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10 - The Daily Sentine l, Middlepor t-Pomeroy , 0. , Friday, Sept . 26, 1975

Plot claimed to kill
Ford, Sen. Kennedy
By J. PAUL WYATT
JACKSONVILLE . F la.
i UP! ) - A federal judge has
ordered psychia tric tests for
unemployed ~a s stal10 n atte nd ant
John
Clayto n
Massey. charged by the FBI
wilh
conspiri ng
to
assassinate President Ford
and Sen. F.dward Kenned y.
Assistant U.S. Attv . Hobert
Yerkes sf:l id 'IlJUrsdav U.S .

District Judge Charies H.
Scott probably would ho ld a
competency hearing within a
week of the te sts.
Th e FBI said Massey called

,---0-~;:-l~~~resl ~~---~
Grealer For You

5.75%
On 90-Day
Certificates
5.75 per cent paid o n

90 day Certificate s of
'Deposit.
$1,000 .00
Minimum .
Inter es t
Payabl e Quarter! y .
A subst.:mt1al pe na lty is
invo ke d on all c ert1fl cate
a ccounts wi thdrawn prior
to the date o l maturity

Meigs Co. Branch

The Ath en &lt;o County
Savinq s &amp; Loan Co
296 Se co nd St .
Pom eroy , Ohto

-

~ ... . .

FBI Special &lt;\gent Hobert H.
Anderson in Ocala , F'la .,
Wednesday · morning and offer ed to g ive him information
a bout an alleged double

assassination plot.
He told Anderson he was

recruited last June at the gas
station where he \\'ork ed by a
man in a white Cadillac with
Texas li cense plat es who
as ked him if he wa nted to
make "a large a mount of
money ," lhe cvmplaint sa id .
1\ ceordtn g to the FBI,

so m ewhere on the West
Coast, possibly California .
Asked wh ether the FBI was
takin g
Ma ssey 's
story
seriously, Arthur Nehrbass,
special agent in charge of the ·
FBi's Jacksonville office ,
said , " When a man says there
is a conspiracy (to kill the
president), tha t is probable
cause to arrest him. "
" It will be up to the courts
to decide the truth or falsi ty
of the charges," he added.

Massey said he was tol d to

qui t his job, move back to
Roysto n , Ga., with his
moth er , ar rang e for a
separation from his wife and
awa it further in.st ru ct ions, a ll
of whi ch he cla imed he did.
Then Ma ssey purportedly
to ld th e FBI he was contacted
by another man ca lled "Bud "
anrl trained to use .303-caliber
Brit ish Enfield · rifles, hand
gr ena des and rocket laun cher s at va rious training sites
in South Carolina an d
(; eorgia .
The FBi sa id Ma ssey told
them he trained with four
other men known to him as
"A, " " B," "C ' ' and '' D."
Massey was told by " B,"
who asked Massey to call him
·'Joe," that the pW"pose of
their training was to prepare
for the C~ssass ina tion s of Ford
and Kennedy " by either
born bin g an area wh ere
President
Ford
was
s peaking, bombing the
Kennedy
compound at
Hyannisport, Mass ., or using
hand g r enades or rocket
launchers."
"Joe" also to ld Massey, the
FBI said, that a similar group
of four or five men was being
trained for the same purpose

lrvin family
to feature series
The Wayne Irvin fam ily of
Chillicothe will be featured in
a se ries of meetings to begin
this evening and continue
through Oct. 5 at 7:30 each
eveni ng at the Whit;, Chapel
Church, near Coolville.
The Rev . Mr . Irvin , an
ordained e ld er in t he
Wesleyan Church, will be
preaching and conducting the
music for each service. The
Irvin family will provide
special si nging through solos ,
duets, and trios . The piano,
accordion, clarinet, rhythm
g uitar, steel g uitar and
electric bass will be used to
en hance
the
musical
program . The Rev. Roy E.
Deet;,r, host pastor, invites
the public.

BOY HURT
Thursday at 6:40 p.m . the
Racine ER squad was called
to Bill Jewell's residence for
four -year-{)ld Chris Jewell
Racine, who had a laceratio~
in his forehead. He was· taken
to Holzer Medical Center .

Brilliant Chromacolor picture tube
100% solid-state chassis
Patented Power Sentry voltage
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Chromatic one-button tuning

r-------------------------- ,
!
Area Deaths l
GEORGE ANGELETTI ·

An addltional 25 names for
possible grand jury duty this
Sept;,mber term were drawn
today in the · office of Meigs
County Clerk of Court.s with
Common Pleas Judge John C.
Bacon presiding .
Names drawn were Donald
Metheny, Rt. I, Ewington;
Neal Jeffers, Rt. I, Dexter;
Joseph E. Carsey, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy; Fran ces M. Smart,
Middleport ; Lawrence M.
Stewart, Middleport; Jessie
Ferrell, Rt. 4, Pomeroy; Paul
Amberger, Syracuse; Linda
Ward, Portland; Mildred
Grate , Rutland ; Crestlyn
Hill, Racine ; Andrew Myers,
Langsville; Bernard Diddle,
Racine; Richard Chambers,
Middleport;
Betty Lou
Gilkey, Middleport ; Jane
Walton, Pomeroy ; Marjorie
Newlun, Long Bottom;
Florence Wyers, Reedsville;
William Wilford, Middleport ;
Charles Hamilton, Racine;
Gene Vance, Rt. 1 Middleport; Ruth Holman,
Syracuse; Wilson Carpent;,r,
Pomeroy; Peggy L. Wolfe,
Racine; Bertha M. Sargent,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy; Mike Grate,
Rutland,
and
Richard
Rosenbawn, Pomeroy .

