Losl

'Gallipolis

t

Athens
Wood

17 70 4.1

Scarmack

11

Smith .
Champlin
Green
TOTALS
•· INDIVIDUAL

HELDMAN PLAYS WADE'
BILLINGHAM,
England
(UPI)-Julie Heldman of New
York, an upset victor over
Wimbledon Champion Evonne
Goolagong of Australia in the
semifinals, was scheduled to
meet England's Virginia Wade
today for the women's singles
ti tie of the Dewar Cup Indoor
Tennis Tournament.
'
Miss Heldman beat Miss
Goolagona, 6-0, 7-li, Friday
while Miss Wade beat Francoise Durr of France, 7-&lt;i, 6-3.
Today's men's final paired
Jaime Fillol of Chile against ·
Gerald Battrick of Wales.

77 7.0

39 3.5
2 0 0.0
2 5 2.5
43 191 4.4
RECEIVING:

;. 11 , 11.0.

·: INDIVIDUAL PASSING :
;,: Meigs. Vaughan 3-6-2. SO yards,
one touch ·

PUNTING:

KO RET.: Meigs, R. Ash 3-54,

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passes while the Tigers completed two of seven.
Don Gullion led the Waverly
ground game with 65 yards in
nine carries.
Score by quarters :
Logan
0 0 6 8--14
Waverly
0 9 7 ()..... 7

Reid, Ken Johnston and Elwood

11

INDIVIDUAL

winter.
Fordham will meet the
Gamecocks on Jan . 27 and this
single game attraction could be
the highlight of the 38th
consecutive season of college

Statistics favored Logan in
every department except
rushing as they led in first
downs 12-11, in passing 22().35,
but Waverly netted 175 yards on
the ground to Logan's 106.
The Chiefs hit on nine of 14

Sparks.

2·22. 11.0. Athens, Scott, 1-47,
' 23.5, Wood t-21, 21.0, Topping 1-

,.'.'•

INSIDE OOOA

tercepted by the . ball-hawking
Bulldogs.
Athens' final touchdown came
with only 15 seconds remaining
in the game as Paul Scarmack,
the game's leading rusher with
77 yards, rambled eight yards
for the score . Snow kicked the
extra to make it 31-0 as the
game ended.
\.__
The Marauders will try to
revenge their hurt feelings next
Friday night against the tough
Blue Devils from Gallipolis.
Athens will travel to Logan in a
battle for ·teague-leaders next.
Friday.

Meigs
0 0 o t)- 0
Athens
0 21 3 7- 31
Officials- AI Deuschle, Jim

·: Meigs, Chaney 2·40, 20 .0, Morris

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Score by quarters :

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quarterback with a strong
throwing arm, came into the
Meigs lineup in the fourth
quarter hopefully to stir things
up. But after moving the team

3 Snow, 3t yards. EP's. Handley,

5-153 l-204
30.6 40.8
Penalties
5- 4~ 3-35
INDIVIDUAL RUSHING
Meigs .
TC Yds Avg.
M. Williams
8 25 3.1
tO 27 2.1
T. Williams
Smith
1 6 6.0
Faulk
4 14 3.5
Lehew
1 6 6.0
McLaughlin
1 3 3.0
Vaughan
5 -13 -2.6
TOTALS
30 68 2.3
Punts

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holding for Snow, faked the kick . with a cut right ,hand, faded
and ran wide to his right for the back and was hit hard forcinll a
extras, and with 2:50 remaining fumble which the Bulldogs' Bill
in the half, Athens took a 14-0 Morehead recovered on the
lead.
Meigs 12.
Meigs was again forced to The Ma,rauder defense held
punt by the sticky Bulldogs· this time. Gary Snow kicked a
defense and Athens took over on 31 · yard field goal on fourth
its own 37 after Robble Eason 's down lor the Bulldogs to give
punt. Three running plays Athens a 24-0 lead with 9: 16le[t
netted 26 yards, moving the ball in the third quarter.
to the Meigs 37. With 18 seconds Meigs, coached by Charles
left on the clock, Green hit Jim Chancey, then settled down on
Scott wide opep on about the 10 defense to hold the home town
and he scampered in for team, but couldn 't move an inch
another score. Snow booted the on offense. They got into Athens
extra to make it 21-0 at the half . territory in the fourth quarter
SECOND HALF
after Chaney made a beautiful
Things just wouldn't go right one-handed catch on the Athens
for the Marauders even in the 32. But that was as far as they
second half. On their second went as Meigs' next pass was
play from scrimmage on their intercepted.
own 24, Andy Vaughan, playing
Jon Buck , a 164 lb. senior

WAVERLY - · With only and marched· 65 yards in six
seven seconds remaining in the plays to score.
contest quarterback Greg
The ,touchdown came on a 20
Smith hit tight end George Shaw yard pass from quarterback Joe
with a fourth down touchdown Acord to end Lourens Steger
pass Friday night to lift the with 8:55 left in the third period.
Logan Chieftains past a fired-up Dan Gullion booted the extra
Waverly team by· a 14-7 score. point to put the Tigers on top 7-0.
In one of the most exciting
Logan took the ensuing
contests -played in the SEOAL kickoff and drove 63 yards in
this
season,
a
large nine plays with Greg Smith
Homecoming
crowd
at passing the final 10 yards to
Radinger Field saw the two Brian Davidson for the -Tb.
teams battle to a().{) standoff in ·Smith was stopped on his
the first half.
conversion rwt and the score
The important Smith-to-Shaw stood at 7-0 with 4:47 left in the
pass not only kept the Chieftains third quarter.
in a three-way tie with fronwn Early in the fourth period the
and Athens, but extended the Chiefs halted a Tiger drive on
victory-starved Tigers' losing the 12 yard line, and later
streak to 16 straight games.
recovered a Waverly fumble on
For the second consecutive the Chieftain 26.
contest, the Chieftains won With 3:16 · showing on the
without the services of tailback clock Logan faced a fourth and
Rick Krebs , who attended four on the Waverly 10 yard
Friday's game on crutches.
stripe, but the Tigers held there .
This enabled t\)e Tiger Waverly was unable to move
defense to focus its attention on the ball and Jeff Ughtle boomed
fullback Ken Culbertson, whom a 61-yard punt to get the Tigers
they limited to just 34 yards, out of the hole.
while substitute tailback Craig The Chieftains then went to
Davidson rolled up 49 for the work from their own 40 yard
Chiefs.
line with time running out and
Neither team mounted a marched 60 yards in six plays,
serious threat throughout the including four passes, to bring
first two quarters but Waverly up the game winning pass from

M:a:dis~o:n~~~~G~ar~d~e~n~th~iis.b~a~~~et:b:al~l~in~th::e~G~a;rd:e;n~. ....~ri·~~ce:.i;ved~th~e=se:c~o;nd~

68 191
62 79
130 270

Yards Rushing
Yards Passing

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remain in a three-way tie for first place in the SEOAL.
Number 80 in middle is Bulldog end Jim Scott. On ground at
right is Marauder fullback Tiny Williams (251. Number 54 at
far right is Athens' Mike Buck. (Katie Crow photo).

Meigs Grid Statistics

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both Meigs and Bulldog fans, the Bulldogs as he quardominated every phase of the terbacked the potent Athens
game. They had no turnovers offense with 4 of 7 passing for
compared to four for the one touchdown. Green, a 170 lb.
Marauders, and permitted senior, also led the defense with
Meigs on Bulldog territory only two interceptions, widening his
once, that coming late in the league lead to five .
Pacing the Bulldogs line play
game after the decision had
was A1 Ackerman, an agile,
been made.
The embarrassed Meigs powerful 223 lb. senior tackle.
defense, the league leaders The Bulldogs ran regularly
coming into the game, gave up through holes he created, while
270 totat yards, 191 rushing and· Meigs had trouble moving him
79 passing. The 79 passing' for out of the action when Athens
Athens was 18more than Athens was on defense.
had gained in its first four
The usually potent Meigs
league games.
offense was throttled down by a
Tbe previous worst 'beating_ tenacious Athens defense'.-Mark
the Marauders ever took was in Williams, the league's leading
1968, a ~ licking by the Pt. rusher going into the game, had
Pleasant Big Blacks at only 25 yards in eight carries.
Marauder Stadium.
All told, Meigs had only 68 yards
Mike Greim was the star for on·the ground and 62 in the air.

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Chieftains Edge Waverly, 14-7

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21 first down~. 210 yards
rushing, and hit four of seven
passes for ll9 yards and two
t.ouchdowns.
Wellston showed 10 first
downs, 67 yards 9n the ground,
and completed ll of 24 passes
for 133 yards, with two intercepted.
Meadows led Jackson in
rushing with 98 yards In 23
carries while · Terry Stewart
was Wetiston•s ·top gainer with
26 yards in nine tries.
Score by quarters: ·
Wellston
0 6 8 l&gt;-20
Jackson
7 8 8 8-29

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BYKEITH WISECUP
THE PLA!ijS - The Athens
Bulldogs handed the Meigs
Marauder~ \lleit .worst defeat in
the Marauders' brief five-year
history, 31-Q, here Friday night
In a critical Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League -game.
The loss all but shot the Meigs
team out o( a chance at the
championship. Athens, on the
other hand, is very much In the
thick of it, tied with Ironton and
Logan for the league lead, each
with 4-1 league records. Athens
is 6-1 overall and Meigs 5-2.
The Bulldogs, playing perfect
ball, struck fvr 21 points in the
(jnal six mlnu!es of the first
half. To that poiQt, the game
was nearly even. But, wham!
The Bulldogs suddenly blew it
wide open.
Athens, to the amazement of

extras but was stopped short,
making the score 14-0.
In the fourth quarter, with
11 : 57 left, Amsbary scored
again on a one-yard sneak.
Amsbary attempted the extras
but was stopped.
The Eagles wlll travel to
Southwestern next Friday to
meet -the winless .Highlanders.
Miller, coached by Jim Cook,
will play the Netsonvllle-York
Buckeyes at home.
(See Statistics on Page 18)

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touchdown with 9:35 left in the
fourth quarter on a seven-yard
run by quarterback Brooks. The
play climaxed a 55-yard march .
Reynolds kicked the extra point
providing the visitors with a 9-0
lead.
The final - Spartan six-pointer
came on a fourth down, 20-yard
pass from Brooks to Walsh.
Brooks "ran the conversion
placing the final count at 17-0.
Kyger Creek, behind two pass
interference calls and a 23-yard
pass from quarterback Glenn
Smith to sophomore halfback
Rick Smith, moved the ball to
the Il-yard line but again their
offens,e became ineffective
before reaching the goalline.
Al~xander controlled the
game statistics as well as the
score. The Spartans collected 15
first downs, 205 yards rushing
and 81 yards passing .
The Bobcats had only seven
first downs, 24 yards rushing
and 58 yards pasSing.
Kyger Creek travels to Green
Friday in a non-league game .
BY QUARTERS
Alexander
0 2 0 15-I7
Kyger Creek
0 0 0 0- 0
· STATISTICS
DEPARTMENT
A KC
First Downs
15 7
Yards Rushing
205 24
Yards Passing
87 58
Passes Attempted
16 ll
Passes Completed
7 5
Fumbles
I
4
Fwnbles Lost
I
1
Penalties
70 10

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Federal Hocking, North Gallia ltnebacker, were the Eagle
Hannan Trace, and Miller. ' headhunters.
The Big Green ripped for two
Given credit for an out- touchdowns in the second
standing effort for the Eagles, quarter Jlfter a scoreless first
besides Sanders and Amsbary, quarter. Amsbary scored his
on offense, was Dan Chaffee, a firstoftwoonal7-yardrun"'ith
l45lb. sophomore fullback, who 11 :09 left in the first half.
filled the gap . left by Dennis Sanders ran in the extras to
Eichinger, 190 lb: senior, who make it 8-0.
was injured in the game.
With 7:56 remaining in the
On defense, John Cline, a 155 second period, Sanders rambled
lb. senior guard, and Alan 29 yards for another score.
Duvall , 170 lb . junior Sanders also attempted the

.

.

Bu}Jdogs Hand Marauders 31-0 Grid Setback

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season as they have only South- touchdown.
western, winless in seven But once again, the story of
games, and Southern, 2-4, left to the Eagles was their defense.
play. Both are SVAC opponents. What can be said about them" It
has allowe-d only three touchJim Amsbary , 160 lb. senior downsinsevengamesthisyear,
quarterback, again p~ced the and a total cif 18 points. Miller
potent Eagle attack with two was their fourth shutout this
touchdowns on runs of one and year and their second in a row.
11 yards. Rick Sanders, 145 lb. The only teams to score .on the
senior halfback, scored the powerful Eagles have been
other Eastern touchdown, a Kyger Creek, Frontier Local,
gallop of 29 yards. Sanders also and Glouster each six points.
ran in the extras after the first The E~gles have shutout

STATISTICS
DEPARTMENT
NG HT
First Downs
10
2
Yards Rushing
225
0
Yards Passing
105 . 15
Passes Attempted
8 14
Passes Completed
5
2
Interceptions
2
0
Fumbles
2
5
Fumbles Lost
2
2
Punts
15-165) (4-121)
Penalties
130 45

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BY KEITH WISECUP
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Eastern Eagles remamed thts
area's only unbeaten and untied
football team by defeating the
Miller Falcons at the Eagles'
home field . near here Friday
night, 2().{1.
Coach Roger Kirkhart 's
Eagles arc-now HI overall and
remained at 3-0 (on top) in the
Southern Valley Conference.
The Eagles are almost a shoo-in
for going undefeated on the

North Galha hosts Hannan,
W. Va., Friday. Hannan Trace
plays Fort Gay, W. Va .
BY QJJARTERS
North Gallia
14 16 10 ().....40
Hannan Trace
0 0 0 ()..... 0

Win,
Falcons Tie

•

In

touchdowns.

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PH. 992-2181

Serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties
Store Open Mon .- Sat. Til ~-Station Open 24 Hours
7106·24
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_17- Tbe Sunday Times-sentinel, Stmday, Oct. 24,1971

16- The Sunday Times -sentinel, Sunoo··. Oct. 24, 1911

£vo urth
~

MERCERVILLE - Combining an explosive ofrense with
a stingy defense, North Gallia 's
Pirates rolled to their .fourth
win in the last five starts here
Fridl&gt;y .night, 40-0 over the
Hannan Trace Wildcats .
Coach John Blake 's Pirates
now own a 4-3 record on the
'\easbn. Tom Belville's Wildcats
dropped to ll-7. North Gallia
took the opening kickoff, punted
but regained possession of the
ball on a Hannan Trace fumble.
Tony Glassburn , 171l-pound
senior, seeing his first action
since suffering a broken
collarbone in the second game
of the season against Eastern,
scored the first Pirate touchdown on a two-yard run . Jackie
Smith, another senior, added
the conversion.
The Pirates reached paydirt
for the second time after
recovering a Wildcat fumble at
the 12-yard line . Smith rambled
in for the score. Phil Hollen. baugh, junior fullback , ran the
extras for a 16-0 lead. Smith
brought the crowd to its feet
with a dazzling 68-yard run off
tackle with 8:46 remaining in
the second period. The attempt
for the conversion was stopped.
Fleet-footed Harvey Brown ,
one of the top scorers in the
Southern Valley Athletic
Conference, raced across the
white stripe with 2:27 left in the
second quarter. Brown took an
18-yard aerial from senior
quarterback John Eggleton.
Hollenbaugh picked up the two
point conversion to make the
score, 3().{1 at the half.
North Gallia scored again
with 1:49left in the third stanza
as Garnes took a touchdown
pass from Eggleton . Eggleton
ran the conversion .
With 1: J3left in the period, a
Hannan Trace player was
dropped in the end zone for a
safety.
The Pirates' second unit
offense went to work in the
fourth period . The second team
was led by David Grant and
Dave Dobbins. Grant passed to
Robert Casto for seven yards
and Dobbins gained 23 yards in
six attempts .
John Eggleton, again, did a
commendable job in leading the
Pirates. Eggleton completed
four of seven passes for 98

w
w/,l n
~

yards and one touchdown .
The Pirate defense received

another pat on the back for a job
well done. Led by Loren Neal ,
George Garnes. David! Grant
and Keith Saunders, the defense
he ld Hannan Trace to no yards
rushing and only 15 yards
passing .
With the .exception of one play
the last 11 minutes was played
between the Hannan Trace 10
yard line and their goalline.
Jackie Smith led the Pirate
offense with 118 yards in only
six carries.
Smith also caught two passes
for 68 yards and scored two

PT . PLEASANT - Pt.
Pleasant's Big Blacks rallied
for 20 points in the final period
to hand Ripley a 27-17 setback
here Friday night. The Blacks
are now 2-5 on the year. Steve
Miller , steve Evans, Mike
McGinnis, and Frank Doolittle
t..llied Pt. Pleasant touchdowns
and Evans kicked three extra
points .
Wahama was tied 6-0 by
Ravenswood. The Falcons are
now 5-0-2 on the yea r. The Red
Devils took a 6-0 halftime lead
on Dennis Miller's nine-yard
run in the second period. WHS
tied it up in the third period
when Randy Clark tallied from
the two on a pass from Mike
White .

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JACKSON - In a traditional
Jackson County clash between
the Jackson fronmen and the
Wellston Golden Rockets
Friday night the Ironmen
downed the Rockets 29-20 in a
rip-roaring battle.
Playing without speedy
Kenny Valentine, the Ironmen
used the passing combination of
Eddie Hughes to Chris Ondera
for two touchdowns and substitute tailback Brad Thompson
to carry the running game as
they upped their SEOAL mark
to 2-3 while Wellston is 0-5 in
league action .
In the first period Hughes hit
Ondera with a 33 yard touchdown pass and Mike Buckley's
kick made it 1~.
The Ironmen struck early in

HEAIU&gt;N \!EETING - Chester Roush (22), senior
halfback for the Wahama White Falcons, looks like he is
about to collide head-&lt;Jn with a would-be Ravenswood tackler
Friday night. Roush, however, broke the tackle and scatted
for several more yards. The Falcons and the host Red Devils
battled to a !Hldeadlock - (Photo by Sam Nichols III )

S•nartans
Blank
'L'
Bobcats, 17-0
CHESHIRE - Coach Dave
George Curry, 16, Rt. I,
Snipe's Alexander Spartans Cheshire, son of George
scored a second period safety Curry, Sr., and Mrs. Yvonne
and added two fourth quarter Chapman, Rt. . I, Cheshire,
touchdowns in spoiling Kyger was listed in satisfactory
Creek's homecoming here condition Saturday at the
Friday night, !HI.
Holzer Medical Center where
The non-league loss dropped he was admitted after being
Kyger Creek's record to 4-2-1 on injured in the third period of
the year. It was Alexander 's action. Curry reportedly has
fourth straight victory afte r a pinched nerve in his neck.
three losses.
He is a 185 pound junior ofFailure to move the ball fensive end and lloebacker.
consistently hampered the Curry is the fourth Bobcat to
Bobcats all night.
be sidelined with major InKyger Creek took the opening juries this fall.
kickoff moving the ball from its
20 yard line to the Spartan 35
before being forced to punt. It pass. Alexander reached the
was the Bobcats' best and last scoreboard with 3:15 remaining
sustained drive of the evening. followin g a 27-yard punt by
The rest of the first period and Garland Reynolds. The ball
most of the second stanza landed at the one foot line. On
continued to be a comedy of the first play from scrimmage,
errors for both sides. In- KC's Lou Louden, a JuniOr
terceptions and fumbles were fullback, was dropped behind
the goalline for a safety by
the rule of the day.
Spartan
linebacker Paul Metts.
Bill Roush, senior end, intercepted a pass to kill an With five seconds left,
Alexander drive and Alexan- Alexander 's Greg Brooks fired
der's Bill Hart picked off a a 19-year pass to his left end
Glenn Smith aerial to stop a Danny Walsh but Walsh was
possible Bobcat score. Hart stopped Shy of the goalline as
grabbed the ball at the 16 yard time ran out. Thus Alexander
led 2-0 at the half.
line.
Midway through the second Playing ball control, the
quarter, Rick Smith recovered Spartans held onto the ball for
a Spartan fumble at the Bobcat approximately 10 of the 12
22-yard line stopping the Athens minutes in the third minute.
Countians in the midst of a Kyger Creek managed to run
drive. Kyger Creek returned the only three plays before punting
ball four plays later when Gary the ball away.
Whitlatch intercepted another Alexander scored its first

the second quarter on a one D. Patton, stole the ball out of
yard run by Steve Meadows for Steve Meadows' hands and
the TO and Meadows' con-- raced 71 yards for a touchdown
version run to hike the lead to with settles passing to Ray
15-0.
McKinness for the conversiort to
Late in the second stanza cut the Jackson lead to 21-14.
quarterback Danny Settles ~~
- dway in the fourth quarter
completed a 12-yard pass to Hu es cranked up and found
Eddie Martin for a Wellston TO Onde a with a 28 yard scoring
and the halftime score stood at pass and then ran the con15-0.
version to widen the gap to 29Brad Thompson scored from 14.
the two yard line in the third Settles put the final points on
period for the Ironmen to make the board late in the contest
it 21-0.
when he scored on a 13-yard
Just over two minutes later keeper for the Rockets .
Wellston's fine defensive end, J. The Jackson offense rolled up

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of the year.
Marauders given credit for a
good game was Bill Chaney, a
170 lb. junior end, who caught
two passes and played defense
in place of Larry Harmon, who
saw action but did not start, and
John Thomas, Tiny Williams,
Ron Smith, and Ted Lehew on
defense.
Eddie Young, 155 lb. senior
center, was injured early in the
second quarter and did not
return. Rick Gaul, 147lb. junior,
took his pl~ce .
The first_quarter and half of
the second were even. Neither
team penetrated far. Punting
exchanges were about even.
But mid-way in the second
quarter, Athens started a drive
from its own 37. Coach Gerald

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ATHENS' Stu Smith (40) hits Meigs tailback Mark
Williams (331 headon in this action shot of Friday's BulldogMarauder grid contest at Athens. The Bulldogs won 31-0 to

FORDHAM GAME
HIGHLIGHT
NEW YORK (UP! )-Fordham and South Carolina will be
18.0. Faulk 2-33, 16-5, Broderick
just two of the 37 college
t-3, 3.0.
PUNT RET. : Meigs. Faulk 5· basketball. teams to appear in
53. 10.6. Athens, Smith 1-8, 8.0,
Hand ley 2-3. l.S.
·
INDIVt DUAL SCORING :

Meigs Athens

First Downs
by Rushing
by Passing
·IIV•Pe(lalty, .

7

13

3
3
t

9
4

0

boys went the
remaining 63 yards in 10 plays
with Don Wood, a 190 lb. junior
fullback, tBking it over from six
yards out. Gary Snow's kick for
the extras was blocked by Tiny
Williams, only ,the second kick
Snow has missed this-year. With
6:39left in the half, Athens had
drawn first blood and led 6-0. It
fired them up like a rocket
leaving the moon pad at Cape
Canaveral.
On Meigs' second play , Green
intercepted his first of two
passes on the Meigs 45. From
here, the Bulldogs went 45 yards
in six plays, repleatedly
blowing away the Meigs front
line. All were running plays.
Wood again took it over, this
time from two yards out to
make it 12-0. Mark Handley,

Total Yards
Pass Aft.

9
'

Meigs, none. Athens, TO's;
Wood , two, runs of six and two;
7 Scott , 37 yard pass from Green ;
4 Sca rmack, eight yard run . FG.

4

0 two on run ; Snow. two on two

Pass Camp .
Interceptions by
Total Fumbles

0

Fumbles Losl

'Gallipolis

t

Athens
Wood

17 70 4.1

Scarmack

11

Smith .
Champlin
Green
TOTALS
•· INDIVIDUAL

HELDMAN PLAYS WADE'
BILLINGHAM,
England
(UPI)-Julie Heldman of New
York, an upset victor over
Wimbledon Champion Evonne
Goolagong of Australia in the
semifinals, was scheduled to
meet England's Virginia Wade
today for the women's singles
ti tie of the Dewar Cup Indoor
Tennis Tournament.
'
Miss Heldman beat Miss
Goolagona, 6-0, 7-li, Friday
while Miss Wade beat Francoise Durr of France, 7-&lt;i, 6-3.
Today's men's final paired
Jaime Fillol of Chile against ·
Gerald Battrick of Wales.

77 7.0

39 3.5
2 0 0.0
2 5 2.5
43 191 4.4
RECEIVING:

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·: INDIVIDUAL PASSING :
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one touch ·

PUNTING:

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passes while the Tigers completed two of seven.
Don Gullion led the Waverly
ground game with 65 yards in
nine carries.
Score by quarters :
Logan
0 0 6 8--14
Waverly
0 9 7 ()..... 7

Reid, Ken Johnston and Elwood

11

INDIVIDUAL

winter.
Fordham will meet the
Gamecocks on Jan . 27 and this
single game attraction could be
the highlight of the 38th
consecutive season of college

Statistics favored Logan in
every department except
rushing as they led in first
downs 12-11, in passing 22().35,
but Waverly netted 175 yards on
the ground to Logan's 106.
The Chiefs hit on nine of 14

Sparks.

2·22. 11.0. Athens, Scott, 1-47,
' 23.5, Wood t-21, 21.0, Topping 1-

,.'.'•

INSIDE OOOA

tercepted by the . ball-hawking
Bulldogs.
Athens' final touchdown came
with only 15 seconds remaining
in the game as Paul Scarmack,
the game's leading rusher with
77 yards, rambled eight yards
for the score . Snow kicked the
extra to make it 31-0 as the
game ended.
\.__
The Marauders will try to
revenge their hurt feelings next
Friday night against the tough
Blue Devils from Gallipolis.
Athens will travel to Logan in a
battle for ·teague-leaders next.
Friday.

Meigs
0 0 o t)- 0
Athens
0 21 3 7- 31
Officials- AI Deuschle, Jim

·: Meigs, Chaney 2·40, 20 .0, Morris

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Score by quarters :

.. &lt;;&gt; Bu ck J.J. t, 12 yards. Athens,

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quarterback with a strong
throwing arm, came into the
Meigs lineup in the fourth
quarter hopefully to stir things
up. But after moving the team

3 Snow, 3t yards. EP's. Handley,

5-153 l-204
30.6 40.8
Penalties
5- 4~ 3-35
INDIVIDUAL RUSHING
Meigs .
TC Yds Avg.
M. Williams
8 25 3.1
tO 27 2.1
T. Williams
Smith
1 6 6.0
Faulk
4 14 3.5
Lehew
1 6 6.0
McLaughlin
1 3 3.0
Vaughan
5 -13 -2.6
TOTALS
30 68 2.3
Punts

Thomas
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holding for Snow, faked the kick . with a cut right ,hand, faded
and ran wide to his right for the back and was hit hard forcinll a
extras, and with 2:50 remaining fumble which the Bulldogs' Bill
in the half, Athens took a 14-0 Morehead recovered on the
lead.
Meigs 12.
Meigs was again forced to The Ma,rauder defense held
punt by the sticky Bulldogs· this time. Gary Snow kicked a
defense and Athens took over on 31 · yard field goal on fourth
its own 37 after Robble Eason 's down lor the Bulldogs to give
punt. Three running plays Athens a 24-0 lead with 9: 16le[t
netted 26 yards, moving the ball in the third quarter.
to the Meigs 37. With 18 seconds Meigs, coached by Charles
left on the clock, Green hit Jim Chancey, then settled down on
Scott wide opep on about the 10 defense to hold the home town
and he scampered in for team, but couldn 't move an inch
another score. Snow booted the on offense. They got into Athens
extra to make it 21-0 at the half . territory in the fourth quarter
SECOND HALF
after Chaney made a beautiful
Things just wouldn't go right one-handed catch on the Athens
for the Marauders even in the 32. But that was as far as they
second half. On their second went as Meigs' next pass was
play from scrimmage on their intercepted.
own 24, Andy Vaughan, playing
Jon Buck , a 164 lb. senior

WAVERLY - · With only and marched· 65 yards in six
seven seconds remaining in the plays to score.
contest quarterback Greg
The ,touchdown came on a 20
Smith hit tight end George Shaw yard pass from quarterback Joe
with a fourth down touchdown Acord to end Lourens Steger
pass Friday night to lift the with 8:55 left in the third period.
Logan Chieftains past a fired-up Dan Gullion booted the extra
Waverly team by· a 14-7 score. point to put the Tigers on top 7-0.
In one of the most exciting
Logan took the ensuing
contests -played in the SEOAL kickoff and drove 63 yards in
this
season,
a
large nine plays with Greg Smith
Homecoming
crowd
at passing the final 10 yards to
Radinger Field saw the two Brian Davidson for the -Tb.
teams battle to a().{) standoff in ·Smith was stopped on his
the first half.
conversion rwt and the score
The important Smith-to-Shaw stood at 7-0 with 4:47 left in the
pass not only kept the Chieftains third quarter.
in a three-way tie with fronwn Early in the fourth period the
and Athens, but extended the Chiefs halted a Tiger drive on
victory-starved Tigers' losing the 12 yard line, and later
streak to 16 straight games.
recovered a Waverly fumble on
For the second consecutive the Chieftain 26.
contest, the Chieftains won With 3:16 · showing on the
without the services of tailback clock Logan faced a fourth and
Rick Krebs , who attended four on the Waverly 10 yard
Friday's game on crutches.
stripe, but the Tigers held there .
This enabled t\)e Tiger Waverly was unable to move
defense to focus its attention on the ball and Jeff Ughtle boomed
fullback Ken Culbertson, whom a 61-yard punt to get the Tigers
they limited to just 34 yards, out of the hole.
while substitute tailback Craig The Chieftains then went to
Davidson rolled up 49 for the work from their own 40 yard
Chiefs.
line with time running out and
Neither team mounted a marched 60 yards in six plays,
serious threat throughout the including four passes, to bring
first two quarters but Waverly up the game winning pass from

M:a:dis~o:n~~~~G~ar~d~e~n~th~iis.b~a~~~et:b:al~l~in~th::e~G~a;rd:e;n~. ....~ri·~~ce:.i;ved~th~e=se:c~o;nd~

68 191
62 79
130 270

Yards Rushing
Yards Passing

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remain in a three-way tie for first place in the SEOAL.
Number 80 in middle is Bulldog end Jim Scott. On ground at
right is Marauder fullback Tiny Williams (251. Number 54 at
far right is Athens' Mike Buck. (Katie Crow photo).

Meigs Grid Statistics

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both Meigs and Bulldog fans, the Bulldogs as he quardominated every phase of the terbacked the potent Athens
game. They had no turnovers offense with 4 of 7 passing for
compared to four for the one touchdown. Green, a 170 lb.
Marauders, and permitted senior, also led the defense with
Meigs on Bulldog territory only two interceptions, widening his
once, that coming late in the league lead to five .
Pacing the Bulldogs line play
game after the decision had
was A1 Ackerman, an agile,
been made.
The embarrassed Meigs powerful 223 lb. senior tackle.
defense, the league leaders The Bulldogs ran regularly
coming into the game, gave up through holes he created, while
270 totat yards, 191 rushing and· Meigs had trouble moving him
79 passing. The 79 passing' for out of the action when Athens
Athens was 18more than Athens was on defense.
had gained in its first four
The usually potent Meigs
league games.
offense was throttled down by a
Tbe previous worst 'beating_ tenacious Athens defense'.-Mark
the Marauders ever took was in Williams, the league's leading
1968, a ~ licking by the Pt. rusher going into the game, had
Pleasant Big Blacks at only 25 yards in eight carries.
Marauder Stadium.
All told, Meigs had only 68 yards
Mike Greim was the star for on·the ground and 62 in the air.

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Chieftains Edge Waverly, 14-7

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21 first down~. 210 yards
rushing, and hit four of seven
passes for ll9 yards and two
t.ouchdowns.
Wellston showed 10 first
downs, 67 yards 9n the ground,
and completed ll of 24 passes
for 133 yards, with two intercepted.
Meadows led Jackson in
rushing with 98 yards In 23
carries while · Terry Stewart
was Wetiston•s ·top gainer with
26 yards in nine tries.
Score by quarters: ·
Wellston
0 6 8 l&gt;-20
Jackson
7 8 8 8-29

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BYKEITH WISECUP
THE PLA!ijS - The Athens
Bulldogs handed the Meigs
Marauder~ \lleit .worst defeat in
the Marauders' brief five-year
history, 31-Q, here Friday night
In a critical Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League -game.
The loss all but shot the Meigs
team out o( a chance at the
championship. Athens, on the
other hand, is very much In the
thick of it, tied with Ironton and
Logan for the league lead, each
with 4-1 league records. Athens
is 6-1 overall and Meigs 5-2.
The Bulldogs, playing perfect
ball, struck fvr 21 points in the
(jnal six mlnu!es of the first
half. To that poiQt, the game
was nearly even. But, wham!
The Bulldogs suddenly blew it
wide open.
Athens, to the amazement of

extras but was stopped short,
making the score 14-0.
In the fourth quarter, with
11 : 57 left, Amsbary scored
again on a one-yard sneak.
Amsbary attempted the extras
but was stopped.
The Eagles wlll travel to
Southwestern next Friday to
meet -the winless .Highlanders.
Miller, coached by Jim Cook,
will play the Netsonvllle-York
Buckeyes at home.
(See Statistics on Page 18)

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touchdown with 9:35 left in the
fourth quarter on a seven-yard
run by quarterback Brooks. The
play climaxed a 55-yard march .
Reynolds kicked the extra point
providing the visitors with a 9-0
lead.
The final - Spartan six-pointer
came on a fourth down, 20-yard
pass from Brooks to Walsh.
Brooks "ran the conversion
placing the final count at 17-0.
Kyger Creek, behind two pass
interference calls and a 23-yard
pass from quarterback Glenn
Smith to sophomore halfback
Rick Smith, moved the ball to
the Il-yard line but again their
offens,e became ineffective
before reaching the goalline.
Al~xander controlled the
game statistics as well as the
score. The Spartans collected 15
first downs, 205 yards rushing
and 81 yards passing .
The Bobcats had only seven
first downs, 24 yards rushing
and 58 yards pasSing.
Kyger Creek travels to Green
Friday in a non-league game .
BY QUARTERS
Alexander
0 2 0 15-I7
Kyger Creek
0 0 0 0- 0
· STATISTICS
DEPARTMENT
A KC
First Downs
15 7
Yards Rushing
205 24
Yards Passing
87 58
Passes Attempted
16 ll
Passes Completed
7 5
Fumbles
I
4
Fwnbles Lost
I
1
Penalties
70 10

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Federal Hocking, North Gallia ltnebacker, were the Eagle
Hannan Trace, and Miller. ' headhunters.
The Big Green ripped for two
Given credit for an out- touchdowns in the second
standing effort for the Eagles, quarter Jlfter a scoreless first
besides Sanders and Amsbary, quarter. Amsbary scored his
on offense, was Dan Chaffee, a firstoftwoonal7-yardrun"'ith
l45lb. sophomore fullback, who 11 :09 left in the first half.
filled the gap . left by Dennis Sanders ran in the extras to
Eichinger, 190 lb: senior, who make it 8-0.
was injured in the game.
With 7:56 remaining in the
On defense, John Cline, a 155 second period, Sanders rambled
lb. senior guard, and Alan 29 yards for another score.
Duvall , 170 lb . junior Sanders also attempted the

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season as they have only South- touchdown.
western, winless in seven But once again, the story of
games, and Southern, 2-4, left to the Eagles was their defense.
play. Both are SVAC opponents. What can be said about them" It
has allowe-d only three touchJim Amsbary , 160 lb. senior downsinsevengamesthisyear,
quarterback, again p~ced the and a total cif 18 points. Miller
potent Eagle attack with two was their fourth shutout this
touchdowns on runs of one and year and their second in a row.
11 yards. Rick Sanders, 145 lb. The only teams to score .on the
senior halfback, scored the powerful Eagles have been
other Eastern touchdown, a Kyger Creek, Frontier Local,
gallop of 29 yards. Sanders also and Glouster each six points.
ran in the extras after the first The E~gles have shutout

STATISTICS
DEPARTMENT
NG HT
First Downs
10
2
Yards Rushing
225
0
Yards Passing
105 . 15
Passes Attempted
8 14
Passes Completed
5
2
Interceptions
2
0
Fumbles
2
5
Fumbles Lost
2
2
Punts
15-165) (4-121)
Penalties
130 45

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• Prem ium

BY KEITH WISECUP
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Eastern Eagles remamed thts
area's only unbeaten and untied
football team by defeating the
Miller Falcons at the Eagles'
home field . near here Friday
night, 2().{1.
Coach Roger Kirkhart 's
Eagles arc-now HI overall and
remained at 3-0 (on top) in the
Southern Valley Conference.
The Eagles are almost a shoo-in
for going undefeated on the

North Galha hosts Hannan,
W. Va., Friday. Hannan Trace
plays Fort Gay, W. Va .
BY QJJARTERS
North Gallia
14 16 10 ().....40
Hannan Trace
0 0 0 ()..... 0

Win,
Falcons Tie

•

In

touchdowns.

SECTIONAL HOME

• m lb. Asphall

•

JACK W. CARSEY, MANAGEK

PH. 992-2181

Serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties
Store Open Mon .- Sat. Til ~-Station Open 24 Hours
7106·24
l

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IB - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, SUnda~· , Oct. 21.1971

38~8

Spears, BoYkin ·Unstoppable, IHS Romps,
IRONTON
All-State
Quarterback Candidate· Hal
Spears threw two touchdown
passes, scored once himself,
and directed three other Ironton
scores as Coach !lob Bruney's
rampaging Tigers swamped
visiting Gallipolis 311-8 before a
standing room only crowd of
4,000 at Tank Stadium here
Friday night.
The 6-3 senior signal caller

the Southeastern Ohio Leagu,e
(with Athens and Logan) with a
4-1 record. GAHS dropped into a
second place tie with Meigs with
a 3-2 confer~nce mark.
When the final shot was fired
from Ironton's huge cannon
beneath the Tiger scoreboard,
Spears had •completed five of 12
passes for 134 yards and two
. The victory left IHS in a touchdowns. The Tigers added
three-way tie for first place in 197 yards rushing in 39 ground
plays to finish the evening with
331 total yards.
The Ironton defense limited
GAHS to 125 yards rushing and
six yarcls passing lor 131 total

loosened up Gallipolis' defense
in the first hall with a spectacular aerial display, then
turned his big speedy backs
loose on the visiting Gallians in
the second hall as the Tigers
upped their season mark to 6-1.
GAHS dropped to 5-2 on the
year .

GAHS Statistics
INDIVIDUAL NET
YARDS RUSHING
(Ga llipolis)
PLAYER- Pos. TCB YG Avg.
Kev Sheets. FB
6 40 6.6
John Davis , RH
M ike Berridge. LH

4 18 ·4.5
2 8 4.0
Pete NeaL LH
20 60
3.0
Larry Snowden , QB 5 I
.2
Dave White, SE
1 -2 -2
TOTALS
38 125 3.2
(Ironton)

runl.

yards. The Lawrence Countians was 12-0 with 7: 29 left in the
collected 14 first downs and half.
GAHS got its first break when
permitted Gft:HS seven.
On the game's lith play, Bud Sanders recovered a
Spears hurled a perfect 62-yard Spears IIJ!llble on the Tiger 43
strike to Jim Payne to give IHS with 3:40 left in the half. But
a IH!lead with 5:29 -showing on Bob Smith pounced on a GAHS
the clock. Jeff Howard 's fumble two plays later on the
placekick was wide, to the left Ironton 43. IHS marched 57
Ironton added two more six yards in seven plays, with
pointers in the second stanza. Spears smashing over from the
The Tigers marched 80 yards in three with 30 seconds left in the
nine plays, the climax being a half. A pass for the extra points
13-yard aerial from Spears to failed.
wingback Steve Massey, The third period was a
Howard 's placekick was . crusher as far as GAHS was
blocked by Rick Grymes and it concerned. No one had scored

blocked Howard's kick from
placement.
Another Ironton interception
by Steve Massey set up the final
Tiger touchdown. Smith plowed
oyer from the one with 11: 17
remaining in the game, and
Howard's placekick split the
uprights to up Ironton's lead to
31Hl.
At this point, Coach ijruney
cleared his bench.'
· GAHS finally got on the board
after Eric Saunders intercepted
Rick Massey's pass on the
GAHS 41. The Devils marched
59 yards in eight plays. Pete
Neal took it the final nine with
2:59lelt in the game, then added
the extra points.
Two sparkling Tiger runs
were nullified by penalties in
the first half.
In the first period, right after
Ironton 's initial touchdown,
Larry Snowden punted 41 yards
' to Jim Payne. The Tiger back
scooted 56 yards to the Blue
Devil six, but a roughing the ·

on GAHS in the third period lor
three years, but the high-flying
Tigers managed to punch over
two six-pointers as a result of a
GAHS fumble and an intercepted pass,
The first came with 9:04 left
when Fullback Bob Smith
bulled over from the four.
Howard's placekick was true.
That made it 25-11.
Then, with 4:34 left, Rick
Boy kin, Ironton's line 200-pound
senior tailback, rambled eight
yards to up the Tiger lead to 310. Rick Grymes, who played
well defensively lor GAHS,

IRONTON - Pay'ne, 62-yard

pa ss from Spears. 5:29 , first
(kick ta il); S. Massey, 13,yard
pa ss from Spears, 7:29 second,
(kick blocked) : Spears, 3-yard
run . : 30, second , (pass , fail) ;
Smith, 4-yard run . 9: 04, third,
( Howard, k ick) ; Boyk in, 8-yard
run , 4 : 34,
third ,
{kick,
blocked) ; Smith, 1-yard run.
11 . 17, f ourth . (Howard , kick).

TEAM STATISTICS
PLAYER
TCB YG Avg .
Rick Boykin, FB 11 113 10.2 SCORE BY QUARTERS
0 0 o 8- a
Greg Spence, RH
2 15 7.5 Gallipol is
6 12 13 7- 38
Jim Payne, SE
I 5 5.0 Ironton
Terry Mowery , F B 7 28 4.0 FIRST DOWNS
2 o 2 3- 7
Bob Smith, FB
10 28 2.8 Gal li pol is
Je ssie Cain , LH

1

3

3.0

Hal Spears, QB
6 7 1.1
Rick Massey, QB
1 ·1 -2
TOTALS
39 197 5.1
INDIVIDUAL PASSING
(Gallipolis)
PLAYER
C-A I YG TO

Snowden

2-9 1

0

1 9 3 1- 1_.

Ironton

13 87 68 36- 20_.

·~

YARDS LOST RUSHING
Gal lipol is
0 1 3 9- 13
Ironton

0 50 2-

Saunders

1-2

White
TOTALS

2

0-5
2-9

0
6

7

PLAYER
Payne
Kriebel
S. Masse y
Spence

Gall ipol is
Ironton

0

5-11 134

0

2

x-One intercepted . ·

1

TOTALS

0

Gallipol is
Ironton

FUMBLES

0

PI YG TO

S. Massey
Payne

!ron ton

1 15
1 13

0
0

Gallipoli s
Ironton

0 2 2 1- 5
0 1 0 Q-1

0 1 1 o-2

0 1 0 Q-1

12 1 0 20 0 Q--20
14) 15 25 0 0-40
LINEUPS
(Gallipolis)

R Massey
1 11 o ENOS- Er ic Saunders, Dave
TOTALS
.
3· 39 0 Wh ite , Rick Grymes . Leon
KICKOFF RETURNS
Smith, Dean Ree s, Leon Briggs.
(Gallipolis)
TACKLES - Chuck Wood
PLAYER
KOYGTD t ee); Jim Mill er. Matt Epling.
Wamsley
5 113 0 Dave Kerns , Steve Rose .
White
2 47 0 GUAR OS - Pal Boster, Ken
TOTALS
7 160 o Wamsley, John Bagshaw, Mike
&lt;Ironton l
Wolfe .
PLAYER
KO YG TO
CENTER - Bud Sanders,
S. Massey
1 25 0 Brett Epling.
Carter

0

I

0

BACKS -

Larry Snowden,

TOTALS
2 25 o Pete Neal {ee l; Mike Berridge,
PUNT RETURNS
John Davis, Kev Sheets, John
(GaUipolis)
Walter , Chuck Perroud.
PLAYER
PR YG TO
(Ironton)
White
1 8 0 ENDS - Steve Massey, Jim
Waller
I 6 0 Payne, Jeff Murnahan, Mike
TOTALS
2 14
0 Reinhard1. Ken Green .
(Ironton l
TACKLES - Mike Albrink.
PLAYER
PR YG TO Bill Mark in, Terry Parker,
Payne
1 24
o Bruce Thomas , Jeff Howard.
TOTALS
I 24 0 Tim Rapp, Paul Wheeler, Roger
RECOVERED
ENEMY Mortan .
FUMBLES' GAHS - Bud
GUARDS - Keith Parker,
Sanders.
Ben Scherer, Char les Keller ,
IRONTON -B. Smith , Roger Morgan .
Spears.
CENTERS- Bob Rist. Dave
OFFICIALS - Ken Russell, Whitehead. ·
Kerm itt Blosser. Ben Kindall
BACKS - Hal Spears, Rick
and Joe
Chap ter .