The TITIAN • F4088
Mediterranean styled console . Decorative
end panels, simulated drawers, lul l base
with concealed casters. Dark linist1ed Oak
color (F406BOE) or Pecan color (F4088P).

Early
American
The AUDUBON

F4086M
This Ea rly Ameri can
styl ed cons ole
imparts t he w a rm th of
colonial times.
Dec orat ive e nd
pane ls, tr aditional
bracket loot des1gn
and con cea led

(Technicolorl
Robert Redford
Bo Suenson

Show Starts at 7: 00p .m

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Reta
ADMITTED
Roush, Pomeroy; Orland
Floyd , Pomeroy; William
Reilmire, Pomer oy; Billy
Lee Wallace , Pomeroy ;r
Bar; bara LJonovan , Syracuse;
Mary Gallagher, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Alberta
Linthicum, Fred Kinsc h,
Helen Kuhn, Tamara Theiss,
Judy Holter.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Patrick
Devrick, Point Pleasant;
Sharon Hanning, Gallipolis
Ferry; Robin Wills, Mason ;
Bessie
Stureon ,
Point
Pleasant; Bonnie Wayan,
Southside; Mrs. Gene Long,
Gallipolis ; Mrs . Warren
Weaver,
New
Haven ;
Margaret Gans, Pomeroy;
Er!c Myers, Gallipolis Ferry;
Cecil Hill , Point Pleasant,
and Mrs. Willie Lee Cook,
Pomeroy.

TITAN 101 CHASSIS
Over 90% Solid State
MEDITERRANEAN STYLED FULL
BASE CONSOLE WITH CASTERS

The Middleport E-R squad
was called at 8:51 a.m.
Friday for Alex Fraser,
Middleport, who was ill on the
sidewalk near the Citizens
National Bank. He was taken
to
Veterans
Memorial

AUTOS DAMAGED
Extensive damages were
reported to three cars in an
accident on West Second St.
Thursday morning. Pomeroy
police said a car driven by
J~eph Frizell, Johnstown,
Oh1o, struck a parked car
owned by Charles Williamson, Rutland, which was
shoved by the impact into the
rear of a second parked car
owned by Robert Jones,
Shade. There were no injuries, and no charges were
filed.

Remember
cash?

Cabinet i n dark finis hed Oak co l or
(E4719D E) or Peca n co lor (E47 19P), with
the look of fine distress in g. Fro nt, ends
and 'base in durab le, ri ch ly- grained simulated
i

Cash _The old-fa shi oned way to shop
Nowadays rt's smart to have a Checking Accou nt.
S1mply buy wha t you wa nt . Wh en you want it.
By check. It's the sim ple. sensibl e . safe way to shop

Of These Popular Styles

$52800

.. _, inet is fmi shed in gra'ih9d Map le colo r.

I '

GAS SERVICE

Gas is kept
at home says
Californian
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Rep. John E . Moss, D.Calif.,
contended Thursday the
biggest reason for the severe
natural gas shortage is that
companies are withholding
gas from interstate sale while
waiting for higher prices.
"The current shortage of
natural gas is not, as some
contend, the inevitable result
of federal regulation," Moss
told the House subconunitt;,e
on Energy and Power.
"It is rather lhe result of
two factors: the failure of
Congress to extend price
regulation to the intrastate
market and, more importantly, the result of indu.stry
specula !ion concerning
future increases in lhe price
of natural gas," he said. Moss
said an investigation by a
subcommittee he heads
turned
up
substantiai
evidence of Hspeculative
withholding" of natural gas.
Prices in interstate sales
are limited by the Federal
Power Commission to 52
cent.s per thousand cubic feet.
Prices of gas sold intrastate
- that is, wilhin the same
state as production - are
free of controls and often are
two to three times the level of
controlled prices.
"As a result of the growing
gap between intrastate prices
":"d the FPC regulated price,
smce 1971 almost all new gas
supplies produced onshore

pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

GALLIPOLIS·POINT PLEASANT

NO. 35

VOL 10

Plummer, executive director, 648 Board, look on as Carter &amp;
Evans Contractors begin clearing off site for tri-&lt;:ounty's new
$1,145,000 mental health center .
, .

MALCOLM OREBAUGH, center administrator, Gallio,
JackS&lt;?n, Meigs Community Health Center, Inc., and Maxine
I

F&lt;1milies

PRICE 25 CENTS

MIDDLEPORTPOMEROY

Th e center will be constructed four
miles northwest of Gallipolis, off Rt. 160,
adjacent to Holzer Medical Center.
Malcolm Orebaugh, center administrator , said Carter &amp; Evans Contractors began clearing the site early
Friday morning . Six hu@: e earth-moving
machines are clearing off approximately
six and one-half acres for the new structure on the east side of Chickamauga
Creek .
Later, two and one-half acres will be
cleared to make way for a park and
recreation area on the other side of the
creek, bi,hind the Southeastern Ohio
Emergency
Service headquarters
building .
Orebaugh said the sit;, should be
cleared within approximately 30 days. If

Coalcon clean burning project said still full go
NEW YORK (UP!) - A spokesman rescheduled only because several memfor the firm that is building an ex- bers could not make it," the spokesman
perimental $237.2 million eoal conversion said. "There definitely is no delay of any
plant on government contract e m~ sort."
Coalcon was established by Union
phatically denied Friday a report the
Carbide Corp. and the Chemical Conproject had been delayed.
The spokesman for Coalcon, the firm struction Co. ( CHEMICO) under the first
set up to design, build and operate the major contract let by the Federal Energy
plant to convert "dirty ·burning" soft coal Research and Development Adto " clean burning" liquid fuel and pipeline ministration (ERDA). Financing of the
gas said the report, not by UPI, apparently plant's construction and operation is to be
sterruned from a postponement of a shared with the federal government on a
meeting scheduled in New York Thursday. 5().50 basis by a consortium of major
"The meeting was of the Coalcon ·private companies in such fields as coal
Consortium Execut ive Committee and was and oil which was established for that

been-

the weather holds up and Jhe clearing
project is completed, the lri-eo unty .
organization will be able to accept bids on
the new structure near the end of October.
If all goes well, the new structure
should be ready for operation by midswnmer in 1976.
Gallia County will pay only five per
cent ( $70,000$ of the total cost of the new
center. Five per cent will be paid by the
state.
Orebaugh said the project is being
supervised jointly by the Gallia-JacksonMeigs 648 Board, Gallia County Commissioners, Community Mental ·Wealth
Cent;,r, State of Ohio and the regional
division of Health, Education and Welfare
out of Chicago .
" When completed, the facility will
proyide Ute most comprehensive mental
health treatment programs in southern
Ohio," Orebaugh said.
The administrator also said the new
center will make available 10 inpatient
psychiatric beds to resident.s of th e three
counties .
When complet;,d, the structure will
belong to Gallla County. All operations of
the eent;,r will be paid for out of the
operating budget.s of the Community
Mental Health Center and 648 Board, with
none of the operating costs coming out of
the county's general operating funds.
Orebaugh said the 648 Board has a
grant pending for $700,000 to staff the new
facility and that it is anticipated next
swnmer with new federal legislation .

operati on in 1983 with an output equivalent
purpose.
Six states - Ohio, Pennsylvania , West to that of a small oil refinery. It is the ftrst
Virginia , Kentucky , Indiana and Illinois of it.s kind.
ar~ competing to be selected for location of
Several sites in Ohio and West Virginia
me plant. Each has sent large delegations have been urged upon the selection
to New York to make lengthy and detailed committee. One is in Mason County , W.
presentations of proposed home state Va. ; the other near Haverhill in Lawrence
sites.
County.
Coalcon has said the site selection will
be made by the end of the year .
"Site selection is moving right along,"
the Coalcon spokesman said today . " There
MIDDLEPORT - Mayor Fred Hoff- would be financed by an increase of sevenis absolutely no delay."
The plant is to begin operation on a man said Saturday Gov . Rhodes' office, tenths of one cent on all sales.
For street.s and highways , $33,830
"demonstration" in 1982 and be in full has told him Middleport would receive
would
be available through Issue No. 3,
$312,230 from Issues 3 and 5 on the
financed
through an increase of nineNovember ballot.
For mWlicipal improvements through tenths of a cent per gallon tax on gasoline.
Both of these issues would be one-time
Issue No. 5, the village would be eligible to
deals
to put money immediately into the.
receive $278,400. This would be available
from the s tate for village lmprovement.s economy and provide jobs for the unemwhich were first approved by the Slate and ployed, Hoffman was informed .

Money promised on Issues 3, 5

Favennan appointed dean of new school
ATHENS, Ohio ( UPI ) - Gerald A.
Faverman , an assistant dean of the
Michi gan Stale University College of
Osteopathic Medicine has been named
acting dean of Ohio's new Osteopathic
College being established at Oh1o
University, it was announced Friday.
Favertnan will assume his new duties

Nov . 1 to direct planning and implementation for the new college which is
scheduled to open in the fail of 1976. He
joined the school ot Michigan State in 1971
when after two years as a pr ivate institution it became part of the state
university .

JOHN K. ALLEN

Allen will
•
retire
soon
GALLIPOLIS - John K. All en,
manager of the River Division, Colwnbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co., announced
Saturday he will retire Oct. 1, completing
nearly H years service with the electric
firm .
Allen's retirement will fall on the
exact date he came to Gallipolis from
Waverly 20 years ago.
Allen began his long career with
Colwnbu.s and Southern Ohio Electric on
Jan. 1, 1932, in his hometown of Oak Hill .
He transferred to Waverly on June 1, 1954
as an administrative assistant during the
construction of the atomic plant in that
community.
Allen then transferred to Gallipolis on
Oct. 1, 1955, succeeding Robert (Bob)
Rannells as division manager _ The
Gallipolis, Pomeroy and Middleport
division was combined into the River
Division about three years ago.
When Allen started in the Jackson
division, Colwnbus and Southern Ohio had
1,217 customers. Today, more than 12,000
are served by the firm in that division .
"That gives you an idea of our growth
down through the years," Allen remarked .
Allen said res idential requests have
slacked off in recent months, " but there is
and will be a good demand for electricity
in the future, especially in the commercial
field as the area continues to grow and
develop ."
Allen has been active in many com~
mtmity affairs during the past two
decades. He is a member of the Gollipolis
I ConU nued on page 4)

Building conversion underway

•

Sale *6.00
·'
RANDALL SIMPSON, GALUPOLIS, ADULT MINING
·Education instructor in the Meigs Local School District, is
pictured with a large. overhead crane, u ~ for the ·
disassembli1c; .and repatr of muung eqwpment which has

J
\

•

Tl11m 12,000

.