Van i ty ,

Athens

~.~

MIKE ALBRINK, 189-pound senior Ironton tackle (77)
swoops in on Gallia 's Pete Neal (38) on this play in Friday's
GAHS-Ironton football game. Neal, who returned to the

14 7 15 14- 50
a 20 11 12- 51

0 0 PENALTIES

1 Ironton)

PLAYER

----------------------

TRI.STATE DRIVER TRAINING
BOZ 111-h• Volley Bonk 111ft,
Chooltotw•, W, Yo., 8311

Nt"'"---------------

33 13 33 52- 131

PASS INTERCEPTION
Gallipoli s
RUN BACKS
Ironton
!Gallipolis)
FUMBLES LOST
PLAYER
PI YG TO Gallipolis
Saunders

SEND COUPON OR CALL (30M 346·1556

75 154 68 34- 33 1

Boyk in, Bob Smith, Jessie Cain,
Monty Boyd, Rick Massey,
Greg Spence, Bob Neiman,
Bruce C,arter. Terry Mowery,
Dave Leasure.

PUNT5--GAHS ' Snowden, 5245 (49.0).
IRONTON ' Kriebe l, 4.\77 ,
1« .2).
NEXT GAHS GAME - Oct.
SCORING , GAH5--Neal , 9· 29, Meigs, home.

·······•····•

Green Tops SW Squad
BY MIKE WISE
FRANKLIN FURNACE
The Green Bobcats handed the
Southwestern Highlanders a 320 loss here Friday night in a
non-league encounter. The win
gave Green a 3-4 record. The
Highlanders are now 0-7.
Mike Tripplett kicked off lor
Green with Southwestern
receiving at the 33-yard line.
The Highlanders punted after
coming short of a first down.
With 7:22 left in the first
quarter , Mike Triplett, senior
halfback, scored lor the Bobcats on a four-yard run. Dan
McDavid scored · the extra
points on a run.
With 5:00 remaining in the
quarter, Jeff Holtzappel scored
on a 40-yard pass by Dan McDavid. Holtzappel also ran in
the extra poiolts.
SECOND QUARTER
Southwestern came close to
touchdown territory in the
second quarter but failed to
push it over. A 35-yard pass
from Larry Frazier to Mark
Smith brought the ball to
Green's live-yard line. Green

Addrea _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Phone - - - -

GAHS lineup for the first time in nearly three weeks, gained
three yards on this play. Tigers in background on left are
Rick Massey (12), Bruce Thomas (72 ), and Bob Smith, (32).
Ironton won 38-&lt;1. (Steve Wilson photo) .

•

buckled down to hold the
Highlanders scoreless.
The Bobcats could not score
during the second quarter as .
Southwestern's defense
toughened during the stanza.
SECOND HALF
Green made a terrlf opening
play to begin the second half
when Triplett caught the Southwestern kickoff and ran SOyards for a touchdown. Holtzappel made the conversion.
Triplett scored again with one
second remaining in the third
quarter on a run. He also took in
'tlle conversion .
Both teams were held
scoreless in the fourth quarter. ·
BY QUARTERS
Green
16 0 16 0--32
Southwestern
0 0 0 0-- 0
STATISTICS
G sw
First Downs
9
8
Rushing Yardage
122
15
Passing Yardage
83 72
Passes Attempted
17 23
Passes Completed
4
6
Penalties
8-90 6-60
Fumbles
5
3
Fumbles Lost
2
l

Stall

Lice"'ed by Stolt of Olllo 552 ·

EK SPECIALS
OCT. ~5th THRU 30th ONLY

Description

2

24" White and Gold Vanity with ForclTIIca ,
top, white P.S. Sink , chrome faucet.
Regular Price 585,40 .....

1

24" K-K. Woodtone vanity

Sale

'

.',

,'

Sale Price •109.95

1

.'

GALLIPOLIS
The
Defending Champions - OUR
Defending Champions - proved
themselves ...
What a thrill ! To watch them
play to win when winning time
was past . . . to see them try,
and try , and try again when
lime is almost gone and the
score long since out of sight ...
To know that something far
more precious than the laurel
crowns their brows, who, losing ,

Eastern Grid

Footba II Scores
By United Press International

John Ecker's Blue Devils live
that, too! And that's high! It's
great to have a son part of that!
·
d
0 ur Champwns
prove
themselves!
- Aproud Dad
·

Portsmouth West 69 li!inford 0
Whe eler sburg 50 Northwest
!Scioto) 7
Green Twp. !Scioto) 32 Southwestern o

Middletown 28 Lima 27
Sidney 14 Shawnee 6

Kenton 9 Bathe 8
Delphos St. Johns 28 Eden 7
Cambridge 31 Claymont 0
Meadowbrook 33 Frontier 14
Malvern 22 Newcomerstown 14

NBA Standings

Statistics

·SEO Standings

Phocn1x
1 2 .333
Pacific Division
ABA Standings
W. L. Pel.
By United Press International
Los Angeles 4 1 .800
East
4 2 .667
W. L. Pet. GB Seattle
3 1 .750 .. . Golden Stale 2 2 .500
New York
0 J .000
2
1 .667
'12 Portland ,
Kentucky
0 5 .000
3 2 .600 1h Houslon
Florid ians
Friday's Results
3 2 .600 v,
Virg inia
22 .5001 New Y'ork '110 Baltimore 87
Pillsburgh

Indiana
Ulah
Dallas
Memphis

I

West

4 .200 3

Milwaukee 124 Buffalo 105
Basion 115 Atlanta 108

W. L. Pet. GB Chicag o 113 Los Angeles 106
Detroll 116 Phoenix 109
5 0 1.000

1

3

GB
...
'h
1112

3
4

Wellston
1 6 o 106 213
Waverly
0 7 0 41 183
SEOAL ONLY
TEAM
W L T POP
Ironton
4 1 o 163 55
·Logan
4 I 0 122 79
Athens
4 1 0 81 40
Gallipolis
3 2 o 104 81
Meigs
3 2 o 9o 75
Jackson
2 3 o 103 100
Waverly
0 50 27 119
Wellston
0 5 0 54 195
TOTALS
20200 744 744
FRIDAY'S RESULTS ,
· Ironton 38 Galllp&lt;ills 8
Alhens 31 Meigs 0
Logan 14 Waverly 7
Jackson 29 Wellston 20
OCT. 29 GAMES'
Meigs 111 Gallipolis
Athens at Logan

3 2 .600 2 Seallle 110 Houston 91
IOnly qame..Scheduled)
2 3 .400 3
o 4 .ooo 4'11
Blue, white and red buntDenver
0 4 .000 4'h
Fridly's Rtsulls
ing should always , be ar,
Carolina 108 Memphis 102
ranged with the blue above ,
Indiana 105 Kentucky 102
white in the middle and red
Plilsburgh 124 Floridians 123
below for decorative· pur- Jackson at Ironton .
· .Dallas m Virginia ! ~
Waverly at Wellston
",.'"~ &lt;;:

Bloom -Carroll 6 Berne-Union 0
M~{s"ille 32 West Muskingum·

1
PREFINI
PANELING

13

134 Pes.

Cambridge 31 Claymont 0
Xenia 19 Beaver Creek 6

Centerville 32 Springfield North
Dayton Chaminade 20 Dayton
34 Dayton

with
marble top and chrome, 1 pc. faucet.
Regular Price 5121.65.

Banatone Planked

Shale White

Regular Price

Clo~e Out

149

2.69

1

1

12

Prices On All Yow Paneling Needs

Athens 31 Meigs 0

.,

o

Fort Frye 34 Warren Local 10
Eastern (Meigs Co.) 2q Miller 0
F~dera l Hocking 8 Vinton
County 6
Alexander 17 Kyger Creek 0

25 Different Varieties to Choose From

!

\

Ironton 38 Ga ll ipolis 8

CASH
&amp;

Pre Finished Moulding and Nails To Match

CARTER &amp; EVANS IN(:.

CARRY
87 OLIVE ST.

"BlJILDING SUPPLIES"
.

,

Monday Thru Friday - 7 A. M . to 5 P.M.
Satur d,1y ~. 7 1\. M . t'l P.M. '
A

P~ONE

4·16-4905

Don't
take a
chance

by

Sawn

Check Our Everyday Low

Louisville 46 Marlington 0
North Canton 18 Oakwood 6

!

- SAVE

12

Wilm ington 35 Hillsboro 6
Alliance 49 St. Thomas Quinas

2 NEW PGA DIRECTORS
NEW YORK ( UPI) - Joseph
C. Dey, Jr., commissioner of
the PGA Tournament' Players ,
Division , announced Friday that
Charles Coody and Gene Littler
wel'e elected as pJayer direc-

skaters in the history of Roller
Derby - Joan Weston, Tony
Roman , and Ronnie Robinson will lead the circuit's new
Central Pioneer Club. Fiery
Ann Calvello, the fussiest
woman in the game, will exhibit
ber control with the Midwest
Jolters, while Cliff Butler, a top

jammer for several years, will
head the men's unit.
Tickets to see the rough and
tumbling Roller Derby may be
purchased . at the Memorial
Field House, Sears and Kay
Jewelers In Huntington.
Reservations may be made by
calling 5~124.
Tomatoes
The tomato originated in
America but it was' not used
as food here until long alter
Europeans had been eating
it. As recently as a century
ago, Americans believed the
p 1an t was poisonous and
grew it only as an ornamentaL This mistaken belief
arose because the plant be·
longs to the sometimes deadly nightshade family .

I

Meadowdale 1-4 Hamilton Ross

Ironton 38 Gallipolis 6
Jackson 29 Wellston 70
Belpre 6 Nelsonville-York

HUNTINGTON - The Roller
Derby, the skate game that has
appeared live in some 500 cities
and is seen weekly on 125 TV
slaUons that reach an estimated
~million people, will be seen at
the Memorial Field House in
Huntington 8 p.m. Nov. 4.
Three of the most popular

marble top and gold 1 piece faucet.
. Regular Price $171.75

Planked
Rosewood

0
Troy 54 Fairmont East 13

· Wright 20

expanded from 1971 operations no matter what
By BERNARD BRENNER
happens - growers who want government
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Continuation of the support will be required to idle acreage equal to
East and Gulf Coast dock tie-ups could inflate the 25 per cent of their historic base acreage. In a
cost of next year's farm support programs, second phase, producers will have the option of
idling a further 10 per cent of their acreage in
according to a top govenunent farm planner.
Clarence D. Palm by, an assistant Secretary of return for federal diversion, or "set aside"
Agriculture, told newsmen the administration's payments. Finally, in a third phase, the farmers
plans for &lt;."ontrolllng 1972 output of corn and will be able to offer to idle an additional 5 or 10
other feed grains are built aroWJd hopes of per cent,of their acreage in return lor still more
holding next year's corn crop to 4.5 billion payments.
Acreage offered under tbe first two phases will
bushels, or about 300 million bushels below
prospective demand in tbe 1972-73 marketing . automatically be accepted by the government.
But acreage offered in the third phase will be
season.
But if the dock strike continues to throttle treated as a safely valve, and will be a~epted
export sales of grain during the current 1971-72 for federal payment only if officials decide next
season, Palmby added, officials could be forced March it is needed.
to seek an even deeper cut in next year's
production.
Looking at supply -demand prospects today,
The deeper the production cut goes, the bigger administration officials plan to gear the 1972
the blll will be for taxpayers. This is because any program to idle about 38 million feed grain acres
extra cutback needed will be reached by paying - more than double the amount retired this
lff'?ers to take additional acreage out of year. Pplmby said this could probably be done
production.
by retiring all the acreage offered by farmers in
Palmby said uie administration's 1972 feed the first two phases of the program plus part of
grain control and farmer-payment program, the acreage from phase three.
announced early this week, was deliberately
If the dock strike continues, however, Palmby
designed with a built-in safety valve to allow said, it might be necessary to push 1972
upansion If the dock strike continues and makes retirement about 38 million acres by dipping
it necessary to idle extra acreage next spring. deeper into the acreage offered by farmers
Under the program - which will be sharply under phase three.

30" IXL Sculptured Satin Gold with

DESCRIPTION

mulch to prevent damage from
alternate freezing and thawing.
Most spring flowering bulbs
should be planted in late Sep!ember through November.
If you want to save your
gladiolus bulbs (corms), better
dig them before the ground
freezes. Dig corms by loosening
the soil with a fork spade and
then pull out the plants- by the
tops. If foliage has died and
been removed, corms may be
hard to locate.
Remove corms when soil is
dry~ Cut tops off close to the top
of the corm and wash away
clinging soiL Cure corms as
quickiy as possible. This can be
done by placing them in shallow
trays with wire bottoms or other
containers that allow air circulation. Curing takes about 2 to
3 weeks. During this time, the
temperature should be kept
between 85 and 95 degrees and
the relative hwnidity at 50 pet.
or above . Proper relative
humidity and high lell)perature
aid in the corking over of injured tissues. Turn corms
several times during the curing
period.

Reduced Supports for Com•

Merillat Woodtone Vanity with
marble top and 1 pc. chrome faucet.
Regular Price $135,95

CLOSE .OUT

Spring-Shawnee. 23 Covington 6
Newark Cathol ic 34 New Albany
6
Lakewood 28 Watkins Memorial

Belmont o
Dayton Dunbar

would have been much better.
If the lawn has been
established, there is still time tQ
apply a complete fertilizer. The
rate of application is based on
the amount of Nitrogen, which
is recommended at 2 pounds of
actuaiNitrogenper 1,000 square
feet For example, if you use a
10-10-10 fertlllzer which contains 10 pet. actual Nitrogen you
would apply this at a rate of 20
pounds per 1,000 square feet.
OVER 500 FAMILIES in
Meigs County are planting
about 8,000-10,000 flower bulbs
this fall which they purchased
through the 4-H clubs last
summer.
If you like beautiful flowers in

30"

30" K. K White and

18

Dub lin 6 Teays Va lley 0
Hilliard 20 Grove City 17
Bexley 20 Marysville 13
Marietta 22 Chillicothe 0

New' in Farming

the spring, better give some
thought to spring flowering bulb
plantings now. Spring flowering
bulb~ are hardy plants . that
reqmre lltUecare. ifhey provide
early color in your garden or
yard at a time when few other
plants are in bloom.
Among the more popular
spring flowering bulbs are tulip,
narcissus, hyacinth, iris, and
crocus, Some that are not so
well known are scilla,
chionodoxa, muscari, and
galanthus.
· Gardeners
use
bulbs
anywhere in their garden, Some
are best as border plants.
Others are best when grouped in
large masses of color, and
many kinds can be scattered in
lawns or planted among shrubs
as ground cover, according to
USDA ornamentalists,
TO GROW SPRING flowering
bulbs successfully, select
healthy, mature bulbs and store
them in a cool, dry place until
planting time. Prepare tile soil
in the planting beds thoroughly,
Plant at depths, distances
apart, and plantfng times
recommended for each kind of
bUlb, and maintain a winter

Sale Price •· •109.95

12

London 9 Grandview 2
Lancaster 32 Newark 14
Hamilton Twp . 20 Olentangy 8
West Jefferson 14 Frank lin
Heights 6

BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
Esl. Agent, Agricallure
POMEROY -A nice looking
lawn an~ y~~td next year has
pretty largely already been
detennined, But there still are
several things , which can be
done.
It Is almost too late to seed a
lawn this fall but some people
may want to try lt. September I

Sale Price •129.95

Tri·Valley 32 Philo 9

Lucasville Valley 6 Groveport 34 Co lumbus M ifflin

Never!, . .

36" Regular Price 515o.65

May sville 32 West Muskingum

never yield · · ·
Springfie ld Sou th 20 Ports. Crooksville 24 Riverview 7
Sir Winston Churchill said it, mouth 7
Millersport 33 Liberty Union 0
and lived it: "Never give in! Portsmouth East 30 New Boslon Logan 14 Waverly 7
0
Whetstone 21 Columbus 0
Never!
Never!
Coal Grove 28 South Point 21
Mt . Vernon 28 Columbus
Never!. .. Never! ... Never!. .. Port smouth N.D. 46
Westland 6

By United Press International 'Perry 23 Glenwood 21
Minerva 20 East Palestine 6
Eastern Conference
Tusky Valley 10 Sandy Valley 6
Atlantic Division
Shelby
20 Galion 13
W. L. Pel. GB
Ashland
7 Wooster 6
,
Philadel phia 4 0 1.000
Upper
Arl
ington
31
Zanesville
0
BY QUARTERS
Boston
2 1 .667 l 1/ 2
3 2 .600 11/2 New Lexington 40 Morgan 6
Miller
o o o o-- o New Yor k
1 4 .200 311'2
East ern
0 14 0 6-20 Buff alo
Centra
I
Division
East. Mill.
First Downs
W. L. Pel. GB
14
5
Total Yard s
1 1 .500 . ..
173
44 Cinc innati
Yards Rush
1 3 .250 1
127
28 Bal timore
YardS Pass .
1 4 ;200 11h
46
16 Cl eve land
SEOAL ALL GAMES
Pass Alt .
0 4 .000 2
13
15 Allanla
TEAM
W L T POP
Pa ss Camp
Western Conference
2
2
Ironton
6 1 0 230 69
Pass. Int. b y
.Midwest Division
4
0
Athens
6 1 o 147 71
Fumbles
W. L. Pel. GB Meigs
4
4
5 2 o 142 95
Fum b. Lost
5 0 1.000
0
0 Milwa ukee
Gallipolis
5 2 0 164 113
Penalt ies
• 1 .800 1
4·30 7·85 De lroi l
Logan
5 2 o 202 120
Punts
3 1 .750 w, Ja ckson
5·25.0 6-30 0 ChiCago
4 3 o 210 1~0

Carolina

1

Friday's Grid Scores
Ohio High School

24" Country Maple woodtone vanity with
marble top and I pc. chrome faucet .
Regular Price 5134.40

1

Some.Things Can Yet~ Be Done for Lawns

Roller Derby Due On November 4th

Sale Price '93.95

va r d run, 2: 59. fourth ( N ee~ I.

Devils Never Gave Up • .

top and chrome, 1 faucet .
Regular Price $115.23

,

'.

·

Dock Tieups Could Trip Up'

Join one of the highnt poylng lndumlto in tilt nttlon. ·In lftt'dlln 1
month we Clll tuch yau 111 drMI o •ml-tnctOI' tnllw tnd wdfy
you under dllpltlment of tranq10111tlon IIIUIItiDIIL FrH nttloiMide
plecement assilllnto upon gllduotlon. For moll lnf!!""'tlon ,

6

C-A YG TO' RETURN YARDAGF.
31 39 74 30-174
1-5 62 1 Gall ipol is
49 0 28 11 - 88
3-4 59 0 Ironton
1-1 13
1 PLAYS FROM SCRIMMAGE
0-1

TOTALS

o--

.

ON 'fn FARM FRONT

Be job-ready in 4 waaks

62 72 0 Q-13~
0 Ironton
TOTAL
YARDS
IRush.Passl
0

)(-Three intercepted .

(Ironton)

0 60

~·

LEARN TO DRIVE
A SEMI-TRACTOR
TRAILER!

NET YARDS RUSHING

0 Gallipol is

kicker penalty nulll{led · thllt
spectacular play. 1
. With 8:40 left in th~ second
period, Boykin , ra!llble4 42
yards unmolested, but a 'CUpping penalty on the GAHS 41
killed that sensational gallop.
Boykin, who hal\ been held in
check in three previous games
against Gallipolis, was unstoppable Friday ' night. The
veteran tailback picked up 113
yards in 11 trips, 10.2 yards per
carry.
Snowden enjoyed the best
night of his career in the punting depariment, ' booting five
times for totals of 45, 51, 51, 45
and 53 yards. Tiger punter Dave
Kriebel had four punts for 177
yards.
AU told, IHS, in the first three
periods, had the ball 10 times
and scored six times.
Gallipolis will return home
Friday to battle the Meigs
Marauders, a ·31-0 victim at
Athens Friday night.' Ironton
will host Jackson.

Qualify for High Paying Jobs I

YARDS GAIN.ED RUSHING
Gal lipol is
3 8 36 61- 138

0-1 1 0 0 Gal lipoli s · 33 7 33 52- 125
13 82 66 34- 197
o.J I 0 0 Ironton
2-12 3 6 o PASSES ATTEMPTED
Gallipolis
3 2 4 3- 12
I Ironton)
3 6 2 1- 12
PLAYER
C-A I YG TO Ironton
Spears
5.11 o 134 2 PASSES COMPLETED
o 2 o 0- 2
o 1 1 0 0 Gal li pol is
R. Massey
1 4 o o-s
TOTALS
5-12 1 134 2 Ironton
INDIVIDUAL RECEPTIONS PASSES INTERCEPTED
Gallipol is ·
o o o 1-1
(Gallipolis)
Ironton
0 0 2 1- 3
PLAYER
C-A YG TO
Sheets
1-2 a 0 YARDS GAINED PASSING
Neal
Berridge
TOTALS

&gt;.r:i

6

Ironton

JJ-TheSI.IICiay'tlma-Sentinel,Sunday,Oct.24.1971

I

CASH
&amp;
CARRY

feeding
moldy corn
to pregnant sows...
FEED
PURINA SOW OVALS

J. D. North Produce

PartFarmer?

When old and new corms
separate readily, dust them
with a lungicLe such as Caplan
or Folpet to prevent storage
rots. Keep treated corms lor a
day or two at 80 degrees and
then place them in cold storage
for the winter. Winter storage
should be near 40 degrees with
adequate air circulation.
THOSE HOUSE plants that
have been vacationing outside
in your flower garden shoufd be
moved inside soon, if you
haven't already done this job.
Some may need repotting, if
left in the original pot all
summer. Use l part peat, I part
sand and 3 parts of a good
garden soiL You'll need to use a
larger pot than the one the plant
came .out of.
Some plants may need
pruning and all will need a close
check lor insects .. While the
plants are still outside, spray
with an insecticide such as
malathion to control plant lice,
mites, spiders, and others.
Once inside, place plants
where they will get plenty of
light. Keep them away from
high heat such as fireplaces,

~~!:~~~st~£~~~a~;~:~~~ Tulip

watering each time. Then give
plants a thorough watering usually about once e~ch week.
You can start cleamng up the
flower' shrub and ga~den beds
now and through the f1rst frost.
And, smce next year's crops
will need all the organic matter
th en can ge t• per haps you ,11
want
. to save clean leaves, plant
foliage . or other refus~ that
make a good compost ptle. Be
d fl
t bl
sul rets vege af e an! d' ower
p an are ree o tseases

over your plans .. . and the advantages

of a Land Bank loan.

B. Walker, Mgr ,

lt._,Locust St. , Gallipolis . 446-0203

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

!11rs.

RAY SCHOENER, FORESTER on the Ironton Ranger
District , sharpening up his eye, not on a squirrel, but a tulip
poplar (yellow poplar) cone, which will be used to provide
seed for planting of tomorrow's ''~per Tree ."

Britannica .

Popular Cones Fair . Game

IRONTON -·Personnel of the
Ironton Ranger District, the
Wayne National Forest, have
been keeping their shooting
eyes in shape not hunting
.
'
.
squ~rrels, but tuhp poplar
cones.
The United States 1"orest
Se rvJCe,
.
·m coopera t'1on WI·th
State Governments and large
.
.
.
pnvate land holdmg compames,
are collecting tulip poplar cones
.

from several superior trees on
the Ironton District. These
seeds will be used to grow
poplar
seedlings
lor
reforestation purposes in this
area.

As an aid to this program,
personnel of the district have
collected tulip poplar cones
from several superior trees.
Armed with .22 caliber rifles
and scopes, personnel have

Road, has ..,een making im·
provements and working the
farm to make it a grassland
farm on which he is using an
extended grazing program .
This extended grazing program
consists of usirig Kentucky 31
fescue as the main forage for
both hay and pasture and
cutting part ofit and baling it in
round bales which are left lying
on the ground where the cattle
feed on them during the winter.
Under this operation the hay
is cut only once usually, that
being about the first of July. An
aftermath growth comes up in
the field , sometimes almost
hiding the round bales. During
the winter months cattle will eat
most of this standing grass,
even though it appears dry and
dead and will eat the bales of
hay also.
It is of interest to note that
there is a diversion ditch on this
farm buill many years ago . Mr .
Seager located a trailer immediately below the ditch in
order to gain protection by the
ditch from hillside runoff. He
plans to extend the present
ditch and repair the outlet
somewhat.
RUSSELL OSHEL of Sandhill
Road is a grassland farmer who
has operated his farm as such
many years, He has a beef
cattle enterprise which depends
mostly on grass and hay for
livestock feed. He inlproved 30
acres of pasture lhis year. In
commenting about his hay, he
said that it was very good this
year and that he had put up all
that he needed for his livestock
in one cutting.
It is interesting to note that
Mr. Oshel has a physical impairment and is paralyzed from
the waist down ; however, he
Th e AI manac
t'll
t h' t
d
.
s
By United Press Intema Irona 1 1 opera es f IS ractor an
Today is Sunday' Oct. 24, the mthanageds the anndiet~~ under
ese a verse con 1ons .
2971 h day of 1971.

The and
moonfirst
is between
phase
quarter. its new
The morning star is Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Scorpio.
American playwright Moss
Hart was born Oct. 24, 1904.
On this day in history:
In 1861 the first telegram was
sent across the United Stales
from calilor)lia Justice Stephen
Field to President Abraham
Lincoln.
In 1939 women's hosiery
made of nylon went on ·sale for·
the first time in ·Wilmington,
Del.
In 1945 Secretary of State
James Byrnes announced the
United Nations charter was in
force following Soviet ratification.
In 1952 Gen. Dwight D,
Eisenhower 1 the Republican
nominee for president, said if
elected he would go to Korea
anti srrk an end to lite war.

clipped oll small branches
containing the cones, which will
be sent to the Warren, Pa.
nursery where the seeds from
the cones will be sowed.
The seedlings produced will
be returned to this area and
planted in a specially selected
site where they will be observed
to see if the seedlings have
in herited the desired qualities.
Those trees showing superior
qualities will be used as seed
sources for the growing of more
seedlings to be used as tulip
poplar planting s!ock for this
area.
Several thousand acres of old
fields and mine spoils on the

Wayne National Forest are in
need of planting and seeding.
Yellow poplar, because of its
rapid growth rate, excellent
form, adaptability to open
conditions and high demand will
be one of the major species used
in reforestation .
The Tree Improvement
Program of the United States
Forest Service has the overall
objective
of
producing
genetically improved seed,
which is adapted to the local
conditions. The primary genetic
improvement aim is an increase in growth rate and
resistance to disease, insects,
drought and frost.

•
HI.

INTERNATIONAL®
u52-HORSE" UTILITY TRACTOR
Big work-power. Four cylinder gas or diesel engines.
Short turn s. Easy handl ing. Hydrostatic power steering. More comfort. New walk-through styling. Highspeed lightning shill (8F-4R speeds). Smooth synchromesh ·transmission .. Rugged planetary drive . 20
gail0n rear fuel tank. Big capaci ly live independent
hydraulics. Precision drafl control 3-point hitch with
infinite rate response . Dyna- Life• clutch . Hydraulic
wet disc brakes. Adjustable seat. Oplions in~lude
twin- shaft 540/1000 RPM PTO and differential lock.
'

SEE THE NEW 574. HERE TODAY

Meip Equipment Co.
Ph. 992-2176

Pomeroy, Ohic

r··-----------···----···-------~

FEED THE BIRDS!
New Crop

SUNFLOWER SEED
•

50 ·lb. bag
25 lb. bag

.,50
•350

CENTRAL
SOY
A
"The FIIOil Pow• P"IOPII"
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
.'

'"

carr ied by men in a sheath,
women wore theirs attached
to a girdle and they were
valued as wedding gifts , according to Encyclopaedia

-

By JOHN COOPER
clearing and improving
Soil Conservation Service
mowable areas as indicated
PT. PLEASANT - We feasible by the soil conservation
assisted Howard E. Love of survey , He uses this farm as a
Sand Hill Road recently with a retreat and as a diversion from
plan on his farm, the fQrmer . his duties as principal of
George Adkins farm. Mr. and Hannan Trace High School in
Mrs. Love plan to improve their Gallia County, Ohio.
land as a grassland farm to CARL SEAGER, whose fa~m
raise cattle. They now have is beyond Upland on the Milton
about 20 head.
The past summer they concentrated on their pasture. All
the mowable land in their
pastures has been clipped and
15 acres were treated with
·fertilizer. They plan some water
Improvement for livestock and
also perhaps a pond for
recreation use and esthetic
value.
JAMES E. LEWIS has
completed a pond on his farm In
the Upper Flats community. It
will be about three-fourth acre
in size when full of water,
James plans to pipe the water
from this pond to his dairy
operation about 1,000 feet away.
HAZLEWOOD
John Lewis, a relative, is the
CADIZ, 0. - Darrell R.
dairyman.
Hazlewood
has joined the
WILFRED DINGESS, whose
Hanna Division of Confarm is on Redmund Ridge, has
clipped all his pasture and solidallon Coal Company as
treated most of it. Now he is environmental engineer for
clearing more land for pasture. the division. Hazlewood
About three years ago Dingess earned his B. S. degree In
started work on his farm by civil engineering at the
University of Kentucky. He
served four years with the
Research DlvlsJon , of the
Kentucky Department of
Highways and two years with
the Agronomy Department at
the University of Kenturky.

to gel capital for this kind of operation?
From us - the Federal Land · Bank.
Let's arronge a meeting soon to talk

'·

Table Knife Oddities
Table knives were once

Grassland lmprove~ent
p •
roJJ e ct is for Cattle

Jf you area part-time farmer, you know
the importanCe of wringing maximum
productivity from every precious hour.
Enough acres to iustify bigger, more
mo~~r.n machinery. Labor-sav ing
f~c1ilt1es for handling additional
livestock and bigger crops . A home and
buildings in exc;ellent cOndition. Where

VINE ST. GALLIPOLIS, 0.

GALLIPOLIS
Temperature, precipitation and
weather conditions for each 24
hour period as recorded by Pete
McCormick, Fairfield Weather
observer :
Day
High Low Prec.
Sunday
68
52
.02
Monday
71
52
Tuesday
80
43
Wednesday
80
52
Thursday
79
52
Friday
69 59
.20
Saturday
60 60
.06
Average high temperature for
week t his year - 72.4. Last year
- 62.1.
Average low temperature for
week this year -- 52.8. Last year
- 39.2.
Total precipitation lor week
this year -.28inch . Last year 1.05 inches.
Total precipitation to date
this year - 25.74 inches. Last
year - 32.66 inches.

LAY OF THE LAND

You can't afford
to waste time
when you've got less
to start with.

Clyde

before incorporating them In
your compost pile .
Put down a layer of any
organic material you . have
available . Those mentioned .
above plus grass clippings,
straw, or spoiled hay are good.
After each layer of organic
material, apply a few handful of
fertilizer . Use a complete
analysis fertilizer such as 10-Jt).
10. Fertilizer speeds up
decomposition of materials and
adds nutrients to the compost.
Alter adding the fertilizer,
apply a layer of garden soil to
stimulate ha.~terial action.
Alternate layers of organic
material, fertilizer and soil until
the desired height is reached.
If organic material is dry, wet
it down before applying the
fertilizer and soil layers.
Materials must be moist to
hasten decomposition. Leave
top of piie flat or slightly concave to prevent runoff of rain
water.
Turning the pile occasionally
helps speed the process and
mixes the materials into a more
uniform compost.

Wee.k's Weather

�1.

I'

IB - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, SUnda~· , Oct. 21.1971

38~8

Spears, BoYkin ·Unstoppable, IHS Romps,
IRONTON
All-State
Quarterback Candidate· Hal
Spears threw two touchdown
passes, scored once himself,
and directed three other Ironton
scores as Coach !lob Bruney's
rampaging Tigers swamped
visiting Gallipolis 311-8 before a
standing room only crowd of
4,000 at Tank Stadium here
Friday night.
The 6-3 senior signal caller

the Southeastern Ohio Leagu,e
(with Athens and Logan) with a
4-1 record. GAHS dropped into a
second place tie with Meigs with
a 3-2 confer~nce mark.
When the final shot was fired
from Ironton's huge cannon
beneath the Tiger scoreboard,
Spears had •completed five of 12
passes for 134 yards and two
. The victory left IHS in a touchdowns. The Tigers added
three-way tie for first place in 197 yards rushing in 39 ground
plays to finish the evening with
331 total yards.
The Ironton defense limited
GAHS to 125 yards rushing and
six yarcls passing lor 131 total

loosened up Gallipolis' defense
in the first hall with a spectacular aerial display, then
turned his big speedy backs
loose on the visiting Gallians in
the second hall as the Tigers
upped their season mark to 6-1.
GAHS dropped to 5-2 on the
year .

GAHS Statistics
INDIVIDUAL NET
YARDS RUSHING
(Ga llipolis)
PLAYER- Pos. TCB YG Avg.
Kev Sheets. FB
6 40 6.6
John Davis , RH
M ike Berridge. LH

4 18 ·4.5
2 8 4.0
Pete NeaL LH
20 60
3.0
Larry Snowden , QB 5 I
.2
Dave White, SE
1 -2 -2
TOTALS
38 125 3.2
(Ironton)

runl.

yards. The Lawrence Countians was 12-0 with 7: 29 left in the
collected 14 first downs and half.
GAHS got its first break when
permitted Gft:HS seven.
On the game's lith play, Bud Sanders recovered a
Spears hurled a perfect 62-yard Spears IIJ!llble on the Tiger 43
strike to Jim Payne to give IHS with 3:40 left in the half. But
a IH!lead with 5:29 -showing on Bob Smith pounced on a GAHS
the clock. Jeff Howard 's fumble two plays later on the
placekick was wide, to the left Ironton 43. IHS marched 57
Ironton added two more six yards in seven plays, with
pointers in the second stanza. Spears smashing over from the
The Tigers marched 80 yards in three with 30 seconds left in the
nine plays, the climax being a half. A pass for the extra points
13-yard aerial from Spears to failed.
wingback Steve Massey, The third period was a
Howard 's placekick was . crusher as far as GAHS was
blocked by Rick Grymes and it concerned. No one had scored

blocked Howard's kick from
placement.
Another Ironton interception
by Steve Massey set up the final
Tiger touchdown. Smith plowed
oyer from the one with 11: 17
remaining in the game, and
Howard's placekick split the
uprights to up Ironton's lead to
31Hl.
At this point, Coach ijruney
cleared his bench.'
· GAHS finally got on the board
after Eric Saunders intercepted
Rick Massey's pass on the
GAHS 41. The Devils marched
59 yards in eight plays. Pete
Neal took it the final nine with
2:59lelt in the game, then added
the extra points.
Two sparkling Tiger runs
were nullified by penalties in
the first half.
In the first period, right after
Ironton 's initial touchdown,
Larry Snowden punted 41 yards
' to Jim Payne. The Tiger back
scooted 56 yards to the Blue
Devil six, but a roughing the ·

on GAHS in the third period lor
three years, but the high-flying
Tigers managed to punch over
two six-pointers as a result of a
GAHS fumble and an intercepted pass,
The first came with 9:04 left
when Fullback Bob Smith
bulled over from the four.
Howard's placekick was true.
That made it 25-11.
Then, with 4:34 left, Rick
Boy kin, Ironton's line 200-pound
senior tailback, rambled eight
yards to up the Tiger lead to 310. Rick Grymes, who played
well defensively lor GAHS,

IRONTON - Pay'ne, 62-yard

pa ss from Spears. 5:29 , first
(kick ta il); S. Massey, 13,yard
pa ss from Spears, 7:29 second,
(kick blocked) : Spears, 3-yard
run . : 30, second , (pass , fail) ;
Smith, 4-yard run . 9: 04, third,
( Howard, k ick) ; Boyk in, 8-yard
run , 4 : 34,
third ,
{kick,
blocked) ; Smith, 1-yard run.
11 . 17, f ourth . (Howard , kick).

TEAM STATISTICS
PLAYER
TCB YG Avg .
Rick Boykin, FB 11 113 10.2 SCORE BY QUARTERS
0 0 o 8- a
Greg Spence, RH
2 15 7.5 Gallipol is
6 12 13 7- 38
Jim Payne, SE
I 5 5.0 Ironton
Terry Mowery , F B 7 28 4.0 FIRST DOWNS
2 o 2 3- 7
Bob Smith, FB
10 28 2.8 Gal li pol is
Je ssie Cain , LH

1

3

3.0

Hal Spears, QB
6 7 1.1
Rick Massey, QB
1 ·1 -2
TOTALS
39 197 5.1
INDIVIDUAL PASSING
(Gallipolis)
PLAYER
C-A I YG TO

Snowden

2-9 1

0

1 9 3 1- 1_.

Ironton

13 87 68 36- 20_.

·~

YARDS LOST RUSHING
Gal lipol is
0 1 3 9- 13
Ironton

0 50 2-

Saunders

1-2

White
TOTALS

2

0-5
2-9

0
6

7

PLAYER
Payne
Kriebel
S. Masse y
Spence

Gall ipol is
Ironton

0

5-11 134

0

2

x-One intercepted . ·

1

TOTALS

0

Gallipol is
Ironton

FUMBLES

0

PI YG TO

S. Massey
Payne

!ron ton

1 15
1 13

0
0

Gallipoli s
Ironton

0 2 2 1- 5
0 1 0 Q-1

0 1 1 o-2

0 1 0 Q-1

12 1 0 20 0 Q--20
14) 15 25 0 0-40
LINEUPS
(Gallipolis)

R Massey
1 11 o ENOS- Er ic Saunders, Dave
TOTALS
.
3· 39 0 Wh ite , Rick Grymes . Leon
KICKOFF RETURNS
Smith, Dean Ree s, Leon Briggs.
(Gallipolis)
TACKLES - Chuck Wood
PLAYER
KOYGTD t ee); Jim Mill er. Matt Epling.
Wamsley
5 113 0 Dave Kerns , Steve Rose .
White
2 47 0 GUAR OS - Pal Boster, Ken
TOTALS
7 160 o Wamsley, John Bagshaw, Mike
&lt;Ironton l
Wolfe .
PLAYER
KO YG TO
CENTER - Bud Sanders,
S. Massey
1 25 0 Brett Epling.
Carter

0

I

0

BACKS -

Larry Snowden,

TOTALS
2 25 o Pete Neal {ee l; Mike Berridge,
PUNT RETURNS
John Davis, Kev Sheets, John
(GaUipolis)
Walter , Chuck Perroud.
PLAYER
PR YG TO
(Ironton)
White
1 8 0 ENDS - Steve Massey, Jim
Waller
I 6 0 Payne, Jeff Murnahan, Mike
TOTALS
2 14
0 Reinhard1. Ken Green .
(Ironton l
TACKLES - Mike Albrink.
PLAYER
PR YG TO Bill Mark in, Terry Parker,
Payne
1 24
o Bruce Thomas , Jeff Howard.
TOTALS
I 24 0 Tim Rapp, Paul Wheeler, Roger
RECOVERED
ENEMY Mortan .
FUMBLES' GAHS - Bud
GUARDS - Keith Parker,
Sanders.
Ben Scherer, Char les Keller ,
IRONTON -B. Smith , Roger Morgan .
Spears.
CENTERS- Bob Rist. Dave
OFFICIALS - Ken Russell, Whitehead. ·
Kerm itt Blosser. Ben Kindall
BACKS - Hal Spears, Rick
and Joe
Chap ter .

Van i ty ,

Athens

~.~

MIKE ALBRINK, 189-pound senior Ironton tackle (77)
swoops in on Gallia 's Pete Neal (38) on this play in Friday's
GAHS-Ironton football game. Neal, who returned to the

14 7 15 14- 50
a 20 11 12- 51

0 0 PENALTIES

1 Ironton)

PLAYER

----------------------

TRI.STATE DRIVER TRAINING
BOZ 111-h• Volley Bonk 111ft,
Chooltotw•, W, Yo., 8311

Nt"'"---------------

33 13 33 52- 131

PASS INTERCEPTION
Gallipoli s
RUN BACKS
Ironton
!Gallipolis)
FUMBLES LOST
PLAYER
PI YG TO Gallipolis
Saunders

SEND COUPON OR CALL (30M 346·1556

75 154 68 34- 33 1

Boyk in, Bob Smith, Jessie Cain,
Monty Boyd, Rick Massey,
Greg Spence, Bob Neiman,
Bruce C,arter. Terry Mowery,
Dave Leasure.

PUNT5--GAHS ' Snowden, 5245 (49.0).
IRONTON ' Kriebe l, 4.\77 ,
1« .2).
NEXT GAHS GAME - Oct.
SCORING , GAH5--Neal , 9· 29, Meigs, home.

·······•····•

Green Tops SW Squad
BY MIKE WISE
FRANKLIN FURNACE
The Green Bobcats handed the
Southwestern Highlanders a 320 loss here Friday night in a
non-league encounter. The win
gave Green a 3-4 record. The
Highlanders are now 0-7.
Mike Tripplett kicked off lor
Green with Southwestern
receiving at the 33-yard line.
The Highlanders punted after
coming short of a first down.
With 7:22 left in the first
quarter , Mike Triplett, senior
halfback, scored lor the Bobcats on a four-yard run. Dan
McDavid scored · the extra
points on a run.
With 5:00 remaining in the
quarter, Jeff Holtzappel scored
on a 40-yard pass by Dan McDavid. Holtzappel also ran in
the extra poiolts.
SECOND QUARTER
Southwestern came close to
touchdown territory in the
second quarter but failed to
push it over. A 35-yard pass
from Larry Frazier to Mark
Smith brought the ball to
Green's live-yard line. Green

Addrea _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Phone - - - -

GAHS lineup for the first time in nearly three weeks, gained
three yards on this play. Tigers in background on left are
Rick Massey (12), Bruce Thomas (72 ), and Bob Smith, (32).
Ironton won 38-&lt;1. (Steve Wilson photo) .

•

buckled down to hold the
Highlanders scoreless.
The Bobcats could not score
during the second quarter as .
Southwestern's defense
toughened during the stanza.
SECOND HALF
Green made a terrlf opening
play to begin the second half
when Triplett caught the Southwestern kickoff and ran SOyards for a touchdown. Holtzappel made the conversion.
Triplett scored again with one
second remaining in the third
quarter on a run. He also took in
'tlle conversion .
Both teams were held
scoreless in the fourth quarter. ·
BY QUARTERS
Green
16 0 16 0--32
Southwestern
0 0 0 0-- 0
STATISTICS
G sw
First Downs
9
8
Rushing Yardage
122
15
Passing Yardage
83 72
Passes Attempted
17 23
Passes Completed
4
6
Penalties
8-90 6-60
Fumbles
5
3
Fumbles Lost
2
l

Stall

Lice"'ed by Stolt of Olllo 552 ·

EK SPECIALS
OCT. ~5th THRU 30th ONLY

Description

2

24" White and Gold Vanity with ForclTIIca ,
top, white P.S. Sink , chrome faucet.
Regular Price 585,40 .....