WESTERN STYLl JACKETS

•

fle11ching Mure

Center.

Men's Department on the 1st Floor

the bank of
the century
established 1872

A member of the Holzer Medical
Center Staff since 1952 when he came to
Gallipolis from Ohio State University
Hospital in Colwnbu.s, Dr. Morgan holds
his A,B. Degree from Washington and
Jefferson College and his medical degree
from Harvard Medi cal School. He
presently serves as an Assistant Clinical
Professor of Surgery at the Ohio State
University College of Medicine .
In addition to his many roles in the
1Con tinued on page 4)

Your l11viteli Guest

GALLIPOUS - Ground was broken
Friday for the new $1,145,000 GalliaJackson-Meigs Community Mental Health

conswned In lhe
producing state," Moss said.
Industry spokesmen including several who also
testified before the energy
subcommittee -agreed with
that, but contended the
solution is to free prices on
interstate sales. The incentive of higher prices, they
said, will bring new exploration and production of
gas.

limited quantity.

the more than 4,&gt;00 physicians who have
involved themselves :,.. this effort to improve standards of care for the emergency
patient.
The invitation extended to Dr . Morgan
to be an advisor to this group recognizes
his interest and expertise in the field of
Trauma and Emergency Medical Service .
He will attend the ACEP meeting in Las
Vegas on his way to the American College
of Surgeons Clinical Congress in San
lo"'rancisco.

Health Center
ground broken

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Broken sizes .38 to 46 -

..

Roher Center surgeon is
elected Active Fellow by ·
nation's Trauma Assn.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1975

.Regular price $10.95 and $11.98- Sizes 30 to 40 - .but not every size
1n every style. Whey they last.
·

pomeroy
natlona
bank

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

Devoted To The Gre&lt;1ter M idllle Uhiln Valley

$1,805 level

hav~

from Cu iorado, Missouri and california .
Dr . Morgan hos additionally been
honored by his selection as an Advisor to
the Ameri can College of Emergency
Physicians to serve as a member of the
Cer tification Task Force . ln,this capacily
he will represent the Committ;,e on
Trawna of the American College of
Sur geons where he also serves as Chair~
man of the Subcommltt;,e on Emergency
Medical Services - Hospital.
The American College of Emergency
Physicians, founded in 1968, was a
response by a group of physicians to the
growing public c lamor for better
emergency care and has grown rapidly .
ACEP is both servant and spokesrnan for

........

tmts

Sun ny Sunday . Highs in the
60s. Fair Sunday night. Lows
in the upper 30s and 40s.
Sunny east and partly cloudy
west Monday. Highs in the 60s
and low 70s.

Fund reaches
A public fund drive for
Lonnie LeMaster, who observed his seventh birthday
on Sept. 23, has reached
$1 ,805.28.
Lonnie underwent brain
surgery in July at St. Joseph
Hospital in Parkersburg, W.
Va., and only recently was
returned to his home, Route
2, Pomeroy. A birlhday party
in his honor will be held
Saturday at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall.
Latest contributors to the
fund include Mrs. Chloe Fick,'
Pomeroy; Mrs. Isabelle
Powell, Middleport; Senior
Unit of Ladies Auxiliary
·Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion; Delores
Will, near Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. John E. Blake, Route 2,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Lisle, Syracuse;
Steve Robson, Gallipolis;
Rock Springs Better Health
Club, Minersville United
Melhodist Women and an
anonymou.s contribution from
Portland.

. ...

.

+

years has been a successful
evangelist and pastor. At
present, she is pastorlng the
Santoy Holiness Chapel with ·
outstanding result.s. The Rev.
Jago is a dynamic speaker.
Her t;,enage choir of 20 will
sing at the Saturday night
service at 7: 30.
On Sunday afternoon at 2
there wlll be a final service of
praise and worship with local
talent singing. The public is
welcome.

Chester, Ohio
I

Weather

Sale '5.00
Mens $18.95 and $13.95

~~,_

TV &amp; APPLIANCE

.

dedic.aled tu adva nl·~ n lc lll of klluwlt'dge .in
the surgery .of trawna ( accidcnlal injury J
and to elevation of standards of care for
the trawna patient.
Dr . Morgan 's election reflects his
participation with the Committee on
Trauma of the American College of
Surgeons where he is also a member of the ·
Board of Gov ernors.
In October , Dr. Morgan will moderate
the Trauma Field Program Panel
discussion on ''Allocating Responsibility in
the Emergency Room " during a General
Session of the 1975 Clinical Congress of the
American College of Surgeons to be held in
Sa n Francisco . Other s ur geons participating on Dr . Morgan 's panel come

of the Nazarene, and for 22

MENS FASHION JEANS

co lonial slyled hardware, an d con toured
bracket fee t with concealed cas ters . Cab-

I·

CASTRO PLANS VISIT
MEXICO CITY (UP!) Pre!Ilier Fidel Castro of Cuba
will make a state visit to
Mexico sometime during the
"first few weeks of 1~76,"
Mexican Ambassador to
Havana Edmundo Flores
said Thursday.

RUTLAND - The speaker
for the Meigs Area Holiness
Assn. Rally this evening at
the Rutland Church of the
Nazarene is a former
resident of Rutland , the Rev.
Dorothy Jago, daughter of
Jushua and Neva Brown
Sowers. She is also a
graduate of Rutland High
School.
After her conversion she
received the call to the
ministry, qualified under the
qualifications of the Church

Television Cabinets

Distinc tive wrap-aroun d gal le ry , tie red
overh ang 1ng top. simulated dr awer wi th

•

CALLED TO FIRE
The Pomeroy Fire Dept.
answered a call to the Landmark Serv; -• Station, E.
Main St. , at.
· a.m . Friday
where wires 011 a car had
caught fire . At 2:05 p.m.
Thursday the E-R squad went
to Nelson's Drug Store where
Nelson l'ickens had fallen . He
was then to Veteran s
Memorial Hospital.

THOMAS W. MORGAN, M.D.

liALLIPOI.lS - Triple honors and
recognition have come to Thomas W.
Morgan, M.D.. Chairman of the Department of Surgery of the Medical Staff of
Holzer Medica l Center and a member •of
the Board of Trustees of the Holzer
Hospital Foundation.
1\t ihe recent 35th annual session 'of the
American Association for the Surge ry of
Trauma in Scottsdale, Ariz., Dr . Morgan 's
election to membership as an Active
Fellow was announced . He is the only
physician from this area to hold such
membership .
The American Assoc ia tion
for . the
.
Surgery of Trauma . founded m 1938, 1s an
international organization of surgeons

Evangelist comes home

Sale! Limited Quantity
'f;t;'

985-3307

Hospital suffering a possible
heart attack .
At 5:22p.m. Thursday, the
Middleport Fire Dept. was
called to South Second Ave.
where a station wagon was
reported on fire. However,
police extinguished the fire
and the call was cancelled. At
10:20 a .m. Thursday, Joseph
Bolin, Page St., was taken to
the Holzer Medical Center by
the Middleport squad. Bolin
was in a car when he became
ill and was taken to the squad
headquarters .

pet. cut in its projected
and federal funds.
According to the Gallla budget but agreed that It will
County Auditor's Office, tbe need all !hat was builgeted.
The board's' budget was
approval was based upon an
increased
to provide for
estimated valuation of $230
expenditures
for new buses,
million .
plant
Mrs . Dorothy Candee, f'aintenanee ,
operations
and
to
update
County Auditor, said under a
formula developed by the curriculwn .
The Budget Commission
State Revised Code, the
Budget Commission could not composed of Mrs. Condee,
place the millage over 14 Gene Wetherholt , Gallia
County Prosecuting Attorney
milla.
The new budget will and Oty M. Stewart, County
provide operational funds for Treasurer, agreed to meet
the entire 1976 school year, again to adjust the rate if
but will not give the district necessary based upon the
any additional funds to pay exact amount of taxes the
off the $341,000 deficit ex- Utility fornmission levies on
pected at the end of the !he Gavin Plant .
current year.
Final budget rates were not
According to the budget set until the end of the three
submitted in July by Gallia hour session .
County School District Clerk, · Attending were Supt.
Mrs . Naomi Beman and Bradbury , Assistant
Count y Superintendent C. Superintendent David C.
Comer Bradbury, receipts Campbell, Mrs. Beman, the
will total $5,205,524. The board's clerk, Dale Rothgeb,
overall budget, according to Jr. , board member and
the Budget Commission, candidate reelection; Bill •
reflected a 120 pet. increase
Bahr, president of the Gallia
over that of 1975.
County Local Teachers'
Ray Simms, tax consultant
Association ; Ray Simms, tax
for the Ohio Valley Electric consultant for OVEC and
Company, first asked the
James Blevins, school board
board to take at least a five
candidate.

Fine Zenith

EARLY AMERICAN STYLED
CONSOLE WITH BRACKET FEET
AND CASTERS

RIDENOUR

Holzer Medical Center
1Discharges, Sept. 25)
Raymond Baker, Kimberly
Boster, Wymond Bradbury,
Rosalie Bush, Minnie Clark,
Mrs. Hubert Cottrill and
daughter, Neva Denney ,
Mary Dixon, Bessie Fell,
Opal Ferrell, Mrs. William
Foster and daughl;,r , Dena
Griffin, Bonnie Halley,
Robert Hoff, Roy Howell,
Herman Johnson, Verona
Jones, Mrs. Charles Klein
and daughter, Mary Markel,
John McGinniss, Gladys
Miller,
Lisa
Pethtel,
Elizabeth Plants, Ethel
Price, Mrs . Danny Robinson
and son, Myrtle Ross, Helen
Rovere, Cora Sharp, Kenneth
Speakman , Mrs. Lloyd
Walter
and
daughter,
Virginia Widger.
(Births)
Mr . and Mrs. Michael
Brown, son, Racine; Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Coleman, son,
Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs.
William
Howell,
son,
Jackson.

E-R, fire units called

just the console
for small homes
and apartments!

casters.

Due to the reassessment of
property brought by the 35
pet. of the true market value
rule and additional property
placed on' !he duplicate by the
James M. Gavin Plant,
residents in the 'Gallia County
Local School District will be
paying a reduced tax rate in
1975.
This rate was temporarily
set Thursday during the
annual meeting of the Gallia
County Budget Commission .
The
overall
school
operations rate was reduced
from 16.5 to 13.4, which includes both operational and
bond funds . The Gallia
County Local Schools will
operat e from $3,082,000
brought in by local taxes and
$1,064,464 in State Foundation

...

More_ ·hq_nors to Morgan

School tax rate reduced -

HOSPITAL NEWS

More names
are draWn

THE GREAT
WALDO PEPPER

Mediterranean

Covrt St., Brighton , Mic h.,

Sac red Heart Cemetery.