1

24" K-K. Woodtone vanity

Sale

'

.',

,'

Sale Price •109.95

1

.'

GALLIPOLIS
The
Defending Champions - OUR
Defending Champions - proved
themselves ...
What a thrill ! To watch them
play to win when winning time
was past . . . to see them try,
and try , and try again when
lime is almost gone and the
score long since out of sight ...
To know that something far
more precious than the laurel
crowns their brows, who, losing ,

Eastern Grid

Footba II Scores
By United Press International

John Ecker's Blue Devils live
that, too! And that's high! It's
great to have a son part of that!
·
d
0 ur Champwns
prove
themselves!
- Aproud Dad
·

Portsmouth West 69 li!inford 0
Whe eler sburg 50 Northwest
!Scioto) 7
Green Twp. !Scioto) 32 Southwestern o

Middletown 28 Lima 27
Sidney 14 Shawnee 6

Kenton 9 Bathe 8
Delphos St. Johns 28 Eden 7
Cambridge 31 Claymont 0
Meadowbrook 33 Frontier 14
Malvern 22 Newcomerstown 14

NBA Standings

Statistics

·SEO Standings

Phocn1x
1 2 .333
Pacific Division
ABA Standings
W. L. Pel.
By United Press International
Los Angeles 4 1 .800
East
4 2 .667
W. L. Pet. GB Seattle
3 1 .750 .. . Golden Stale 2 2 .500
New York
0 J .000
2
1 .667
'12 Portland ,
Kentucky
0 5 .000
3 2 .600 1h Houslon
Florid ians
Friday's Results
3 2 .600 v,
Virg inia
22 .5001 New Y'ork '110 Baltimore 87
Pillsburgh

Indiana
Ulah
Dallas
Memphis

I

West

4 .200 3

Milwaukee 124 Buffalo 105
Basion 115 Atlanta 108

W. L. Pet. GB Chicag o 113 Los Angeles 106
Detroll 116 Phoenix 109
5 0 1.000

1

3

GB
...
'h
1112

3
4

Wellston
1 6 o 106 213
Waverly
0 7 0 41 183
SEOAL ONLY
TEAM
W L T POP
Ironton
4 1 o 163 55
·Logan
4 I 0 122 79
Athens
4 1 0 81 40
Gallipolis
3 2 o 104 81
Meigs
3 2 o 9o 75
Jackson
2 3 o 103 100
Waverly
0 50 27 119
Wellston
0 5 0 54 195
TOTALS
20200 744 744
FRIDAY'S RESULTS ,
· Ironton 38 Galllp&lt;ills 8
Alhens 31 Meigs 0
Logan 14 Waverly 7
Jackson 29 Wellston 20
OCT. 29 GAMES'
Meigs 111 Gallipolis
Athens at Logan

3 2 .600 2 Seallle 110 Houston 91
IOnly qame..Scheduled)
2 3 .400 3
o 4 .ooo 4'11
Blue, white and red buntDenver
0 4 .000 4'h
Fridly's Rtsulls
ing should always , be ar,
Carolina 108 Memphis 102
ranged with the blue above ,
Indiana 105 Kentucky 102
white in the middle and red
Plilsburgh 124 Floridians 123
below for decorative· pur- Jackson at Ironton .
· .Dallas m Virginia ! ~
Waverly at Wellston
",.'"~ &lt;;:

Bloom -Carroll 6 Berne-Union 0
M~{s"ille 32 West Muskingum·

1
PREFINI
PANELING

13

134 Pes.

Cambridge 31 Claymont 0
Xenia 19 Beaver Creek 6

Centerville 32 Springfield North
Dayton Chaminade 20 Dayton
34 Dayton

with
marble top and chrome, 1 pc. faucet.
Regular Price 5121.65.

Banatone Planked

Shale White

Regular Price

Clo~e Out

149

2.69

1

1

12

Prices On All Yow Paneling Needs

Athens 31 Meigs 0

.,

o

Fort Frye 34 Warren Local 10
Eastern (Meigs Co.) 2q Miller 0
F~dera l Hocking 8 Vinton
County 6
Alexander 17 Kyger Creek 0

25 Different Varieties to Choose From

!

\

Ironton 38 Ga ll ipolis 8

CASH
&amp;

Pre Finished Moulding and Nails To Match

CARTER &amp; EVANS IN(:.

CARRY
87 OLIVE ST.

"BlJILDING SUPPLIES"
.

,

Monday Thru Friday - 7 A. M . to 5 P.M.
Satur d,1y ~. 7 1\. M . t'l P.M. '
A

P~ONE

4·16-4905

Don't
take a
chance

by

Sawn

Check Our Everyday Low

Louisville 46 Marlington 0
North Canton 18 Oakwood 6

!

- SAVE

12

Wilm ington 35 Hillsboro 6
Alliance 49 St. Thomas Quinas

2 NEW PGA DIRECTORS
NEW YORK ( UPI) - Joseph
C. Dey, Jr., commissioner of
the PGA Tournament' Players ,
Division , announced Friday that
Charles Coody and Gene Littler
wel'e elected as pJayer direc-

skaters in the history of Roller
Derby - Joan Weston, Tony
Roman , and Ronnie Robinson will lead the circuit's new
Central Pioneer Club. Fiery
Ann Calvello, the fussiest
woman in the game, will exhibit
ber control with the Midwest
Jolters, while Cliff Butler, a top

jammer for several years, will
head the men's unit.
Tickets to see the rough and
tumbling Roller Derby may be
purchased . at the Memorial
Field House, Sears and Kay
Jewelers In Huntington.
Reservations may be made by
calling 5~124.
Tomatoes
The tomato originated in
America but it was' not used
as food here until long alter
Europeans had been eating
it. As recently as a century
ago, Americans believed the
p 1an t was poisonous and
grew it only as an ornamentaL This mistaken belief
arose because the plant be·
longs to the sometimes deadly nightshade family .

I

Meadowdale 1-4 Hamilton Ross

Ironton 38 Gallipolis 6
Jackson 29 Wellston 70
Belpre 6 Nelsonville-York

HUNTINGTON - The Roller
Derby, the skate game that has
appeared live in some 500 cities
and is seen weekly on 125 TV
slaUons that reach an estimated
~million people, will be seen at
the Memorial Field House in
Huntington 8 p.m. Nov. 4.
Three of the most popular

marble top and gold 1 piece faucet.
. Regular Price $171.75

Planked
Rosewood

0
Troy 54 Fairmont East 13

· Wright 20

expanded from 1971 operations no matter what
By BERNARD BRENNER
happens - growers who want government
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Continuation of the support will be required to idle acreage equal to
East and Gulf Coast dock tie-ups could inflate the 25 per cent of their historic base acreage. In a
cost of next year's farm support programs, second phase, producers will have the option of
idling a further 10 per cent of their acreage in
according to a top govenunent farm planner.
Clarence D. Palm by, an assistant Secretary of return for federal diversion, or "set aside"
Agriculture, told newsmen the administration's payments. Finally, in a third phase, the farmers
plans for &lt;."ontrolllng 1972 output of corn and will be able to offer to idle an additional 5 or 10
other feed grains are built aroWJd hopes of per cent,of their acreage in return lor still more
holding next year's corn crop to 4.5 billion payments.
Acreage offered under tbe first two phases will
bushels, or about 300 million bushels below
prospective demand in tbe 1972-73 marketing . automatically be accepted by the government.
But acreage offered in the third phase will be
season.
But if the dock strike continues to throttle treated as a safely valve, and will be a~epted
export sales of grain during the current 1971-72 for federal payment only if officials decide next
season, Palmby added, officials could be forced March it is needed.
to seek an even deeper cut in next year's
production.
Looking at supply -demand prospects today,
The deeper the production cut goes, the bigger administration officials plan to gear the 1972
the blll will be for taxpayers. This is because any program to idle about 38 million feed grain acres
extra cutback needed will be reached by paying - more than double the amount retired this
lff'?ers to take additional acreage out of year. Pplmby said this could probably be done
production.
by retiring all the acreage offered by farmers in
Palmby said uie administration's 1972 feed the first two phases of the program plus part of
grain control and farmer-payment program, the acreage from phase three.
announced early this week, was deliberately
If the dock strike continues, however, Palmby
designed with a built-in safety valve to allow said, it might be necessary to push 1972
upansion If the dock strike continues and makes retirement about 38 million acres by dipping
it necessary to idle extra acreage next spring. deeper into the acreage offered by farmers
Under the program - which will be sharply under phase three.

30" IXL Sculptured Satin Gold with

DESCRIPTION

mulch to prevent damage from
alternate freezing and thawing.
Most spring flowering bulbs
should be planted in late Sep!ember through November.
If you want to save your
gladiolus bulbs (corms), better
dig them before the ground
freezes. Dig corms by loosening
the soil with a fork spade and
then pull out the plants- by the
tops. If foliage has died and
been removed, corms may be
hard to locate.
Remove corms when soil is
dry~ Cut tops off close to the top
of the corm and wash away
clinging soiL Cure corms as
quickiy as possible. This can be
done by placing them in shallow
trays with wire bottoms or other
containers that allow air circulation. Curing takes about 2 to
3 weeks. During this time, the
temperature should be kept
between 85 and 95 degrees and
the relative hwnidity at 50 pet.
or above . Proper relative
humidity and high lell)perature
aid in the corking over of injured tissues. Turn corms
several times during the curing
period.

Reduced Supports for Com•

Merillat Woodtone Vanity with
marble top and 1 pc. chrome faucet.
Regular Price $135,95

CLOSE .OUT

Spring-Shawnee. 23 Covington 6
Newark Cathol ic 34 New Albany
6
Lakewood 28 Watkins Memorial

Belmont o
Dayton Dunbar

would have been much better.
If the lawn has been
established, there is still time tQ
apply a complete fertilizer. The
rate of application is based on
the amount of Nitrogen, which
is recommended at 2 pounds of
actuaiNitrogenper 1,000 square
feet For example, if you use a
10-10-10 fertlllzer which contains 10 pet. actual Nitrogen you
would apply this at a rate of 20
pounds per 1,000 square feet.
OVER 500 FAMILIES in
Meigs County are planting
about 8,000-10,000 flower bulbs
this fall which they purchased
through the 4-H clubs last
summer.
If you like beautiful flowers in

30"

30" K. K White and

18

Dub lin 6 Teays Va lley 0
Hilliard 20 Grove City 17
Bexley 20 Marysville 13
Marietta 22 Chillicothe 0

New' in Farming

the spring, better give some
thought to spring flowering bulb
plantings now. Spring flowering
bulb~ are hardy plants . that
reqmre lltUecare. ifhey provide
early color in your garden or
yard at a time when few other
plants are in bloom.
Among the more popular
spring flowering bulbs are tulip,
narcissus, hyacinth, iris, and
crocus, Some that are not so
well known are scilla,
chionodoxa, muscari, and
galanthus.
· Gardeners
use
bulbs
anywhere in their garden, Some
are best as border plants.
Others are best when grouped in
large masses of color, and
many kinds can be scattered in
lawns or planted among shrubs
as ground cover, according to
USDA ornamentalists,
TO GROW SPRING flowering
bulbs successfully, select
healthy, mature bulbs and store
them in a cool, dry place until
planting time. Prepare tile soil
in the planting beds thoroughly,
Plant at depths, distances
apart, and plantfng times
recommended for each kind of
bUlb, and maintain a winter

Sale Price •· •109.95

12

London 9 Grandview 2
Lancaster 32 Newark 14
Hamilton Twp . 20 Olentangy 8
West Jefferson 14 Frank lin
Heights 6

BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
Esl. Agent, Agricallure
POMEROY -A nice looking
lawn an~ y~~td next year has
pretty largely already been
detennined, But there still are
several things , which can be
done.
It Is almost too late to seed a
lawn this fall but some people
may want to try lt. September I

Sale Price •129.95

Tri·Valley 32 Philo 9

Lucasville Valley 6 Groveport 34 Co lumbus M ifflin

Never!, . .

36" Regular Price 515o.65

May sville 32 West Muskingum

never yield · · ·
Springfie ld Sou th 20 Ports. Crooksville 24 Riverview 7
Sir Winston Churchill said it, mouth 7
Millersport 33 Liberty Union 0
and lived it: "Never give in! Portsmouth East 30 New Boslon Logan 14 Waverly 7
0
Whetstone 21 Columbus 0
Never!
Never!
Coal Grove 28 South Point 21
Mt . Vernon 28 Columbus
Never!. .. Never! ... Never!. .. Port smouth N.D. 46
Westland 6

By United Press International 'Perry 23 Glenwood 21
Minerva 20 East Palestine 6
Eastern Conference
Tusky Valley 10 Sandy Valley 6
Atlantic Division
Shelby
20 Galion 13
W. L. Pel. GB
Ashland
7 Wooster 6
,
Philadel phia 4 0 1.000
Upper
Arl
ington
31
Zanesville
0
BY QUARTERS
Boston
2 1 .667 l 1/ 2
3 2 .600 11/2 New Lexington 40 Morgan 6
Miller
o o o o-- o New Yor k
1 4 .200 311'2
East ern
0 14 0 6-20 Buff alo
Centra
I
Division
East. Mill.
First Downs
W. L. Pel. GB
14
5
Total Yard s
1 1 .500 . ..
173
44 Cinc innati
Yards Rush
1 3 .250 1
127
28 Bal timore
YardS Pass .
1 4 ;200 11h
46
16 Cl eve land
SEOAL ALL GAMES
Pass Alt .
0 4 .000 2
13
15 Allanla
TEAM
W L T POP
Pa ss Camp
Western Conference
2
2
Ironton
6 1 0 230 69
Pass. Int. b y
.Midwest Division
4
0
Athens
6 1 o 147 71
Fumbles
W. L. Pel. GB Meigs
4
4
5 2 o 142 95
Fum b. Lost
5 0 1.000
0
0 Milwa ukee
Gallipolis
5 2 0 164 113
Penalt ies
• 1 .800 1
4·30 7·85 De lroi l
Logan
5 2 o 202 120
Punts
3 1 .750 w, Ja ckson
5·25.0 6-30 0 ChiCago
4 3 o 210 1~0

Carolina

1

Friday's Grid Scores
Ohio High School

24" Country Maple woodtone vanity with
marble top and I pc. chrome faucet .
Regular Price 5134.40

1

Some.Things Can Yet~ Be Done for Lawns

Roller Derby Due On November 4th

Sale Price '93.95

va r d run, 2: 59. fourth ( N ee~ I.

Devils Never Gave Up • .

top and chrome, 1 faucet .
Regular Price $115.23

,

'.

·

Dock Tieups Could Trip Up'

Join one of the highnt poylng lndumlto in tilt nttlon. ·In lftt'dlln 1
month we Clll tuch yau 111 drMI o •ml-tnctOI' tnllw tnd wdfy
you under dllpltlment of tranq10111tlon IIIUIItiDIIL FrH nttloiMide
plecement assilllnto upon gllduotlon. For moll lnf!!""'tlon ,

6

C-A YG TO' RETURN YARDAGF.
31 39 74 30-174
1-5 62 1 Gall ipol is
49 0 28 11 - 88
3-4 59 0 Ironton
1-1 13
1 PLAYS FROM SCRIMMAGE
0-1

TOTALS

o--

.

ON 'fn FARM FRONT

Be job-ready in 4 waaks

62 72 0 Q-13~
0 Ironton
TOTAL
YARDS
IRush.Passl
0

)(-Three intercepted .

(Ironton)

0 60

~·

LEARN TO DRIVE
A SEMI-TRACTOR
TRAILER!

NET YARDS RUSHING

0 Gallipol is

kicker penalty nulll{led · thllt
spectacular play. 1
. With 8:40 left in th~ second
period, Boykin , ra!llble4 42
yards unmolested, but a 'CUpping penalty on the GAHS 41
killed that sensational gallop.
Boykin, who hal\ been held in
check in three previous games
against Gallipolis, was unstoppable Friday ' night. The
veteran tailback picked up 113
yards in 11 trips, 10.2 yards per
carry.
Snowden enjoyed the best
night of his career in the punting depariment, ' booting five
times for totals of 45, 51, 51, 45
and 53 yards. Tiger punter Dave
Kriebel had four punts for 177
yards.
AU told, IHS, in the first three
periods, had the ball 10 times
and scored six times.
Gallipolis will return home
Friday to battle the Meigs
Marauders, a ·31-0 victim at
Athens Friday night.' Ironton
will host Jackson.

Qualify for High Paying Jobs I

YARDS GAIN.ED RUSHING
Gal lipol is
3 8 36 61- 138

0-1 1 0 0 Gal lipoli s · 33 7 33 52- 125
13 82 66 34- 197
o.J I 0 0 Ironton
2-12 3 6 o PASSES ATTEMPTED
Gallipolis
3 2 4 3- 12
I Ironton)
3 6 2 1- 12
PLAYER
C-A I YG TO Ironton
Spears
5.11 o 134 2 PASSES COMPLETED
o 2 o 0- 2
o 1 1 0 0 Gal li pol is
R. Massey
1 4 o o-s
TOTALS
5-12 1 134 2 Ironton
INDIVIDUAL RECEPTIONS PASSES INTERCEPTED
Gallipol is ·
o o o 1-1
(Gallipolis)
Ironton
0 0 2 1- 3
PLAYER
C-A YG TO
Sheets
1-2 a 0 YARDS GAINED PASSING
Neal
Berridge
TOTALS

&gt;.r:i

6

Ironton

JJ-TheSI.IICiay'tlma-Sentinel,Sunday,Oct.24.1971

I

CASH
&amp;
CARRY

feeding
moldy corn
to pregnant sows...
FEED
PURINA SOW OVALS

J. D. North Produce

PartFarmer?

When old and new corms
separate readily, dust them
with a lungicLe such as Caplan
or Folpet to prevent storage
rots. Keep treated corms lor a
day or two at 80 degrees and
then place them in cold storage
for the winter. Winter storage
should be near 40 degrees with
adequate air circulation.
THOSE HOUSE plants that
have been vacationing outside
in your flower garden shoufd be
moved inside soon, if you
haven't already done this job.
Some may need repotting, if
left in the original pot all
summer. Use l part peat, I part
sand and 3 parts of a good
garden soiL You'll need to use a
larger pot than the one the plant
came .out of.
Some plants may need
pruning and all will need a close
check lor insects .. While the
plants are still outside, spray
with an insecticide such as
malathion to control plant lice,
mites, spiders, and others.
Once inside, place plants
where they will get plenty of
light. Keep them away from
high heat such as fireplaces,

~~!:~~~st~£~~~a~;~:~~~ Tulip

watering each time. Then give
plants a thorough watering usually about once e~ch week.
You can start cleamng up the
flower' shrub and ga~den beds
now and through the f1rst frost.
And, smce next year's crops
will need all the organic matter
th en can ge t• per haps you ,11
want
. to save clean leaves, plant
foliage . or other refus~ that
make a good compost ptle. Be
d fl
t bl
sul rets vege af e an! d' ower
p an are ree o tseases

over your plans .. . and the advantages

of a Land Bank loan.

B. Walker, Mgr ,

lt._,Locust St. , Gallipolis . 446-0203

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

!11rs.

RAY SCHOENER, FORESTER on the Ironton Ranger
District , sharpening up his eye, not on a squirrel, but a tulip
poplar (yellow poplar) cone, which will be used to provide
seed for planting of tomorrow's ''~per Tree ."

Britannica .

Popular Cones Fair . Game

IRONTON -·Personnel of the
Ironton Ranger District, the
Wayne National Forest, have
been keeping their shooting
eyes in shape not hunting
.
'
.
squ~rrels, but tuhp poplar
cones.
The United States 1"orest
Se rvJCe,
.
·m coopera t'1on WI·th
State Governments and large
.
.
.
pnvate land holdmg compames,
are collecting tulip poplar cones
.

from several superior trees on
the Ironton District. These
seeds will be used to grow
poplar
seedlings
lor
reforestation purposes in this
area.

As an aid to this program,
personnel of the district have
collected tulip poplar cones
from several superior trees.
Armed with .22 caliber rifles
and scopes, personnel have

Road, has ..,een making im·
provements and working the
farm to make it a grassland
farm on which he is using an
extended grazing program .
This extended grazing program
consists of usirig Kentucky 31
fescue as the main forage for
both hay and pasture and
cutting part ofit and baling it in
round bales which are left lying
on the ground where the cattle
feed on them during the winter.
Under this operation the hay
is cut only once usually, that
being about the first of July. An
aftermath growth comes up in
the field , sometimes almost
hiding the round bales. During
the winter months cattle will eat
most of this standing grass,
even though it appears dry and
dead and will eat the bales of
hay also.
It is of interest to note that
there is a diversion ditch on this
farm buill many years ago . Mr .
Seager located a trailer immediately below the ditch in
order to gain protection by the
ditch from hillside runoff. He
plans to extend the present
ditch and repair the outlet
somewhat.
RUSSELL OSHEL of Sandhill
Road is a grassland farmer who
has operated his farm as such
many years, He has a beef
cattle enterprise which depends
mostly on grass and hay for
livestock feed. He inlproved 30
acres of pasture lhis year. In
commenting about his hay, he
said that it was very good this
year and that he had put up all
that he needed for his livestock
in one cutting.
It is interesting to note that
Mr. Oshel has a physical impairment and is paralyzed from
the waist down ; however, he
Th e AI manac
t'll
t h' t
d
.
s
By United Press Intema Irona 1 1 opera es f IS ractor an
Today is Sunday' Oct. 24, the mthanageds the anndiet~~ under
ese a verse con 1ons .
2971 h day of 1971.

The and
moonfirst
is between
phase
quarter. its new
The morning star is Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Scorpio.
American playwright Moss
Hart was born Oct. 24, 1904.
On this day in history:
In 1861 the first telegram was
sent across the United Stales
from calilor)lia Justice Stephen
Field to President Abraham
Lincoln.
In 1939 women's hosiery
made of nylon went on ·sale for·
the first time in ·Wilmington,
Del.
In 1945 Secretary of State
James Byrnes announced the
United Nations charter was in
force following Soviet ratification.
In 1952 Gen. Dwight D,
Eisenhower 1 the Republican
nominee for president, said if
elected he would go to Korea
anti srrk an end to lite war.

clipped oll small branches
containing the cones, which will
be sent to the Warren, Pa.
nursery where the seeds from
the cones will be sowed.
The seedlings produced will
be returned to this area and
planted in a specially selected
site where they will be observed
to see if the seedlings have
in herited the desired qualities.
Those trees showing superior
qualities will be used as seed
sources for the growing of more
seedlings to be used as tulip
poplar planting s!ock for this
area.
Several thousand acres of old
fields and mine spoils on the

Wayne National Forest are in
need of planting and seeding.
Yellow poplar, because of its
rapid growth rate, excellent
form, adaptability to open
conditions and high demand will
be one of the major species used
in reforestation .
The Tree Improvement
Program of the United States
Forest Service has the overall
objective
of
producing
genetically improved seed,
which is adapted to the local
conditions. The primary genetic
improvement aim is an increase in growth rate and
resistance to disease, insects,
drought and frost.

•
HI.

INTERNATIONAL®
u52-HORSE" UTILITY TRACTOR
Big work-power. Four cylinder gas or diesel engines.
Short turn s. Easy handl ing. Hydrostatic power steering. More comfort. New walk-through styling. Highspeed lightning shill (8F-4R speeds). Smooth synchromesh ·transmission .. Rugged planetary drive . 20
gail0n rear fuel tank. Big capaci ly live independent
hydraulics. Precision drafl control 3-point hitch with
infinite rate response . Dyna- Life• clutch . Hydraulic
wet disc brakes. Adjustable seat. Oplions in~lude
twin- shaft 540/1000 RPM PTO and differential lock.
'

SEE THE NEW 574. HERE TODAY

Meip Equipment Co.
Ph. 992-2176

Pomeroy, Ohic

r··-----------···----···-------~

FEED THE BIRDS!
New Crop

SUNFLOWER SEED
•

50 ·lb. bag
25 lb. bag

.,50
•350

CENTRAL
SOY
A
"The FIIOil Pow• P"IOPII"
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
.'

'"

carr ied by men in a sheath,
women wore theirs attached
to a girdle and they were
valued as wedding gifts , according to Encyclopaedia

-

By JOHN COOPER
clearing and improving
Soil Conservation Service
mowable areas as indicated
PT. PLEASANT - We feasible by the soil conservation
assisted Howard E. Love of survey , He uses this farm as a
Sand Hill Road recently with a retreat and as a diversion from
plan on his farm, the fQrmer . his duties as principal of
George Adkins farm. Mr. and Hannan Trace High School in
Mrs. Love plan to improve their Gallia County, Ohio.
land as a grassland farm to CARL SEAGER, whose fa~m
raise cattle. They now have is beyond Upland on the Milton
about 20 head.
The past summer they concentrated on their pasture. All
the mowable land in their
pastures has been clipped and
15 acres were treated with
·fertilizer. They plan some water
Improvement for livestock and
also perhaps a pond for
recreation use and esthetic
value.
JAMES E. LEWIS has
completed a pond on his farm In
the Upper Flats community. It
will be about three-fourth acre
in size when full of water,
James plans to pipe the water
from this pond to his dairy
operation about 1,000 feet away.
HAZLEWOOD
John Lewis, a relative, is the
CADIZ, 0. - Darrell R.
dairyman.
Hazlewood
has joined the
WILFRED DINGESS, whose
Hanna Division of Confarm is on Redmund Ridge, has
clipped all his pasture and solidallon Coal Company as
treated most of it. Now he is environmental engineer for
clearing more land for pasture. the division. Hazlewood
About three years ago Dingess earned his B. S. degree In
started work on his farm by civil engineering at the
University of Kentucky. He
served four years with the
Research DlvlsJon , of the
Kentucky Department of
Highways and two years with
the Agronomy Department at
the University of Kenturky.

to gel capital for this kind of operation?
From us - the Federal Land · Bank.
Let's arronge a meeting soon to talk

'·

Table Knife Oddities
Table knives were once

Grassland lmprove~ent
p •
roJJ e ct is for Cattle

Jf you area part-time farmer, you know
the importanCe of wringing maximum
productivity from every precious hour.
Enough acres to iustify bigger, more
mo~~r.n machinery. Labor-sav ing
f~c1ilt1es for handling additional
livestock and bigger crops . A home and
buildings in exc;ellent cOndition. Where

VINE ST. GALLIPOLIS, 0.

GALLIPOLIS
Temperature, precipitation and
weather conditions for each 24
hour period as recorded by Pete
McCormick, Fairfield Weather
observer :
Day
High Low Prec.
Sunday
68
52
.02
Monday
71
52
Tuesday
80
43
Wednesday
80
52
Thursday
79
52
Friday
69 59
.20
Saturday
60 60
.06
Average high temperature for
week t his year - 72.4. Last year
- 62.1.
Average low temperature for
week this year -- 52.8. Last year
- 39.2.
Total precipitation lor week
this year -.28inch . Last year 1.05 inches.
Total precipitation to date
this year - 25.74 inches. Last
year - 32.66 inches.

LAY OF THE LAND

You can't afford
to waste time
when you've got less
to start with.

Clyde

before incorporating them In
your compost pile .
Put down a layer of any
organic material you . have
available . Those mentioned .
above plus grass clippings,
straw, or spoiled hay are good.
After each layer of organic
material, apply a few handful of
fertilizer . Use a complete
analysis fertilizer such as 10-Jt).
10. Fertilizer speeds up
decomposition of materials and
adds nutrients to the compost.
Alter adding the fertilizer,
apply a layer of garden soil to
stimulate ha.~terial action.
Alternate layers of organic
material, fertilizer and soil until
the desired height is reached.
If organic material is dry, wet
it down before applying the
fertilizer and soil layers.
Materials must be moist to
hasten decomposition. Leave
top of piie flat or slightly concave to prevent runoff of rain
water.
Turning the pile occasionally
helps speed the process and
mixes the materials into a more
uniform compost.

Wee.k's Weather

�21- The Slllday Times Sentinel Sunday Oct 24 1971

-,..,..-- For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
STROUT REALTY
The WISEMAN
20 - The Stmday Tunes Sentmel SwldAI Oct 24 1971

In Memory

~

. ., N LOV N G memo y o Be ha

M M e

who pa ssed away
en yea s ago Oc 23 96

'"

~

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

D NG DONG E e yone k ow

F YOU wou d ke an exc ng
a ee n he p om s ng wo ld
o
Beau y Cu u e n a
u I
p og am wh ch ha s
go e nmen
nanc ng w e

Tha can nean p o
o you A on Rep ese n
a ves ea n money se ng
h gh qua y A on p oduc s n
he
spa e
me
Need
o ey W e o
a
Ms
H e en Yeage
Box
72
Avon

You gen le ace and pa en
':'
sm e w h sa dness we ec a
.. Vou had a k nd y wo d o ea h
and d ed be ov ed by a
;;' The o ce s mu e and s ed he
._ hea
Tha oved us we and

-

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b er was

Ah
F om one so
Yo a e no
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245 6

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you e e be
"W. As ong as
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emembe hee
-

We m ss you now

a e so e As

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posonWeoe
Oppo un y o ea n
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$8 000 up annua y
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me goes by we

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you

M
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and M s S an ey Swa n

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- - -- - Not1ce

• TO ALL

-

Monday 0
Th sday 0

- SUN VA LEY Nu se
S

:

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Va ey D

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-

Depa men
We a e now
day
ca e
deve opmen
p e schoo
h

:

exc uded Open 6 30 a m o 6

-

..

:
•
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-

:c
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:

week $5 pe day
es
e day~ $3 pe day
mo n ng sess ons Ph
365
Mad ge
Hau d
Owne 0 rec o
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L o ed
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Hau d
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28

h u
250 4

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depa n en o a man uta
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ha nd e gu es a u a e y
ab
y o ake d c a on s
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Expe e n e
he p u Ca Fede a Mogu

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p o d ng u
and
h d
p og am
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p m Monday lh ough F day
Fees $20 o
u
e day

:
:
-

25

Co p 446 92

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250

BU

NEW
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250

PROVEN SUCCESS
SALES&amp; SALES
MANAGEMENT PARADISE
Ow n you own bus ness A e you
ea n ng wha you a e wo h n
you
p esen
pa s on
oo k ng o amb o s m en
ho wan o s a t w h a new
ompany w h a g ow h and
ea n ng
paten a
s
n m ed Ha e open ngs o
d s buto sh ps n you a ea
n es men se u ed Send
pe sana backg ound esume
o A ea Coo d na o Box 22

Be p e Oh o Rep es s cl y
on den a

242 2

ouse
be ween
e &amp; Ha
sbu g
C 0 Tope 2 n es W

C n a

Rod e on o d R 35

2 B3

250 3
--------------~TOP

WOMEN
B 35
TRA N NG GOOD PAY
EXC T NG TRAVEL Wan

smou h Rd
nex
pan F
and Sa

24S I

hea

deep

What A Place
TO RET RE

o

a se you

am y 6 Ac es p en y good
ga dens 8 oom 4 BR home
f ep ace
n LR
2 a ge
po ches ba n ce a house
pen y wa e
a lso 4 ca r
ga age and sor e bu d ng A

to $ 8 000 w h beau! fu
shade

ees and g een awn

PARENTS
AL KE

sp a e n ud ng
and wo apa
ed on a co ne o
H ghway

So Easy
To Own
0 ROLL NG a es oca ed on a
b a k op oa d 6 oom 3 BR
home w h ul
basemen
s o m doo s and w ndows
a um um s d ng
2 ca
ga age and apa tm en deep
we and u a wa e Assume
a G oan l ow ow n e e

pc

Just L1sted

...,.
::

A.

""

h
Gobese ab et s and E Vap
wa e p I s G ngham D g

TC HEN

A R

223 26

..

e

a

e

ames B ss Co

Box 324 Dep

~

~

Ph 446 3553

ow

250

~
•

qua

y

w

w

Pa

P 0

K 8

e

S EEP NG ROOMS

24 2

a e

week y

Pa k Cen a Ho e

you
orne o sa e
p ced gh We ha e ac e
demand o ho mes and sma
a eage A homes and a ms
so d on 5 pe en comm by

he D LLON AGE NCY

M NUTE S
DOWNT OW N

•...
~

1-once more
6--Reaches

6--Possesses
ansa on
78-F esh wa e

ecross

-Enc OSU IS 0
an mas
16-Ex I
2 -Case
22 Lone egged
b d
23-Wa n l'tlit de

•h

demn y
Ce emony
84-Loca ons
BS-Sa ed mage
86-Noose
9-

82

e

24-K nd o bee

88-0 I C
Ge ma y

2S-Pronoun

89

26-G mpse
28--A mon h
30-Ma s name
32-Symbo o
an a um

33-Baby on an
do y

Po

32--Go mound
33 0 d woman sh

35-Shade ee
38--Younes e
39-cha ense
40--Ans o Saxon

90

THE ELDERLY

s o was

WH C H

PETED

02 No se c ods
03- n a o o

38-P s:pen

04

o

porta

43-F ock
-44-Wnes

45--Lub ca e
47-Looks pry na: y
-49-Neckp eces
50-P onou
5 -En erta ns

00-A e oon

05 S spe nd
06-Hartebees
O!l-Com pass po n
09 P epos on
0-Span sh art c e
S dden pa
2-Ag eemen s
be wee

nd s

a

om o

- Pans
2 Mass e
3-Sw ss
e
4 P onou
5 8 d s beak
6-Ena: sh

n"

9-Wa k ac os

s eam
20 Harves
122-Powe
persons
24 Worth ns

property
Q-P o
Mo 8 e

DOWN

..

5 Weak ood
6-F gh e ed
28 Pe m

Ban a o he
Came oons
8-Food prog am
80--M ne en an e
8
Nega e
83-Ch nese P380da
84-Scorch
87 Sma

36-Amoun s
bo owed
37 F acas
39 Proh b on s s
40 Eye co ey
44-Cao 1 ho c

.

45-E eryone
46-Su IIi
adhe en o
47
48

Fo

shame

Mans

n ckname
49- Rocky h

15 - Pad no e
53 Cooed a a
55-Cha dean
y
57 Prepos on

bahw h u
Rve vew $0000

EDGE OF C TY 5 m home
w h ba h p us 2 bd m 70
mode

CAR

REAL
BU

ha

needs some

Lo a on s 947 Second
A enue 35 f f on age
epa

Off ce 446 1066
Even ngs Call
Ron Canaday 446 3636
John I R chards 446 0280
Russe l D Wood446 4618

NEAR TOWN

GREAT
OTS
N

n ce

Cheap1es
4 RM &amp; ba h Sp use S
4 RM &amp; ba h Texas Rd
5 RMS &amp; ba h 3 A SB 500
5 RMS &amp; ba h V n on 55 500
s RM
A Thu man $8 000

4 bed ooms

2

po ches ga age co ne e e
d eway Ia ge ya d w h
p en y of shade eP Lac a ed
on S R
2-i n Sy acuse
Oh o Ava l ab e
a
m
med a e occupa cy To see

Second Ave
Ph 446 4775
"1--t-t--~ 42 ACRES 3 BR HOME

-

Ca p e ed
v ng
oom
pa e ng a um num s d ng 0
ac es bo om and on L le
Raccoon P ced gh

1 ke brand new
couc h
d esse
amps sofa bed
au tom a cgas d yer 2 dinette

R ce s
New &amp; Used Furn 854 Second
ac ass f om Texaco Stat on)
446 9523
249 tt

sets

o I away bed

take over sp net p ana Easy
te ms Can be seen oca y

W e C ed t Manage
Box 276 She byv e
46176

9 2 25 FT SPARTA N avel
a er fu y self con a ned
los of ex t as Must sac f ce
See any t me Hende son s
T a e C
Hende son W

Va

an e n $ o New Coleman
s ove $ 4 Ph 367 7125 afler 4

p m

248 3

MODEL zg zag sewng

mac h ne makes buttonho es
ancy des gns e c Sal due

$32 BB Ph 675 1589

H UN TER

spec a

o

258 Th d Ave Ph 446 2606
245 26

se up Tr County Mob le
Homes 446 0 75
93 f

USED

Mob e

Headqua e s A

Home
s ze mob e

67 I

she mans

wagon 6 cy s d
ans Best
o te ove $ 50 buys
Ph
446

546

249 6

24 ACRES on Br ck Road 2
m es f om Add son Severa

exce en bu d ng lots
367 7598

Ph

204 If

--- - - - - --

62 CHEVROLE T 6 cy
sh
$245 Ph 256

249 3

sd

45
249 3

SERVIa

248 3

SELL THE AUCTION
WAY

22 A MONEY MAKER good
b dgs
good ences p en y
wa l e

Ph 36 7708

BARB E DOLL o hes of all
s yes Ph 44602 2
248 3
6 PR B ocad e d ape es 90x75
col o B ue Jay pe ma p ess

he ma ga

a

back ng

some bo om and ob base
pen y wate
and can be

bought tor $15 750
ANY HR 446 1998
E W nters 446 3828
Eve J Fuller 446 3246

Neal Realty

Ph Ga ll pol s 446 9539 a e 5 2 BR home that need s some
epa s Ha s 6 ac es of and
232 I
ba n and oca ed on 5R 2 8 4

JAMES (JIMME)

SAYRE
PH. 446-3444

ke

new w h wh e shee s $9 p

Ph 446 9442
969 VALIANT good
Ph 446 3653
248 3
USED 20

and

PUBLIC
NOTICE
We sell anyth ng for
anybody Bring your
tems to Knotts Com

ce en cond on
d a nage Ph Hun

5555

248 6
9 CHEVROLET p ckup 307
V8 8ft bed 5 000 m les Call
446 2949 after 5
246 6

mun 1y Auct1on

Barn

Corner Thord &amp; Olive
For apporntment call
446 2917 Sale every
Saturday Evenong at

ABC Accou nt ng &amp; Bookkee p ng
Serv ces

mat resses

and

ta x

fo ms

197

TED W BROWN
Sec e y of Sta e
Seal

Sep

N EWJ bed oom home n Plantz
Subd v good loca on n c y

sc hoo d sf ct W I be
t n shed soon $ 5 500 Ph
De be Clar k 446 0390

m les

om

own

Full p ce

$ 500
30R4BRhome ocaedonnce
o a
2 State St Ac ass
tram H gh Sc hoo
near
bus ness d s ct P ced to

se I
Cat
us
today
Off ce Phone - 446 1694

home w h u
basemen
ca po
u ba h o u nace
a oss f om schoo

Even ng s

Charles M Neal 446 546
J M chael Nea 446 503

we s

SMA LL
Th ee

Plumbmg &amp; Heatmg
RUSSELLS
PLUMBING &amp; HEA Tl NG
SE PT C tank clean ng elect c

bed ooms fu ba h bu
n
k hen ga age o
hea
o n wa e ow ax d s c
owne mo ed ou o s a e

sewe

&gt;Oscar Sa rd 446 4632
Doug Welher~oll 446 4244

c ea n ng

d tch ng

Ga po s Oh o Ph 446 4782
193 It

SWAN CREEK Ga nge Ha I &amp;
o oca ed a B aden 0 on
R 7 Ia ge 2 s o y bu d ng n
exce ll en sha pe Ph Emrne
C~u

ch 446 0849

248 4

DEW TT 5 PLUMB NG
AND HEAT ING
Rou te 60a Eve g een

Phone 446 2735
trade n ce 3 bedroom
n town R ve v ew

ex a n ce o

Ph 446 2852

ava able Nov 1

246 I
4

BEDROOM b
M dd lepo Ph

28\

STA NDARD
P umb ng &amp; Hea ng
2 s Th dAve 446 3782
187 If
CARTER 5 PLUMBING
AND HEATING
8JO Fou lh Avenue
Phone 446 3888 or 446 447?
155 If

ESTATE

ON

Late Mary Hannah Wolfe
128 Fourth Ave - Galhpohs Oh1o
11 oo A M ()(;Iober 30 1971

box

SINGER Sew ng Mach ne Sales
&amp; Service All models n
stock Free del very Se v ce
guaranteed Models p ced
!rom $69 95 F ench C y
l'abrlc Shoppe S nge ap
proved dealer 58 Cour 51
Ph 446 9255
308 f

told ng Iabies
res auran s
organlzat ons

Comp ele I ne of off ce cha rs
and desks S mmons Pig &amp;
Oft ce Equ p Ph 446 397

Propollng to amend. Mc:Uon lg of
Artlc e JI oj lbe Coutltul on of
the Btalt of Ohio to nqulre ne'ID-

141 f

paper 1D Ueu of mall noUct of
law.. propoHd lawt or propo~ed

amtndmtnll to Jhe Conlliiul on

nqulnd. to be 1ubmuted to a

'YOie

of the •leeton
Be t eso ed b y he Gene a As
WHITE cement a sizes t le n semb y of he s a e of Oh o hree
hs ot the membe~ e e ed 0
s ock 12 &amp; 15 I eld e til
ea h ho se oncu ring' 1he en ha
su table tor h ghway d tc~ ng the e sha be subm ed o he t ec
co ncrete
bocks
ors of he sta e n the manne
GALLIPOLIS BLOCK CO p esc bed by a w a he gene a t
e e uo
o be h e d o
he fl s
ph 446 2783
Tuesday af e h e ft s Monday n
97
No embe 91 a p oposa o ame nd
- - - -- - - - -- - - :se on g o A c e
of he C n
GOOD CLEAN LUMP and s u on o Oh o o ead a o ows

s oker coal Car Wnters R 0
Grande Phone 245 5 5

ART C LE I

Mrs

Vc

tor an p cl u e f ame d splay box
Also Much Clean Household Items Such As Washer
dryer ret Zen th portable T V comb console T v
s ave 4 pc bedroom set a so k tchen utens Is
Th s s a arg e sa le w th m uch more too numerous to
ment on

TERMS CASH
LUNCH SERVED
EXECUTOR LOIS POOLE
AUCTIONEERS
R chard D Davis - 1 216 717 7491 App
Don W Standen
4J22 Mart n Dr North Olmsted Ohio

24

James

Swart

ac

compan ed Mr and Mrs Alfred
Crow an d Be cky Io Was hmgt on

Pa to attend tl e funeral of her
s ster Mrs Mabel Wherry
d M
L
Rev
an
rs
arry
Beougher and ch ldren of
Amanda were Sunday guests
d
F
k
of Rev an Mrs
ran
Cheesebrew
Mr and Mrs Ben Petre] and
h
M
Add p t J
mot er
rs
e e re
spen a recent weekend w h
Mr and Mrs Robert Feuer

8 f

IF YOU are bu d ng a new
home or emodt ng see us
We are bu ders D s r bu or
Hotpo

nt App ances

A son Elec r c

SIGNS

No

154 f

hun ng

o

respass ng or o he s Pro ect
your rights S mmons Pig &amp;

Office Equ p

203 I

of

DOUBLE oven boll ed gas
ange wh te Ph 446 t 299

Campm&amp; Equipment
J US't--;!il\ R V ED new

tow
le ravel ra er 6 f 5
$1695 18 It s $1945 Also the
Wonder Star Ira lers n slock
at huge d scounts 972 S!ar
Mas!er cam pers Sl 325
Stardust w brakes $1 525 1
used 1 S a Mas e $1 175
used 70 Const loaded $ 425

prof

We serv ce wha

we se

S ock oil accessor es Camp
Con ey Sla craf Sales R 62
N of P P easan W Va
240 I

and

f re homeowne s

hosp lal and gene al I ab

FRENCH CITY Bu des
Supp y 750 ls Ave 446 1499
pane ng

4d

HT a

ha dware

plumb ng and elect ca
su ppl es Hours 7 o 5
T~ursday 7 o 12 Altend ou
Founders Day and Grand
open ng Sale beg nn ng Oc

Dudley
n law of
Addte

236 f

DEAD STOCK
$5 00 Serv ce Charge
Will remove your dead
horse and cows

Call Jackson 286-453

DODGE
70 Polara Sta Wagon a r Sharp

FORD....
70 l TO 2 Dr H T a r Loaded

D P MARTIN &amp; Son •Va e
Del very Serv e
Your
patronage w II be ap
prec ated Ph 446 0463 7 f
SWISHER 5
DITCH TRENCHING
SERVICE Ph 367 7475

174 II

-J-:;,D,_s..LR:-a-d-lo,--&amp;--::T:::Vc:-::S:-e:-v ce
Serving Gall po s &amp; PI
reasonable rates

675 5220

SWISME R S P umb ng &amp;
Eleclrlc contractor We
special ze n hook ng up rural
water I ne sys em to your
~ome Comple ely bu d your
bathroom c;at us for com
plele free es mate Delbe t
Swisher Add Ison Ph 367
7475
15 If

•2995

70 Coronet 4 Dr Sedan
70 Dart 2 Dr H T a r mmacuia!e

69 Polara 4 Dr

1969 BUICK ELECTRA 2 DR. HDTP.
r cond p w nd v nyl

••

69 Impala 2 dr H T real n ce

DODGE
68 Charger 2 Dr HT Clean

CHEVROLET

I me green

v nyl top

Electra trade

'2395

1969 PONTIAC CATALINA 2 DR. HDTP

•2195

1968 BUICK ELECTRA 4 DR. HDTP.

H T Loaded a r

CHEVROLET

top

1969 BUICK LeSABRE 4 DR. HDTP

•2795

69 Bonnev lie 4 Dr H T

DODGE ...

'2595

Gold
cond

dark brown v nyl
72 LeSabre

•1895

Custom a r cond
owner

'1895

1966 BUICK RIVIERA

68 Chevelle 2 Dr HT N ce

top

a

r

41 000 m es One loca

Gold bucket seals

NORRIS DODGE
UPPER ROUTE 7 &amp;50 STATE STREET
PHONE 44~05 or 446-0842

1966 BUICK LeSABRE 4 DR.
Factory
Sharp

a r local college prof

tr ade

1970 DiEVROLET PICKUP
18 000 m les V 8 eng ne 8 II bed N ce

Fairview

•2395
•3295

bucket seats

A

DODGE

There's nothing Iunny
about our 1200 Sedan.

1962 FORD TUDOR

•2695
'2595
'1495
•1195
'2395
•295

News Notes
By Mrs Herbert Roush
Mr and Mrs Roger Parsons 1200 Sedan
Mrs Jess e Parsons and son
George of Ashland Oh10 spent
a weekend w h Mr and Mrs
Donald Hupp Mrs Jess e
T E E H E E stand for
Parsons w 11 reman at the Techmcal Eng1neenng
Hupp home for a week to ca re Excellence And H ghly 1\eek
for the Hu
children wh le Extravagant Extras
Mrs Mam e Newlun has
Mrs Hupp ~~ surg cal patent
StaSandfatyrdfequtodpmenbt likke
moved
n w th the Joe Carsey
•
e ron LSC ra es
lam ly
at
Veterans
Menlor al
, A h 1gh cam engone
4 Dr hardtop p steer ng p brakes rad o
Mr Neal has bee n II
Hosp tal
• Wh1tewalls
w lh rear seal speakers gold metallic f n sh
Mr and Mrs Harold Lawson
• Front buckets
Mrs Lou se G lkey and Karen
w th blk v n yl roof w s w I res L ke new
and son of !..;,tart W Va spent
See your Dalsun dealer
of Albany vos ted Mr and Mrs
cond
Saturday w th Mr and Mrs the Small Car Expert
L ncoln Russell and Ava G lkey
Charles Lawson and famtly
Dnve a Datsun then
Sunday afternoon
Mr and Mrs Charles Lawson dec1de
Mo and Mrs Lowell He tger
spent Sunday afternoon w th
and Mr Earl Anx made a
Mr and Mrs D amond Lawson
bus ness tr p to C nc nnat last
at Mt Mor ah
week
FROM NISSAN WTH PR DE
Mr and Mrs Ron me Young of
Mr and Mrs V rg I Atk ns
M ddleport Mark and Tony
went to a gra nge conference
Venoy of Wolf Pen Jan and
and then on to M chtgan to vtsot
Dean H II spent Sunday af
Mr and Mrs Gordon Atk ns
Kanauga Oh o
Gallipolis 0
Eastern Ave
ternoon w th Mr and Mrs
Mr and Mrs James Payne of
Russell Roush and lam ly
Newark were overn ght guests
Mr and Mrs Dorsa Parsons
of the Robert Welshes and
Harnsonvtlle
attended the Lancaster Faor
JOHNSON
called on the Joe Carseys and
Mrs Clara Mae Sargent
he Kenneth Paynes
ADVANCES
Soc1ety News
Stephame Radford of Pomeroy
Mr and Mrs Harold Ball of
Don Johnson has moved
II
Mrs Foe e Hayman Mr and
Columbus v s ted the Eugene Into third place In the Pro
Mrs Edward Rob nson of
Dr and Mrs Don G bson Youngs The) came espec ally fess1onal Bowlers Assocla
Cleve land Mrs
Marlene Mark and Gay Lynn of Rock for the fun eral of Raymond lion standings of lifetime
tournament victories John
F sher Moll) Larry and Amy v lie Md spent Thursday Webb
s 14th career win left
son
of Racme v s ted over the throug h Sunday w th the r
Mrs Betty Bishop v s ted her
him
trailing Dick Weber
weekend w th Mrs Bertha parents Mrs Lana G bson and s ster at Lancaster Saturday
who leads with 22 and Billy
Robmson
Mr and Mrs Murl Douglas
Mr and Mrs Tom Wells sold Hardwick s~'&lt;'ond with 16
Mr and Mrs Jlffi Kn ght ng
Mr and Mrs C F G lkey of the r home on Pomeroy and - - - - - - - - , - - Terry a nd Jeff of Racme Mr Albany spent Saturday even ng purchased a tra ler
word of the dea th of her brother
and Mrs Russell G bbs of w th Ava G lkey
Mrs Clarence East rece ved Harold Wr ght at Moddleport
Columbus v s ted Mr and Mrs
Mr Dale W II ams s m
Donald Hupp Sunday
prov ng very slowly n a Hun ~--------------------- --------------------Mr and Mrs Dean Sayre of t ngton hosp tal
Middletown Pa spent several
Mrs Ruby Hall day spent an
days w1th the former s parents eve mn g w th Ava G1lkel
Mr and Mrs Herbert Sayre recently
I
Mr and Mrs Lester Manuel Mrs John Stout and Mrs
Glor a and George Abbott had an affectiOnate
BY JACK 0 BRIAN
an d baby of Logan spent Eliza Powell attended th e
greetmg as they passed each other at I.AluJSe s
Saturday w th Mr a nd Mrs Democra c d nner and speech
HE S ON TilE ROCKS
checkroom
Paul Manuel
at Middleport recen tly
BUT SHES WITH REX
The French Connection IS only the secllnd
Mr and Mrs Harry Rowe of Mr Earl McGrath nslalled a
NEW YORK (KFS ) - Star Rtchard Harns
Trenton M1ch are v s t ng bathroom for Paul Dull last adm Is he still adores hiS ex wife Elizabeth now 11 ck ever made by 1ts producer Phil D Antom
mdeftmtely woth Mrs Kate - - - -- - - -- - - wed to Rex Hamson ) Th ngs went wrong and already he s a millionaU"e (from hiS
Buliltt film exc tement whoch already has
Rowe and Ada Sunday guests Kingsbury and Mr and Mrs because of me he agon zed
Lana Turner
hauled m $34 mill on m net rentals - and Phil
m the Rowe home were Mrs Charles Barnett of Grove City told her cast-mates m the tourmg 40 Carats
Steve McQJeen was
Jesste Parsons and George Mr The Carls have three sons her favor te all-movie leading man was John has 20 pet of the net)
Diary of a Mad Housewife star paod $750 000 In front plus a percentage of
and Mrs Roger Parsons of The new arr val w II be called Gar! eld
Melod
Came Snodgress and composer -8 m ~r Neil
Bullitt and already has $2 mtlloon for hiS end
Ashland
Mr and Mrs Edward Kar
Mr Nev Wh te suffered a Young )Otned the non mar tal bunkmate
The French Connection 1s based on Robm
d sh of New Castle Pa spent a broken leg at h s employment at br1gade Marnage IS for the state and the ( Green Berets ) Moore s very factual tale of
weekend w th Mr a nd Mrs Kaoser plant at Ravenswood church and Nell and 1 don t belong to etther
two N Y detectoves (Egan and Rossi) who
Herbert Sayre
Recent v sttors of Mr and Mrs she bravadoes
flushed a Mafia French scheme and grabbed the
Whole were Mr a nd Mrs
Rocky Graziano s been taking smgmg boggest herom haul in police annals Phil has 20
Charles Holley and family of lessons We p1ck Rocky over Pucclm ID two pet of thiS smash too
Phil and thiS dep t
Ashton W Va Mr Johnson rounds LaStre1sanddoesn t oonfme herself to remamed fnends tho we gave one of his TV
Holley and Mr and Mrs Jun or Ryan 0 Neal either
Czech dU"ector Milos shows the worst rev1ew of hiS show biZ We It
Holley of M lton W Va
Forman took her to the L A tenms tournament was perhaps the worst TV show we ever
Mrs Lou se Harr son Mrs
Mabel Bnckles and Mrs Faye
Doctor summoned to treat a Jesus ChriSt reVIewed - Ebzabeth Taylors London was 1ts
Pratt were on Parkersburg Superstar actor was shocked at the very un Utle
Ex Las Vegas casmo owner Beldon
The Carleton Church had Is recently
b bhcal language the stage manager hurled at
Katelman and Ricky Revson may wed K flew
homecom ng Sunday Oct loth
M ss Judy Kmg v stted here the apostles ear-8hattermg
mto town to meet R1ck1 s folks (her father s
Age of Vulganty m the Clllllllle 2000
wtth Sunday School followed by from Kankakee 111 woth her
worship serv ce with Rev Jay parents Mr and Mrs v rgll flock Damele Gauber wtll disport on a see Jerry Brody who riUIS the Rambow Room
St les pastor A basket d nner King and grandparents Mr through mattress
Tony Randall at the Ra nbow Gr II L Etoile and Gallagher s
Martha
was enjoyed at noon m the and Mrs wlliam King Mr and Chateau R1chel eu sa1d between Sips he and hiS restaurants not Ill mention Raffles)
socoal room of the church Mrs Weber Wood
Odd Couple co-8tar Jack Kiugman will do a and Suzy Stephenson were two of the glamor
Afternoon serv1ces were held
Mrs Sally Byers was a recent Las Vegas mtery act
One of the f nes Jazz debs of the Stork Club era theU" mother Helen
w th spec al s ng ng and a guest Colwnbus v s tor While there ptamsts MarJan McPartland has h8d one of her Forrester a beauty m her own right just
speaker
she v1s1ted the Paul Toops Mr oomposttlons ( Twol ght World ) set to Johnny became a great.grandmom Vl8 Suzy s daughter
Burdell Brofford and Wolloam and Mrs Gam Strause Mr and Mercer lyrics and already Tony Bennett s Candy Schrafft Her pop IS George SCh~afft of
of Columbus Mr and Mrs Mrs Arvm Wh1lls Mr and recorded ot
the candy 1ce cream dynasty (ergo the Can
U,ster Arnold and son B lly of Mrs Danny Booth Mrs Orea
Why the mystery about Perry Como s leg - dy ) and her mom s now Suzy Girard owner of
Colwnbus Mr and Mrs Ronald Booth and Mrs Paul Dillion
he busted 11 while TV lapmg h1s Christmas show a ch1c shop on Lexmgton Ave m the 60s
McNalley of Athens and Mr
Mrs Roma Beal Js qu te oll at
A stage trapdoor opened whlle Perry was suzy s siSter Martha was wed to St Cla1r
and Mrs Patrock W1lluuns and veterans Memor1a1 Hosp1 tal smgmg and plunged hlffi Into the NBC stage- McKelvey of the New Yorker V1ctor Mature
choldren of Colwnbus VISited Mr and Mrs N1ck p er kms basement HehadnodocwrlnLA sojettedto
w1th Mrs Hazel Arnold and and ch ld ren v1s1 ted over th e his Palm Beach area home (Tequesta and has bandleader Hal Kemp on approximately
reverse order
Walter recently
ken d w1 th Mrs Colloe ~·d hiS gam ••t at Good Samarotan Hospital
wee
The Giants educated arm Fran Tarkenton
Mr and Mrs Ralph Carl and H d
•.,.
~
u son
Palm Beach He s fme
lives m Greenwich Conn and spends free time
Rodney vtsoted w1th Mr and
Mr and Mrs Eddie Kmg and
bo
Mrs Clyde Harr son recently sons Charles and Susan had as
Behind Andy W1lbarns tldy American Y studying every facet of N1ck Manero s
Roy Lyons ts home on leave Sunday VISitors Mr and Mrs facade there s a golf hustler - he won $1 300 restaurant operation there - object future
Ethel Mennan and her longplay
v s ling h s parents He 1s Ed K ng of Hamsonvllle
from a comedian the other mormng m Las Vegas bonlfac~
stat oned with the Air Force n Recent v Sltors of Mr and - for only mne holes
Glor1a Swanson ad gentleman fnend, Eric Palm sipped SU"lolns at
New Mexico
Mrs John Dean and John were mored tt e food In our favorote neighborhood the Pen &amp; Pencil OidUme patroils of the long
Mr and Mrs VIrgil Carl are Mr and Mrs Gerald Gilkey and restaurant I.Aluise son E 58th St and Gloria Is defunct Armando\ s do a take when they, aee
announc ng the arrtval of a ch ldren and John Shim of a f mcky trencherman but lhe vegetables grown Phlllp Groll at the door of !Jill s Gay 90s he cobaby g rl Gran .. parents are Athens and Walter Terrell and by the Jor10 family \Owners) on their upe!ate owned and co-hosted Armando s for 34 yean!
Mr and Mrs Ralph Carl of Bruce Reed of Pataskala
!arm were r1ght down her gliStatorlal aUry

T.E.E. H.E.E.!

67 PONTIAC EXECUTIVE

DATSUN

News, Notes

GILLENWATER S sept c tank
cleonlng and epa r al o
house wrecking Ph 446
9499 Establ shed n 1940
69 tf

calls

•2995

•2695

DODGE

Kingsbury

Pleasant

ea n ce

•1595

WOOD MOTOR SALES

! Voice along Broadway

y
84 f

Semces Offered
Pant

SMITH

•3095

GET YOUR 1972 BUICK NOW
AT 1971 PRICES.
OFFER GOOD UNTIL NOV 13

GET
1m11101

lns~tance
FOR ALL you nsu ance needs
check w h your Grange
agents al he Nea Ins
Agenq 64 Stole Sl Agenls
far au o

DODGE

Sm1th Auto Sales

24111

1 4 If

be top tab e three l er walnut table walnut spooled bed
cherry h boy dresser ornate carved coffee table

7

By Mrs Francis Morris
The Booster Sunday School
Central Aor Co~dit on ng
class of the F rst Bapt st
- Heatong
Free Estoma!es
Chur ch was enterta ned m the
Stewart s Hardware
home of Mrs Edna Pickens
Vonlon Ohoo
Fr
day evenmg Oct 15 The
14
meet ng opened w th the hymn
HORSE SHOEINCO
Blessed Assurance
The
COMP ETE fa r e serv ce
Bob Schaetf ng 446 510
Beat tudes was the program
188 I topic presented by Mrs
Maqone Gr mm and scnpture
TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE nspect on Cal 446-3245 was Matt 5 I 15 Prayer by
Me
0 Dell Ope ato to
Mrs P ckens was followed by
Exterm nal Terml e Se v ce
readmgs
Mrs Clara Powell
19 Belmont Dr
267 t presiden t presided at the
bus ness sessoon Meetmg
- - --------LEGAL NOTICE
closed w th the Lords Prayer m
Amended senate Jo n Reso u on lU1 son Durmg a fellowship
No '
hour Mrs P cke ns serv ed
JOINT RESOLUTION
refreshments

Complete-. water I ne serv ce

ANTIQUE GLASS &amp; COLLECTABLES S gned North

0

Racine
Social Events

and trench ng C J Lemley
V nlon 011 o Ph 388 8.543

wood and other ca n va l co
55 piece) Dragon China
occ Japan c anberry crue t and souve n e pi eces hand
pa nted g ass Sat suma Rosev e M cCoy co
of
e ephan ts ove 90 co of w ne bottles nc r are ba k
covered bot e a so wh skeys ch na clock w th matc hing
vases p cut p sm s lamps dep ess on pressed pr
m ne a o I am ps b ass terns o I t ns Cup d dolls c up
co ect on clo sonne b sque o d aco d an
FURNITURE Ve or carved couch &amp; char beaut lui
V ctor an love sea w th two matching c ha rs t\o'fll
ockers wa nut claw ft sew ng cabinet V ctor an ..mar

3

"DOC"

PONTIAC

WATER well d I ng Myers
pumps Sales and Serv ce

11:00 A.M.
OCTOBER 30, 1971

26 Oc

243

sp ngs Corb n &amp; Snyder
Furn 955 Second Ave Ph
446 71
3 If

churches

A I

ava ab e Ph 446 4 0

LOW ow p ces on Bemco and

11

248 3

1 623 b ob base now

ope a ed as G ade A Da y
a m Th s s a dandy
100 A 6 RM ho~se b g ba n

AUCTION

pol ce mon tors antennas

etc ) Bob C t zens Band Rad o
Equ p Georges C eek Rd
Gallipolis Ohio 446 4517
24 f

241 f

for

USED TRAILERS
960 Na ona OxlO 2 br
967 Hor zon 2x50 2 b
957 G de 45x8 J b
966 Namco 52x 0 3 b
960 Van Dyke Ox50 2 b
960 Van Dyke 10x50 2 b
965 Ken luck an 56x 0 3 br
962 Colon a 50xl0 2 b
960 Van Dyke Ox40 2'b
A
a e s c ean and recon

Home Sa es Second &amp; V and
P P easan nex o Heck s

1963 Fo d s at on

446 694 0

Lowe B os and Grey Sea
pa n s M u neaux Dec Co

TWO WAY Rados Sales &amp;
Serv ce New and used CB s

SOMMERS GMC
TRUCKS INC
133 Pone 51
Ph 446 2532

247 It

CORBIN &amp; SNYDER
FURNITURE CO

243 I

TOP-NOTCH CARS!
70 Polar

OFF CE OF TI-lE SEC RETARY
OF STATE

I TEDW BROWN Sceayof
S a e of he S ate of Oh o do he e
by
e fy hu
he fo eg ng s
a
ue copy of A rn e ded Senate
23 It Jon Reso u on No 2 fi ed n he
office of he Se eta y ot S a e and
p opos ng to amend he above sec
ons of be Cons u o of O h o
ALBERT EHMAN
IN TEST MONY WHEREOF I
Water Del very Se v ce
ha e he eun to subsc bed my name
Pa r ol5 ar Rt Gal po s
and affixed m y offi al sea at Co
Ph 379 2133
urn bus h s 0 h day of September

1965
T GMC P U
1969 thev dump lruck
19S2 , T Chev P U
1965 1 T GMC
1969 GMC 4 T log t uck
lt57 'h T GMC P U
1965 , T Ford P,U
1963 h T Chev i&gt; U
1969 1 T GMC
1967 , T GMC P U
1968 Chev Suburban
1966 '4 T Chev P U
1967 'I• T Chevrolet p cl&lt;up
1963 F600 Ford T ck
1961 2 T GMt;
1964 3 T GMC
1964 ' T Chev P U

Serta

UN TED STATES OF AME I CA
SrArE OF OH 0

FAIN
EXTERMINATING CO
Te m e &amp; Pest Control
Wheelersbu g Oh o
Ph 5746 2

967 DATSI,IN P U
1966 2 T GMC P U
1969 P vmn lh Roadrunne
•63 C750 Ford truc&lt;

249 3

homes n s ock B &amp; S Mob le

249

New GM'C
Truck Headquarte~

nd ana

d oned
Ready for oc
cupancy F ee De very and

Ph 446 0457

- - - - --

P 0

NEW doub e man I e Coleman

97

HOLLEY S DITCHING
OF ANY type and complete
water:
ne
nsta lat on
gua anteed Ph J P Ho ley
245 50 8 0 446 4344
219 tf

p m weekdays o appt

3 BR ADDAV LL E AREA
F y a pe ed ~ree bed oo m

N CE
HOME
ACREAGE

A

P ce $13 500

on a ge o 250 fl by 250 f

450

oca ed on nea

Farms

n basenwJ

ucellent con

------2 BD RM Close own ex a 964 GTO 389 3 spd Bes ofle

v ng oom d n ng oom
ba h w h s how e
a ge
k hen w h o of bu
n
b ch cab ne s ha dwood
oo s na
gas fu nace 50
ga on e eel water heate
2
a ge
ec ea on oo ms

pane ed

hea

P ce educed S16 000

We Need Ltshngs
ROOM block

Rea n ce 5 m

hom e w h ba h and fu

OUTBU D NGS PLUS 4
GOOD BU D NG 0 S

$2500

P S P B 4 new t res

$ B000

SO ME

FRONTAGE ON RT
4
BARN
AND
OTHER

LO on Ke Be he oad ao x
3 6 enced C y wa e P ce

BOX SPR NGS &amp; mattress
bed 2 pc v ng room su te

E NO 6 oom modern home on
2 A C ose new Gav n pan

Older Home
4 Acres
A EDGE OF TO VN
GOO D 4 BEDROOM
HOME W TH 600 FEE

and he o he 202 A w h 90 A

Ford To no !02 II 8

8 000

ST RT 60 6 b g ooms and
bahon A$4000

CLOSE TO TOWN OR OU
N HE COUN TRY

WE HAVE 2 a ms on Sae
Ro e 325 be ween R o
G ande and V n on One has
90 A w h 3 bed oom h ome

HOUSE

Y

D NG

$

on a a ge o

NEAR R 0 GRANDE - 3 bd
m home on one h d A o
Cheap a $13 000

MODERN

DREAMS
WE
HAVE

a e

A I to

H NK N G O F BU L D NG
HE HOME OF YOUR

N ADDISON Townsh p 260 A
a m 90 A bo om and 31 A

o Ra coon bo om
h 7
oom mode n house and a ge
ba n Lan d we fenc ed

A

5 ms
hea on A o

Butldmg Lots

o n base and
A oba co
base w h 2 houses and l h ee
gas we s Bo h houses en ed
Gas we pays $90 e e y 3
m on hs

Co h measu e

5-4-Fee

60--Damp

um

25-Wa ks

party

55-Na a e
56-Pocke books
59-P epos o
62-F'a a y
6-4 Moun an

•

Y

250 6
FOR SALE

LOWER R VER RD

SC HOOL

99-Possess e
p o o n

Co

b ck beau y 5 a ge ms a
ba hs
ca pe ed
basemen
2 ca ga
a ge andscaped Ia
anx ous o se

NO

and

econom ca
tha s B ue
Lus e ca pe and upho ste ry
eane
Ren
e ec
c
shampooer S Cen a Supp y

FA RV EW SUB D V -

F URNA CE AND BA H ON
A LAR GE LOT
US
STEP S FRO M GRADE

gas

98-Wa m h

ET

USED FURNITURE

OVAL top med oak pedes a
base d n ng lab e w lh 6 USED Apar menl s ze gas
range
u
s ze bed
3
malch ng cha s $75 Ph 446
ef
ge
a
o
s
a
I
n
good
0358
250 3
cond t on New Select on of
Tappan gas &amp; electr c
TEN5mo od shoa s 520each
anges washers &amp; d ryers by
See John Sw sher on Van
Speed
Queen Plenty of t ee
Zand Rd o ca 367 7749
park
ng
end y serv ce Ph
250 3
446
7
- - -- -246 f
BX32 TRA LER Ph 367 7329
250 6
STORM w dows o m doors
----~::---:-"-:-::-:-.
a um and canvas awn ngs
969 CHEVROLET V 8 C20
ep ace men w ndows s d ng
on uck Ph 446 7
a ge selec on of wa lpape
250 3
EXCELLENT

Realtor 32 State St
Tel 446-1998

Good Home Pnced
Roghl In Thurman
3 BEDROOM HOME
COM P

250 If

- -- - --

M O NEY DOWN

P R CE educed on h s n ce 2
bed oom home on S a e Rou e
1 w h oad on age of 229
w h c y wa e and na u a

94-C ha ae

udes
m 2
o he
qu ck

MASSIE

3

M EA N S

7

Branch Manager

BEDROOM
HOME ON COR NER LO
ON
CE NTRAL
AVE
F H A
SHOULD
AP
PROVE
H S
ONE

ng he p eache s sma
o
Does you
a he e e
p ea h he same se man
w ce
he a ked
Oh su e
he does
he boy answe ed
bu he ho e s n d e ent
paces

•bri
9 2-Hted

P US A

Owner Must Sell
A

he

sa e $ 5 000
Ranny Blackbu n

GARAGE B DG OWNER
5 AN OFFER

4461066

Loose wo en

m s down n
m and TV
ga ages se on he ea
a ge l o P ed o

WAN

o

Sea taKe
lS--0 ne
J 6-Rem ne a ed
3 -Thee oed
so hs
42-Posed

3 - Wa k

9 Nerve netwo ks
2G-W pe ou
27 Pe m
29-Ed b e seeds
l -F ee o
36-To
37-Cha y
39-Possess e

ham me

34

•o-vapo

oun

A e

d n ng

ENT SHOP AND

T S

l or

sla e d A I s ock and
equ p nc uded
CITY
N CE 2 s o y home on Eas e n

Y ROOM
ON 2
OTS
GOOD GA RDEN
SPO
A
EDGE OF
OW N
E SS
TH AN
$20 000

CE

e ms

qua e s and ca po
a
ac eo l and on
ached Ove

ODAY
DON
M 55
SEE NG T HE C EANES
BEDR OOM
HOME
BARGA N
N
OWN
ARGE
ROOM S
~ AM

$90 000 repo ed
E Z

gh pe son 5 4 500
GROCERY STORE
OVER 3 soo sq f sore
bu ld ng
o ey
v ng

SEL L

H ROUGHOU T

d

n orne

HOU SE

TO

a gest se lec on
of d amonds n the a ea We
ask you o shop el sew here
hen p ce ou s GUa an eed
sav ngs Tawney Jewe ers

422 Second Ave

FEED MILL

s aile

CON

A

PR CEO

250 f

WELL es abl shed bus ness on

EN MENT HERE BUT
HA S AL
WERE

SUNDAY OCTOBER
'29--0 1 ha 11d a

HAN
OF

GENTLEMAN S FARM
A ON 60 N ce 6 oom
pond

V EW
$22 000

EN

so

home ga age wo kshop and

BR CK
N EW
3

Y

EXCE

\o

2-Wo m

4

VERY GOOD HC ME AND
5 ACRES W TH EX

~

4- 85

e

Ctly Farmer,,

•

ACROSS

N CE 8 oom home barn
sever a f u
ees Buy w h
ac
or
You cho ce

FROM
ROOMY

STY E

RANCH
N EAR

Ga pols

EASY TERMS

Comfort &amp;
Conventence

308 I

.• SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER:~LL
.•.
24 1971
REALTOR

t
•
......•

GARAGE

N CE QU ET LO CAT ON
PR CED
ESS THAN
$20 000 C TY WATER
GAS AND SCHOOLS

HE RE 5

ANY T ME s agood

De a s

9053

CE N RA

Bargam Hunter

W L L PAY we o ou
me wo k ng a home o u
Anyo e who a
ead a d

•
For Sale or Trade
•••
MUSTANG A cond on
• 96550 000
BTU ga s oo u nace

Ga c a Vega
and
Jo se
Me end c ga s The Smoke s
Co ne
422 Second Ave

ATTRACT VE

CAR

erms Call 446 1028
250 3

WE HAVE a comp e e I ne of
GBD p pes and obaccos Also

M E OU T N CE S ZED

ASK NG

House L1stmgs
Wanted

budge

3 BEDROOM RANCH ON
A
ACRE PL OT UST
K

carpet

aft c

h Blue
sham poo

962 RAMBLER wagon P S
p B a Hollywood style ~&lt;Ill
bed Ph 446 4566
248 3

MODERN
Wa nut
s ye
sle eo ado AM FM ado 4 COU R ER 23 chan ne c tzen
s pe ake so und sys tem 4
band
ad o w anten na for
speed au oma t c c hang e
house Ca n be used n house o
Balan ce $69 72 Use ou
ca Excellent cond Ph 446
budge! e ms Ca 446 028
828 at er4 p m
250 3
249 2

BASEMENT
AND
G ARAGE
PR CEO

ROOMS

pa nt

speaker sou nd sys em 4
speed automal c ch ange
Ba ance S77 79
Use our

omme cal

LV NG ROOM AND
FORMAL D N NG FU L

FURN SHED
Fou h A

ROOMS week y
ga age pa k ng

so m e

248 J

SPINET CONSOLE
EARLY Amer can Slereo ado
PIANO
comb na on AM FM ad o 4 WANTED espons be pany to

t mbe $10 000

ED ENTRANCE

CAR PE

MORE
WORTH

s

house

BEDROOMS VERY N CE
K
CHEN
GARAGE

26

250 5

N

EXCEL ENT NE GH
BORHOOD
3
BEDROOMS
BATHS

equ ed

:- ------:-:-:• REDUCE sa e and as w

Ia ge

50A c ose a V n on 25A now
unde
plow 2 ba ns
og

N TOWN ON

Sma l

Lower G C Mu phy 5 o e
250 6

abe 2

NEW LISTING

F OR

LOR EN

L A RG E SHADY LOT

3 BEDROOM home Ph 4 6 THE HOUSE OF A FR END
58
248 3

24 3

Lust e

REAL

A
SE
&amp; CH

250 6

TH 15 SPOT thai spo
pa hs oo emoved w

Very Ltvable

CUT RATE gas o e 5500 q

5

NEW LISTING

200 ACRES
On SlateR "" 90 pel
ponds
"'JLD &gt;ees
ba n $45 lilA:

ac

damage n s~ pp ng W I ake
$27 cash o budge! p an
ava ab e Phone 446 2827
250 6

$26 900

Serv1ce Sta
&amp; Garage
oo
es au an
men s loca
on a S a e

H ERES
PARAD

clean ng tools

Love y 3 BR mode n home c ose
to town w h a ge s one
1 ep ace bu
n k t chen
ba h s garage and a ge
fenced n awn

Altracltve Modern
Coloma I In Town

Trade ns

ava ab l e

cep ed Phone 446 2827

VACUUM C eane brand new
971 model Comp ete w th all

(gl t~.toMWtola

garden
p e $

Evenmg
Ike Wtseman
446 3796
E N Wtseman
446 4500

we and c s e n ex a good
ca ga age o ng awn w th
owe s sh ubs shade ees
P ce $9 000

For Rent
ROOM
Adam s

o

ca pe

LA~CONTRAC"!j
ooms n~t~ in f""JI,ton

Off 446 3643

Eureka Oh1o

562

Busmess Opportun1t1es

6

REALTOR

4 REG Suffolk rams 4 Reg
Mon ada e rams 1 AKC Toy
Pood e 2 t sh aquar ums 446
2947

ave cast and fancy s tch

Pay \us $48 75 cash or erms

Serv1ces Offered

1970 CADILLAC sed DeV I e
fully equipped low m eage
Ph Pl. Pleas 675 4283 after 6
226 It

For Sale

97 ZIG ZAG sew ng mach ne
ef n layaway Beaut fu
pastel colo ful s ze mode
All bu It n o, but onho e

THE LEADER SINCE 1900 IN
SERVING THE NATIONS
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
Ph 446 0008

Agency

Rea tor

Off ce 446 2674
Howard o Luc lie Brannon

For Sale

Reai.Estate For Sale

World s Largest

and ba h w h a p c
249 6 5 Room
u esq e
ew o
he Oh o
R e and W Va h Is Wa o

Ae

en
and
en

35
~c-Ac:R-::P:-:0:-:R:-:T::--::Sc-ac-e- -:-:--;:-

Hoba t 0 lon

o n

Va

do a s and god cons
Tawney Jewe le s 422 Se end

WANT

4.46

2

Dillon
Agency
Even ngs 446 226

WE W LL buy you

w h no

can ass ng
2 weeks o
mo e pa d
aca on
s yea
6 Company ns a e and
e emen pan
We u n sh eh c e and a
expenses
The Qua
a ons Ma ed
o e 25 ha e a good em
p oyme
e o d Be a se I
s a e Con ac M Ewe
a he Blue Foun a n Moe
be wPen 7 and
0 p m

250

~

24

3 5 Day week

Sad y m ssed by da ugh e
M s ohn K C a k pa en

and b o he s a d s

o Beau y 609 Th d Ave

Chesa peake Oh o o ca
o ec 304 525 4826 be ween 9
and 2 p m

ha s Wanted
n
he
a ea o
e ab e 800Ph 000
H
ma ed man oak ng o a
6S
0
s ea dy and se e

good as you

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

For Sale

AND REPEAL
y

!

�21- The Slllday Times Sentinel Sunday Oct 24 1971

-,..,..-- For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
STROUT REALTY
The WISEMAN
20 - The Stmday Tunes Sentmel SwldAI Oct 24 1971

In Memory

~

. ., N LOV N G memo y o Be ha

M M e

who pa ssed away
en yea s ago Oc 23 96

'"

~

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

D NG DONG E e yone k ow

F YOU wou d ke an exc ng
a ee n he p om s ng wo ld
o
Beau y Cu u e n a
u I
p og am wh ch ha s
go e nmen
nanc ng w e

Tha can nean p o
o you A on Rep ese n
a ves ea n money se ng
h gh qua y A on p oduc s n
he
spa e
me
Need
o ey W e o
a
Ms
H e en Yeage
Box
72
Avon

You gen le ace and pa en
':'
sm e w h sa dness we ec a
.. Vou had a k nd y wo d o ea h
and d ed be ov ed by a
;;' The o ce s mu e and s ed he
._ hea
Tha oved us we and

-

,.,.

e
b er was

Ah
F om one so
Yo a e no
one No w

""
:

he

a

a kson Oh o Ph 286 4028
245 6

o pa

o go en

o ed

you e e be
"W. As ong as
e and me no as
""' We w
emembe hee
-

We m ss you now

a e so e As

..

ou

hea

posonWeoe
Oppo un y o ea n
om
$8 000 up annua y
e 2 Gua an eed week y sa a y

me goes by we

-: m ss you m o e
.....,. You o ng s n e yo
._.
ace No one an
acan pa ce

ge
you

M
•

Es ab shed bus e

and M s S an ey Swa n

es

- - -- - Not1ce

• TO ALL

-

Monday 0
Th sday 0

- SUN VA LEY Nu se
S

:

5

-

by

~

Va ey D

e

5a e

o

he

_
:_
,..,.
""
-

Depa men
We a e now
day
ca e
deve opmen
p e schoo
h

:

exc uded Open 6 30 a m o 6

-

..

:
•
.,.

-

:c
~

:

week $5 pe day
es
e day~ $3 pe day
mo n ng sess ons Ph
365
Mad ge
Hau d
Owne 0 rec o
ohn
L o ed
h
Hau d
opeaos

28

h u
250 4

o accoun ng
depa n en o a man uta
u ng p an Shou d be abe o
ha nd e gu es a u a e y
ab
y o ake d c a on s
des abe
Expe e n e
he p u Ca Fede a Mogu

o
p o d ng u
and
h d
p og am
d en
an s

p m Monday lh ough F day
Fees $20 o
u
e day

:
:
-

25

Co p 446 92

ha
fo

250

BU

NEW
ane W

ea

wa

250

PROVEN SUCCESS
SALES&amp; SALES
MANAGEMENT PARADISE
Ow n you own bus ness A e you
ea n ng wha you a e wo h n
you
p esen
pa s on
oo k ng o amb o s m en
ho wan o s a t w h a new
ompany w h a g ow h and
ea n ng
paten a
s
n m ed Ha e open ngs o
d s buto sh ps n you a ea
n es men se u ed Send
pe sana backg ound esume
o A ea Coo d na o Box 22

Be p e Oh o Rep es s cl y
on den a

242 2

ouse
be ween
e &amp; Ha
sbu g
C 0 Tope 2 n es W

C n a

Rod e on o d R 35

2 B3

250 3
--------------~TOP

WOMEN
B 35
TRA N NG GOOD PAY
EXC T NG TRAVEL Wan

smou h Rd
nex
pan F
and Sa

24S I

hea

deep

What A Place
TO RET RE

o

a se you

am y 6 Ac es p en y good
ga dens 8 oom 4 BR home
f ep ace
n LR
2 a ge
po ches ba n ce a house
pen y wa e
a lso 4 ca r
ga age and sor e bu d ng A

to $ 8 000 w h beau! fu
shade

ees and g een awn

PARENTS
AL KE

sp a e n ud ng
and wo apa
ed on a co ne o
H ghway

So Easy
To Own
0 ROLL NG a es oca ed on a
b a k op oa d 6 oom 3 BR
home w h ul
basemen
s o m doo s and w ndows
a um um s d ng
2 ca
ga age and apa tm en deep
we and u a wa e Assume
a G oan l ow ow n e e

pc

Just L1sted

...,.
::

A.

""

h
Gobese ab et s and E Vap
wa e p I s G ngham D g

TC HEN

A R

223 26

..

e

a

e

ames B ss Co

Box 324 Dep

~

~

Ph 446 3553

ow

250

~
•

qua

y

w

w

Pa

P 0

K 8

e

S EEP NG ROOMS

24 2

a e

week y

Pa k Cen a Ho e

you
orne o sa e
p ced gh We ha e ac e
demand o ho mes and sma
a eage A homes and a ms
so d on 5 pe en comm by

he D LLON AGE NCY

M NUTE S
DOWNT OW N

•...
~

1-once more
6--Reaches

6--Possesses
ansa on
78-F esh wa e

ecross

-Enc OSU IS 0
an mas
16-Ex I
2 -Case
22 Lone egged
b d
23-Wa n l'tlit de

•h

demn y
Ce emony
84-Loca ons
BS-Sa ed mage
86-Noose
9-

82

e

24-K nd o bee

88-0 I C
Ge ma y

2S-Pronoun

89

26-G mpse
28--A mon h
30-Ma s name
32-Symbo o
an a um

33-Baby on an
do y

Po

32--Go mound
33 0 d woman sh

35-Shade ee
38--Younes e
39-cha ense
40--Ans o Saxon

90

THE ELDERLY

s o was

WH C H

PETED

02 No se c ods
03- n a o o

38-P s:pen

04

o

porta

43-F ock
-44-Wnes

45--Lub ca e
47-Looks pry na: y
-49-Neckp eces
50-P onou
5 -En erta ns

00-A e oon

05 S spe nd
06-Hartebees
O!l-Com pass po n
09 P epos on
0-Span sh art c e
S dden pa
2-Ag eemen s
be wee

nd s

a

om o

- Pans
2 Mass e
3-Sw ss
e
4 P onou
5 8 d s beak
6-Ena: sh

n"

9-Wa k ac os

s eam
20 Harves
122-Powe
persons
24 Worth ns

property
Q-P o
Mo 8 e

DOWN

..

5 Weak ood
6-F gh e ed
28 Pe m

Ban a o he
Came oons
8-Food prog am
80--M ne en an e
8
Nega e
83-Ch nese P380da
84-Scorch
87 Sma

36-Amoun s
bo owed
37 F acas
39 Proh b on s s
40 Eye co ey
44-Cao 1 ho c

.