TONITE thru TUESDAY
SEPT . 26·30

only$44800

GuY. W. Will , 55, of 101

former Pomeror resident,
died Thursday a St. Joseph
Sa turday at Parma Com. Mercy Hospital, Ann Arbor,
munity Hospital. were held fOIIO'Wing an extended Illness .
Wednesday
morn1n9:
at
Mr . Will was preceded in
Sacred Heart Church wrth the
death by his father , Clarence
Rev. Father Paul Welton
Will. He was a member of
officiating
Paramuthla Lodge No. 25
Out.of -town guests of Mr .
F&amp;AM. Athens, and the K . T .
and Mrs . Leland Sisson, the
Crossen Post No. 21 of the
former Rose Angeletti , In
American Legion , Athens.
conjunction with the death of
He is surv ived by his wife,
Mr . Angeletti.
included
Lenore Bingham Will , also
Joseph Johnson , Memph is,
formerly of Middleport ; one
Tenn .; Mrs . Olga Mathews,
son, Jerry ; a daughter ,
Fort Lauderdale , Fla . ; Mr .
Barba ra ;
his
mother ,
and Mrs . Alfred Sisson
Wealthy Will of Pomeroy RD
Galion; Mr. and Mrs . Joh~
and three grandchildren .
Kopf and daughter. Mr. and
Funeral services will be
Mrs . Joe ~lgna and son, John . held Sunday at I p.m . at the
Tracy, Srster Mary Reg is,
Hughes Funeral Home in
Mr . and Mrs. Martin Tra cy.
Athens with the Rev. Cecil
all of Columbus ; Mr . and
Cox officia ting . Buria l w i ll be
Mrs . Don Crow and family of
in
Carleton
Cemelery .
Carroll ; Mr. and .Mrs. L. G.
Friends may call at the
Marchi , Mr . and Mrs . Robert
funeral home from 7 to 9 p .m .
Y?Ung .. Mr. and Mrs . Hugo Salurdav
P1erottr, all of Gall ipolis, and
family members of Mr .
Angeletti of Parma and North
Royalton . Burial was in

MEIGS THEATRE

choice
OF THESE POPULAR STYLES

GUYW. WILL

Funeral
se rv ices
for
George V . Angeletti, 62,
North Royalton , Ohio, for .
merly of Pomeroy, who died

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been moved into the old Pomeroy Junior High auditorium.
The auditorium will be converted exelu.sively for u.se as a
mining training 'center in the near future.

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By Bob Hoeflich
POMEROY . - The days of the
Pomeroy Jun.ior High School auditorium
as a community center are about to end.
Since the junior high school was
abandoned as a class r oo m building
several years ago by the Meigs Local
, School District, the auditorium has
provided facilitie s for meetings and
music'a l shows, basketball practice~.•
dances , a youth eent;,r, Boy Seout.s, and
regatta weekend activities.
However, the Meigs Local Board of
Education recently vo!;,d to accept $30,000
from the "Governor's FUnd" to be used
toward converting the junior high
auditoriwn into an expanded facility for
the training of coal mine workers . The
money also will be used in other ~ays to
convert :he building into a vocational
training center.
·
Using the auditoriwn and the building
extensively over the past couple of years
have been Meigs County's senior citizens.
The building, even though a couple of
classrooms were used for mining classes,
became the Meigs County Sehior Citi&gt;.ens
Ce nter.
Besides using the auditoriwn for

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various activities, the senior citize ns have
had hot lunches served in the auditorium
everyday for several months. Wednesday,
however, will be the final day for their
lunch program there, although other
rooms will be used to continue it.
Senior Citizens appear to have their
problem solved as far as a new center is
concerned . Eventually they will have to
move from the junior high school. Through
the county commissioners, the senior
citizens have received a $160,000 federal
grant. According to plans, this money will
be used to purchase the nearby former
Pomeroy Senior High School building as a
new center and to remodel the str ucture .
Undoubtedly, something will be
worked out for other groups who occasionally used the Pomeroy Junior High
School auditoriwn and will need some
facility in the future.

FERRY WORKING
POMEROY - Ferry service between
Pomeroy and Mason was r esumed
Saturday morning . The ferry did not
operate for three days due to high water .

Eq\)ipment is presently being moved
into the junior high auditorium to prov ide
additional instruction facilities not on1y for
high school mining classes but for adults
who also study mining courses being offered.
According to Hay Goodman, director
of the Meigs High School vocational
training program, $Il ,OOO of the $30,000
received will go towards roof repair at the
junior high school. Overhead doors will be
installed at the auditoriwn at a cost of
$3,6110 ; a ·new security loc k system for
$1 ,200; $3,600 for wiring; _$1,000 for installing new welding heads and an exhau.st
system ; $1 ,200 for manifold oxygen and
acetylene installations ; $800, for painting
and cleaning the building ; $51000 for installation of an overhead crane; $500 for an
air· manifold system and $400 for a storage
area in the. office quarters and $1,600 for a
tool crib and'storage in another part of the
building.
Hopefully, G9Qdman is shooting for a
November completion date for the eonversion program.
Yes - the days of the ' junior high
aud itorium as a community center are
trul y nwnbered.