45-E eryone
46-Su IIi
adhe en o
47
48

Fo

shame

Mans

n ckname
49- Rocky h

15 - Pad no e
53 Cooed a a
55-Cha dean
y
57 Prepos on

bahw h u
Rve vew $0000

EDGE OF C TY 5 m home
w h ba h p us 2 bd m 70
mode

CAR

REAL
BU

ha

needs some

Lo a on s 947 Second
A enue 35 f f on age
epa

Off ce 446 1066
Even ngs Call
Ron Canaday 446 3636
John I R chards 446 0280
Russe l D Wood446 4618

NEAR TOWN

GREAT
OTS
N

n ce

Cheap1es
4 RM &amp; ba h Sp use S
4 RM &amp; ba h Texas Rd
5 RMS &amp; ba h 3 A SB 500
5 RMS &amp; ba h V n on 55 500
s RM
A Thu man $8 000

4 bed ooms

2

po ches ga age co ne e e
d eway Ia ge ya d w h
p en y of shade eP Lac a ed
on S R
2-i n Sy acuse
Oh o Ava l ab e
a
m
med a e occupa cy To see

Second Ave
Ph 446 4775
"1--t-t--~ 42 ACRES 3 BR HOME

-

Ca p e ed
v ng
oom
pa e ng a um num s d ng 0
ac es bo om and on L le
Raccoon P ced gh

1 ke brand new
couc h
d esse
amps sofa bed
au tom a cgas d yer 2 dinette

R ce s
New &amp; Used Furn 854 Second
ac ass f om Texaco Stat on)
446 9523
249 tt

sets

o I away bed

take over sp net p ana Easy
te ms Can be seen oca y

W e C ed t Manage
Box 276 She byv e
46176

9 2 25 FT SPARTA N avel
a er fu y self con a ned
los of ex t as Must sac f ce
See any t me Hende son s
T a e C
Hende son W

Va

an e n $ o New Coleman
s ove $ 4 Ph 367 7125 afler 4

p m

248 3

MODEL zg zag sewng

mac h ne makes buttonho es
ancy des gns e c Sal due

$32 BB Ph 675 1589

H UN TER

spec a

o

258 Th d Ave Ph 446 2606
245 26

se up Tr County Mob le
Homes 446 0 75
93 f

USED

Mob e

Headqua e s A

Home
s ze mob e

67 I

she mans

wagon 6 cy s d
ans Best
o te ove $ 50 buys
Ph
446

546

249 6

24 ACRES on Br ck Road 2
m es f om Add son Severa

exce en bu d ng lots
367 7598

Ph

204 If

--- - - - - --

62 CHEVROLE T 6 cy
sh
$245 Ph 256

249 3

sd

45
249 3

SERVIa

248 3

SELL THE AUCTION
WAY

22 A MONEY MAKER good
b dgs
good ences p en y
wa l e

Ph 36 7708

BARB E DOLL o hes of all
s yes Ph 44602 2
248 3
6 PR B ocad e d ape es 90x75
col o B ue Jay pe ma p ess

he ma ga

a

back ng

some bo om and ob base
pen y wate
and can be

bought tor $15 750
ANY HR 446 1998
E W nters 446 3828
Eve J Fuller 446 3246

Neal Realty

Ph Ga ll pol s 446 9539 a e 5 2 BR home that need s some
epa s Ha s 6 ac es of and
232 I
ba n and oca ed on 5R 2 8 4

JAMES (JIMME)

SAYRE
PH. 446-3444

ke

new w h wh e shee s $9 p

Ph 446 9442
969 VALIANT good
Ph 446 3653
248 3
USED 20

and

PUBLIC
NOTICE
We sell anyth ng for
anybody Bring your
tems to Knotts Com

ce en cond on
d a nage Ph Hun

5555

248 6
9 CHEVROLET p ckup 307
V8 8ft bed 5 000 m les Call
446 2949 after 5
246 6

mun 1y Auct1on

Barn

Corner Thord &amp; Olive
For apporntment call
446 2917 Sale every
Saturday Evenong at

ABC Accou nt ng &amp; Bookkee p ng
Serv ces

mat resses

and

ta x

fo ms

197

TED W BROWN
Sec e y of Sta e
Seal

Sep

N EWJ bed oom home n Plantz
Subd v good loca on n c y

sc hoo d sf ct W I be
t n shed soon $ 5 500 Ph
De be Clar k 446 0390

m les

om

own

Full p ce

$ 500
30R4BRhome ocaedonnce
o a
2 State St Ac ass
tram H gh Sc hoo
near
bus ness d s ct P ced to

se I
Cat
us
today
Off ce Phone - 446 1694

home w h u
basemen
ca po
u ba h o u nace
a oss f om schoo

Even ng s

Charles M Neal 446 546
J M chael Nea 446 503

we s

SMA LL
Th ee

Plumbmg &amp; Heatmg
RUSSELLS
PLUMBING &amp; HEA Tl NG
SE PT C tank clean ng elect c

bed ooms fu ba h bu
n
k hen ga age o
hea
o n wa e ow ax d s c
owne mo ed ou o s a e

sewe

&gt;Oscar Sa rd 446 4632
Doug Welher~oll 446 4244

c ea n ng

d tch ng

Ga po s Oh o Ph 446 4782
193 It

SWAN CREEK Ga nge Ha I &amp;
o oca ed a B aden 0 on
R 7 Ia ge 2 s o y bu d ng n
exce ll en sha pe Ph Emrne
C~u

ch 446 0849

248 4

DEW TT 5 PLUMB NG
AND HEAT ING
Rou te 60a Eve g een

Phone 446 2735
trade n ce 3 bedroom
n town R ve v ew

ex a n ce o

Ph 446 2852

ava able Nov 1

246 I
4

BEDROOM b
M dd lepo Ph

28\

STA NDARD
P umb ng &amp; Hea ng
2 s Th dAve 446 3782
187 If
CARTER 5 PLUMBING
AND HEATING
8JO Fou lh Avenue
Phone 446 3888 or 446 447?
155 If

ESTATE

ON

Late Mary Hannah Wolfe
128 Fourth Ave - Galhpohs Oh1o
11 oo A M ()(;Iober 30 1971

box

SINGER Sew ng Mach ne Sales
&amp; Service All models n
stock Free del very Se v ce
guaranteed Models p ced
!rom $69 95 F ench C y
l'abrlc Shoppe S nge ap
proved dealer 58 Cour 51
Ph 446 9255
308 f

told ng Iabies
res auran s
organlzat ons

Comp ele I ne of off ce cha rs
and desks S mmons Pig &amp;
Oft ce Equ p Ph 446 397

Propollng to amend. Mc:Uon lg of
Artlc e JI oj lbe Coutltul on of
the Btalt of Ohio to nqulre ne'ID-

141 f

paper 1D Ueu of mall noUct of
law.. propoHd lawt or propo~ed

amtndmtnll to Jhe Conlliiul on

nqulnd. to be 1ubmuted to a

'YOie

of the •leeton
Be t eso ed b y he Gene a As
WHITE cement a sizes t le n semb y of he s a e of Oh o hree
hs ot the membe~ e e ed 0
s ock 12 &amp; 15 I eld e til
ea h ho se oncu ring' 1he en ha
su table tor h ghway d tc~ ng the e sha be subm ed o he t ec
co ncrete
bocks
ors of he sta e n the manne
GALLIPOLIS BLOCK CO p esc bed by a w a he gene a t
e e uo
o be h e d o
he fl s
ph 446 2783
Tuesday af e h e ft s Monday n
97
No embe 91 a p oposa o ame nd
- - - -- - - - -- - - :se on g o A c e
of he C n
GOOD CLEAN LUMP and s u on o Oh o o ead a o ows

s oker coal Car Wnters R 0
Grande Phone 245 5 5

ART C LE I

Mrs

Vc

tor an p cl u e f ame d splay box
Also Much Clean Household Items Such As Washer
dryer ret Zen th portable T V comb console T v
s ave 4 pc bedroom set a so k tchen utens Is
Th s s a arg e sa le w th m uch more too numerous to
ment on

TERMS CASH
LUNCH SERVED
EXECUTOR LOIS POOLE
AUCTIONEERS
R chard D Davis - 1 216 717 7491 App
Don W Standen
4J22 Mart n Dr North Olmsted Ohio

24

James

Swart

ac

compan ed Mr and Mrs Alfred
Crow an d Be cky Io Was hmgt on

Pa to attend tl e funeral of her
s ster Mrs Mabel Wherry
d M
L
Rev
an
rs
arry
Beougher and ch ldren of
Amanda were Sunday guests
d
F
k
of Rev an Mrs
ran
Cheesebrew
Mr and Mrs Ben Petre] and
h
M
Add p t J
mot er
rs
e e re
spen a recent weekend w h
Mr and Mrs Robert Feuer

8 f

IF YOU are bu d ng a new
home or emodt ng see us
We are bu ders D s r bu or
Hotpo

nt App ances

A son Elec r c

SIGNS

No

154 f

hun ng

o

respass ng or o he s Pro ect
your rights S mmons Pig &amp;

Office Equ p

203 I

of

DOUBLE oven boll ed gas
ange wh te Ph 446 t 299

Campm&amp; Equipment
J US't--;!il\ R V ED new

tow
le ravel ra er 6 f 5
$1695 18 It s $1945 Also the
Wonder Star Ira lers n slock
at huge d scounts 972 S!ar
Mas!er cam pers Sl 325
Stardust w brakes $1 525 1
used 1 S a Mas e $1 175
used 70 Const loaded $ 425

prof

We serv ce wha

we se

S ock oil accessor es Camp
Con ey Sla craf Sales R 62
N of P P easan W Va
240 I

and

f re homeowne s

hosp lal and gene al I ab

FRENCH CITY Bu des
Supp y 750 ls Ave 446 1499
pane ng

4d

HT a

ha dware

plumb ng and elect ca
su ppl es Hours 7 o 5
T~ursday 7 o 12 Altend ou
Founders Day and Grand
open ng Sale beg nn ng Oc

Dudley
n law of
Addte

236 f

DEAD STOCK
$5 00 Serv ce Charge
Will remove your dead
horse and cows

Call Jackson 286-453

DODGE
70 Polara Sta Wagon a r Sharp

FORD....
70 l TO 2 Dr H T a r Loaded

D P MARTIN &amp; Son •Va e
Del very Serv e
Your
patronage w II be ap
prec ated Ph 446 0463 7 f
SWISHER 5
DITCH TRENCHING
SERVICE Ph 367 7475

174 II

-J-:;,D,_s..LR:-a-d-lo,--&amp;--::T:::Vc:-::S:-e:-v ce
Serving Gall po s &amp; PI
reasonable rates

675 5220

SWISME R S P umb ng &amp;
Eleclrlc contractor We
special ze n hook ng up rural
water I ne sys em to your
~ome Comple ely bu d your
bathroom c;at us for com
plele free es mate Delbe t
Swisher Add Ison Ph 367
7475
15 If

•2995

70 Coronet 4 Dr Sedan
70 Dart 2 Dr H T a r mmacuia!e

69 Polara 4 Dr

1969 BUICK ELECTRA 2 DR. HDTP.
r cond p w nd v nyl

••

69 Impala 2 dr H T real n ce

DODGE
68 Charger 2 Dr HT Clean

CHEVROLET

I me green

v nyl top

Electra trade

'2395

1969 PONTIAC CATALINA 2 DR. HDTP

•2195

1968 BUICK ELECTRA 4 DR. HDTP.

H T Loaded a r

CHEVROLET

top

1969 BUICK LeSABRE 4 DR. HDTP

•2795

69 Bonnev lie 4 Dr H T

DODGE ...

'2595

Gold
cond

dark brown v nyl
72 LeSabre

•1895

Custom a r cond
owner

'1895

1966 BUICK RIVIERA

68 Chevelle 2 Dr HT N ce

top

a

r

41 000 m es One loca

Gold bucket seals

NORRIS DODGE
UPPER ROUTE 7 &amp;50 STATE STREET
PHONE 44~05 or 446-0842

1966 BUICK LeSABRE 4 DR.
Factory
Sharp

a r local college prof

tr ade

1970 DiEVROLET PICKUP
18 000 m les V 8 eng ne 8 II bed N ce

Fairview

•2395
•3295

bucket seats

A

DODGE

There's nothing Iunny
about our 1200 Sedan.

1962 FORD TUDOR

•2695
'2595
'1495
•1195
'2395
•295

News Notes
By Mrs Herbert Roush
Mr and Mrs Roger Parsons 1200 Sedan
Mrs Jess e Parsons and son
George of Ashland Oh10 spent
a weekend w h Mr and Mrs
Donald Hupp Mrs Jess e
T E E H E E stand for
Parsons w 11 reman at the Techmcal Eng1neenng
Hupp home for a week to ca re Excellence And H ghly 1\eek
for the Hu
children wh le Extravagant Extras
Mrs Mam e Newlun has
Mrs Hupp ~~ surg cal patent
StaSandfatyrdfequtodpmenbt likke
moved
n w th the Joe Carsey
•
e ron LSC ra es
lam ly
at
Veterans
Menlor al
, A h 1gh cam engone
4 Dr hardtop p steer ng p brakes rad o
Mr Neal has bee n II
Hosp tal
• Wh1tewalls
w lh rear seal speakers gold metallic f n sh
Mr and Mrs Harold Lawson
• Front buckets
Mrs Lou se G lkey and Karen
w th blk v n yl roof w s w I res L ke new
and son of !..;,tart W Va spent
See your Dalsun dealer
of Albany vos ted Mr and Mrs
cond
Saturday w th Mr and Mrs the Small Car Expert
L ncoln Russell and Ava G lkey
Charles Lawson and famtly
Dnve a Datsun then
Sunday afternoon
Mr and Mrs Charles Lawson dec1de
Mo and Mrs Lowell He tger
spent Sunday afternoon w th
and Mr Earl Anx made a
Mr and Mrs D amond Lawson
bus ness tr p to C nc nnat last
at Mt Mor ah
week
FROM NISSAN WTH PR DE
Mr and Mrs Ron me Young of
Mr and Mrs V rg I Atk ns
M ddleport Mark and Tony
went to a gra nge conference
Venoy of Wolf Pen Jan and
and then on to M chtgan to vtsot
Dean H II spent Sunday af
Mr and Mrs Gordon Atk ns
Kanauga Oh o
Gallipolis 0
Eastern Ave
ternoon w th Mr and Mrs
Mr and Mrs James Payne of
Russell Roush and lam ly
Newark were overn ght guests
Mr and Mrs Dorsa Parsons
of the Robert Welshes and
Harnsonvtlle
attended the Lancaster Faor
JOHNSON
called on the Joe Carseys and
Mrs Clara Mae Sargent
he Kenneth Paynes
ADVANCES
Soc1ety News
Stephame Radford of Pomeroy
Mr and Mrs Harold Ball of
Don Johnson has moved
II
Mrs Foe e Hayman Mr and
Columbus v s ted the Eugene Into third place In the Pro
Mrs Edward Rob nson of
Dr and Mrs Don G bson Youngs The) came espec ally fess1onal Bowlers Assocla
Cleve land Mrs
Marlene Mark and Gay Lynn of Rock for the fun eral of Raymond lion standings of lifetime
tournament victories John
F sher Moll) Larry and Amy v lie Md spent Thursday Webb
s 14th career win left
son
of Racme v s ted over the throug h Sunday w th the r
Mrs Betty Bishop v s ted her
him
trailing Dick Weber
weekend w th Mrs Bertha parents Mrs Lana G bson and s ster at Lancaster Saturday
who leads with 22 and Billy
Robmson
Mr and Mrs Murl Douglas
Mr and Mrs Tom Wells sold Hardwick s~'&lt;'ond with 16
Mr and Mrs Jlffi Kn ght ng
Mr and Mrs C F G lkey of the r home on Pomeroy and - - - - - - - - , - - Terry a nd Jeff of Racme Mr Albany spent Saturday even ng purchased a tra ler
word of the dea th of her brother
and Mrs Russell G bbs of w th Ava G lkey
Mrs Clarence East rece ved Harold Wr ght at Moddleport
Columbus v s ted Mr and Mrs
Mr Dale W II ams s m
Donald Hupp Sunday
prov ng very slowly n a Hun ~--------------------- --------------------Mr and Mrs Dean Sayre of t ngton hosp tal
Middletown Pa spent several
Mrs Ruby Hall day spent an
days w1th the former s parents eve mn g w th Ava G1lkel
Mr and Mrs Herbert Sayre recently
I
Mr and Mrs Lester Manuel Mrs John Stout and Mrs
Glor a and George Abbott had an affectiOnate
BY JACK 0 BRIAN
an d baby of Logan spent Eliza Powell attended th e
greetmg as they passed each other at I.AluJSe s
Saturday w th Mr a nd Mrs Democra c d nner and speech
HE S ON TilE ROCKS
checkroom
Paul Manuel
at Middleport recen tly
BUT SHES WITH REX
The French Connection IS only the secllnd
Mr and Mrs Harry Rowe of Mr Earl McGrath nslalled a
NEW YORK (KFS ) - Star Rtchard Harns
Trenton M1ch are v s t ng bathroom for Paul Dull last adm Is he still adores hiS ex wife Elizabeth now 11 ck ever made by 1ts producer Phil D Antom
mdeftmtely woth Mrs Kate - - - -- - - -- - - wed to Rex Hamson ) Th ngs went wrong and already he s a millionaU"e (from hiS
Buliltt film exc tement whoch already has
Rowe and Ada Sunday guests Kingsbury and Mr and Mrs because of me he agon zed
Lana Turner
hauled m $34 mill on m net rentals - and Phil
m the Rowe home were Mrs Charles Barnett of Grove City told her cast-mates m the tourmg 40 Carats
Steve McQJeen was
Jesste Parsons and George Mr The Carls have three sons her favor te all-movie leading man was John has 20 pet of the net)
Diary of a Mad Housewife star paod $750 000 In front plus a percentage of
and Mrs Roger Parsons of The new arr val w II be called Gar! eld
Melod
Came Snodgress and composer -8 m ~r Neil
Bullitt and already has $2 mtlloon for hiS end
Ashland
Mr and Mrs Edward Kar
Mr Nev Wh te suffered a Young )Otned the non mar tal bunkmate
The French Connection 1s based on Robm
d sh of New Castle Pa spent a broken leg at h s employment at br1gade Marnage IS for the state and the ( Green Berets ) Moore s very factual tale of
weekend w th Mr a nd Mrs Kaoser plant at Ravenswood church and Nell and 1 don t belong to etther
two N Y detectoves (Egan and Rossi) who
Herbert Sayre
Recent v sttors of Mr and Mrs she bravadoes
flushed a Mafia French scheme and grabbed the
Whole were Mr a nd Mrs
Rocky Graziano s been taking smgmg boggest herom haul in police annals Phil has 20
Charles Holley and family of lessons We p1ck Rocky over Pucclm ID two pet of thiS smash too
Phil and thiS dep t
Ashton W Va Mr Johnson rounds LaStre1sanddoesn t oonfme herself to remamed fnends tho we gave one of his TV
Holley and Mr and Mrs Jun or Ryan 0 Neal either
Czech dU"ector Milos shows the worst rev1ew of hiS show biZ We It
Holley of M lton W Va
Forman took her to the L A tenms tournament was perhaps the worst TV show we ever
Mrs Lou se Harr son Mrs
Mabel Bnckles and Mrs Faye
Doctor summoned to treat a Jesus ChriSt reVIewed - Ebzabeth Taylors London was 1ts
Pratt were on Parkersburg Superstar actor was shocked at the very un Utle
Ex Las Vegas casmo owner Beldon
The Carleton Church had Is recently
b bhcal language the stage manager hurled at
Katelman and Ricky Revson may wed K flew
homecom ng Sunday Oct loth
M ss Judy Kmg v stted here the apostles ear-8hattermg
mto town to meet R1ck1 s folks (her father s
Age of Vulganty m the Clllllllle 2000
wtth Sunday School followed by from Kankakee 111 woth her
worship serv ce with Rev Jay parents Mr and Mrs v rgll flock Damele Gauber wtll disport on a see Jerry Brody who riUIS the Rambow Room
St les pastor A basket d nner King and grandparents Mr through mattress
Tony Randall at the Ra nbow Gr II L Etoile and Gallagher s
Martha
was enjoyed at noon m the and Mrs wlliam King Mr and Chateau R1chel eu sa1d between Sips he and hiS restaurants not Ill mention Raffles)
socoal room of the church Mrs Weber Wood
Odd Couple co-8tar Jack Kiugman will do a and Suzy Stephenson were two of the glamor
Afternoon serv1ces were held
Mrs Sally Byers was a recent Las Vegas mtery act
One of the f nes Jazz debs of the Stork Club era theU" mother Helen
w th spec al s ng ng and a guest Colwnbus v s tor While there ptamsts MarJan McPartland has h8d one of her Forrester a beauty m her own right just
speaker
she v1s1ted the Paul Toops Mr oomposttlons ( Twol ght World ) set to Johnny became a great.grandmom Vl8 Suzy s daughter
Burdell Brofford and Wolloam and Mrs Gam Strause Mr and Mercer lyrics and already Tony Bennett s Candy Schrafft Her pop IS George SCh~afft of
of Columbus Mr and Mrs Mrs Arvm Wh1lls Mr and recorded ot
the candy 1ce cream dynasty (ergo the Can
U,ster Arnold and son B lly of Mrs Danny Booth Mrs Orea
Why the mystery about Perry Como s leg - dy ) and her mom s now Suzy Girard owner of
Colwnbus Mr and Mrs Ronald Booth and Mrs Paul Dillion
he busted 11 while TV lapmg h1s Christmas show a ch1c shop on Lexmgton Ave m the 60s
McNalley of Athens and Mr
Mrs Roma Beal Js qu te oll at
A stage trapdoor opened whlle Perry was suzy s siSter Martha was wed to St Cla1r
and Mrs Patrock W1lluuns and veterans Memor1a1 Hosp1 tal smgmg and plunged hlffi Into the NBC stage- McKelvey of the New Yorker V1ctor Mature
choldren of Colwnbus VISited Mr and Mrs N1ck p er kms basement HehadnodocwrlnLA sojettedto
w1th Mrs Hazel Arnold and and ch ld ren v1s1 ted over th e his Palm Beach area home (Tequesta and has bandleader Hal Kemp on approximately
reverse order
Walter recently
ken d w1 th Mrs Colloe ~·d hiS gam ••t at Good Samarotan Hospital
wee
The Giants educated arm Fran Tarkenton
Mr and Mrs Ralph Carl and H d
•.,.
~
u son
Palm Beach He s fme
lives m Greenwich Conn and spends free time
Rodney vtsoted w1th Mr and
Mr and Mrs Eddie Kmg and
bo
Mrs Clyde Harr son recently sons Charles and Susan had as
Behind Andy W1lbarns tldy American Y studying every facet of N1ck Manero s
Roy Lyons ts home on leave Sunday VISitors Mr and Mrs facade there s a golf hustler - he won $1 300 restaurant operation there - object future
Ethel Mennan and her longplay
v s ling h s parents He 1s Ed K ng of Hamsonvllle
from a comedian the other mormng m Las Vegas bonlfac~
stat oned with the Air Force n Recent v Sltors of Mr and - for only mne holes
Glor1a Swanson ad gentleman fnend, Eric Palm sipped SU"lolns at
New Mexico
Mrs John Dean and John were mored tt e food In our favorote neighborhood the Pen &amp; Pencil OidUme patroils of the long
Mr and Mrs VIrgil Carl are Mr and Mrs Gerald Gilkey and restaurant I.Aluise son E 58th St and Gloria Is defunct Armando\ s do a take when they, aee
announc ng the arrtval of a ch ldren and John Shim of a f mcky trencherman but lhe vegetables grown Phlllp Groll at the door of !Jill s Gay 90s he cobaby g rl Gran .. parents are Athens and Walter Terrell and by the Jor10 family \Owners) on their upe!ate owned and co-hosted Armando s for 34 yean!
Mr and Mrs Ralph Carl of Bruce Reed of Pataskala
!arm were r1ght down her gliStatorlal aUry

T.E.E. H.E.E.!

67 PONTIAC EXECUTIVE

DATSUN

News, Notes

GILLENWATER S sept c tank
cleonlng and epa r al o
house wrecking Ph 446
9499 Establ shed n 1940
69 tf

calls

•2995

•2695

DODGE

Kingsbury

Pleasant

ea n ce

•1595

WOOD MOTOR SALES

! Voice along Broadway

y
84 f

Semces Offered
Pant

SMITH

•3095

GET YOUR 1972 BUICK NOW
AT 1971 PRICES.
OFFER GOOD UNTIL NOV 13

GET
1m11101

lns~tance
FOR ALL you nsu ance needs
check w h your Grange
agents al he Nea Ins
Agenq 64 Stole Sl Agenls
far au o

DODGE

Sm1th Auto Sales

24111

1 4 If

be top tab e three l er walnut table walnut spooled bed
cherry h boy dresser ornate carved coffee table

7

By Mrs Francis Morris
The Booster Sunday School
Central Aor Co~dit on ng
class of the F rst Bapt st
- Heatong
Free Estoma!es
Chur ch was enterta ned m the
Stewart s Hardware
home of Mrs Edna Pickens
Vonlon Ohoo
Fr
day evenmg Oct 15 The
14
meet ng opened w th the hymn
HORSE SHOEINCO
Blessed Assurance
The
COMP ETE fa r e serv ce
Bob Schaetf ng 446 510
Beat tudes was the program
188 I topic presented by Mrs
Maqone Gr mm and scnpture
TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE nspect on Cal 446-3245 was Matt 5 I 15 Prayer by
Me
0 Dell Ope ato to
Mrs P ckens was followed by
Exterm nal Terml e Se v ce
readmgs
Mrs Clara Powell
19 Belmont Dr
267 t presiden t presided at the
bus ness sessoon Meetmg
- - --------LEGAL NOTICE
closed w th the Lords Prayer m
Amended senate Jo n Reso u on lU1 son Durmg a fellowship
No '
hour Mrs P cke ns serv ed
JOINT RESOLUTION
refreshments

Complete-. water I ne serv ce

ANTIQUE GLASS &amp; COLLECTABLES S gned North

0

Racine
Social Events

and trench ng C J Lemley
V nlon 011 o Ph 388 8.543

wood and other ca n va l co
55 piece) Dragon China
occ Japan c anberry crue t and souve n e pi eces hand
pa nted g ass Sat suma Rosev e M cCoy co
of
e ephan ts ove 90 co of w ne bottles nc r are ba k
covered bot e a so wh skeys ch na clock w th matc hing
vases p cut p sm s lamps dep ess on pressed pr
m ne a o I am ps b ass terns o I t ns Cup d dolls c up
co ect on clo sonne b sque o d aco d an
FURNITURE Ve or carved couch &amp; char beaut lui
V ctor an love sea w th two matching c ha rs t\o'fll
ockers wa nut claw ft sew ng cabinet V ctor an ..mar

3

"DOC"

PONTIAC

WATER well d I ng Myers
pumps Sales and Serv ce

11:00 A.M.
OCTOBER 30, 1971

26 Oc

243

sp ngs Corb n &amp; Snyder
Furn 955 Second Ave Ph
446 71
3 If

churches

A I

ava ab e Ph 446 4 0

LOW ow p ces on Bemco and

11

248 3

1 623 b ob base now

ope a ed as G ade A Da y
a m Th s s a dandy
100 A 6 RM ho~se b g ba n

AUCTION

pol ce mon tors antennas

etc ) Bob C t zens Band Rad o
Equ p Georges C eek Rd
Gallipolis Ohio 446 4517
24 f

241 f

for

USED TRAILERS
960 Na ona OxlO 2 br
967 Hor zon 2x50 2 b
957 G de 45x8 J b
966 Namco 52x 0 3 b
960 Van Dyke Ox50 2 b
960 Van Dyke 10x50 2 b
965 Ken luck an 56x 0 3 br
962 Colon a 50xl0 2 b
960 Van Dyke Ox40 2'b
A
a e s c ean and recon

Home Sa es Second &amp; V and
P P easan nex o Heck s

1963 Fo d s at on

446 694 0

Lowe B os and Grey Sea
pa n s M u neaux Dec Co

TWO WAY Rados Sales &amp;
Serv ce New and used CB s

SOMMERS GMC
TRUCKS INC
133 Pone 51
Ph 446 2532

247 It

CORBIN &amp; SNYDER
FURNITURE CO

243 I

TOP-NOTCH CARS!
70 Polar

OFF CE OF TI-lE SEC RETARY
OF STATE

I TEDW BROWN Sceayof
S a e of he S ate of Oh o do he e
by
e fy hu
he fo eg ng s
a
ue copy of A rn e ded Senate
23 It Jon Reso u on No 2 fi ed n he
office of he Se eta y ot S a e and
p opos ng to amend he above sec
ons of be Cons u o of O h o
ALBERT EHMAN
IN TEST MONY WHEREOF I
Water Del very Se v ce
ha e he eun to subsc bed my name
Pa r ol5 ar Rt Gal po s
and affixed m y offi al sea at Co
Ph 379 2133
urn bus h s 0 h day of September

1965
T GMC P U
1969 thev dump lruck
19S2 , T Chev P U
1965 1 T GMC
1969 GMC 4 T log t uck
lt57 'h T GMC P U
1965 , T Ford P,U
1963 h T Chev i&gt; U
1969 1 T GMC
1967 , T GMC P U
1968 Chev Suburban
1966 '4 T Chev P U
1967 'I• T Chevrolet p cl&lt;up
1963 F600 Ford T ck
1961 2 T GMt;
1964 3 T GMC
1964 ' T Chev P U

Serta

UN TED STATES OF AME I CA
SrArE OF OH 0

FAIN
EXTERMINATING CO
Te m e &amp; Pest Control
Wheelersbu g Oh o
Ph 5746 2

967 DATSI,IN P U
1966 2 T GMC P U
1969 P vmn lh Roadrunne
•63 C750 Ford truc&lt;

249 3

homes n s ock B &amp; S Mob le

249

New GM'C
Truck Headquarte~

nd ana

d oned
Ready for oc
cupancy F ee De very and

Ph 446 0457

- - - - --

P 0

NEW doub e man I e Coleman

97

HOLLEY S DITCHING
OF ANY type and complete
water:
ne
nsta lat on
gua anteed Ph J P Ho ley
245 50 8 0 446 4344
219 tf

p m weekdays o appt

3 BR ADDAV LL E AREA
F y a pe ed ~ree bed oo m

N CE
HOME
ACREAGE

A

P ce $13 500

on a ge o 250 fl by 250 f

450

oca ed on nea

Farms

n basenwJ

ucellent con

------2 BD RM Close own ex a 964 GTO 389 3 spd Bes ofle

v ng oom d n ng oom
ba h w h s how e
a ge
k hen w h o of bu
n
b ch cab ne s ha dwood
oo s na
gas fu nace 50
ga on e eel water heate
2
a ge
ec ea on oo ms

pane ed

hea

P ce educed S16 000

We Need Ltshngs
ROOM block

Rea n ce 5 m

hom e w h ba h and fu

OUTBU D NGS PLUS 4
GOOD BU D NG 0 S

$2500

P S P B 4 new t res

$ B000

SO ME

FRONTAGE ON RT
4
BARN
AND
OTHER

LO on Ke Be he oad ao x
3 6 enced C y wa e P ce

BOX SPR NGS &amp; mattress
bed 2 pc v ng room su te

E NO 6 oom modern home on
2 A C ose new Gav n pan

Older Home
4 Acres
A EDGE OF TO VN
GOO D 4 BEDROOM
HOME W TH 600 FEE

and he o he 202 A w h 90 A

Ford To no !02 II 8

8 000

ST RT 60 6 b g ooms and
bahon A$4000

CLOSE TO TOWN OR OU
N HE COUN TRY

WE HAVE 2 a ms on Sae
Ro e 325 be ween R o
G ande and V n on One has
90 A w h 3 bed oom h ome

HOUSE

Y

D NG

$

on a a ge o

NEAR R 0 GRANDE - 3 bd
m home on one h d A o
Cheap a $13 000

MODERN

DREAMS
WE
HAVE

a e

A I to

H NK N G O F BU L D NG
HE HOME OF YOUR

N ADDISON Townsh p 260 A
a m 90 A bo om and 31 A

o Ra coon bo om
h 7
oom mode n house and a ge
ba n Lan d we fenc ed

A

5 ms
hea on A o

Butldmg Lots

o n base and
A oba co
base w h 2 houses and l h ee
gas we s Bo h houses en ed
Gas we pays $90 e e y 3
m on hs

Co h measu e

5-4-Fee

60--Damp

um

25-Wa ks

party

55-Na a e
56-Pocke books
59-P epos o
62-F'a a y
6-4 Moun an

•

Y

250 6
FOR SALE

LOWER R VER RD

SC HOOL

99-Possess e
p o o n

Co

b ck beau y 5 a ge ms a
ba hs
ca pe ed
basemen
2 ca ga
a ge andscaped Ia
anx ous o se

NO

and

econom ca
tha s B ue
Lus e ca pe and upho ste ry
eane
Ren
e ec
c
shampooer S Cen a Supp y

FA RV EW SUB D V -

F URNA CE AND BA H ON
A LAR GE LOT
US
STEP S FRO M GRADE

gas

98-Wa m h

ET

USED FURNITURE

OVAL top med oak pedes a
base d n ng lab e w lh 6 USED Apar menl s ze gas
range
u
s ze bed
3
malch ng cha s $75 Ph 446
ef
ge
a
o
s
a
I
n
good
0358
250 3
cond t on New Select on of
Tappan gas &amp; electr c
TEN5mo od shoa s 520each
anges washers &amp; d ryers by
See John Sw sher on Van
Speed
Queen Plenty of t ee
Zand Rd o ca 367 7749
park
ng
end y serv ce Ph
250 3
446
7
- - -- -246 f
BX32 TRA LER Ph 367 7329
250 6
STORM w dows o m doors
----~::---:-"-:-::-:-.
a um and canvas awn ngs
969 CHEVROLET V 8 C20
ep ace men w ndows s d ng
on uck Ph 446 7
a ge selec on of wa lpape
250 3
EXCELLENT

Realtor 32 State St
Tel 446-1998

Good Home Pnced
Roghl In Thurman
3 BEDROOM HOME
COM P

250 If

- -- - --

M O NEY DOWN

P R CE educed on h s n ce 2
bed oom home on S a e Rou e
1 w h oad on age of 229
w h c y wa e and na u a

94-C ha ae

udes
m 2
o he
qu ck

MASSIE

3

M EA N S

7

Branch Manager

BEDROOM
HOME ON COR NER LO
ON
CE NTRAL
AVE
F H A
SHOULD
AP
PROVE
H S
ONE

ng he p eache s sma
o
Does you
a he e e
p ea h he same se man
w ce
he a ked
Oh su e
he does
he boy answe ed
bu he ho e s n d e ent
paces

•bri
9 2-Hted

P US A

Owner Must Sell
A

he

sa e $ 5 000
Ranny Blackbu n

GARAGE B DG OWNER
5 AN OFFER

4461066

Loose wo en

m s down n
m and TV
ga ages se on he ea
a ge l o P ed o

WAN

o

Sea taKe
lS--0 ne
J 6-Rem ne a ed
3 -Thee oed
so hs
42-Posed

3 - Wa k

9 Nerve netwo ks
2G-W pe ou
27 Pe m
29-Ed b e seeds
l -F ee o
36-To
37-Cha y
39-Possess e

ham me

34

•o-vapo

oun

A e

d n ng

ENT SHOP AND

T S

l or

sla e d A I s ock and
equ p nc uded
CITY
N CE 2 s o y home on Eas e n

Y ROOM
ON 2
OTS
GOOD GA RDEN
SPO
A
EDGE OF
OW N
E SS
TH AN
$20 000

CE

e ms

qua e s and ca po
a
ac eo l and on
ached Ove

ODAY
DON
M 55
SEE NG T HE C EANES
BEDR OOM
HOME
BARGA N
N
OWN
ARGE
ROOM S
~ AM

$90 000 repo ed
E Z

gh pe son 5 4 500
GROCERY STORE
OVER 3 soo sq f sore
bu ld ng
o ey
v ng

SEL L

H ROUGHOU T

d

n orne

HOU SE

TO

a gest se lec on
of d amonds n the a ea We
ask you o shop el sew here
hen p ce ou s GUa an eed
sav ngs Tawney Jewe ers

422 Second Ave

FEED MILL

s aile

CON

A

PR CEO

250 f

WELL es abl shed bus ness on

EN MENT HERE BUT
HA S AL
WERE

SUNDAY OCTOBER
'29--0 1 ha 11d a

HAN
OF

GENTLEMAN S FARM
A ON 60 N ce 6 oom
pond

V EW
$22 000

EN

so

home ga age wo kshop and

BR CK
N EW
3

Y

EXCE

\o

2-Wo m

4

VERY GOOD HC ME AND
5 ACRES W TH EX

~

4- 85

e

Ctly Farmer,,

•

ACROSS

N CE 8 oom home barn
sever a f u
ees Buy w h
ac
or
You cho ce

FROM
ROOMY

STY E

RANCH
N EAR

Ga pols

EASY TERMS

Comfort &amp;
Conventence

308 I

.• SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER:~LL
.•.
24 1971
REALTOR

t
•
......•

GARAGE

N CE QU ET LO CAT ON
PR CED
ESS THAN
$20 000 C TY WATER
GAS AND SCHOOLS

HE RE 5

ANY T ME s agood

De a s

9053

CE N RA

Bargam Hunter

W L L PAY we o ou
me wo k ng a home o u
Anyo e who a
ead a d

•
For Sale or Trade
•••
MUSTANG A cond on
• 96550 000
BTU ga s oo u nace

Ga c a Vega
and
Jo se
Me end c ga s The Smoke s
Co ne
422 Second Ave

ATTRACT VE

CAR

erms Call 446 1028
250 3

WE HAVE a comp e e I ne of
GBD p pes and obaccos Also

M E OU T N CE S ZED

ASK NG

House L1stmgs
Wanted

budge

3 BEDROOM RANCH ON
A
ACRE PL OT UST
K

carpet

aft c

h Blue
sham poo

962 RAMBLER wagon P S
p B a Hollywood style ~&lt;Ill
bed Ph 446 4566
248 3

MODERN
Wa nut
s ye
sle eo ado AM FM ado 4 COU R ER 23 chan ne c tzen
s pe ake so und sys tem 4
band
ad o w anten na for
speed au oma t c c hang e
house Ca n be used n house o
Balan ce $69 72 Use ou
ca Excellent cond Ph 446
budge! e ms Ca 446 028
828 at er4 p m
250 3
249 2

BASEMENT
AND
G ARAGE
PR CEO

ROOMS

pa nt

speaker sou nd sys em 4
speed automal c ch ange
Ba ance S77 79
Use our

omme cal

LV NG ROOM AND
FORMAL D N NG FU L

FURN SHED
Fou h A

ROOMS week y
ga age pa k ng

so m e

248 J

SPINET CONSOLE
EARLY Amer can Slereo ado
PIANO
comb na on AM FM ad o 4 WANTED espons be pany to

t mbe $10 000

ED ENTRANCE

CAR PE

MORE
WORTH

s

house

BEDROOMS VERY N CE
K
CHEN
GARAGE

26

250 5

N

EXCEL ENT NE GH
BORHOOD
3
BEDROOMS
BATHS

equ ed

:- ------:-:-:• REDUCE sa e and as w

Ia ge

50A c ose a V n on 25A now
unde
plow 2 ba ns
og

N TOWN ON

Sma l

Lower G C Mu phy 5 o e
250 6

abe 2

NEW LISTING

F OR

LOR EN

L A RG E SHADY LOT

3 BEDROOM home Ph 4 6 THE HOUSE OF A FR END
58
248 3

24 3

Lust e

REAL

A
SE
&amp; CH

250 6

TH 15 SPOT thai spo
pa hs oo emoved w

Very Ltvable

CUT RATE gas o e 5500 q

5

NEW LISTING

200 ACRES
On SlateR "" 90 pel
ponds
"'JLD &gt;ees
ba n $45 lilA:

ac

damage n s~ pp ng W I ake
$27 cash o budge! p an
ava ab e Phone 446 2827
250 6

$26 900

Serv1ce Sta
&amp; Garage
oo
es au an
men s loca
on a S a e

H ERES
PARAD

clean ng tools

Love y 3 BR mode n home c ose
to town w h a ge s one
1 ep ace bu
n k t chen
ba h s garage and a ge
fenced n awn

Altracltve Modern
Coloma I In Town

Trade ns

ava ab l e

cep ed Phone 446 2827

VACUUM C eane brand new
971 model Comp ete w th all

(gl t~.toMWtola

garden
p e $

Evenmg
Ike Wtseman
446 3796
E N Wtseman
446 4500

we and c s e n ex a good
ca ga age o ng awn w th
owe s sh ubs shade ees
P ce $9 000

For Rent
ROOM
Adam s

o

ca pe

LA~CONTRAC"!j
ooms n~t~ in f""JI,ton

Off 446 3643

Eureka Oh1o

562

Busmess Opportun1t1es

6

REALTOR

4 REG Suffolk rams 4 Reg
Mon ada e rams 1 AKC Toy
Pood e 2 t sh aquar ums 446
2947

ave cast and fancy s tch

Pay \us $48 75 cash or erms

Serv1ces Offered

1970 CADILLAC sed DeV I e
fully equipped low m eage
Ph Pl. Pleas 675 4283 after 6
226 It

For Sale

97 ZIG ZAG sew ng mach ne
ef n layaway Beaut fu
pastel colo ful s ze mode
All bu It n o, but onho e

THE LEADER SINCE 1900 IN
SERVING THE NATIONS
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
Ph 446 0008

Agency

Rea tor

Off ce 446 2674
Howard o Luc lie Brannon

For Sale

Reai.Estate For Sale

World s Largest

and ba h w h a p c
249 6 5 Room
u esq e
ew o
he Oh o
R e and W Va h Is Wa o

Ae

en
and
en

35
~c-Ac:R-::P:-:0:-:R:-:T::--::Sc-ac-e- -:-:--;:-

Hoba t 0 lon

o n

Va

do a s and god cons
Tawney Jewe le s 422 Se end

WANT

4.46

2

Dillon
Agency
Even ngs 446 226

WE W LL buy you

w h no

can ass ng
2 weeks o
mo e pa d
aca on
s yea
6 Company ns a e and
e emen pan
We u n sh eh c e and a
expenses
The Qua
a ons Ma ed
o e 25 ha e a good em
p oyme
e o d Be a se I
s a e Con ac M Ewe
a he Blue Foun a n Moe
be wPen 7 and
0 p m

250

~

24

3 5 Day week

Sad y m ssed by da ugh e
M s ohn K C a k pa en

and b o he s a d s

o Beau y 609 Th d Ave

Chesa peake Oh o o ca
o ec 304 525 4826 be ween 9
and 2 p m

ha s Wanted
n
he
a ea o
e ab e 800Ph 000
H
ma ed man oak ng o a
6S
0
s ea dy and se e

good as you

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

For Sale

AND REPEAL
y

!

�..
•
22 - 1'heSlU1dayTimes-Sentinei,Sunday.OcU4, 1971

....
•..

For Fast Results Use The Sunday .Times-Sentinel Classifieds

! Card

of Thanks

~ W E WISH to thank the many
., friends and relatives for their
;I prayers, cal ls. cards and
"' flowers , Dr Simo n, Dr .
'"" Sattler , nurses and staff at the

' • Holzer Medical Ce nter Also
the neighbors for the food and
:

•

many acts of kindness The

Rev . Raullm Moyer. the
org ani st, pall bearers and auwho helped m any way dur ing
the sick ness and death of our

...
•,

loved one .

In Memory

Employment Wanted
HO USECLEANING in Racine,

IN LOVING memory of our
dea r fa ther , Fred M Colli ns

Syracuse and Pome roy area .

Phone 992·2676.

wh o passed away Oct ober 23.

10·24 ttc

1963. Thousand lhoughls of
one so dear , often brings a

tiny tear ; Thoughts go back to
scenes long passed , Time
51 NGLE young man age 22
r oll s on but memones last.
w i th 1mpressive ba ckground
Sad ly missed by daughters. and
good re fere nces, needs
L orena M. R1 ce. Florence L.
No
good
em ploy ment
Mc Daniel and Bun 1ce V
sol ici ting 10bs please . Phone

Pauley

9yj.J740

10-24 ltp

The Homer R1ce famil y

10 12-31c

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before PubliCat ion
Monda y Deadline 9 a.m.

Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
· The Publisher reserves the·
rtght to edit or reject any ads
deemed

!/URING HAL-F TIME

For Rent

EARLY American stereo-radio
combination, AM·FM radio,
mile fr om Pomeroy Co r 4·Speed automatic changer, 4·
poration Lim its. Phone 992·
speaker sound system.
2941.
Balance $76 .93. Use our
10·24·61c
budget terms. Call 992·7085.
10·18·61c
FURNISHED
2·be dr oom
apar tm ent. Adults only . HERE FORDS, 1970 bulls, open
Middleport. Phone 992·3874.
heifers. Phone 992-6497 .
10·24·31c
10·22-31c
FURNISH ED. and unf~;·~i~hed
Cl
to hoot 1971 ZIG·ZAG sewing machine
apar 1men 1s.
ose
sc
.
left in layaway Beautiful
Phone 992·5434.
10·16·1fc: pastel color, full size model.
All bullt·in to buttonhole.
Overcast and fancy stitch .
TRAILER spaces, extra large.
overlooking the Ohio River Pay "lust $48.75 cash or terms
$25 a month . Velma G.
a11ai able . Trad e-ins ac·
Zuspan . Mason, W. Va .
cepted. Phone 992·5641.
l0·19·61c
10-5·20tc

'I'

tor more than one mcorrect .
insertion

RATES
For Want Ad Service

5 cents per Word one 1nsert ion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three,
consecutive inserl!ons.
·
18 cents per word six consecu tiv e insertions .
25 Per Cen t 01scount on paid TRAILER LOTS, Bob's ·Mobile VACUUM cleaner, brand new

••
/ WH'&lt;' DO~&lt;~- '1'0\.J cow::!M C ~ .4.N0 VI'So!T .~e

Th e

publis her wi ll not be responsible

10·24· 1tp

••'

objej':t iona l .

For Sale

TRAILER s~ace on Rt. 33,

-~al1c_e! lci tion &amp; Corrections
W1 ll·be accepted unti: 9 a .m . far ·

\

}
&lt;:)

;---r -

ads and ads paid wi thin 10 days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

USED CARS at

1971 model. Complete with all
cleaning tools . Small paint
damage In shipping. Will take
$1 .50 for 50 word min 1m um .
$27
cash or budget plan
'
Each additiona l word 2c .
available. Phone 992·5641.
TRAILER space, de si rab le
BLIND ADS
10·19·6tc
neigh borhood, phone 992·2084.
Addillonal 25c Cha rge per
9. f9.tfc - - - - - - - - Ad ve rti se m ~nt .
OFFICE HOURS
M"obile Homes for Sale
6 30 a.m. to 5: 00 p.m Dady, For Sale
8: 30 am. to 12 : 00 Noon H &amp; N DAY OLD or started
Saturday
Leghorn pullets. Both floor or
Cour t. Rt. 124. Syracuse ,
Jhio, 992·2951.
4·2·1fC

p~~ Ct.088£Re0
COMPLETE.
CLOSEOUT

cage

Poultry

grown

71 DEMON 2 DR. HT

Hall owee n Party , Fri day,
Oc lobcr 29 . Races, prizes, NI CE 2·slory home with lull
balloons. Open Wedn esday.
basement, 2 lots, new forced
Fri da y and Saturday nights air furnr.tce , nea r elementary

69 ·8UICK E~CTRA 225

from 7. 30 p m to 10: 30 p. m.
Available forparli es Monday,

school. Phone 992-7384 to see.
10·24·61p

$1,000

1220 Washiogton Blvd ..
Belpre, Ohio

• :'·

.-.·

TRAP AND Still Shoot. Sunda y, 2 RA BBIT beegles , 1 year old .
Oct . 24. 1 p.m., Rutland Gun
Phone 643·2703.
Club on New Lima Road .
10·24·31c
10.21.3tc
FOAM mattr ess and in ·
THERE will be a reviva l at the nersprings for twin bed . Like
Rut land Free Will Baptist new . $20 for the set. Phone For Sale or Trade
Chu rch . Sta rt ed Monday.. 965-3900.
FORD
Co nvertibl e,
October 16. 7· 30 p.m. wilh
10·20tp '64
automati
c,
V·8.
'67 Pl ymouth
Sister Dor ot hy Overton as
Sa te ll ite. 2.dr . hardt op,
eva ng elis t
Ev eryo ne PITCHER and bowl $35 ; 1892
automat ic. V-8. Phone 992 welcome Ia come and wor ship
Telephone $35; 90" corner
6547
with us.
wha tnot SSO ; antiques galore.
10·22·tfC
10.24·1fc Ju nkali que, Guysv ille. Ohio.
10·24·31c
RE VIVAL , Oct 27, 7:30 p.m. at
Zaleski Free Will Baplis l TROPI CAL fi sh and suppl ieS .
Church , Za leski, Oh io. Special
Forest Showal ter , Chester.
si nging . Everyone welcome .
Ohio. 965·3356 Open even&gt; ngs

'::[;&gt; .... -

1 0 · 1~

Rev .

..

Ma rvin

Mark 1n s,

10·22-21p
Pas tor , Rev John El swick.
Evangelist .
10-24·41C RIDING LAWN mower . Also.
welder Phone 742 5265
10·22.31p
GUN SHOOT, Sunday, October
24, I p.m. Racine Gu n Club
10·22·21c POLLED Hereford ca ttl e
--------Phone 742-3435
10·22-12tc
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
• over;we\ght ~adiei , teen' and
men interested in a We1ghl GE NERAL Electric stove, good
Wat chers ( R) Cla ss in conditi on. Phone 742·5937.
10-22·3tc
Pomeroy wr ite·
Weigh t
Watchers ( R). 1663 Section
Rd , Cincinnal i, Ohio 45237 Musical Merchandi se
10·3·tfc SP INET .CONSOLE PIANO.
Wanted respons ible party to
- - -· -- tak e over spi net piano Easy
KOS COT Kos meli cs lor sate,
term s. Can be seen loca ll y
de li vered to yo ur door . New
Write Credit Ma nager-. P 0
co min g
aut
products
reg ula rl y. Wou ld you like to Box 276. Shelb yv ille, Indiana
46 176
'try them' Ca ll 992·5113.
10.n2 tp
10·5-lfc

~W

COME VOU'VE
GOT TUIS P(AV

8001&lt; ON TI4E.
GR:OUN 0, COACH ~

SAVE up to one half Bring your AP PLES Several va r.elies. by
SiCk TV to Chuck's TV Shop. peck or bushel. Special on
large Rome Beauty's $2 25 a
15 1 Butternu t Ave ., Pomeroy,
bushel or $2.00 a bu shel lor tO
phone 992 ·5060.
9·24·tfC bushel or more . Bring conla i ner s. Qui sen berrys , Rl.
124, Syracuse. Ohio .

Help Wanted
NO 5 EN'::.E S f'"'L! GG'-''.'G "

• TH' LEAD f=ISl" CLE.NCH£S
AU TUr-AATICALI:-1-AN AH

"J''U·HA.W.' .'-CAN' T

-9)13.~-

GE.TOUTOI=' IT,',' -

t&lt;NOCt&lt;'5 TH '
IIORI. SOUL:S

10·21 -6tc

MOTEL MANAGEMENT
Men-Women-Couples

Learn Mote t Operation with

T!E.TH OUT.'.'

our shar i, inexpensive court

at home followed by two
weeks' Resident Training in

a motel ope rat ed by us. Age
no barrier . Fr ee nationwide
placeme nt assistance upon
completi on.

VA APPROVED
For com plete information
wri te, giving address and

r ~ N'T 52E I'.W WE:
CAN'T MR 31l.T. YOU HAVE
TI"E NECE&amp;SARY PAPERe&gt;

D~'/YIN

UP I'JHJLE I GET

A CERTIFIES! CH:CX
AT l'HE MNK.I

phone number, to:
MOTEL
437 Carilla Lane
Columbus, Ohio

'
'8£55/f.l
Ill/Iff

F::R HEAVEN 5
SAt&lt;.E. ...wtiAT5-

HAPPffi/NG ?

1

CA MPER . comp le tely fur ·
ni shed, bottled gas equ ipped,
plenty of cupboard s, 7 good
tires . Motor in A-l condition .

Phone after 12 noon 949·2726.
10·21 ·31c
APPLES . Burdette farms .
Pomeroy, Rt 2. Phone 992·
3930
10·21 ·31p
BA L DWIN
spinet
pian o.
Hammon d Chor d Organ ,
Accordi on. All in excellent
condition . Phone Chesler 985-

3929.

EARN at home addressing

10·21 ·31c

en11elopes . Rush stamped 1972 SPAR TAN trave l trailer, 25
se lf -addr essed en11elope. The
ft.. fu lly self.conla ined. must
Ambrose Co .• 4325 Lakeborn . sell. Henderson Trailer Park,

Davisburg, Mi ch . 46019 .
10·24·301p

Hende rson. W. Va.

10·12·61p

PART .TIME kitchen, help . I=GAL. li mes tone Excelsior
Appl y tn person Crows Steak 'a ll Works, E. Main St.,
House.
,.&gt;omeroy Phone 992· 3~91.
10·19·5fc
9 If
-----------------'·· c
NEED so meone to paint eaves POODLE puppies, Si lver Toy,
troug hs and do ya rd work . Parkview Kennels . Phone 992·
Phone 992-2677 .
5443.
10·22-blc
8-15·1fc

Wanted

•

Original Cabinet
Company
No'w Offering A

New Service
We have added a craftsman
with 20 years experience in

Stop in, call or write or talk to Dan Thompson,
Tom Lavender or John Ketchka.

FOUR NEW HOME~ •
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
·, • Ti' NO"'MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly pa yment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
salary of $5,000.00 and · three children. 7i/, Pet annual
rate.

BILL NELSON
. 992·3657

HILTON WOLFE
949·3211

Wheel Alignment

HOME &amp; AUTO

Complete
Plumbing ,
Heating and A.ir Con.

'5.55

992-2094
606 E . Mclin

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992·2094

Pomero)

OFFICE SUPPliES
And

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

FURNITURE

Open 8 TitS
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

Stop In and See Out
Floor DisDiav.

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Serv ice
P~one 949·3821

Racine, Ohio

Crill Bradford

5·f·tfr

AWNINGS. storm doors and
windows , carports,
marquees, aluminum siding

ahd railing . Call A. Jacob,
sat es representative. For free '
estimates , phone Charles

Lisle , Syracuse . V. V..
Johnson and Son. Inc.
'
5·27·tf c

SMITH NELSON
MOTOR, INC.
PHONE NUMBER

992-2174
FOR SALES
&amp; SERVICE

HOUS E MUVINI.&gt; : Houses, etc,
raised, mo11ed, underpinned,

remodeled. Estimates tree, NEIGLE R Building Supply ."
Free estimate on building
anywhere. National House
Movers, Box 5002, Charleston , your new hom e. Will draw
W. Va. 25311, or phone 304·925· prints to suit the lay ot your
land . Call Guy Nelgler ,
3279 .
Racine. Ohio. For repair and
9 · 30· 60t~
aluminum siding, soffel and
gutter . Cali Dona"fd Smith,
·,t=PTIC tanks cleaned . Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph . · Raci ne, Ohio.
10·7·1fC
662·3035 .
2·12·tfC
~tADY . Mtx coNcRETE Real Estate For Sale __
delivered right to your 7 ROOMS and bath on Union
prQject. Fast and easy . Free Ave., Pomeroy. Ohio . Phone
estimates. ·Phone 992 ·3284. 992-5641.
10-22-12tp
Goeglein Ready ·Mix Co ..
Middleport. Ohio.
6·30.ff 4 BEDROOM brick home .
Phone 992·3457 .
10·20·61c
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates . Ph . 446·4762,
Gallipolis . John Russell, RACINE - tO room hoUse -and
bath . Two lots, basement ,
Owner &amp; Operator .
garage. Phone 949·4313.
5·13·1f&lt;
10·20·12tc
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rl . 124. NEW. ) .bedroom ho-me r~
Middleport. Builf.in kitchen,
Complete front end service,
ceramic
tile bath, all·electrlc
tune up and brake service .
. Wheels balanced etec· heat , good nelghborhooo . Can .
Ironically .
All
work arrange FHA financing.
Telephone 992-3600 or 992·
guaranteed .
Reasonable
2186.
ra tes. Phone 992·3213.
7·2S·Ifc7·27·1fc

·AP PLE S
Fitzpatrick or.
WILL BABY sit in my farm c hards , Sta te Route 689,
home wit h presc hool age phone Wilkesville, 669·3785.
C!Jmpiete
ch ildren Wilt pi ckup and - - - -- - -- -9-·J_.ffc
delive r home. Pr efer the
J( emodelintt
Rutland, · Middle port and 2 END TABLES. round coffee
Pomeroy area . Phone 992· table, Mahogany , very good
Kitchens, Baths
6407.
co nd iti on. Phone 992 ·3401
Room Additions
10·21 ·5fc alter 6 p.m.
And Patios
10·20·61c
Backhoe And
AN ELDERLY lady who needs
Endtoader Work
LAZ Y BOY chair , excellent
a home ins tead of a rest co
nd
iti
on
$75
.
2
Ear
ly
home'! Call 1·304 ·882·3250.
Septic Tahks
10·22·3fc American ta ble lamps, ' like
And
Leach Beds.
new $25. Hartis Fra nk, phone
·965·3368.
Pets For Sale
10·20·61p
BEAUTIFUL . th oro ughbre d
Siamese kitt ens. c h eap . 5 PO NI ES, 1 rid ing horse, 1
RUBBER stamps made -,o
Phone 1·304-662 ·3250.
G E aUtomat ic was her, 1941
order, 24-hour servlce. Dwain
. 10·22· 3fc
Pon tiac, 4 dr . sedan; 1938
or Wilma Casto, Portland .
r..
Buick Coupe, French fryer ,
10·24·30ic
wanted T,o Buy
hot ptale. 3 burner grllt.
OLD Fu"rnitur'e, dishes, clock, Phone 992·2564 or 992-9943.
AUTOMOBILE 1 nsurance oeen
10·20·5fc
and ·Or complete households .
cancelled ?
Lost
your
Call
992·
operator's
license?
Wr ite M. D. Miller, Rt. 4, 970 12 X 60 TOTAL 1 t ·
Pomero , Ohio. Call 992·6271 . 1
.
e ec fiC
2966.
Y
8·25·1fc mob tle home , take ove r
6·15·1fC
payments. 1966 Me rc ury
1 USA BLE wqod burn ing coo~ Comet. V-8, Standard - $375; HARRISO N ' ~ TV and Antenna
1971 350 Yamaha. 300 miles
Service, Phone 992·2522. ,
sto11e ; also need fuel oil space
6·lO·IfC
hea ter - 50,000 B.T.U 's or - $675 . Phone 985·337R.
f0.22·31c
up . Phone 592·5332.
7
_H_A_c"'
K:""Nc:E::-Y-c;'S::-.:E""l~
e c1 r"lc:--.
s=
erv tee,
10·24-61c s·tX t&lt;OOM house, bath, ,futr
all types of electrical work.
WALNUT s tereo, four·• peed
SEWING
MACHINES.
Repair
.
~ase ment, 133 Butternul Ave. ,
Phone 992 ·6407 .
9·29·30ic · service, all makes, 992·2284,
intermixed changet
4just walking distance·-- from,
For Rent or Sale
spe aker sound system, AM·
The
Fabric
Shop,
Pomeroy
.
downtown
Pomeroy. Contact'
HARR ISONV.ILLE - . 4 room
0:E -:-A-N-=o-=o-=o::
z-;;
E:R"""'work . Authorized Singer Sales and
FM radio. Balance $67 . 59~ Use ~B-A-c"""'t&lt;-H::~d Hedric~, 2137 Wadswoo 'hi
house and bath, 1 bedrooms.
our budget terms . Call 992·
Septic tanks installed . George Serrice. We Sharpen Scissors.
ijr1ve. Columbus, Ohio, phone
cerpeled. $50 il rr.. mth . Phone
7085.
,
3·29·1fc
237·4334. Columbus."
(Bill
)
Pullins,
Phooe
992·2478.
)4? ·3173
I
10·18.6tc
5·9·1fd
4·25·1fC

IOHNSON MASONRY

H2-7608 ·

1Q·11-31c

REDUCED I

66 CHEVROLO 4 DR. SEDAN

1969 CHEVROLET

$2695

CE.50 · 2 Ton, 84" cab to axle, 350 cu. in . V.6 engine, 7000
lb. front axle. 15000 lb. 2 speed rear axle, 23000 lb. rear
sprtngs &amp; aux iliary springs. H. duty frame. &amp; frame

Catalina 2 dr. HT, Ventura trim, real sharp,
red outside with black vinyl interior. One
owner . A steal .

remforc ement, front _tow hooks, custom comfort &amp; apP:Carance cab, w.c. m1rrors, rad lo, power steering, 900x20
ttres. -Locally owned &amp; looks &amp; drives right.

$2695

1970 Buick

NOW

Skylark, 2 dr. HT, white bottom with black
vinyl top, 21.000 miles. This car is a cream
puff. Auto., P .S., one owner . Ready to go .

V·8, auto., P.S.• 11. green, matching interior.

8' Wide Sport Custom Pickup. 360 cu. in. V.6 engirte. less
than 15,000 miles by local owner, radio, cab light, 3 lone

'

64 MERCURY 4 DR. sEDAN

We now have 18 new Buicks &amp; Pontiacs in
stock. Come in &amp; see us for a fleal Buy on one
of these new Buicks or Pontiacs .
·

v.a, auto., P.S.

white &amp; turquoise finish, full chrome equipment, chrome
mirrors, clean, attractive truck .

.

7 Ford Econoline .................. '695

&lt;

Panel, Super H. Duty Van, 6 cyl . Special Price.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.
i
PH. 992-2174

Open Eves. Tii8--Til5 P.M. Sat.

j

8

I

GMC TRUCKS
E. MAIN ST.. POMEROY, OHIO ·

1966 Chevrolet.. ............ ~~.~~!~.~..S1695
Two ton truck. 84" cab to axle, extra good. 625x20 tires,
solid cab, foam seat, 292 cu . in . engine, 15,000 lb., 2 speed
rear axle, 23,000 lb. rear springs, never been 011erloaded &amp;

abused.

.

Also Available •••
AT PRICES WE DARE
NOT ADVERTISE

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

Oeland

LATE MODEL CARS

Realty

.

608 East Main
POMEROY
2 story frame, 6 rooms, 3

R. H. Rawlings Sons Co.

-""'!ker
110 Mechanic Street
P'bmoroy, Ohio

bedrooms, bath, ALMOST
NEW gas for.ced.alr furnace,
ONE ACORN DOESN'T MAKE A FOREST ·
part hardwood floors, JUST
NEW
LISTING
Neat
3
$3,800.
bedrooms, bath, gas furnace . Dear Helen :
Hel't''s one for your side, Helen. About 10-tipeed bikes : Hooray
POMUOY - NICE FOR . 3 porches. Double garage.
One
acre
RUTLAND.
for
the
mother who didn't want her son lo have one.
RETIREMENT - 2 story
frame, 2 bedroom1, NEW
I had a good friend who went on a cross COIUltry bike hike. He
BATH. NEW forced .alr POMEROY - 2 business used a !!).speed.
buildings for tease.
furnace , large tot , storm
Allan (as I'll call him) wasabout50 miles from home when he
doors. S5,300.
3 HOUSES - 2 rented - 1
ran
into
the back of another bike. He tried lo maintain his balance
modern 3 bedrooms, bath,
POMEROY- 1 story' frame, 6
Satellite, 2 dr: h ·top,
p .. steering, T·flite.
furna{e, Free gas to all. 19 and gol his hands caughlln the brake cables. He couldn't save
rooms,
3
bedrooms ,
acres
ol
land.
Now
only
Sharp
&amp;
ready.
himself and
over the handlebars. As a result he received
basement, porches, IN GOOD
$16,000.00.
CONDITION. $5,000.
multiple skull fra~ and BUffered Internal bleeding. After
' RUTLAND- IV• stQ;.yv i~am~,';j ..ltEW' LISTING- 2 bedrooms1 belnfwlcoiiScioiis for two weeks,'he died. He was only 19.
bedrooll)s, bath, alum. siding,
bath, gas heal, basement.
Allan was more of a brother to me than my own brother. He
American, 2 dr. sedan , 6 cyl., automatic, true
storm doors and windows,
Oak floors . POMEROY.
was always there when we needed him and now he isn't there any
nice tot, almost if• acre. POMEROY - 3 bedrooms. llh
economy .
more. I've come to despise !!).speed bikes.- KAREN
$5,995.
baths; gas furnace. 2 room
apartment
down with private Dear Karen :
WANTED 6 to 10 ACRES . ON
II was a terrible loss, and my deepest sympathies go 1o you
entrance.
Only
57,500.110.
ROUTE 7 OR Jl, NEED400 ft.
and Allan's famlly. But, Karen, if you despised everything in this
FRONTAGE - WILL PAY
- 3 pedrooms, bath,
Deluxe2dr. sedan, choiceof2, both sha;poneHIGH PRICE, MUST BE RURAL
world that can Induce accidents, soon you'd be giving up
furnace,
cellar,
garden,
and
CLOSE TO POMEROY OR
owner trades, automatic transmission on
garage. Asking S7,ooo.oo.
everything from cars to bathtubs.
MIDDLEPORT. CALL IF
both .
Read on, and perhaptS you'll see what I mean about blaming
YOU HAVE ANYTHING AT NEW LISTING-S Acres on the
ALL.
OHIO River with opportunity all of a group for one bad happening. - HELEN
for
vacation lodges. Asking Dear RaP.:
PLACE THE SALE OF
$10.00
a front fool.
YOUR PROPERTY IN
Recently something happened lo our group that got us mad
MONEY TALKS, MAKE
Fury II 4 dr. sedan ,
p.·steering, T· flite.
COMPETENT HANDS.
US AN OFFER
and scared.
HENRY E. CLELAND
Very nice .
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Duririg the summer and on weekends we hang around the
REALTOR
ASSOCIATE
Olflct 99'1-2259
high school playground lUltil about 10 p.m. Sometimes we got a
m -332S 992-2371
Rtsldonct 992·2568
10·2~· 61c
little row!ly, but not menacing. Naturally we expected the neigh10·20-61c
bors lo get irritated and occasionally call the cops. Each lime we
were asked to leave and we did so quickly and respectfully. No
Polara 4 dr. Wagon,
p .·steering, p. 7· ROOM block house, 4
Real Estate
bedrooms, living room, dining
p-obleni, either way.
brakes, T-flite. Priced to go.
·
.room, bath with shower, large
The olher night, however, we were jusl standing around when
·1\U.chen with tots · of bulft.ln HOUSE - Two apts .• ~ rooms
b·rrch ' cabinets . Hardwood and bath each, near new a police car came up, so we scattered. About seven of us began
floors. Natural gas furnace, · housing project. Trade lor walking to my girlfriend's house. Just lhen, the squad car sped
SO· g~llon
electric water smaller house. Phone 992.
aro~md the comer and out jumptS this officer, who shouted at us
heater, 2 large recreation 2608.
rooms, paneled In basement,
9·26-30\c and accused us of lying when we said we were on our way home.
2 porches, garage, concrete
Then he searched us lhoroughly for beer or dope - and l mean WIN AT BRIDGE
drlvewar· large yard with
reaDy too thoroughly for young girls, and threatened 1o book us
plenty o shade trees. located
on large lot, 250ft. by 250ft. on .Auto Sales
which we weren't.
SR 12~ In Syracuse, Ohio. '69 CHEVROLET Custom Cab for '1olterlng,"
Ourproblemlawehavenoplacetogoexcepttheplayground,
pickup
wtlh·
cam
par,
stereo
Available· for Immediate
tape, fog llghls, $2.500. Phone and we don't do anything wrong. Some of the guys drink, but not
occupancy. To see, phone
it was bad luck to find all
992·602'1.
23
Gallipolls-446·9539afler 5 p.m.
when
they're
with
girls.
four
trumps bunched against
10.24-Jtp
4
week days for appointment .
Is It any wonder policemen gel called names when they all
• A9
exactly four clubs and three
f().3.tf
'.
come
on
strong
like
that?
NON-VIOLENT
CROWD
WHO
+9
6
2
diamonds in addition to my
_
.
1969 PICKUP truck, 8 ft. bed,
• K Q s2
king of hearts for you to
$2 .300 WILL buY ~J acres In excellent condition, 18,000 MIGHT CHANGE BECAUSE OF COPS
WEST
EAST
make your contract."
Bedlord Township, Wolfpen &lt;ICtuat miles. Phone 992·6.107
Dear
NVCWMCBOC:
•
J1098
•
Void
"Yes," said the professor.
Road, 20 minutes from or see at~ &amp; G·Market, Rt. 7,
Don it judge "all" policemen from one bad experience. • K10
• J 7s3 2
"I had some good luck, but
Pomeroy. :v. ot"tand In tt,mber. Middleport.
.
balance In pasture . No
10.19·Sfc Remember last summer when you "expected the cops" and had
J 85
Q 10 7 4 3
America'J top eJtpertJ t~plain their
buildings. Call 992-2152 and -;::========~ nO problems, nor did they. Most treat you decently if you give "' J 9 6 3
"' 10 74
ask for Dick.
,
SOUTH (D)
toutnamenf·winning techniques in o
9·22·tfC
.them the chance, but there can be over-ceactors In any group • K 7 63 2
•'I' I 21-poge book on J A C D 8 Y
and that includes lhe ' 'rowdy" teengers who rile the neighbors
• Qs6 4
MOOERN. for your copy sen! $1
·HOUSE, Ji12 Lincoln Heights.
(who
over-ceact
and
call
for
a
squad
·car)
HELEN
AND
SUE
+
AK
witlr your name, addrtu and zip
Qlll Danny Thompson, ·992·
Dear Sue:
·- ··
•As
OF THE
2196.
I
*e to: ''Win at Bridge/' (c/o tltit
Both
vulnerable
7·18-tfc
newspaper), P.O. B.. m, Radio Cit.,
My best friend ran away from home last week. When she
West North East South
SlatKin,
Ntw 'forlc, N.Y. 100l9.
came back, her parents didn't even act glad lo see ~r. They sent
NEW HAVEN ....: 12 X SO mobile"
1 &lt;fo
Pass 1•
home on. an 80 i235 level tot.
Pass 4 N.T.
her lo her rodm and groiUld~ her. All they do is remind her of the Pass 3.
Block utility building, washer
me. In any event I allowed
Pass
S
•
Pass S N.T.
terrible thing she did. Is punishment the answer? - H.P.
and dryer, on Mill St., Phone
for the whole play at trick
Pess 6
Pass 6 •
Dear H.:
882·2717.
Pass
Pass
Pass
one
by winning in my himd.
10· t 1·tfc
~ No! A good, heart-to-heart talk lo see what lhe real problem is
Opening lead- • J
Please note that if I won the
· might help to solve'il. Then everyone should put the past where it
first spade in dummy as
' ._ LOTS for sale. Phone 992-6329.
.
· •o·22·6tc
belongs
behind
them.
SUE
By Oswald &amp; Jame~ Jacoby most people would, I could
YOUR DIAL
not have developed the final
The Professor looked over
end play."
Mrs. Larry Lllrtis and family of dummy carefully and _re·
INEWSPAPE~ ENTERPRISE ASSN 1
Long Botlom.
marked, " If all four trumps
Mrs. David Ross of Athens are in one hand, I will have
spent a ·weekend here with her to be very lucky to make the
ByMn. Evelyq Brickles
parents Mr and Mr W s 1a m. Otherwise, it's a
The bidding has been:
Sunday
School
attendance
at
' . ·
s. ay spread."
SATURDAY~ OCTOBER 30, 1971
North
East South
the United Methodial Church on Clark.
.
Then he called for a low West
1+
Oct 17
:16 Off In
Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Tippie spade - from dummy. Sure
Pass
1
¥
Pass
21'\.T.
$!4 Wwa~ . • tte ~ g was of Athens spent SIUlday with her enough, East showed out and Pass
3¥
Pass
3 N.T.
, 7 · lth oroffpria nf ••eel was parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence lhe Professor had to work Pass
The "following is a tist of ihe •ch•ttlas of the toto Thelma
4+
p,., 4•
- w an e ng o .., .16. Nichols.
out an end p I a y against Pass
Michael. They will be sold at tht restdonct on North M•in
5"'
Pass~ 5 •
StrHI, in Rullond,
Ohio. Watch
- Mrs. Cordelia Lambert of Mrs. Paul Buckley lUlder;.ent ~est. He started by cashing Pass
.
. for s1fo sign.
5•
Pass
6 "'
Arizona has been spending surgery at Camden Clark hts ace and k 1 n g of dta· Pass
6+
Pass
?
Hot Point ' electric dryer, Motorola 21" ·TV, small
several days here with her H "tal H 1
tin t monds. Then he led a trump
You, Soulh, hold :
refrigerator, Spo. dinette set, 3 pc. lfvtng rool)'1 suite, 3 pc.
sister Mrs Grace Kuhn
ospt · e s recupera g a to dummy and r u f f e d
•A!l4 .K 8+ AQ t085&lt;fo K 109
bedroom suite, Maytag wringer washer,, mantel clock, ~
· ~ Ma.bel Swarl2 ·
home.
·
.
dummy's last diamond. Next
rockers, buffet, Walnut wardrobe, 2 chest of drawers, Oak
What do you do now ?
·
was a- Gerald Violet called on Mr. came four rounds of clubs
dresser, 2 Iron beds. mtlal kitchen cabtnet,,wood kitchen
~-Pass. You have shown
Sunday dinner guest of Mr. and and Mrs. Wayne Brickles with lhe Professor ruffing
&lt;:abinet, wall telephone. 5 plank bottom chairs, pte safe,
re\'Cry
VIIUe and your partner
Mrs.
Charles
Betmlg. .
SIUlday evening.
dummy's last club wilh his
toy Iron banks. Art VIctrola. quilt frame, violin, 4 gas
has settled ror sii. diamonds. In
Mrs. Leonard McGill un- Mrs. J. B.' Wayland ·of Mid- next to last t-rump.
.
heaters, porch furniture, oll •lamp, stone jars. pots, dishes,
match poirit d up I i c a .t e, you
King Baritone, log chain, drill press, and other numer.Us
derwept major surgery at dleport spent Sunday with M
Another trump to dummy might try six no-trump.
Items.
·
,,
OWNER: J: w. BROWN
,
Camden Clark Hospilal in and Mrs R K Row
·
r. and a lead of the last trump
TODAY'S QUl:STJON
Terms: Cash
·
__
. Lunch Av.llabt.
Parkersburg
and
is
· · ·
an.
threw West in .
lnst&lt;ad of btddi~ throe
•
C,t.RNAHA :~ AUCTIUJ"'1 $ERVICE '·
,
recuperaling oS~~Iisfactorily
Mr. and Mr.s. Clarence
He hap to lead from his
hearts. ymu parlnt~r hes bid
.
J.
Carnohtn
D.
Smlth,
.
.
·
Mr
and
M
M
.
W
·
k
Ni~hols
were
Tuesday
guests
of
king
of
hearts
and
the
slam
94 2033
1
949 2701
1~n.:~ dub:; ovc1 ·your two no~
Ractno, Ohio
d ·
rs. arvm ~ er •their daughter, Mr. and Mrs. carile home.
• •
NOt rosponsible tor .accidents or loss of property.
an Ruthie were Sunday dmner Harvey Hendershot of Lan" L u c k. 1 u c k. I u c k.' · tJ·ump. Whnt do )lc)u do now ?
•
l..iiiii.itltliiii!ttt!~l!!lf!!i-illi~~~~~~~~~!!l!!!l!"'-_ guests of her mece, Mr. and caster.
.groaned West. ""1 had to hold

NEW 1971 CH E'V"~LET
3/.i ton
Fleetside, V-8, auto., P.S., and many
other extras.
NEW 1971 CHEVROLET- 112 ton, 8'
bed, 6 cyl. engine.

COMPLETE STOCK NEW '72's

Dependable City

Chevy Blazer Trucks, 4-wheel drive, 112
ton 4-wheel drive Pickups.

·-------------------·
1969 Plymouth -------$1995

All models 112 &amp; 3/4 ton, 6 cyl., 8 cyl. and
other extras. Ready to go. ·

v.s,

new

1969··Rambler .~ ___ ;.;_;$1595

1969 Volkswagen----- s1795

1966 Plymouth------· $1395
v.s,

1967 Dodge---------$1695
v.s,

For .Sale or_Trade

===--==-===:-:::=

us

Luck : A Two-way Street
:o:;r:

+

- -----

•2995

1970 Ford 1h ton .... _...............s2695

MIDIUPORT 992-2151 • 992-2152

Construction Co. and An thony .Plumbing &amp; Heating.

-SPECIALsNovember 1 thru 6
LOVING CARE
~eg . 16.50
Now 15.00
NovemberS thru 13
PERMANENT
Reg . $12.50
Now 18.50
FREE PARKING
FREE COFFEE
Phone 992·7474
orner Union Ave. &amp; St. Rt. 7

v.a, auto., P.S.

cadillac • "()ldsmoblle .

· -

POMEROY

JOHNIES
BEAUTY SHOP

V·8, auto .• P.S., blue with matching interior.

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

POMEROY - HERE IS A BUY

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

EXPERT

Phone 992-2550
Insured· Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See
us for
Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnstalation .

~dan,

1970 Pon.iac

GOld finish, black vinyl top, gold interior, full power
equipment. Climate Control air conditioning.

Lot. Ph. 992-7004
If No Answer, 992-3422
Daily 12 to 9, Sunday I to 6
OPPOSITE GOBLE'S USED CAR LOT

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Rooting &amp;

240 Lincoln St., MiddlepOi t

6(» FORD FAIRLANE 2 DR HT

1967 CADILlAC COUPE DEVIllE .......... '2500 ·

KEITH GOBLE
MOBILE HOME SALES

Ph. H2-7796

ditioning.

1971 CADILLAC OOUPE DeVIllE ........ 16500

owner.

FREE DELIVERY - FREE SET-iJP

roofing to our staff .

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

'

LTO, dr. sed., factory air, P.S., P. B., one
local owner. This car is sharp.

GMAC Flnandng Av•llable
POII'IIIIIIY ,
"You'll Like Our Qu•llty Wly of Oolng Bust ness"

Business Services

and weekends .

TRUCK PRICES

197b4 Ford

992-5:142

---------------------------------------------------·

... 'IJ,T', _.;_

68 CHEVROLO BELAIR 4 DR.·

Dark blue with matching Interior, fut"i power equipment,
tilt &amp; telescope wheel, Climate Conlrot .alr conditioning, 1

NOW

Get your new mobile home

now. See James Simpkins,
Valley Estates Mobile Home
Sales, Rt 5" East Athens 593 8762 .
9·19·37tc

Almond Ftremlst finish. matclilng Interior, full power
equipment, AM·FM radio, Climate Control air con·
dltlonlng, one owner. tow mtteaae.

1968 CADI~ SEDAN DEVIllE .......... '3200

(2) UBERTY
65x12
(1) KING, 65xl2
Save Up To

MOBILE HOMES

Tues day and Thursday
nigh ts, Saturday and Sunday B·1 SER IES LJodge if2 ton Gl FINANCING AVAILABLE.
No down payment, 12 years to
afternoons. Schedu le part1 es
pick up . Sol id body, runs good
pay to qualified G I. Up to
ear l y, dates gomg last . Phone
$200 Phone 675·1620 after 4
$2,500 available lor lot im·
965 3929 or 965·3565
p.m.
provements if you own a lot.
1021121c
10·24-Hp

1971 CADIUAC ELDORADO OOUP~ ....... f7495

Loaded w)th everything Including Tap air conditioning,
white "!lth black vinyl.

Tawny beige finish , brown vinyl top, matching leather
Int., full power equipment, Climate Control air con.
dltloning, AM·FM radio, 1 owner 110w Cadillac trade.

MILLER

blue matching Interior.

interior.

(3 ONLY)

1.2' · 14' · 24' - WIDE

$2295

396 Engine, 4 sp., with all the goodies, brown with black

MOBILE HOMES

automation . Modern Poultry,

SHOWALTER 'S Wet Pel Shop , 399 W Mai n, Pomeroy, 992Chesle r . Oh io. All day 2164.
Saturday and Sunda y 20 pe t.
10·24·11C
oil on all lives tock.
- -- - -- 10·21·31&lt; HONDA 90, gooo condition,
$150. Phone 992 5323.
SKA T A·WA Y- announces
10·24·61p

P.S:~

69CAMARO

1971 MODELS

and

LOOK!

Nova 114 dr . seda~, only 23,000 miles, 307 eng .,
auto. , power steertng, one owne r. This car is
perfect in every way .

6 Cyt., auto.,

a11atlable .

hous ing

· Pre Grand Opening Sale

1970 Chevrolet Nova

- - -- - -

Notice

SMITH·NELSON MOTORS, I"C.

+

1970 Camaro Cpe. ................... s3095

Less lhan. l1 ,0oo ,;) rs &amp; appearance of 71 model. R
"alTy
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood interior,
tinted glass, factory air conditioned, sports mirrors.
console, air spotter, turbo hydromatic, power steering &amp;
brakes, 350 cu. in. V·8 engine. Really sharp.

1970 Chevrolet BelAir 4 noor...... 52595 '
•

Less than 10,000 miles by local owner. Sharp as new in all
ways, while over gold finish , 350 v.if e'ngine, power
steering, radio, white-walls, wh. co11ers .

1970 Dodge Polara...................s2495
4. Dr. , V.8 engine, automatic trans ., P.S.• factory air, good
ftres, radio &amp; other extras, white finish, clean interior.

1966 Volkswagen ..................... s1095
Square Back Sedan. Black fin ish, clean inferior., gooo
tires, radio .

1966 Ford .......................5.~~-~~.~~.'595
Fairlane 500 4 door. Local owner , new tires, clean int ., 6

cyl. , std. trans ., radio.

4 DR. MALIBU
regs
1966 CheveIIe............................
'11
6 Cyl. engine, automatic trans., radio, needs a good
cleanup .

Pomeroy Motor Co.
Your Chevy Dealer
Open Eves. TiiB

992-2126

Pomeroy

THE SOuND
GOOD
LIFE

+

WMP0/1390
.
ON

PUBLIC SALE ·
11130 AiM.

Tuppers Plains,
Society News ·

in

.

Unscnmble these four Jumblea,
one letter to each ~quare, to
form four ordinary words.
,..._.;...._....,

Walt'll

thoM ,..dskins

'"THISI

IL~;.:q::.._+.:;:;=:;:;;~
WHAAS •:::...;:=.-

u: Rm11XtklUfX1 ....~===~_[~~....a
BLYVL

IIII
FRUIPY
I· I I I
IRUM.\IRU

1"." 5 SURPIC:IGIN&amp;

FO~

AN C:NeMY

· 10

·po THIS.

~
· (U.won lleoUr)

I

Jomhlro• PIINl SKULK JUGGLI

Yetlf'rd•f•

COM'IL

Anlwf'rl Thr•" n•r•lt·, ,. dl'e 1uppo•rtf ID ob#.y '''"''"-'

oNio,.-LIGS

.

�..
•
22 - 1'heSlU1dayTimes-Sentinei,Sunday.OcU4, 1971

....
•..

For Fast Results Use The Sunday .Times-Sentinel Classifieds

! Card

of Thanks

~ W E WISH to thank the many
., friends and relatives for their
;I prayers, cal ls. cards and
"' flowers , Dr Simo n, Dr .
'"" Sattler , nurses and staff at the

' • Holzer Medical Ce nter Also
the neighbors for the food and
:

•

many acts of kindness The

Rev . Raullm Moyer. the
org ani st, pall bearers and auwho helped m any way dur ing
the sick ness and death of our

...
•,

loved one .

In Memory

Employment Wanted
HO USECLEANING in Racine,

IN LOVING memory of our
dea r fa ther , Fred M Colli ns

Syracuse and Pome roy area .

Phone 992·2676.

wh o passed away Oct ober 23.

10·24 ttc

1963. Thousand lhoughls of
one so dear , often brings a

tiny tear ; Thoughts go back to
scenes long passed , Time
51 NGLE young man age 22
r oll s on but memones last.
w i th 1mpressive ba ckground
Sad ly missed by daughters. and
good re fere nces, needs
L orena M. R1 ce. Florence L.
No
good
em ploy ment
Mc Daniel and Bun 1ce V
sol ici ting 10bs please . Phone

Pauley

9yj.J740

10-24 ltp

The Homer R1ce famil y

10 12-31c

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before PubliCat ion
Monda y Deadline 9 a.m.

Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
· The Publisher reserves the·
rtght to edit or reject any ads
deemed

!/URING HAL-F TIME

For Rent

EARLY American stereo-radio
combination, AM·FM radio,
mile fr om Pomeroy Co r 4·Speed automatic changer, 4·
poration Lim its. Phone 992·
speaker sound system.
2941.
Balance $76 .93. Use our
10·24·61c
budget terms. Call 992·7085.
10·18·61c
FURNISHED
2·be dr oom
apar tm ent. Adults only . HERE FORDS, 1970 bulls, open
Middleport. Phone 992·3874.
heifers. Phone 992-6497 .
10·24·31c
10·22-31c
FURNISH ED. and unf~;·~i~hed
Cl
to hoot 1971 ZIG·ZAG sewing machine
apar 1men 1s.
ose
sc
.
left in layaway Beautiful
Phone 992·5434.
10·16·1fc: pastel color, full size model.
All bullt·in to buttonhole.
Overcast and fancy stitch .
TRAILER spaces, extra large.
overlooking the Ohio River Pay "lust $48.75 cash or terms
$25 a month . Velma G.
a11ai able . Trad e-ins ac·
Zuspan . Mason, W. Va .
cepted. Phone 992·5641.
l0·19·61c
10-5·20tc

'I'

tor more than one mcorrect .
insertion

RATES
For Want Ad Service

5 cents per Word one 1nsert ion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three,
consecutive inserl!ons.
·
18 cents per word six consecu tiv e insertions .
25 Per Cen t 01scount on paid TRAILER LOTS, Bob's ·Mobile VACUUM cleaner, brand new

••
/ WH'&lt;' DO~&lt;~- '1'0\.J cow::!M C ~ .4.N0 VI'So!T .~e

Th e

publis her wi ll not be responsible

10·24· 1tp

••'

objej':t iona l .

For Sale

TRAILER s~ace on Rt. 33,

-~al1c_e! lci tion &amp; Corrections
W1 ll·be accepted unti: 9 a .m . far ·

\

}
&lt;:)

;---r -

ads and ads paid wi thin 10 days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

USED CARS at

1971 model. Complete with all
cleaning tools . Small paint
damage In shipping. Will take
$1 .50 for 50 word min 1m um .
$27
cash or budget plan
'
Each additiona l word 2c .
available. Phone 992·5641.
TRAILER space, de si rab le
BLIND ADS
10·19·6tc
neigh borhood, phone 992·2084.
Addillonal 25c Cha rge per
9. f9.tfc - - - - - - - - Ad ve rti se m ~nt .
OFFICE HOURS
M"obile Homes for Sale
6 30 a.m. to 5: 00 p.m Dady, For Sale
8: 30 am. to 12 : 00 Noon H &amp; N DAY OLD or started
Saturday
Leghorn pullets. Both floor or
Cour t. Rt. 124. Syracuse ,
Jhio, 992·2951.
4·2·1fC

p~~ Ct.088£Re0
COMPLETE.
CLOSEOUT

cage

Poultry

grown

71 DEMON 2 DR. HT

Hall owee n Party , Fri day,
Oc lobcr 29 . Races, prizes, NI CE 2·slory home with lull
balloons. Open Wedn esday.
basement, 2 lots, new forced
Fri da y and Saturday nights air furnr.tce , nea r elementary

69 ·8UICK E~CTRA 225

from 7. 30 p m to 10: 30 p. m.
Available forparli es Monday,

school. Phone 992-7384 to see.
10·24·61p

$1,000

1220 Washiogton Blvd ..
Belpre, Ohio

• :'·

.-.·

TRAP AND Still Shoot. Sunda y, 2 RA BBIT beegles , 1 year old .
Oct . 24. 1 p.m., Rutland Gun
Phone 643·2703.
Club on New Lima Road .
10·24·31c
10.21.3tc
FOAM mattr ess and in ·
THERE will be a reviva l at the nersprings for twin bed . Like
Rut land Free Will Baptist new . $20 for the set. Phone For Sale or Trade
Chu rch . Sta rt ed Monday.. 965-3900.
FORD
Co nvertibl e,
October 16. 7· 30 p.m. wilh
10·20tp '64
automati
c,
V·8.
'67 Pl ymouth
Sister Dor ot hy Overton as
Sa te ll ite. 2.dr . hardt op,
eva ng elis t
Ev eryo ne PITCHER and bowl $35 ; 1892
automat ic. V-8. Phone 992 welcome Ia come and wor ship
Telephone $35; 90" corner
6547
with us.
wha tnot SSO ; antiques galore.
10·22·tfC
10.24·1fc Ju nkali que, Guysv ille. Ohio.
10·24·31c
RE VIVAL , Oct 27, 7:30 p.m. at
Zaleski Free Will Baplis l TROPI CAL fi sh and suppl ieS .
Church , Za leski, Oh io. Special
Forest Showal ter , Chester.
si nging . Everyone welcome .
Ohio. 965·3356 Open even&gt; ngs

'::[;&gt; .... -

1 0 · 1~

Rev .

..

Ma rvin

Mark 1n s,

10·22-21p
Pas tor , Rev John El swick.
Evangelist .
10-24·41C RIDING LAWN mower . Also.
welder Phone 742 5265
10·22.31p
GUN SHOOT, Sunday, October
24, I p.m. Racine Gu n Club
10·22·21c POLLED Hereford ca ttl e
--------Phone 742-3435
10·22-12tc
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
• over;we\ght ~adiei , teen' and
men interested in a We1ghl GE NERAL Electric stove, good
Wat chers ( R) Cla ss in conditi on. Phone 742·5937.
10-22·3tc
Pomeroy wr ite·
Weigh t
Watchers ( R). 1663 Section
Rd , Cincinnal i, Ohio 45237 Musical Merchandi se
10·3·tfc SP INET .CONSOLE PIANO.
Wanted respons ible party to
- - -· -- tak e over spi net piano Easy
KOS COT Kos meli cs lor sate,
term s. Can be seen loca ll y
de li vered to yo ur door . New
Write Credit Ma nager-. P 0
co min g
aut
products
reg ula rl y. Wou ld you like to Box 276. Shelb yv ille, Indiana
46 176
'try them' Ca ll 992·5113.
10.n2 tp
10·5-lfc

~W

COME VOU'VE
GOT TUIS P(AV

8001&lt; ON TI4E.
GR:OUN 0, COACH ~

SAVE up to one half Bring your AP PLES Several va r.elies. by
SiCk TV to Chuck's TV Shop. peck or bushel. Special on
large Rome Beauty's $2 25 a
15 1 Butternu t Ave ., Pomeroy,
bushel or $2.00 a bu shel lor tO
phone 992 ·5060.
9·24·tfC bushel or more . Bring conla i ner s. Qui sen berrys , Rl.
124, Syracuse. Ohio .

Help Wanted
NO 5 EN'::.E S f'"'L! GG'-''.'G "

• TH' LEAD f=ISl" CLE.NCH£S
AU TUr-AATICALI:-1-AN AH

"J''U·HA.W.' .'-CAN' T

-9)13.~-

GE.TOUTOI=' IT,',' -

t&lt;NOCt&lt;'5 TH '
IIORI. SOUL:S

10·21 -6tc

MOTEL MANAGEMENT
Men-Women-Couples

Learn Mote t Operation with

T!E.TH OUT.'.'

our shar i, inexpensive court

at home followed by two
weeks' Resident Training in

a motel ope rat ed by us. Age
no barrier . Fr ee nationwide
placeme nt assistance upon
completi on.