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3- The SIUlday Times, Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 28, 197S

2 --T~· Sunday Times - Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 28, 1975
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Luck is not enough
A grotesque and unenviable record has·been set, one that
all Americans hope wiD never be surpasses or even approached. One of the best-liked and most personable presidents in
many years, Gerald R. Ford is nevertheless the first to ha ve
had two assaults made on his life - both in the same month
and in the same state, and both by women .
Again, an iricalculable element of luck saved the nation
from tragedy . Despite extra-strong security precautions instituted in San Francisco because of the assault against Mr.
Ford in Sacramento some two weeks previously, another
unbalanced person got dose enough to the President -1 with a
gun - to again have changed the course of history.
Is there someone else out there who even now is thinking
about making the third try a charm ' By "out there" we don 't
necessarily mean California or the San Francisco area, which
certainly have no monopoly on strange people. But surely it
would seem to be tempting late in the extreme lor the
President to try to prove something by exposing hirnseU to
another crowd anywhere near where his life has twice been put
in jeopardy . Yet that is what he presently plans to do, later in
October.
Mr . Ford has reiterated his determination not to ca pitulate
to those who, as he puts it; are trying to tear down wha t is best
in America . Of course, he cannot. He must continue to travel
the nation and meet the people .
But there must he better way s of doing it, than appearing
for a fleeting instant as he leaves a hotel to enter a limousine

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the bills printed up in advance to ha5\en the process.
No changes fere to be made
in the versions passed by the
chamber of origin.
Republicans countered
with their primary weaponU. Gov. John W. Brown, a
ulame duck" who was to
remain in office exactly as
long as Gillig~·"·
As presiding officer of the
Senate, it was Brown's
constitutional job to certify
that
all
legislative
requirements were followed,
and he announced before the
session began that he aimed
to carry out that duty to the
end.
Indeed, Brown guarded his
authority so zealously that he
slept in the Statehouse for two
nights so the Democrats
couldn't legally make an end
run around him.
At last, the Democrats saw
powers of a Republican time running out and made
secretary of state and the end run anyway, sending
liberalize voter registration the bills to Gilligan without
provisions and unem· Brown's signature less than
ploy.ment compensation 48 hours before the adregulations-both traditional · ministration changed hands.
Democratic objectives.
Secretary of State Ted W.
Democrats assuming Brown, the real GOP ace-incontrol of both legislative
the-hole, blocked final
chambers for the first time in enactment and threw the
14 years, carefully chose the matter into Franklin County
priority bills to push through Common Pleas Court, where
during the first six days of the the bills were declared innew session, so they could get valid last June by a
them signed into law before Republican judge.
Democratic Gov. John J.
That decision was ;~ffirmed
Gllllgan left office.
last week, to no one's surThey limited the list so prise, by a panel of three
there would be no delay. A Republican judges, two of
bill must be considered for whom had served in the Ohio
three separate days in each House. Judge John W. Mcchamber, so they had littie Cormac, author of the
room for error. Seven days unanimous opinion, offered
from the start of the session, this summary:
Republican James A. Rhodes
"A valid constitutional
was to take office with veto provision was found perpower.
mitting speedy action by the
The Democrats carefully General Assembly and it was
rehearsed procedures so utilized. Another equally
nothing would go wrong. valid section of the ConCourt testimony shows they stitution required,_ as an
even had the final versions of essential element to the

Ohio politics

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~ Berrys World
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·needs~~ ­

crowd
pleaser
food are.o:
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CJ 111S br NEA, Int. ~
football was only·a garnet""
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validity of this legislation,
that the lieutenant governor
certify
its
procedural
correctness. This provision
was ignored ."
John Brown has sa1d since
the so-&lt;:alled " Six-Day War"
that had the Democrats given
him the original bills as he
requested , he would have had
no choice but to return them
promptly for correction of
any procedural errors.
The Democrats, unwilling
to gamble on any delay,
bypassed Brown and took
their chances in court.
In their written opinion, the
three Republican appellate
judges used the opportunity
to rub salt in the Democrats'
wounds on this point:
"Even if devious conduct
(on Brown's part) had been
intended,'' McCormac wrote,
"no opporunity was given for
it to take place and it cannot

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the Fann Front ,,

Humphrey , D-Minn . He
asked government and ~·
nongovernmental experts
size up the gaps m the ability"'of American and international officials to spot
foc1"
developing world
problems in time to act odl

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be presumed."
The jurists determined that
the lieutenant governor "has
no veto power over the
substantive aspects of the
legislation and he may not
use a procedural subterfuge
in order to effect a substantive veto power."
" If wrongful activity by the
presiding officer had actually
taken place, the result in this
case may well have dif-

fered."
The Democrats no doubt
take a dim view of this interpretive hindsight. They
can't believe the result would
have differed any more than
they believe It wiD differ
when they make their final
appeal •to the Ohio Supreme
Court, also dominated 5 to 2
by Republicans.
In politics, the last weapon
in the arsenal counts, even a
technical sword.