VA APPROVED
For com plete information
wri te, giving address and

r ~ N'T 52E I'.W WE:
CAN'T MR 31l.T. YOU HAVE
TI"E NECE&amp;SARY PAPERe&gt;

D~'/YIN

UP I'JHJLE I GET

A CERTIFIES! CH:CX
AT l'HE MNK.I

phone number, to:
MOTEL
437 Carilla Lane
Columbus, Ohio

'
'8£55/f.l
Ill/Iff

F::R HEAVEN 5
SAt&lt;.E. ...wtiAT5-

HAPPffi/NG ?

1

CA MPER . comp le tely fur ·
ni shed, bottled gas equ ipped,
plenty of cupboard s, 7 good
tires . Motor in A-l condition .

Phone after 12 noon 949·2726.
10·21 ·31c
APPLES . Burdette farms .
Pomeroy, Rt 2. Phone 992·
3930
10·21 ·31p
BA L DWIN
spinet
pian o.
Hammon d Chor d Organ ,
Accordi on. All in excellent
condition . Phone Chesler 985-

3929.

EARN at home addressing

10·21 ·31c

en11elopes . Rush stamped 1972 SPAR TAN trave l trailer, 25
se lf -addr essed en11elope. The
ft.. fu lly self.conla ined. must
Ambrose Co .• 4325 Lakeborn . sell. Henderson Trailer Park,

Davisburg, Mi ch . 46019 .
10·24·301p

Hende rson. W. Va.

10·12·61p

PART .TIME kitchen, help . I=GAL. li mes tone Excelsior
Appl y tn person Crows Steak 'a ll Works, E. Main St.,
House.
,.&gt;omeroy Phone 992· 3~91.
10·19·5fc
9 If
-----------------'·· c
NEED so meone to paint eaves POODLE puppies, Si lver Toy,
troug hs and do ya rd work . Parkview Kennels . Phone 992·
Phone 992-2677 .
5443.
10·22-blc
8-15·1fc

Wanted

•

Original Cabinet
Company
No'w Offering A

New Service
We have added a craftsman
with 20 years experience in

Stop in, call or write or talk to Dan Thompson,
Tom Lavender or John Ketchka.

FOUR NEW HOME~ •
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
·, • Ti' NO"'MONEY DOWN
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly pa yment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
salary of $5,000.00 and · three children. 7i/, Pet annual
rate.

BILL NELSON
. 992·3657

HILTON WOLFE
949·3211

Wheel Alignment

HOME &amp; AUTO

Complete
Plumbing ,
Heating and A.ir Con.

'5.55

992-2094
606 E . Mclin

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992·2094

Pomero)

OFFICE SUPPliES
And

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

FURNITURE

Open 8 TitS
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

Stop In and See Out
Floor DisDiav.

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Serv ice
P~one 949·3821

Racine, Ohio

Crill Bradford

5·f·tfr

AWNINGS. storm doors and
windows , carports,
marquees, aluminum siding

ahd railing . Call A. Jacob,
sat es representative. For free '
estimates , phone Charles

Lisle , Syracuse . V. V..
Johnson and Son. Inc.
'
5·27·tf c

SMITH NELSON
MOTOR, INC.
PHONE NUMBER

992-2174
FOR SALES
&amp; SERVICE

HOUS E MUVINI.&gt; : Houses, etc,
raised, mo11ed, underpinned,

remodeled. Estimates tree, NEIGLE R Building Supply ."
Free estimate on building
anywhere. National House
Movers, Box 5002, Charleston , your new hom e. Will draw
W. Va. 25311, or phone 304·925· prints to suit the lay ot your
land . Call Guy Nelgler ,
3279 .
Racine. Ohio. For repair and
9 · 30· 60t~
aluminum siding, soffel and
gutter . Cali Dona"fd Smith,
·,t=PTIC tanks cleaned . Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph . · Raci ne, Ohio.
10·7·1fC
662·3035 .
2·12·tfC
~tADY . Mtx coNcRETE Real Estate For Sale __
delivered right to your 7 ROOMS and bath on Union
prQject. Fast and easy . Free Ave., Pomeroy. Ohio . Phone
estimates. ·Phone 992 ·3284. 992-5641.
10-22-12tp
Goeglein Ready ·Mix Co ..
Middleport. Ohio.
6·30.ff 4 BEDROOM brick home .
Phone 992·3457 .
10·20·61c
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates . Ph . 446·4762,
Gallipolis . John Russell, RACINE - tO room hoUse -and
bath . Two lots, basement ,
Owner &amp; Operator .
garage. Phone 949·4313.
5·13·1f&lt;
10·20·12tc
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rl . 124. NEW. ) .bedroom ho-me r~
Middleport. Builf.in kitchen,
Complete front end service,
ceramic
tile bath, all·electrlc
tune up and brake service .
. Wheels balanced etec· heat , good nelghborhooo . Can .
Ironically .
All
work arrange FHA financing.
Telephone 992-3600 or 992·
guaranteed .
Reasonable
2186.
ra tes. Phone 992·3213.
7·2S·Ifc7·27·1fc

·AP PLE S
Fitzpatrick or.
WILL BABY sit in my farm c hards , Sta te Route 689,
home wit h presc hool age phone Wilkesville, 669·3785.
C!Jmpiete
ch ildren Wilt pi ckup and - - - -- - -- -9-·J_.ffc
delive r home. Pr efer the
J( emodelintt
Rutland, · Middle port and 2 END TABLES. round coffee
Pomeroy area . Phone 992· table, Mahogany , very good
Kitchens, Baths
6407.
co nd iti on. Phone 992 ·3401
Room Additions
10·21 ·5fc alter 6 p.m.
And Patios
10·20·61c
Backhoe And
AN ELDERLY lady who needs
Endtoader Work
LAZ Y BOY chair , excellent
a home ins tead of a rest co
nd
iti
on
$75
.
2
Ear
ly
home'! Call 1·304 ·882·3250.
Septic Tahks
10·22·3fc American ta ble lamps, ' like
And
Leach Beds.
new $25. Hartis Fra nk, phone
·965·3368.
Pets For Sale
10·20·61p
BEAUTIFUL . th oro ughbre d
Siamese kitt ens. c h eap . 5 PO NI ES, 1 rid ing horse, 1
RUBBER stamps made -,o
Phone 1·304-662 ·3250.
G E aUtomat ic was her, 1941
order, 24-hour servlce. Dwain
. 10·22· 3fc
Pon tiac, 4 dr . sedan; 1938
or Wilma Casto, Portland .
r..
Buick Coupe, French fryer ,
10·24·30ic
wanted T,o Buy
hot ptale. 3 burner grllt.
OLD Fu"rnitur'e, dishes, clock, Phone 992·2564 or 992-9943.
AUTOMOBILE 1 nsurance oeen
10·20·5fc
and ·Or complete households .
cancelled ?
Lost
your
Call
992·
operator's
license?
Wr ite M. D. Miller, Rt. 4, 970 12 X 60 TOTAL 1 t ·
Pomero , Ohio. Call 992·6271 . 1
.
e ec fiC
2966.
Y
8·25·1fc mob tle home , take ove r
6·15·1fC
payments. 1966 Me rc ury
1 USA BLE wqod burn ing coo~ Comet. V-8, Standard - $375; HARRISO N ' ~ TV and Antenna
1971 350 Yamaha. 300 miles
Service, Phone 992·2522. ,
sto11e ; also need fuel oil space
6·lO·IfC
hea ter - 50,000 B.T.U 's or - $675 . Phone 985·337R.
f0.22·31c
up . Phone 592·5332.
7
_H_A_c"'
K:""Nc:E::-Y-c;'S::-.:E""l~
e c1 r"lc:--.
s=
erv tee,
10·24-61c s·tX t&lt;OOM house, bath, ,futr
all types of electrical work.
WALNUT s tereo, four·• peed
SEWING
MACHINES.
Repair
.
~ase ment, 133 Butternul Ave. ,
Phone 992 ·6407 .
9·29·30ic · service, all makes, 992·2284,
intermixed changet
4just walking distance·-- from,
For Rent or Sale
spe aker sound system, AM·
The
Fabric
Shop,
Pomeroy
.
downtown
Pomeroy. Contact'
HARR ISONV.ILLE - . 4 room
0:E -:-A-N-=o-=o-=o::
z-;;
E:R"""'work . Authorized Singer Sales and
FM radio. Balance $67 . 59~ Use ~B-A-c"""'t&lt;-H::~d Hedric~, 2137 Wadswoo 'hi
house and bath, 1 bedrooms.
our budget terms . Call 992·
Septic tanks installed . George Serrice. We Sharpen Scissors.
ijr1ve. Columbus, Ohio, phone
cerpeled. $50 il rr.. mth . Phone
7085.
,
3·29·1fc
237·4334. Columbus."
(Bill
)
Pullins,
Phooe
992·2478.
)4? ·3173
I
10·18.6tc
5·9·1fd
4·25·1fC

IOHNSON MASONRY

H2-7608 ·

1Q·11-31c

REDUCED I

66 CHEVROLO 4 DR. SEDAN

1969 CHEVROLET

$2695

CE.50 · 2 Ton, 84" cab to axle, 350 cu. in . V.6 engine, 7000
lb. front axle. 15000 lb. 2 speed rear axle, 23000 lb. rear
sprtngs &amp; aux iliary springs. H. duty frame. &amp; frame

Catalina 2 dr. HT, Ventura trim, real sharp,
red outside with black vinyl interior. One
owner . A steal .

remforc ement, front _tow hooks, custom comfort &amp; apP:Carance cab, w.c. m1rrors, rad lo, power steering, 900x20
ttres. -Locally owned &amp; looks &amp; drives right.

$2695

1970 Buick

NOW

Skylark, 2 dr. HT, white bottom with black
vinyl top, 21.000 miles. This car is a cream
puff. Auto., P .S., one owner . Ready to go .

V·8, auto., P.S.• 11. green, matching interior.

8' Wide Sport Custom Pickup. 360 cu. in. V.6 engirte. less
than 15,000 miles by local owner, radio, cab light, 3 lone

'

64 MERCURY 4 DR. sEDAN

We now have 18 new Buicks &amp; Pontiacs in
stock. Come in &amp; see us for a fleal Buy on one
of these new Buicks or Pontiacs .
·

v.a, auto., P.S.

white &amp; turquoise finish, full chrome equipment, chrome
mirrors, clean, attractive truck .

.

7 Ford Econoline .................. '695

&lt;

Panel, Super H. Duty Van, 6 cyl . Special Price.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.
i
PH. 992-2174

Open Eves. Tii8--Til5 P.M. Sat.

j

8

I

GMC TRUCKS
E. MAIN ST.. POMEROY, OHIO ·

1966 Chevrolet.. ............ ~~.~~!~.~..S1695
Two ton truck. 84" cab to axle, extra good. 625x20 tires,
solid cab, foam seat, 292 cu . in . engine, 15,000 lb., 2 speed
rear axle, 23,000 lb. rear springs, never been 011erloaded &amp;

abused.

.

Also Available •••
AT PRICES WE DARE
NOT ADVERTISE

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

Oeland

LATE MODEL CARS

Realty

.

608 East Main
POMEROY
2 story frame, 6 rooms, 3

R. H. Rawlings Sons Co.

-""'!ker
110 Mechanic Street
P'bmoroy, Ohio

bedrooms, bath, ALMOST
NEW gas for.ced.alr furnace,
ONE ACORN DOESN'T MAKE A FOREST ·
part hardwood floors, JUST
NEW
LISTING
Neat
3
$3,800.
bedrooms, bath, gas furnace . Dear Helen :
Hel't''s one for your side, Helen. About 10-tipeed bikes : Hooray
POMUOY - NICE FOR . 3 porches. Double garage.
One
acre
RUTLAND.
for
the
mother who didn't want her son lo have one.
RETIREMENT - 2 story
frame, 2 bedroom1, NEW
I had a good friend who went on a cross COIUltry bike hike. He
BATH. NEW forced .alr POMEROY - 2 business used a !!).speed.
buildings for tease.
furnace , large tot , storm
Allan (as I'll call him) wasabout50 miles from home when he
doors. S5,300.
3 HOUSES - 2 rented - 1
ran
into
the back of another bike. He tried lo maintain his balance
modern 3 bedrooms, bath,
POMEROY- 1 story' frame, 6
Satellite, 2 dr: h ·top,
p .. steering, T·flite.
furna{e, Free gas to all. 19 and gol his hands caughlln the brake cables. He couldn't save
rooms,
3
bedrooms ,
acres
ol
land.
Now
only
Sharp
&amp;
ready.
himself and
over the handlebars. As a result he received
basement, porches, IN GOOD
$16,000.00.
CONDITION. $5,000.
multiple skull fra~ and BUffered Internal bleeding. After
' RUTLAND- IV• stQ;.yv i~am~,';j ..ltEW' LISTING- 2 bedrooms1 belnfwlcoiiScioiis for two weeks,'he died. He was only 19.
bedrooll)s, bath, alum. siding,
bath, gas heal, basement.
Allan was more of a brother to me than my own brother. He
American, 2 dr. sedan , 6 cyl., automatic, true
storm doors and windows,
Oak floors . POMEROY.
was always there when we needed him and now he isn't there any
nice tot, almost if• acre. POMEROY - 3 bedrooms. llh
economy .
more. I've come to despise !!).speed bikes.- KAREN
$5,995.
baths; gas furnace. 2 room
apartment
down with private Dear Karen :
WANTED 6 to 10 ACRES . ON
II was a terrible loss, and my deepest sympathies go 1o you
entrance.
Only
57,500.110.
ROUTE 7 OR Jl, NEED400 ft.
and Allan's famlly. But, Karen, if you despised everything in this
FRONTAGE - WILL PAY
- 3 pedrooms, bath,
Deluxe2dr. sedan, choiceof2, both sha;poneHIGH PRICE, MUST BE RURAL
world that can Induce accidents, soon you'd be giving up
furnace,
cellar,
garden,
and
CLOSE TO POMEROY OR
owner trades, automatic transmission on
garage. Asking S7,ooo.oo.
everything from cars to bathtubs.
MIDDLEPORT. CALL IF
both .
Read on, and perhaptS you'll see what I mean about blaming
YOU HAVE ANYTHING AT NEW LISTING-S Acres on the
ALL.
OHIO River with opportunity all of a group for one bad happening. - HELEN
for
vacation lodges. Asking Dear RaP.:
PLACE THE SALE OF
$10.00
a front fool.
YOUR PROPERTY IN
Recently something happened lo our group that got us mad
MONEY TALKS, MAKE
Fury II 4 dr. sedan ,
p.·steering, T· flite.
COMPETENT HANDS.
US AN OFFER
and scared.
HENRY E. CLELAND
Very nice .
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Duririg the summer and on weekends we hang around the
REALTOR
ASSOCIATE
Olflct 99'1-2259
high school playground lUltil about 10 p.m. Sometimes we got a
m -332S 992-2371
Rtsldonct 992·2568
10·2~· 61c
little row!ly, but not menacing. Naturally we expected the neigh10·20-61c
bors lo get irritated and occasionally call the cops. Each lime we
were asked to leave and we did so quickly and respectfully. No
Polara 4 dr. Wagon,
p .·steering, p. 7· ROOM block house, 4
Real Estate
bedrooms, living room, dining
p-obleni, either way.
brakes, T-flite. Priced to go.
·
.room, bath with shower, large
The olher night, however, we were jusl standing around when
·1\U.chen with tots · of bulft.ln HOUSE - Two apts .• ~ rooms
b·rrch ' cabinets . Hardwood and bath each, near new a police car came up, so we scattered. About seven of us began
floors. Natural gas furnace, · housing project. Trade lor walking to my girlfriend's house. Just lhen, the squad car sped
SO· g~llon
electric water smaller house. Phone 992.
aro~md the comer and out jumptS this officer, who shouted at us
heater, 2 large recreation 2608.
rooms, paneled In basement,
9·26-30\c and accused us of lying when we said we were on our way home.
2 porches, garage, concrete
Then he searched us lhoroughly for beer or dope - and l mean WIN AT BRIDGE
drlvewar· large yard with
reaDy too thoroughly for young girls, and threatened 1o book us
plenty o shade trees. located
on large lot, 250ft. by 250ft. on .Auto Sales
which we weren't.
SR 12~ In Syracuse, Ohio. '69 CHEVROLET Custom Cab for '1olterlng,"
Ourproblemlawehavenoplacetogoexcepttheplayground,
pickup
wtlh·
cam
par,
stereo
Available· for Immediate
tape, fog llghls, $2.500. Phone and we don't do anything wrong. Some of the guys drink, but not
occupancy. To see, phone
it was bad luck to find all
992·602'1.
23
Gallipolls-446·9539afler 5 p.m.
when
they're
with
girls.
four
trumps bunched against
10.24-Jtp
4
week days for appointment .
Is It any wonder policemen gel called names when they all
• A9
exactly four clubs and three
f().3.tf
'.
come
on
strong
like
that?
NON-VIOLENT
CROWD
WHO
+9
6
2
diamonds in addition to my
_
.
1969 PICKUP truck, 8 ft. bed,
• K Q s2
king of hearts for you to
$2 .300 WILL buY ~J acres In excellent condition, 18,000 MIGHT CHANGE BECAUSE OF COPS
WEST
EAST
make your contract."
Bedlord Township, Wolfpen &lt;ICtuat miles. Phone 992·6.107
Dear
NVCWMCBOC:
•
J1098
•
Void
"Yes," said the professor.
Road, 20 minutes from or see at~ &amp; G·Market, Rt. 7,
Don it judge "all" policemen from one bad experience. • K10
• J 7s3 2
"I had some good luck, but
Pomeroy. :v. ot"tand In tt,mber. Middleport.
.
balance In pasture . No
10.19·Sfc Remember last summer when you "expected the cops" and had
J 85
Q 10 7 4 3
America'J top eJtpertJ t~plain their
buildings. Call 992-2152 and -;::========~ nO problems, nor did they. Most treat you decently if you give "' J 9 6 3
"' 10 74
ask for Dick.
,
SOUTH (D)
toutnamenf·winning techniques in o
9·22·tfC
.them the chance, but there can be over-ceactors In any group • K 7 63 2
•'I' I 21-poge book on J A C D 8 Y
and that includes lhe ' 'rowdy" teengers who rile the neighbors
• Qs6 4
MOOERN. for your copy sen! $1
·HOUSE, Ji12 Lincoln Heights.
(who
over-ceact
and
call
for
a
squad
·car)
HELEN
AND
SUE
+
AK
witlr your name, addrtu and zip
Qlll Danny Thompson, ·992·
Dear Sue:
·- ··
•As
OF THE
2196.
I
*e to: ''Win at Bridge/' (c/o tltit
Both
vulnerable
7·18-tfc
newspaper), P.O. B.. m, Radio Cit.,
My best friend ran away from home last week. When she
West North East South
SlatKin,
Ntw 'forlc, N.Y. 100l9.
came back, her parents didn't even act glad lo see ~r. They sent
NEW HAVEN ....: 12 X SO mobile"
1 &lt;fo
Pass 1•
home on. an 80 i235 level tot.
Pass 4 N.T.
her lo her rodm and groiUld~ her. All they do is remind her of the Pass 3.
Block utility building, washer
me. In any event I allowed
Pass
S
•
Pass S N.T.
terrible thing she did. Is punishment the answer? - H.P.
and dryer, on Mill St., Phone
for the whole play at trick
Pess 6
Pass 6 •
Dear H.:
882·2717.
Pass
Pass
Pass
one
by winning in my himd.
10· t 1·tfc
~ No! A good, heart-to-heart talk lo see what lhe real problem is
Opening lead- • J
Please note that if I won the
· might help to solve'il. Then everyone should put the past where it
first spade in dummy as
' ._ LOTS for sale. Phone 992-6329.
.
· •o·22·6tc
belongs
behind
them.
SUE
By Oswald &amp; Jame~ Jacoby most people would, I could
YOUR DIAL
not have developed the final
The Professor looked over
end play."
Mrs. Larry Lllrtis and family of dummy carefully and _re·
INEWSPAPE~ ENTERPRISE ASSN 1
Long Botlom.
marked, " If all four trumps
Mrs. David Ross of Athens are in one hand, I will have
spent a ·weekend here with her to be very lucky to make the
ByMn. Evelyq Brickles
parents Mr and Mr W s 1a m. Otherwise, it's a
The bidding has been:
Sunday
School
attendance
at
' . ·
s. ay spread."
SATURDAY~ OCTOBER 30, 1971
North
East South
the United Methodial Church on Clark.
.
Then he called for a low West
1+
Oct 17
:16 Off In
Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Tippie spade - from dummy. Sure
Pass
1
¥
Pass
21'\.T.
$!4 Wwa~ . • tte ~ g was of Athens spent SIUlday with her enough, East showed out and Pass
3¥
Pass
3 N.T.
, 7 · lth oroffpria nf ••eel was parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence lhe Professor had to work Pass
The "following is a tist of ihe •ch•ttlas of the toto Thelma
4+
p,., 4•
- w an e ng o .., .16. Nichols.
out an end p I a y against Pass
Michael. They will be sold at tht restdonct on North M•in
5"'
Pass~ 5 •
StrHI, in Rullond,
Ohio. Watch
- Mrs. Cordelia Lambert of Mrs. Paul Buckley lUlder;.ent ~est. He started by cashing Pass
.
. for s1fo sign.
5•
Pass
6 "'
Arizona has been spending surgery at Camden Clark hts ace and k 1 n g of dta· Pass
6+
Pass
?
Hot Point ' electric dryer, Motorola 21" ·TV, small
several days here with her H "tal H 1
tin t monds. Then he led a trump
You, Soulh, hold :
refrigerator, Spo. dinette set, 3 pc. lfvtng rool)'1 suite, 3 pc.
sister Mrs Grace Kuhn
ospt · e s recupera g a to dummy and r u f f e d
•A!l4 .K 8+ AQ t085&lt;fo K 109
bedroom suite, Maytag wringer washer,, mantel clock, ~
· ~ Ma.bel Swarl2 ·
home.
·
.
dummy's last diamond. Next
rockers, buffet, Walnut wardrobe, 2 chest of drawers, Oak
What do you do now ?
·
was a- Gerald Violet called on Mr. came four rounds of clubs
dresser, 2 Iron beds. mtlal kitchen cabtnet,,wood kitchen
~-Pass. You have shown
Sunday dinner guest of Mr. and and Mrs. Wayne Brickles with lhe Professor ruffing
&lt;:abinet, wall telephone. 5 plank bottom chairs, pte safe,
re\'Cry
VIIUe and your partner
Mrs.
Charles
Betmlg. .
SIUlday evening.
dummy's last club wilh his
toy Iron banks. Art VIctrola. quilt frame, violin, 4 gas
has settled ror sii. diamonds. In
Mrs. Leonard McGill un- Mrs. J. B.' Wayland ·of Mid- next to last t-rump.
.
heaters, porch furniture, oll •lamp, stone jars. pots, dishes,
match poirit d up I i c a .t e, you
King Baritone, log chain, drill press, and other numer.Us
derwept major surgery at dleport spent Sunday with M
Another trump to dummy might try six no-trump.
Items.
·
,,
OWNER: J: w. BROWN
,
Camden Clark Hospilal in and Mrs R K Row
·
r. and a lead of the last trump
TODAY'S QUl:STJON
Terms: Cash
·
__
. Lunch Av.llabt.
Parkersburg
and
is
· · ·
an.
threw West in .
lnst&lt;ad of btddi~ throe
•
C,t.RNAHA :~ AUCTIUJ"'1 $ERVICE '·
,
recuperaling oS~~Iisfactorily
Mr. and Mr.s. Clarence
He hap to lead from his
hearts. ymu parlnt~r hes bid
.
J.
Carnohtn
D.
Smlth,
.
.
·
Mr
and
M
M
.
W
·
k
Ni~hols
were
Tuesday
guests
of
king
of
hearts
and
the
slam
94 2033
1
949 2701
1~n.:~ dub:; ovc1 ·your two no~
Ractno, Ohio
d ·
rs. arvm ~ er •their daughter, Mr. and Mrs. carile home.
• •
NOt rosponsible tor .accidents or loss of property.
an Ruthie were Sunday dmner Harvey Hendershot of Lan" L u c k. 1 u c k. I u c k.' · tJ·ump. Whnt do )lc)u do now ?
•
l..iiiii.itltliiii!ttt!~l!!lf!!i-illi~~~~~~~~~!!l!!!l!"'-_ guests of her mece, Mr. and caster.
.groaned West. ""1 had to hold

NEW 1971 CH E'V"~LET
3/.i ton
Fleetside, V-8, auto., P.S., and many
other extras.
NEW 1971 CHEVROLET- 112 ton, 8'
bed, 6 cyl. engine.

COMPLETE STOCK NEW '72's

Dependable City

Chevy Blazer Trucks, 4-wheel drive, 112
ton 4-wheel drive Pickups.

·-------------------·
1969 Plymouth -------$1995

All models 112 &amp; 3/4 ton, 6 cyl., 8 cyl. and
other extras. Ready to go. ·

v.s,

new

1969··Rambler .~ ___ ;.;_;$1595

1969 Volkswagen----- s1795

1966 Plymouth------· $1395
v.s,

1967 Dodge---------$1695
v.s,

For .Sale or_Trade

===--==-===:-:::=

us

Luck : A Two-way Street
:o:;r:

+

- -----

•2995

1970 Ford 1h ton .... _...............s2695

MIDIUPORT 992-2151 • 992-2152

Construction Co. and An thony .Plumbing &amp; Heating.

-SPECIALsNovember 1 thru 6
LOVING CARE
~eg . 16.50
Now 15.00
NovemberS thru 13
PERMANENT
Reg . $12.50
Now 18.50
FREE PARKING
FREE COFFEE
Phone 992·7474
orner Union Ave. &amp; St. Rt. 7

v.a, auto., P.S.

cadillac • "()ldsmoblle .

· -

POMEROY

JOHNIES
BEAUTY SHOP

V·8, auto .• P.S., blue with matching interior.

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

POMEROY - HERE IS A BUY

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

EXPERT

Phone 992-2550
Insured· Experienced
Work Guaranteed
See
us for
Free
Estimate on Furnace
lnstalation .

~dan,

1970 Pon.iac

GOld finish, black vinyl top, gold interior, full power
equipment. Climate Control air conditioning.

Lot. Ph. 992-7004
If No Answer, 992-3422
Daily 12 to 9, Sunday I to 6
OPPOSITE GOBLE'S USED CAR LOT

NEW &amp; OLD WORK
All Weather Rooting &amp;

240 Lincoln St., MiddlepOi t

6(» FORD FAIRLANE 2 DR HT

1967 CADILlAC COUPE DEVIllE .......... '2500 ·

KEITH GOBLE
MOBILE HOME SALES

Ph. H2-7796

ditioning.

1971 CADILLAC OOUPE DeVIllE ........ 16500

owner.

FREE DELIVERY - FREE SET-iJP

roofing to our staff .

ROOFING &amp; CARPENTER
WORK
SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

'

LTO, dr. sed., factory air, P.S., P. B., one
local owner. This car is sharp.

GMAC Flnandng Av•llable
POII'IIIIIIY ,
"You'll Like Our Qu•llty Wly of Oolng Bust ness"

Business Services

and weekends .

TRUCK PRICES

197b4 Ford

992-5:142

---------------------------------------------------·

... 'IJ,T', _.;_

68 CHEVROLO BELAIR 4 DR.·

Dark blue with matching Interior, fut"i power equipment,
tilt &amp; telescope wheel, Climate Conlrot .alr conditioning, 1

NOW

Get your new mobile home

now. See James Simpkins,
Valley Estates Mobile Home
Sales, Rt 5" East Athens 593 8762 .
9·19·37tc

Almond Ftremlst finish. matclilng Interior, full power
equipment, AM·FM radio, Climate Control air con·
dltlonlng, one owner. tow mtteaae.

1968 CADI~ SEDAN DEVIllE .......... '3200

(2) UBERTY
65x12
(1) KING, 65xl2
Save Up To

MOBILE HOMES

Tues day and Thursday
nigh ts, Saturday and Sunday B·1 SER IES LJodge if2 ton Gl FINANCING AVAILABLE.
No down payment, 12 years to
afternoons. Schedu le part1 es
pick up . Sol id body, runs good
pay to qualified G I. Up to
ear l y, dates gomg last . Phone
$200 Phone 675·1620 after 4
$2,500 available lor lot im·
965 3929 or 965·3565
p.m.
provements if you own a lot.
1021121c
10·24-Hp

1971 CADIUAC ELDORADO OOUP~ ....... f7495

Loaded w)th everything Including Tap air conditioning,
white "!lth black vinyl.

Tawny beige finish , brown vinyl top, matching leather
Int., full power equipment, Climate Control air con.
dltloning, AM·FM radio, 1 owner 110w Cadillac trade.

MILLER

blue matching Interior.

interior.

(3 ONLY)

1.2' · 14' · 24' - WIDE

$2295

396 Engine, 4 sp., with all the goodies, brown with black

MOBILE HOMES

automation . Modern Poultry,

SHOWALTER 'S Wet Pel Shop , 399 W Mai n, Pomeroy, 992Chesle r . Oh io. All day 2164.
Saturday and Sunda y 20 pe t.
10·24·11C
oil on all lives tock.
- -- - -- 10·21·31&lt; HONDA 90, gooo condition,
$150. Phone 992 5323.
SKA T A·WA Y- announces
10·24·61p

P.S:~

69CAMARO

1971 MODELS

and

LOOK!

Nova 114 dr . seda~, only 23,000 miles, 307 eng .,
auto. , power steertng, one owne r. This car is
perfect in every way .

6 Cyt., auto.,

a11atlable .

hous ing

· Pre Grand Opening Sale

1970 Chevrolet Nova

- - -- - -

Notice

SMITH·NELSON MOTORS, I"C.

+

1970 Camaro Cpe. ................... s3095

Less lhan. l1 ,0oo ,;) rs &amp; appearance of 71 model. R
"alTy
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood interior,
tinted glass, factory air conditioned, sports mirrors.
console, air spotter, turbo hydromatic, power steering &amp;
brakes, 350 cu. in. V·8 engine. Really sharp.

1970 Chevrolet BelAir 4 noor...... 52595 '
•

Less than 10,000 miles by local owner. Sharp as new in all
ways, while over gold finish , 350 v.if e'ngine, power
steering, radio, white-walls, wh. co11ers .

1970 Dodge Polara...................s2495
4. Dr. , V.8 engine, automatic trans ., P.S.• factory air, good
ftres, radio &amp; other extras, white finish, clean interior.

1966 Volkswagen ..................... s1095
Square Back Sedan. Black fin ish, clean inferior., gooo
tires, radio .

1966 Ford .......................5.~~-~~.~~.'595
Fairlane 500 4 door. Local owner , new tires, clean int ., 6

cyl. , std. trans ., radio.

4 DR. MALIBU
regs
1966 CheveIIe............................
'11
6 Cyl. engine, automatic trans., radio, needs a good
cleanup .

Pomeroy Motor Co.
Your Chevy Dealer
Open Eves. TiiB

992-2126

Pomeroy

THE SOuND
GOOD
LIFE

+

WMP0/1390
.
ON

PUBLIC SALE ·
11130 AiM.

Tuppers Plains,
Society News ·

in

.

Unscnmble these four Jumblea,
one letter to each ~quare, to
form four ordinary words.
,..._.;...._....,

Walt'll

thoM ,..dskins

'"THISI

IL~;.:q::.._+.:;:;=:;:;;~
WHAAS •:::...;:=.-

u: Rm11XtklUfX1 ....~===~_[~~....a
BLYVL

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FRUIPY
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IRUM.\IRU

1"." 5 SURPIC:IGIN&amp;

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· 10

·po THIS.

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· (U.won lleoUr)

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Jomhlro• PIINl SKULK JUGGLI

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COM'IL

Anlwf'rl Thr•" n•r•lt·, ,. dl'e 1uppo•rtf ID ob#.y '''"''"-'

oNio,.-LIGS

.

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24 -:- TheSWlday Times-Senllnel,SWl@Y, Oct. 24,1971

.
£
•
J·
,
a}
·How a Fellow GOt Hooked
SOrt 9 OUrD . ~.On fublic Libraries

Bam, Hay and Cow Lost
MASON - A fire, stilfWlder
investigation, destroyed a large
frame barn, ·25 to 30 bales of
hay. and killed a steer early
. Saturday here.
Firt Chief George A. Carson
said the structure was the
former Fred Icenhower barn
located near Wahama High
School. It was being used by
Fred Samsel to house the 800 lb.
steer, a horse and the hay.
Carson said the owner had
just brought the steer in from
the pasture a couple of days ago
and was keeping it confined
while feeding it grain in
preparation for but~ hering this
fall . In addition to it, Samsel
owns a horse which was also
sheltered in the barn, but was
permitted to come and go into
the pasture £ield. It happened to
be outside when the fire broke
out.
The fire was discovered at
5:45a .m., by Kevin Brown and
Danny Riley who notified the
fire department that there was
a fire in the vicinity of Wahama
High.
Thinking that the fire could be
of major proportion, the
fireman said Pomeroy was
summoned without delay .
The Ohio unit answered with a
truck and emergency vehicle.
Carson said they were also
planning to call New Haven, but
when it was known what it was,
they didn 't make this call.
Carson stated the blaze was

/ ' faa

'

8

out of control and the barn roof ·
had fallen in when firemen
arrived . Firemen stayed at the
scene approximately two hours.
Damages were estimated to be

., ,
GAUJPOLIS - One sultry July
· ,; ' morning in 1919 Dr. Ella Lupton, lhe
; :;' first and only female general practice .
· ·'' physician In community history, was
·. · · summoned eal'ly to a small cottage on
, ': lower Fourth Avenue; there to attend a
· ': mother in labor. It was a boy.
The task completed, Dr. Ella
: :· placed the squalling tike in the
· mother's arms and Inquired, "Byrd,
have you Lee chosen a name for the
biiby? I'll need it for the bir\h certificate. "
Yes, Dr. Ella, this is John. John

$850.

Members of \he Fire
Department Auxiliary were on
hand as usual to serve firemen
coffee and other refreshments.

PLEASANT VAUEY
ADMISSIONS: Lenora
Gilman, Gallipolis ; Mrs. Willie
Arnett, Glenwood; Mrs . Ralph
Anderson, New Haven; Mrs.
Cleo Smith, Apple Grove.
"·
DISCHARGES: Lois Leport,
Mrs. Leonard Stern, Benjamin
Kesterson, Robert Crislip, Mrs.
Willie Walker, Mrs. Byron
Dudding, Mrs . Arlage Lanham,
Conrad Berkley, Emory Haggy,
Oretha Kirk, Mrs . Lowell
Wingett, Lewis Allen.

\~_\_
MR. BLAE'M'NAR

Blaettnar with MCM
POMEROY - Fred S.
Blaettnar, Spring Ave .,
Pomeroy; has been named a
sales representative of Mason
County Motors, dealers in Oldsmobiles and Chevrolets, at
Point Pleasant, W. Va.
A native of Pomeroy,
Blaettnar graduated from

$

' ' ~!:.~,~?!~~~. ;"
K. Carr, professor of biology at
Rio Grande College, has been
selected for biographical and
pictorial inclusion in the
massive Fourth Volume of
"Two Thousand Men of
Achievement, " due
for
publication next JIUle.
A Harrison Fellow at the
University of Pennsylvania and
a Thayer Scholar at Harvard
Carr is currently working on~

a

,,

couldn't read the conversation subtitles) only to have a horror picture
develop which'~ send him fleeing ~p the
aisle to muffled snickers and, "There
he goes!"· from hi~ older brother and
sisters and their frij!nds .
It was no laughing · matter. That
Lon Chaney and Bela Lugosi spurred
him on the dead run to Brandstetter
Heights many a night.
Early on in grade school he began
using the public library regularly,
pestering Addie Vanden, 30 · years
librarian, for new editions of The
Bobbsey Twins and Tom Swift adventures. Will) progress, he absorbed
the works of Mark Twain, Jack London,
Brete Hart, Burns, Longfellow, Riley,
and eventually into histoty, biography,
and philosophy. The guy was hooked on

Anderson.''

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Sharon Smith,
Pomeroy; Madeline Painter,
Middleport ; Emmett McClaskey, Rutland; Kathy
Matson, Rutland; Carolyn
Dailey, Middleport; Mildred
Frank, Pomeroy; Mary Pauley,
Albany ; James McClain,
Albany; Iris Morris, New
Haven.
DISCHARGED - Mildred
Will, Elizabeth Conde, Christine
Sheets, Martha Ann Shuler.

II can give you
a paycheck
if you're dltabled.

Call me.

CARROL K. SNOWDEN
Park Central Hotel Bldg.
Second Ave. Ph. 446-4290
Home Ph. 446-4518
Gallipolis
,_._.. STATEFAAM MUTUAL

A

• ~ovu~•

Au to mobilo ln:\uranr;e Co,

Horr.e Ollice:
Bloomington, Illinois

tmts··

BY J. A. McKEAN

the field of bi?logy. The book IS
the result of his work m ~he field
of suppression of autoimmune
diseases.
Carr joined the faculty at Rio
Grande College in 1963, and held
the post of Chairman of the
Division of Natural Sciences.
He studied at the Sorbonne at
the doctoral level, and did
research work at the Pasteur
Institute in Paris. At the
Pasteur Institute , he was
associated with Dr. Gabriel
Bertrand, the last living student
of Louis Pasteur. He defended
his thesis at the Sorbonne and
received a doctorate with high
honors.
Holder of US, German and
British patents in one area,
Carr is a member of numerous
professipnal groups, including
the American Chemical
Association, the American
Association for the Advancement of Science and the
New York Academy of Sciences. He was elected a member
of the International Platform
Association in 1969, and was
selected a Fellow of the
American Institute of Chemists.

Pomeroy High School in 1927.
He received his AB degree in
commerce
from
Ohio
University where he was a
member of Lambda Chi Alpha,
Kappa Kappa Psi and Alpha
Beta Chi Fraternities. He was a
member of Varsity 0 in track at
the university .
Blaettnar joined his father at
the Blaettnar Auto Co. in
Pomeroy in 1932 and became a
partner in 1946. He managed the
business until recently when the
agency was sold.
A lifelong member of Trinity
Church in Pomeroy, Blaettnar
has served twice, for a period of
seven years, as president of the
coWlcil of the church. He served
35 years as superintendent of
the Sunday School and ·ap·
proximately for the same length
of time as a Sunday school class
teacher.
Blaettnar is a member
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F.
A.M. ; Pomeroy Chapter
R.A.M.; Bosworth Council 46;
Ohio Valley Commandery 24,
Knights Templar and the York
Cross of Honor .

.··

:· ::

,· ..;.. ;.

·. '·'

.· .. · .·.: ·:· ·.· ·. .·.
:: :: ·::. ..:-· :=··:·
·::: :: .·: :.. ·.·. ,•.

:

''.

:-· :-.

·'

'·'

•

•

. Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Vallev

: :: -; ...

·'·' .=:.·.· ·'·:; .::::: '· .

Counseling Help Available
PT. PLEASANT - Mason
CoiUltians who need help with
emotional or family problems
can get professional guidance

'"'

'

.

THEATERSMOKEBOMBED
STOCKHOLM (UPI )
Police temporarily halted the
showing of the John Wayne
movie ~&lt;The Green Berets"
agl!in Friday night after left
wing demonstrators threw a
smoke bomb into the theater
where it was beirlg shcown.

HERE SHE IS, Miss
America of 19'72, Laurie
Lea Schaefer of Bexley,
Ohio. Poised for the start
of her y.ear-Iong reign, she
received the crown at the
close of the annual Atlantic
City pageant amid traditional tears.

l

'•

:·

today·sFUNNY

''

PIC
ATUB Ull ~_,..,
TODAY/

' John for both his grandfathers, or
course. But may I ask, the Anderson?"
Ella, my family , the Wattersons
are Scotch. ·Always in our home the
supreme·poet was Robert Burns. One of
his poems is titled 'John Anderson' .
libr~ries.
"I see. Most interesting. The name
Books - any reading material is quite good."
became a way of life, boy and man,
T)lis inconspicuous event Iran· wherever desUny led him. Today he
spired much in this fashion, with Rene regards any library as a marvelous
Rose, a neighbor and friend assisUng place, almost sanctified, whether
mother and child. It was Important modest or imposing.
principally to one person -' the lad.
Eventually the fellow returned to
Among Dr. Lupton's appointments his hometown and renewed acquainthat day one may have been to conduct, tance with the now entitled Gallia
as president, a meeUng of the Board of CoiUlty District Library. What imTrustees, Gallipolis Public Library Co., pressed him initially was the growth,
a position she served from the library's the increased facilities and services,
incorporation in 1898 until retiring in the staff competency. Statistics are
usually boring but one is significant
1951.
In fall, 1925 the mother conducted here : the 165,000 books circulated each
her yoWlgWl' to the ground floor, year, about twQ-thirds by the travelling
• northeast corner of the Gallipolis bookmobile. Considering the coWlty's
· elementary school into the tutelage of · population, a lot of folks are being
his first teacher, Miss Marie Meal. The served.
boy and gentle Miss Meal hit if off real
However, becoming more familiar
good from the beginning, for there was with the library's many resources, it
a compelling need for his learning to became all too evident that general
, '; :· read quickly. He couldn't decipher the public was not using their excellent
;f.' Gallipolis Theater billboard.
institution to full advantage . ParThis reading deficiency wasted ticularly adults.
:.: : many a ten cent admission. He'd swing
For instance, how often does one
' ''' breezily into the old silent movie house, encounter in this complex modern life
way down front, attacking a sack of A. an important problem or question :
Fontana's fudge, chuckle gleefully at something he needs to know at once.
the 'fable' cartoons and 'short sub· Perhaps it's rather basic, often comjects', then settle back as the feature plicated. It's very likely the solution
title and credits are rWl. Too often, he can be found in the local library.
watched the initial scene IUlVeil (he
Business methods, public policy,

government, family matters, housing,
farm and home · management, career
guidimce ·and assistance, veterans
benefits, self-training aids, equlpm~nt
repair.
Budgeting, . child care, environment, nutrition; sewing, cooking,
hygiene, travel, hobbles, camping,
autos, gardening: How-to books on
virtually',any field. Dozens of magazine
files. -·Tbe subjecta are endless. And
what's wrong , with a good novel or
biography for easing the day's tension.
Op tiling contributing to this
restrained public usage custom may be
the old hangup that a library is
maintained only for children or meek,
eccentric egg-heads. Nothing could be
farther from the truth. A modern
facility is a vir.grant, necessary,
community
oriented
activity.
Whenever a guy has a need to know, he
·should call on his library; and he'll get
cheerful, skiUed, rapid assistance. It's
all there, free for the asking, because
he owns a piece of the act!on.
Andrew carnegie really started
something when he gave away his 350
miUion dollar fortune, mostly for
educational purposes; 60 million for
public libraries, a portion of which was
used to erect the one at Slate and Third..
His act has gotta rank with the great
civic deeds in U. S. history.
Incidently, Andrew carnegie was
Scotx:)l t90, a self-educated scholar who
revered knowledge . He died in August
1919. ·Coincidence? Who knows?
Anyway, a lad with people such as a
school teacher mother, Dr. Ella Lutpon, Mrs. Addie Vanden, Andrew
Carnegie, and Miss Marie Meal going
for him is boWld to have some book
learn~ng rub off on him.
Especially with The HWlchback of
Notre Dame and CoWit Dracula urging
him 01\.
(Author's Note: O.K. So we'll
have a small library funds renewal
levy iD the upeomlag election. You
know how we'll vole. ·u I ever have a
disagreement with the tax collector,
it won't be over a meager couple of
bucks to support the library.)

from a team of counselors of the
Region II CommiUlity Mental
Health Center.
. The traveling team visits
Mason on the first, second and
fourth Tuesdays of each month.
Members of the team are a
psychologist, social worker,
registered nurse and an
alcoholism and drug COWlselor.
Arrangements can be made for
help from the team by contacting Mrs . Ruby Waugh, in
the Mental Health Office,
Mason County Courthouse,
Point Pleasant. The telephone

Q;/J01·'

number is 675-2793.
The team offers individ~al
COIUlsellng and screens persons
who may require more ex·
tensive services as provided at
the HWitington Center. The
team is also avallable for
Consultation and Education
with comrnWlity groups and
agencies.
The Center has recently instituted follow -up care for
discharged State Hospital
patients. Emergency services
can be administered through
Mrs. Waugh's office.

Llll\lt
lltllff{t
lllflll\t
Lilli/

Elberfelds In ·Pomeroy
·,
'

...

0

_,...... . .,

..

-' ...

.

LANCELOT

by Coker &amp; Pennl

CYRANO IS. OFF TO 170 Hl5
.THING--BURt/ A BONE:!

for ALL
&amp;

MODELS!
it 's a new car you need and

o low cost auto loan from
bank will make it pauiblol
us what terms suit you best
. . . then let us show you how
easy it is to finance through
usl COME IN SOON!

aettJirtdiitttJt "IT'S INCOMPARABLE''
.

II IJ s t ~s gr~al- MOR ~

TAS T£5 BETTER.

.

Interior paneling with the bold, rough-sawn look
of old barn siding, with deep grooves and strong
texture. For country kitchens and playrooms, of
course, but subtle enough to complement any
room decor. Carries the Weldwood "Life of the
Building" guarantee.

That's BROASTED Supreme.
Wh ich ca me fi rst, I he c lli ~ ~.c n or th e sloga n -The chicken
did , of co ur ~e.

only

ss ~:~8'

BROASTED Supreme is new- br~ nd new. The slogan
foll owed riuhl in its footste ps.

II fine entin' chicke n cJ n "'(;I lw II Jllit fo rmi ng, it'll b~•
BROASTf D Supre rnc- we hav" " tre~ h Bup ply con•
~tantly- c~ ll or CO ni ~ in lor y~ur fir~ I ! JS t ~ tutl (ty.
" U' s in compJr;;~fr:- ot you r /J jOtWy ~"'·A!''

"That Old Fashion Goodness"
· Gallipolis, Ohio

panel

Carolina Lumber &amp;
Supply Co.
312 SIXTH AVE.

PT. PLEASANT, W.VA .

Another blg shipment of Kimball Pianos and Organs. A fine group of styles in Walnut
Persimmon- Cherry - Maple finishes . You'lllike the fine quality of these Kimball Pianos the excellent tone and furniture styling.
Stop in the Music Deparlmeht · 211d floor . See the Kimball Pianos and Organ~ - lry oul Lhe
one you like or let us demonstrate for you - and make your selection. Use our Sensibl~
Credit Service to budget your payments .
You'll want to see all the other items in the music department, including the fine·Panasonic.
line of radios, tape players, record players, black and white or color televisions.
Be sure to see the new selec(ion of guitars, sheet music, records, tapes, strings and music
accessories.
•

Elberfelds Toy Store now in lhe middle block is open. Use our convenient lay-away plan Io
hold the t9ys you select until Christmas time.

Open every week day 9: JO to S and on Fridays and
Saturdays 9! 30 a.m. to 9 p.m.

E!berfelds In
I

Pom~r.oy
'

'

'I

THAT'S. THE FIRST TIME 'I. e:ve=R HAI7
A HO[..S THROW A BONE BACK!

�.

'

r ..

""

,, ..

r

24 -:- TheSWlday Times-Senllnel,SWl@Y, Oct. 24,1971

.
£
•
J·
,
a}
·How a Fellow GOt Hooked
SOrt 9 OUrD . ~.On fublic Libraries

Bam, Hay and Cow Lost
MASON - A fire, stilfWlder
investigation, destroyed a large
frame barn, ·25 to 30 bales of
hay. and killed a steer early
. Saturday here.
Firt Chief George A. Carson
said the structure was the
former Fred Icenhower barn
located near Wahama High
School. It was being used by
Fred Samsel to house the 800 lb.
steer, a horse and the hay.
Carson said the owner had
just brought the steer in from
the pasture a couple of days ago
and was keeping it confined
while feeding it grain in
preparation for but~ hering this
fall . In addition to it, Samsel
owns a horse which was also
sheltered in the barn, but was
permitted to come and go into
the pasture £ield. It happened to
be outside when the fire broke
out.
The fire was discovered at
5:45a .m., by Kevin Brown and
Danny Riley who notified the
fire department that there was
a fire in the vicinity of Wahama
High.
Thinking that the fire could be
of major proportion, the
fireman said Pomeroy was
summoned without delay .
The Ohio unit answered with a
truck and emergency vehicle.
Carson said they were also
planning to call New Haven, but
when it was known what it was,
they didn 't make this call.
Carson stated the blaze was

/ ' faa

'

8

out of control and the barn roof ·
had fallen in when firemen
arrived . Firemen stayed at the
scene approximately two hours.
Damages were estimated to be

., ,
GAUJPOLIS - One sultry July
· ,; ' morning in 1919 Dr. Ella Lupton, lhe
; :;' first and only female general practice .
· ·'' physician In community history, was
·. · · summoned eal'ly to a small cottage on
, ': lower Fourth Avenue; there to attend a
· ': mother in labor. It was a boy.
The task completed, Dr. Ella
: :· placed the squalling tike in the
· mother's arms and Inquired, "Byrd,
have you Lee chosen a name for the
biiby? I'll need it for the bir\h certificate. "
Yes, Dr. Ella, this is John. John

$850.

Members of \he Fire
Department Auxiliary were on
hand as usual to serve firemen
coffee and other refreshments.

PLEASANT VAUEY
ADMISSIONS: Lenora
Gilman, Gallipolis ; Mrs. Willie
Arnett, Glenwood; Mrs . Ralph
Anderson, New Haven; Mrs.
Cleo Smith, Apple Grove.
"·
DISCHARGES: Lois Leport,
Mrs. Leonard Stern, Benjamin
Kesterson, Robert Crislip, Mrs.
Willie Walker, Mrs. Byron
Dudding, Mrs . Arlage Lanham,
Conrad Berkley, Emory Haggy,
Oretha Kirk, Mrs . Lowell
Wingett, Lewis Allen.

\~_\_
MR. BLAE'M'NAR

Blaettnar with MCM
POMEROY - Fred S.
Blaettnar, Spring Ave .,
Pomeroy; has been named a
sales representative of Mason
County Motors, dealers in Oldsmobiles and Chevrolets, at
Point Pleasant, W. Va.
A native of Pomeroy,
Blaettnar graduated from

$

' ' ~!:.~,~?!~~~. ;"
K. Carr, professor of biology at
Rio Grande College, has been
selected for biographical and
pictorial inclusion in the
massive Fourth Volume of
"Two Thousand Men of
Achievement, " due
for
publication next JIUle.
A Harrison Fellow at the
University of Pennsylvania and
a Thayer Scholar at Harvard
Carr is currently working on~

a

,,

couldn't read the conversation subtitles) only to have a horror picture
develop which'~ send him fleeing ~p the
aisle to muffled snickers and, "There
he goes!"· from hi~ older brother and
sisters and their frij!nds .
It was no laughing · matter. That
Lon Chaney and Bela Lugosi spurred
him on the dead run to Brandstetter
Heights many a night.
Early on in grade school he began
using the public library regularly,
pestering Addie Vanden, 30 · years
librarian, for new editions of The
Bobbsey Twins and Tom Swift adventures. Will) progress, he absorbed
the works of Mark Twain, Jack London,
Brete Hart, Burns, Longfellow, Riley,
and eventually into histoty, biography,
and philosophy. The guy was hooked on

Anderson.''

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Sharon Smith,
Pomeroy; Madeline Painter,
Middleport ; Emmett McClaskey, Rutland; Kathy
Matson, Rutland; Carolyn
Dailey, Middleport; Mildred
Frank, Pomeroy; Mary Pauley,
Albany ; James McClain,
Albany; Iris Morris, New
Haven.
DISCHARGED - Mildred
Will, Elizabeth Conde, Christine
Sheets, Martha Ann Shuler.

II can give you
a paycheck
if you're dltabled.

Call me.

CARROL K. SNOWDEN
Park Central Hotel Bldg.
Second Ave. Ph. 446-4290
Home Ph. 446-4518
Gallipolis
,_._.. STATEFAAM MUTUAL

A

• ~ovu~•

Au to mobilo ln:\uranr;e Co,

Horr.e Ollice:
Bloomington, Illinois

tmts··

BY J. A. McKEAN

the field of bi?logy. The book IS
the result of his work m ~he field
of suppression of autoimmune
diseases.
Carr joined the faculty at Rio
Grande College in 1963, and held
the post of Chairman of the
Division of Natural Sciences.
He studied at the Sorbonne at
the doctoral level, and did
research work at the Pasteur
Institute in Paris. At the
Pasteur Institute , he was
associated with Dr. Gabriel
Bertrand, the last living student
of Louis Pasteur. He defended
his thesis at the Sorbonne and
received a doctorate with high
honors.
Holder of US, German and
British patents in one area,
Carr is a member of numerous
professipnal groups, including
the American Chemical
Association, the American
Association for the Advancement of Science and the
New York Academy of Sciences. He was elected a member
of the International Platform
Association in 1969, and was
selected a Fellow of the
American Institute of Chemists.

Pomeroy High School in 1927.
He received his AB degree in
commerce
from
Ohio
University where he was a
member of Lambda Chi Alpha,
Kappa Kappa Psi and Alpha
Beta Chi Fraternities. He was a
member of Varsity 0 in track at
the university .
Blaettnar joined his father at
the Blaettnar Auto Co. in
Pomeroy in 1932 and became a
partner in 1946. He managed the
business until recently when the
agency was sold.
A lifelong member of Trinity
Church in Pomeroy, Blaettnar
has served twice, for a period of
seven years, as president of the
coWlcil of the church. He served
35 years as superintendent of
the Sunday School and ·ap·
proximately for the same length
of time as a Sunday school class
teacher.
Blaettnar is a member
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F.
A.M. ; Pomeroy Chapter
R.A.M.; Bosworth Council 46;
Ohio Valley Commandery 24,
Knights Templar and the York
Cross of Honor .

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. Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Vallev

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Counseling Help Available
PT. PLEASANT - Mason
CoiUltians who need help with
emotional or family problems
can get professional guidance

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THEATERSMOKEBOMBED
STOCKHOLM (UPI )
Police temporarily halted the
showing of the John Wayne
movie ~&lt;The Green Berets"
agl!in Friday night after left
wing demonstrators threw a
smoke bomb into the theater
where it was beirlg shcown.

HERE SHE IS, Miss
America of 19'72, Laurie
Lea Schaefer of Bexley,
Ohio. Poised for the start
of her y.ear-Iong reign, she
received the crown at the
close of the annual Atlantic
City pageant amid traditional tears.

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today·sFUNNY

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ATUB Ull ~_,..,
TODAY/

' John for both his grandfathers, or
course. But may I ask, the Anderson?"
Ella, my family , the Wattersons
are Scotch. ·Always in our home the
supreme·poet was Robert Burns. One of
his poems is titled 'John Anderson' .
libr~ries.
"I see. Most interesting. The name
Books - any reading material is quite good."
became a way of life, boy and man,
T)lis inconspicuous event Iran· wherever desUny led him. Today he
spired much in this fashion, with Rene regards any library as a marvelous
Rose, a neighbor and friend assisUng place, almost sanctified, whether
mother and child. It was Important modest or imposing.
principally to one person -' the lad.
Eventually the fellow returned to
Among Dr. Lupton's appointments his hometown and renewed acquainthat day one may have been to conduct, tance with the now entitled Gallia
as president, a meeUng of the Board of CoiUlty District Library. What imTrustees, Gallipolis Public Library Co., pressed him initially was the growth,
a position she served from the library's the increased facilities and services,
incorporation in 1898 until retiring in the staff competency. Statistics are
usually boring but one is significant
1951.
In fall, 1925 the mother conducted here : the 165,000 books circulated each
her yoWlgWl' to the ground floor, year, about twQ-thirds by the travelling
• northeast corner of the Gallipolis bookmobile. Considering the coWlty's
· elementary school into the tutelage of · population, a lot of folks are being
his first teacher, Miss Marie Meal. The served.
boy and gentle Miss Meal hit if off real
However, becoming more familiar
good from the beginning, for there was with the library's many resources, it
a compelling need for his learning to became all too evident that general
, '; :· read quickly. He couldn't decipher the public was not using their excellent
;f.' Gallipolis Theater billboard.
institution to full advantage . ParThis reading deficiency wasted ticularly adults.
:.: : many a ten cent admission. He'd swing
For instance, how often does one
' ''' breezily into the old silent movie house, encounter in this complex modern life
way down front, attacking a sack of A. an important problem or question :
Fontana's fudge, chuckle gleefully at something he needs to know at once.
the 'fable' cartoons and 'short sub· Perhaps it's rather basic, often comjects', then settle back as the feature plicated. It's very likely the solution
title and credits are rWl. Too often, he can be found in the local library.
watched the initial scene IUlVeil (he
Business methods, public policy,

government, family matters, housing,
farm and home · management, career
guidimce ·and assistance, veterans
benefits, self-training aids, equlpm~nt
repair.
Budgeting, . child care, environment, nutrition; sewing, cooking,
hygiene, travel, hobbles, camping,
autos, gardening: How-to books on
virtually',any field. Dozens of magazine
files. -·Tbe subjecta are endless. And
what's wrong , with a good novel or
biography for easing the day's tension.
Op tiling contributing to this
restrained public usage custom may be
the old hangup that a library is
maintained only for children or meek,
eccentric egg-heads. Nothing could be
farther from the truth. A modern
facility is a vir.grant, necessary,
community
oriented
activity.
Whenever a guy has a need to know, he
·should call on his library; and he'll get
cheerful, skiUed, rapid assistance. It's
all there, free for the asking, because
he owns a piece of the act!on.
Andrew carnegie really started
something when he gave away his 350
miUion dollar fortune, mostly for
educational purposes; 60 million for
public libraries, a portion of which was
used to erect the one at Slate and Third..
His act has gotta rank with the great
civic deeds in U. S. history.
Incidently, Andrew carnegie was
Scotx:)l t90, a self-educated scholar who
revered knowledge . He died in August
1919. ·Coincidence? Who knows?
Anyway, a lad with people such as a
school teacher mother, Dr. Ella Lutpon, Mrs. Addie Vanden, Andrew
Carnegie, and Miss Marie Meal going
for him is boWld to have some book
learn~ng rub off on him.
Especially with The HWlchback of
Notre Dame and CoWit Dracula urging
him 01\.
(Author's Note: O.K. So we'll
have a small library funds renewal
levy iD the upeomlag election. You
know how we'll vole. ·u I ever have a
disagreement with the tax collector,
it won't be over a meager couple of
bucks to support the library.)

from a team of counselors of the
Region II CommiUlity Mental
Health Center.
. The traveling team visits
Mason on the first, second and
fourth Tuesdays of each month.
Members of the team are a
psychologist, social worker,
registered nurse and an
alcoholism and drug COWlselor.
Arrangements can be made for
help from the team by contacting Mrs . Ruby Waugh, in
the Mental Health Office,
Mason County Courthouse,
Point Pleasant. The telephone

Q;/J01·'

number is 675-2793.
The team offers individ~al
COIUlsellng and screens persons
who may require more ex·
tensive services as provided at
the HWitington Center. The
team is also avallable for
Consultation and Education
with comrnWlity groups and
agencies.
The Center has recently instituted follow -up care for
discharged State Hospital
patients. Emergency services
can be administered through
Mrs. Waugh's office.

Llll\lt
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Lilli/

Elberfelds In ·Pomeroy
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LANCELOT

by Coker &amp; Pennl

CYRANO IS. OFF TO 170 Hl5
.THING--BURt/ A BONE:!

for ALL
&amp;

MODELS!
it 's a new car you need and

o low cost auto loan from
bank will make it pauiblol
us what terms suit you best
. . . then let us show you how
easy it is to finance through
usl COME IN SOON!

aettJirtdiitttJt "IT'S INCOMPARABLE''
.

II IJ s t ~s gr~al- MOR ~

TAS T£5 BETTER.

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Interior paneling with the bold, rough-sawn look
of old barn siding, with deep grooves and strong
texture. For country kitchens and playrooms, of
course, but subtle enough to complement any
room decor. Carries the Weldwood "Life of the
Building" guarantee.

That's BROASTED Supreme.
Wh ich ca me fi rst, I he c lli ~ ~.c n or th e sloga n -The chicken
did , of co ur ~e.

only

ss ~:~8'

BROASTED Supreme is new- br~ nd new. The slogan
foll owed riuhl in its footste ps.

II fine entin' chicke n cJ n "'(;I lw II Jllit fo rmi ng, it'll b~•
BROASTf D Supre rnc- we hav" " tre~ h Bup ply con•
~tantly- c~ ll or CO ni ~ in lor y~ur fir~ I ! JS t ~ tutl (ty.
" U' s in compJr;;~fr:- ot you r /J jOtWy ~"'·A!''

"That Old Fashion Goodness"
· Gallipolis, Ohio

panel

Carolina Lumber &amp;
Supply Co.
312 SIXTH AVE.

PT. PLEASANT, W.VA .

Another blg shipment of Kimball Pianos and Organs. A fine group of styles in Walnut
Persimmon- Cherry - Maple finishes . You'lllike the fine quality of these Kimball Pianos the excellent tone and furniture styling.
Stop in the Music Deparlmeht · 211d floor . See the Kimball Pianos and Organ~ - lry oul Lhe
one you like or let us demonstrate for you - and make your selection. Use our Sensibl~
Credit Service to budget your payments .
You'll want to see all the other items in the music department, including the fine·Panasonic.
line of radios, tape players, record players, black and white or color televisions.
Be sure to see the new selec(ion of guitars, sheet music, records, tapes, strings and music
accessories.
•

Elberfelds Toy Store now in lhe middle block is open. Use our convenient lay-away plan Io
hold the t9ys you select until Christmas time.

Open every week day 9: JO to S and on Fridays and
Saturdays 9! 30 a.m. to 9 p.m.

E!berfelds In
I

Pom~r.oy
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THAT'S. THE FIRST TIME 'I. e:ve=R HAI7
A HO[..S THROW A BONE BACK!

�ALLEY OOP

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AW,C'M'OFF IT,OOP! YOU1Re

HEY! WMASSAIDEA
ALL 'r'OU QUYS
t.~UMPIN' ON ME,

SO FAR OFF 'YOUR

AWRIGHT, BOYS, WELL., IF 'IOU LUGS THINK
TAKE; 'IM AWAY! YOU 1RE GONNA TAKE ME

ROCJ&lt;f;;R

'r()U COULDN'T Tal. A

by Dick Cavalli

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DINOSAUR,.,

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~60:JN?

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WHA.Tf"tlZ~ 11-IEY"RE
GOING W E*&lt;ING

C:O 'aJ 11-/INK 1HEYLL

ANYWHERE ....

SAND CRAB FROM A .

FOR CATSAKE?

WINTHROP

B~:mlin

by V. T.

rx:;t..~'r

ul..J6r

aAO&lt;. ANOTHER.. L.ClAD
OF M&lt;XlN Kt:::0:::'5.

KNO.V.

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A GRAND WIJ:.~R SAYS :t AMJ

... AN 1 THAT GOES FOR

1 'THINKTHE WHOLE

'rOU POTBELLIED OJ!

&lt;SW"EPROO~

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WN'r 6TAND RJQ "THAT
KIND OF TALJ&lt;: /

· ISGREAILY

OVE'RRATED•• •!!

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.. _,'bF AI Ver111ee:r ·.

PRISCILLNS I'OP .

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:PINto ...

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NATIONAL. A951STANC5

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WE 1REON IT
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JOHNNY WONDER
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by Dick Ro@:ers

a&amp;.,s ....

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1-A~iS~ 1HAt-J 1!!:1!,!1:~

'I"Hii U.6,
GAL.~ ON.

"THIS FEM ·~II THING IS RE~LLY GETTING OUT OF HAND!
THEY'RE STARTING TO ANNOY UNI$CORTED MEN IN THE PARKSr'

"WE CERTAINLY COULD USE HER DOWH AT THI HO!PI1rAL

DATUIEEOlOIS
OPOSSIJMS
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"I'~L THANK YOU TO REME~·~~ HADINJ, I'M NOT DOIH~ THE DRIVING!"
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�I&gt;AR.DON ME..!. UMP,
EIUT OUR 8A'b&amp;IIALI.
SEASON ENI&gt;!I&gt;•&amp;It-

PVS

CLa1T.E

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LON~

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·~WISE
~~~~~--~--~----------------~;
GUV••• PRESI~NT
WHAT l&lt;INI&gt; OF ADMINISTRATIVE
POMP ljAS OFF!R!I&gt; .

THE BORN LOSER
~.-~----~~------~

POSITION COUI.I&gt; n.i\T ST'U8110RN1
OLI&gt; FOUl. ~W. HANI&gt;Li 'i

:g~~~~~~~~::oN

by Art SansoDJ.·

POSITION!

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'FR.OM 'DOOLITTLE COLLEGE

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by

COME ON,
LiT'S FOI.I.OW
1-!IM,L.

&amp;uuut JJa,u_
Wl-IAT'$
~E. I&gt;OIN~,
81MO~

WELL;VOU
MIGj.IT SAV ~E'S
I)OINCi ~IS
~lNG ...

M.KEEPING ANGR.V "!:Aio.l!l'"
OOT OF THE

•suu:

WHV ARE 'IOU JUST

I'M

STANDING, AROU~D

I-JOT!

WflSflfJ~ 't'OVR l1M5

WH~'\S GOI~Q 0~ OOf
1H~~~ 1(00 GALLED ~

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1t\~ QAM.f, l'Liot~.
l"f\\00~\ 'ffiAI WAS
O~f TKU~() I tMPt

A~L.

RIGH'f,

'BUGS BUNNY

WAAI
IS 11'?

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by Stoffel &amp; Hei:mdahl

. IF' TH'

YlTT\..E:S
AI&lt;. e.

READY

... Lc'-s
EAT!

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Out·of the
flearse:S Mouth~
'iO UR'N TO FE ED

AH WI&gt;J.¥f' A

A&gt;J ' S H ELTIOR, Ell.IT

INDNIDUAL

WIFAM INDO'

HAIRCUT, f!&gt;Y •
TI-\AT t-lt:.W
5T'/~1 5T FUM
TI-l' CIT'{-

MAH

OWN!!

AJ1'LL
'v-IA L V.
1-\l)M[.

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MAKC IT SfJAPP'/ !!'
;&gt;.H HA l 'l'T GOT
FOREVER-

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·Participation Invited zn ·comprehensive Plan
•

Vl!llS /4. SIT OF
EITHJR' ~HEATH/

W11Ai 5HOW5·
ON ~APA~~

OR ~HEA'fHI!!t1'

•

COU~17N'T ~6E

The brains of snakes and
alligators are less than 1·1500 of
total body weight, compared
with about 1-100 in mammals
such as cats and squirrels.

VOL XXIV

by Les Carroll

OF A.NV DONNE.YBROOK-5
l""TELY .' WHY PON"T

ANI',IEMPORAR ILY,
~~~_,.
!.'M OUT
OF FUND.S!

)'O U SEE: A

DENT IST?

UMN·HUMN ... Or\, MY,
YE$ , VERY PRETTY...

UNH··DOGIO!&lt;: ,
'IOU
THINK A 6ENE:RAL
ANAESIKEIIC MI6HT
BE ADVISABLE~

YOU WERE PI&lt;06A61-V
GNI\WING A PIG'5

I':NUCKLE AT Ti1E

HERE~·GO

6EE
DOC YANKUM!

OWL$ CLUB!

LOOK~

LII&lt;E ~AlN··
'1\.L PICK AMO~ UP

' BE" 61LLY: lT WAS
PRACTICA-LLY OUT...

A:r

Air Guar over Strip Mines

'
Miller Poll Shows

12 Non-Union

Withdrawal Supported

Mine.s Opened

WASHINGTON, D. C. Congressman Clarence E.
Miller today announced final
results of public opinion polls
conducted at county lairs and
festivities throughout
southeastern Ohio. Miller said
he considered the poll findings a
valuable barometer in deter·
mining opinion on current
issues.
The findings were :
Do you support the present
Administration policy of withdrawing from Vietnam (in
order, Yes, No, Undeclded)?64.1 pet., 31.5 pet., 4.4 pet.
Would you support a national
health insurance program
which provides income tax
credits lor the cost of pur·
chasing private health insurance?-S7.1 pet., 33.0 pet.,

MARTHA, M LOVE, you
ARa A VERITABLE
FLORENCE NIGHT INGA.lE!

9.9 pet.
.
Do you support federal in·
volvement in the control and
regulation of strip mining? 78.2 pet., 17.0 pet., u pet.
Do you favor the admission of
Red China to the U.N.? - 52.0
pet., 41.0 pet., 7.0 pet.
Do you support the Ad·

BLOOD DAY
Tuesday will be Blood·
mobile Day In Meigs County.
The unit will he at the
Pomeroy Elementary School
frGm 1 to 8 P• m.
Vernon Nease, blood
program chairman, II urging
all residenla to support the
blood program.

31 Die in Vietnamese Plane

NEED PICKINGUP, ALL. RIGI-IT!

•

SAIGON - MIUTARY SPOKESMEN SAID today that a
South Vietnamese air force Cl7 passenger plane crashed Sunday
after rurining into bad weather three miles below the town of Qui
Nhon. All31 persons aboard the craft were ldlled. None of them
was believed American. Intensive relief operations were being
conducted by U. S. troops and South Vietnamese government
forces in the wake of Typhoon Hester. Casualty reports said at
least 64 persons, including three Americans, were kiled in the
storm-devastated areas. On the battle fronts, fighting was
reported light throughout South Vietnam.

Shootings Continue in Belfast

by Crooks &amp; Lawrence ·

VV~'Vf:

Bf:f:N SA~f:S.-n:smJG IT IN

KE.I' CITIE:S-WITH TERRIFIC SVCCE?G!

NEXT MOIIlTH OUR C0SMETIC7 •. JHU:7 5CORING
DIV I ?IO~

LAUN CHI07 IT

~ #lfTIONWIPE...

A ClEAN MARKEf
SCOOP OVE:R OUR.
ARCH RIVAL.,

COUNTESS.

6ELLA80NI!

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~ THE' FIFTH AVE:f-JUE 5Al.ON OF THAi L.!:'Gt:IJDAR'r' . BEAI:JT'i G.UEEN ,..

THE COUNTE:?:; Hf:J&lt;:?E:~Fl
7CUlPTE:O AT THS' HE:IGHI
OF Ht:~ Be:AUTY!,..I?NT
SHE' DIVINE~
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BELFAST, NORTIIERN IRELAND ~ BRITISH Army
spokesmen said two gurunen shot and wounded a British soldier
today during a troop search in the Roman Catholic Andersontown
regioJI of the capital. The victim received a slight arm injury.
Also during the search, a woman was shot and taken to a hospital.
Details of her condition are not known. Earlier, police fired on two
men and a woman suspected of placing a time bomb in a crowded
nightclub. One man was killed, the woman was seriously wounded
ana the other man was arrested. The bomb went off two hours
later, causing heavy damage but inflicting no injuries. Elsewhere
in Belfast, two gurunen shot a policeman in the head and critically
wounded him when he answered a knock on the door of his home.

Police Building Bombed
DETROIT -TilE REAR SECTION 0~' THE Detroit Police
Officers Association building on the city's North Side was
damaged by a bomb early today. Authorities ssid the building
was unoccupied at the time of the explosion, and no one in the area
was reported hurt.
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10,000 Marchers Expected

'
?OMEWHEFtf: 11\1 THIS TEEMING CITY
IS A WOMAN WHO WI!..J.. HE:L.P U? '!JMEAK
. "McKf:f:';&gt; AJ5~LIRP BATH MUCK!
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IN fACl; I
THIN!&lt;: rve JU~r .
FOLJI\ID Hf:R .. .ON

A GARBAGE

6COWt

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! News •.• in Briefs ! Units Busy
By Unilrd Press International

CAPTAIN EASY

ministration 's general revenue
sharing plan in which $5 billion
in federal tax dollars would be
relw'ned to the states and local
governments to use as they see
fit ?- 61.5 pet., 31.0 pet., 7.5 pet.
Do you support a welfare
reform plan of providing a
minimwn income lor every
American family ? - 30.5 pet.,
63.4 pet., 6.1 pet.
Should the federal government provide· more support for
education?- 66.0 pet., 30.1 pet.,
3.9 pet.
Do you support stricter
federal laws to control pollu~lon
even if it may mean higher
prices lor some products?
81.2 pel., 15.9 pet. , 2.9 pet.

E-R, Fire

rx;c.-, OFFIC!!

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

MONDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 135

Groun
11 MU!il HAVE COME ADR IFI
IN P... D15H OF E!OUILli\~A16E ...

Cloudy this morning followed
by clearing in the west this
afternoon and eastern sections
tonight. Little temperature
change today and a little cooler
tonight. Highs today in the
uppers 60s.

Devoted To The ' Interests Of The Meigs-Ma.,on Area

TJ.IERE WA~N
ANYONE IN
· JT;n

A LOOGE "TOOTH 1
1 l-\,.,._VEN'I HE!&gt;,RD

Weather

at

e

TOO. GOOP'. 'T

OUR, BOARDING HOUSE

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Now You Know

u .S. Census of Manufacturers (1963, 1967). Birth and death rateH
are taken from data pUblished by the Ohio Division of Vital
Statistics; labor force Md employment data was supplied by the
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services. Finally, an important
source of basic information on Ohio ~nd the counties was l.he
Statistical Abstract .of Ohio (1969), published by the Ohio
Development Department.
POPULATION
NUMBERS AND TRENDS
The population of Meigs County has been declining almost
steadily since the late 19th Century, and it suffered its biggest
percentage loss during the last 10 years ( 1960 to 1970). The result
is that the current population of 19,799 is the lowest for Meigs
County since before the Civil War. The Population decrease is
probably the result of a significant ouimigration of people seeking
a better standard of living, a new job, or greater opportWJity for
(Continued on Page 2)

take m the future are to be discussed. Population characteristics
will include : the size and composition of _the county, its townships,
and villages; changes in population and migration; age groups
and family size. Economic areas of study will include: the various
sectors making up Meigs CoWJly's economy; and labor force,
employment, and earnings. Several combined socio-economic
indicators will be evaluated; these are county ed1·otion level,
family income, per capita personal income, and local tax base .
Finally, general future trends and possibilities for Meigs County's
economy and population will be examined.
· Much of the data presented in the study was gathered from
the U.S. Census of Population for 1950 and 1960. A limited number
of population stati~tics was also available from the 1970 Census.
The section of the report on mining is basically drawn from annual reports by the Ohio Division of Mines. Other information on
economic sectors came from the U. S. Census of Agriculture
(1954, 1959, 1964), the U.S. Census of Business (1963, 1967) , and the

The Meigs County Regional Planning Commission, working Study" was presented to the planning commisr'on at its October
with its consultant, Pat Meeker, of Surveys Unlimited, Inc., is meeting . Following this, the commission is using every means
engaged in developing a comprehen&amp;ve plan for Meigs County. possible to inform people of what the plan contains. Suggestions
What is a comprehensive plan? It is a study of what .has and comments are sought,
Following is the first part of the preliminary draft of the
happened before, is happening now , and is likely to happen in the
sttldy.
Extensive fables extraCted from official sources will not
future to people. The people - by whatever determines peoples'
fates - are grouped by politiCal subdivision, economic in- he reproduced, opt are adeq\IBtely summarized in the material
today and in the .series to follow .
terdependence, city, town, or village. Even the nation could E. F. R.oblnson, Pomeroy businessman and former mayor
and certainly should -have a comprehensive plan.
and
president of council of Pomeroy, is Planning Commission
A study having been completed, the best trained brains
available are picked to !l'oduce an educated guess about what a ·Chairman. Suggestions should be din:cted to him at town hall,
Pomeroy, by mail. The study:
group of people should do to become what they want to he.
The Commission and the consultant is urging everyone in the
SOCIO..ECONOMIC STUDY
county to participate in seeing that the plan to be made for Meigs
The purpose of this background study of Meigs County is to
County is the best possible guideline for the development of the
describe
the past trends and current condition of the county's
county during the next period of years.
The preliminary draft of the study, called a "Socio-Economic population and economy. In addition, directions the county might

WASHINGTON- TEN THOUSAND PERSONS are expected
to begin today a two-day demonstration designed to oust
President Nixon from office. The planned highlight of the "Evict
Nixon" drive will be a transailantic phone call from Or. Benjamin
Spack to Nguyen Minh Vy of the North Vietnamese delegation to
the Paris Peace talks. Some two thousand troops have been
placed on alert in preparation for the demonstrations.

Kosygin Well Protected

Tlu:ee calls were answered by
the Middleport E-R Unit or Fire
Dept. Sunday. At 1 a. m. tilt
squad went to 760 Laurel St. for
Nancy Pope who had injured
her leg. She was taken to the
Holzer Medical Center.
At 6:12p. m. the fire depart·
ment was called to 1275 Vine St.
where a small fire had
developed at the trailer home of
Judy Cowen. The fire was out
before firemen arrived.
At 8:33 p, m. Sunday the
squad went to the Robert
.Musser home in l.\utland from
where a maternity patient,
Kathryn Ferrell, was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Driver Cited
Harry A. Davis, 48, Rt. 1,
Coolville, was cited to .Meigs
County Court for failure to stop
within the assured clear
distance following a rear end
accident at 11:53 a. m. Sunday
on Rt. 124, two and five-tenths
miles south of Rt. 248.
According to the Gall\a-Meigs
State Highway Patrol, Davis'
car struck the rear of an auto
operated by Virgil E. Westfall,
26, Rt. 1, Long Bottom. Westfall
sustained minor injuries but
was not immediately treated.
_There was moderate damage to
both cars.

SHERRY KING, MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL Homecoming Queen and Head Majorette, leads
the Marching Band up Old Rt. 35 making their grand entrance to the recent Bob Evans .Farm
Festival near Rio Grande College. An estimated 8,000.10,000 persons attended.

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2nd MIXED UP DAY
By United Press International
Tbe second of the two most
confusing day~ of tbe year
occurs tbhi Sunday - the day
all · clocks must be turned
back one hour.
At 2 a. m. Sunday, Eastern
Daylight Savings· Time wlll
end and Eastern Standard
Time will return. All clocks at
thai hour must be turned
back to read 1 a. m.
Clocks will remain on
standard lime untO 'April 30,
197Z, w.hen the switch to
daylight lime wlll occur once
again.
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TO REI;'AIR: OR NOT?
public is invited to an
open meeting at the Letart Falls
Community Hall at 7:30 jl. m.
Wednesday for a discussion on
whether to repair the hall. Ml
interested persons are asked to
attend .
Th~

2 Men Charged
Breaking and entering during
the night season charges were
filed Saturday night against
Larry A. Murray, 20, and
Harold E. Williams, 29, Rt. I,
Ewington, arrested in con·
nection with the theft of 10 guns
and ammunition from Stewart's
Hardware in Vinton. They are
scheduled for court ap·
pearances Wednesday before
Municipal Judge Robert S.
Betz.
SCOUTERS TO MEET
There will be a meeting at the
United Methodist Church at 7:30
p. rri. Tuesday for anyone in·
terested in Girl Scouting in the
Tuppers Plains area . The
meeting will be conducted by
Donna Ohlinger, Neighborhood
Chairman, Pomeroy, assisted
by Mary Hunter of Chester. All
interested persons are urged to
attend.

The pair was arrested by
Deputy Sheriff James Crace,
who, with Deputy Irvin Crab·
tree, continued investigation of
.the burglary throughout
Saturday.
M
h db
th b'
f
urray a een e 0 Jed 0
a four-county manhunt smce
bemg seen about 1:30 a. m.

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alerted by residents living in the
vicinity of the store.
Deputy Crabtree spotted
Murray's tan station wagon
Saturday while on patrdl 'in the
Alice area, at Williams' trailer
home where both men were
taken into Custody without
resistance.
Also confiscated were be·
tween $100 an d $200, wor th of
groceries, cigarettes and
miscellaneous items believed
taken in
burglary Friday
night of Folden's Store near
Wellston.

Instead, police said, the man
shot Blanche dead.
Authorities said Sunday that
Buchler, a slight man with gray
hair and horn-rimmed glasses,
hatched ,the scheme when his
arguments with Blanche over
where they would live turned
into what he told police was
irritating nagging .
Buchler had becomdriendly
with a customer of the tropical
fish store, and offered the man
$300 or $400-whatever he could
raise-to frighten Mrs. Buchler
into moving.
. The idea was to.rwe the man ,
Mark Truesdale, 21, surprise
Mrs. Buchler while she walked

her dog and lire several shots
into the air.
· Blanche Buchler was shot and
killed Wednesday night on the
doorstep ' of the home she
wouldn 't leave.
Buchler unraveled the mys·
tery to police Saturday. Up to
then detectlyes had spent two
fruitless days ti:ying to solve the
apparently senseless murder .
Buchler told police how he
and his wife went out that
Wednesday night to order a
cake for their daughter Linda .
who celebrated her sixth
bi1·thday Saturday.
When they got home, he sa id,

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio
(UPI) - A special Veterans
Day session of Munlclpal
court was scbeduled .loday to
accommodate arralgwoent
of 59 persons arrested during
the weekend in a series of
drug raids In and near here,
police said.

Grid Dinner
Plans Made

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Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS _
. .
Charles Prunty, Galh.pohs;
James Hall, J~. , Vmton ;
Gertrude Drake, Vmton ; Elmer
Norvell, Portland; Anna Hart,
Pomeroy; Lawrence Green,
Albany; Betsy Barnhart,
Rutland; Perry Frank Hoff.
the telephone rang and his wife man, Middleport ; Ruth Adams,
answered. She did not know it, Pomeroy.
but it was the man who was to
shoot her minutes later, police
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
said . She handed the telephone - Mary Husell ,. Michael
to her husband, who told police Haning, Michal!! Caton, Carrie
later it was Truesdale calling. Neal, Pearl Ash, Glenn Baker,
"Tonight's the night," Trues- Buy Morris, Jeanette Duffy.
dale said, according to Buch·
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS ler's statement to police.
Dalla Parker, Albany; Joan
Mrs. Buchler went out to walk Kirkham , Middleport; Vi~la
her dog. The next time Buchler Edwards, Pomeroy; J1m
saw he r she lay dead on the Wickersham , Racme.
doorslep.
Using Buchler's statement, SUNDAY DISCHARGES _
police arrested Truesdale Sun· Charles Prunty, Madeline
day . Both men were arrested Painter Teresa Carroll Roy
RuliSell: Edna Hill.
'
and charges with murder.

a

Scare Shots Turned to Murder

PHILADELPHIA. (UPI) TORONTO - AN ARMY OF POLICE will protect Soviet
Premier Alexei N. Kosygin when he tours the Toronto area today. Blanche Buchler wanted to stay
Security was Increased In the wake of threats against the Russian in her $30,000 ranch home and
leader's life. Police nabbed guns and ammunition in the. biggest • refurbish it with.new fu,rniture,
·
raids in recent Toronto history before Kosy~tn·~ arrival Sunday. ap~li11nces, carpet~.
Joseph . B~tchler : 55, her
Doctors ·BuUding-Care Facility
husband \yho makes '168-a·
'
COLUMBUS - SIXTEEN LOCAL physicians today an- week sellin~, tropical fish ,
nounced plans to construct and jointly own and operate a $2.1 wanted to move to a clleaper
million extended care medical facility on the city's near west neighborhood, a cheaper
side. Dr. Richard Slager, spokesman for the group, said con- · apartment:
struction has already started 011 the facility, to be called the St.
He dec!ided, police said, to
Luke Convalescent Center, a three-&lt;itory, 120-bed structore hir~ a man to frighten hiS wife
located near MI. Carmel Hospital.
by firing a gun at her. This, he
Slager, an orthopaedic surgeon and president of the center, believed, would make her think
said he and other physicians were concerned oVer the shortage of their neighborhood was unsafe,
beds and health care facilities on the city's west side and rapidly and slie would gladly move to
less posh accommodations.
increasing costs of medical care.

NEW PHILADELPHIA, Ohio (UPI) - With State Highway
Patrolmen on the ground and in the air over eastern Ohio to
!X'Ovide "aerial surveillance," strip mines planned to reopen
today despite threats by striking miners to shut them down.
At least 12 non-union mining companies decided to resume
operations and they received assurances from Gov. John J .
Gilligan that he would do "everything in our power to maintain
or der .... "
Gilligan said Patrol aitcraft would be in the area of the mines
today and Patrol cruisers would increase "surveillance activities
along state highways, particularly at border crossings with
neighboring states."
II necessary, the governor lin; Wallick Coal Co. of Strassaid, aircraft of the Ohio Na· burg, Puskarish Mining Inc. of
tiona! Guard would be called Sherrodsville, Wilmot Mining
into action.
Co. of Mt. Eaton and Sugar·
State authorities were asked creek Cartage Co.
for help after at least on two
Sheriff Seeks Help
occasions "caravans" of cars Gilligan met in his office in
.allQ trucl:s &lt;llli!Tyilng hundreds of Colwnbus Saturday with Allor·
armed miners took to the roads ney General William Brown, U.
·to scare mine operators into S. Attorney William Milligan,
shutting down until the United state Highway Patrol SuperinMine Workers Union strike with mtendent Col. Robert Chiara·
the ·soft coal industry is over. monte, Adj . Gen. Dana Stewart
VIolations "Clear"
and their aides to discuss the
The worst of the incidents crisis in the mines. Gilligan's
took place Oct. 16 when a mine pledge for help stemmed from
was burned down.
that meeting.
After a meeting with high Tuscarawas County Sheriff A.
state officials Saturday, Gilligan J. Young had asked the state to
said "it is clear that local, intervene Friday night, declar·
state and federal laws have ing a "state of emergency" ex·
isted with ·the decision by the
been violated."
"We are detennined to insure mines to reopen.
that these
laws are enforced In related developments, a
··''
and that violence and vandal· Carroll County grand jury has
ism simply will not be tolerat· been convened to investigate
violence in that coWJty. The
ed," the governor said.
Most of the mines which James Brothers Co. mine in
planned to operate today after that coWJty w&amp;s burned dozn by
being shut down were in Tus· roving gangs of miners on Oct.
carawas County.
16.
The reopened mines were to Sen. Robert Taft Jr., who
include Eberhart Coal Inc. and asked for a federal grand jury
Kimble Coal Co., both of IJo. investigation of the violence lasf
ver ; Zoar Mining Co. and A1ex- week in a Senate speech, has
ander Bros. Mining Co., both of called Gilligan's response "both
Mineral City; Tobo Mining Co. feeble and tardy."
of New Philadelphia; Rucker Taft said he believes the govBros., Inc., Emp1re
· Coa1 Co . ernilr should have called the
and Wolfe Coal, all of Gnaden· National Guard into the mine
hutten· Hardy Coal Co. of Ber· areas.
'

Plans for the annual Southern
High School Football Banquet
were made at the regular
meeting of the Southern
Athletic Boosters recently. The
banquet will be Saturday, NoV'.
13 lor jUnior and senior football
members and the cheerleaders.
A dance will fo~o':" the dinner
with free admission to the
senior team members and
cheerleaders. Also discussed
was the alwnni game between
Southern and Eastern.
The Boosters meet each
Monday at 7'30
t th h' h
school
· p. m. a e lg
·

PRACTICE SET
Teen Pony Chorus lines of the
Big Bend Minstrel Assn.'s Fall
Follles will meet at 6:30 p. m.
today and Wednesday at the
Pomeroy Elementary School.
Vocalists for the show to be
staged Nov. 13 at the Meigs
High School under sponsorship
of the Meigs Athlellc Boosters
wlllmeetlrom6:30to8:30p ,m.
Tuesday in the vocal mU!lic
room of the Pomeroy
Elementary Building.

..
'

'.

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