Roscoe Village is ·
from canal days
Ohio Bicentennial Offering
By SANDI LATIMER
COSHOCTON, Ohio (UPI)
-It took nine years to dig the
Ohio-Erie
Canal
from
Cleveland to Portsmouth
between 1825 and 1834.
A lot of Irish laborers were
used. They received 30 cents
a day and all the whiskey
they could drink to keep them
on the job.
The canal provided a new
way for Ohio farmers to move
their goods and get produce
in from the East. It flourished
until the railroads appeared
in the 1860s and then began to
deteriorate.
The 1913 flood nearly wiped
the canal out of history.
Several years ago artist
Dean Cornwell was commissioned to paint a mural
for a Coshocton County bank.
He chose a scene of the former village of Roscoe, along
the Ohio-Erie Canal at what
is now Coshocton.
Several artists at the mural
dedication suggested the
buildings, falling into ruin,
should be restored.
In 1968, wealthy industrialist Ed Montgomery of
Edmont,Inc.; waslookingfor
a project for his family's
foundation, when he hit upori ·
. the idea of restoring Roscoe. ·
Today, Roscoe Village is a
two-blQCk area along Ohio 83
in Coshocton in east central
Ohio, with buildings restored
to the canal days era. It
contains private homes,
modern shops and stores with
· the canal-&lt;!ra atmosphere
where friends can riungle
around a pot-bellied stove.
Visitors can stroll up and
down the brick sidewalks,
visit the stores, and eat at the
Warehouse Restaurant.
" Mrs. Montgomery began
with the tollkeeper's hquse ,
and the project kept
growing;" said Montgomery.
"Nine buildings were
beyond ho~ and had to be
totally destroyed," he said.
The tollkeeper's house
today is the museum, one of
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the four buildings where
admission is charged. Others
are the .Township Hall, the
Craft House and the JohnsonWilllams House where the
heritage of that era is
depicted in the furnishing.
There is no admiaslon just to
stroll through the Village.
Costumed girls perform
weaving on the looms and
offer demonstiations on the
spinning wheels at the
Township Hall. Craftsmen
show their skills in · tinworks
and pottery at the Craft
House.
All crafts made at tbe
Village are for sale. Although
the gnides do their work
mostly voluntarily, Montgomery said they are paid
for their work.
Once restoration of the
village began, the name of
the foundation was changed
to the Roscoe Village
Foundation, a private,
nonprofit foundation. MontRomery heads the office in a
building in the Vlllage.
The first canal boat arrived
Aug. 21, 1830. The village was
then known as Calderburg,
but the next year was
changed to Roscoe, in honor
of Englishman William
Roscoe, an abolitionist and
poet who never visited the
area.
"The
canals
were
necessary for opening of Ohio
and
the
Northwest
Territory,"
said
Mantgomery. "They gave farmers an outlet for produce.
Before, they had to get thelr
goods from the East by horse
and wagon."
··
Many of the boats on the
canal were packets - those
which earried passengers. It
was standard procedure to
· charge five cents a mile and
offer free meals. Often the
passengers would. board
around meal Uine, rush to the
table and eat, travel one mile,
pay, get off and walk home.
"This practice was soon
halted
because
of
economics," Montgomery

By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI Farm Editor
"."
WASHINGTON (UPI) .::J
Two private economists tol(fl
Cong r ess t his week that'
improvementlj•
substa ntial
are needed in domestic and
international forecasting oi1
world food production ani!i
"
needs.
"l •
The analysis was presente(f'
to one of Congress' leasC:.
known aims, its Office Of!
Technology Assessment',
headed by Sen. Hubert H,

them.

DR.UMB

Heart needs more blood
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Could
you tell me a little about
coronary insufficiency and
myocardial ischemia? Should
I have my personal property
fixed so my family will be
taken care of? I've had some
severe pain in the chest,
lasting only five to six
minutes, but severe while it
lasted.
DEAR
READER
Coronary insufficiency
means insufficient blood flow
through the coronary arteries
to your heart muscle. The
heart muscle (myocardium)
is unable to get enough
oxygen or eliminate the build
up of carbon dioxide , and this ·
is called ischemia], hence
myocardian ischemia.
You are describing angina
pectoris type pain . This
usually lasts "less than half a
quarter of an hour" as the
classic ·description of the
disease states.
Coronary artery disease is
unpredictable. You may even
cease to have these painful
episodes or you may have a
more severe episode in the
near future . You certainly
need to he under a doctor's
care. You will do better if you
get rid of all, and I mean all,
of your excess fat under your
skin, and if you have high
blood pressure get treated for
that.
You should get your affairs

in order. That is good advice
for every adult with a family
regardless of health status. It
is too late alter a fatal accident or an unexpected fatal
heart attack. In your case you
have had a warning so you
would be wise to heed it. Then
don 't expect the worst but
enjoy the peace of mind of
knowing you have your affairs in order.
If you want a more detailed
discussion 'of angina pectoris
and related heart diseases,
write to me in care of this
newspaper, P. 0 . Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019. Send 50
cents, a long, stamped, selfaddressed envelope, and ask
for The Health Letter number
2-10,
Heart
Attack:
Myocardial Infarction ,
Angina Pectoris .
DEAR DR. LAMB - I need
some information on the
subject of eating before
runnin~. I'm a 16-year-old
boy who runs approximately
two to three miles every
morning. I find it hard to
make it riUlning on an empty
stomach. When I have an
early breakfast and wait a
few hours and then run I find
it much easier. Could you
please tell me of some foods
that I would be able to eat
that would pep me up and
won '! upset my\ stomach? I
have no time to ) wait a few
hours after eating to run.

said. "They even had canal town festivity with arts
economic problems then." and crafts demonstrations,
There were 146 locks along entertainment, booths,
the length of the canal. Three contests and parades.
were just above Ro8coe .
Each October an Apple
They have been restored, Butter Stirrin' is held where
and today visitors can travel the apple butter is cooked in
to the locks, and ride the copper kettles over open
M011tlcello II, a replica of the fires. Corn husking, spellin,g
Monticello, the first boat to bee and children's games are
arrive at Roscoe.
held. Pumnins and corn
A horse-drawn trolley trip shocks decorate the Village.
is available spring through
Christmas in Roscoe
fall days. The fee is 50 cents Village begins with the anfor youths and 75 cents for nual candlelighting and
adults. The trolley goes tO the holiday stroll two to three
Triple Locks where there are weeks before the big day.
also picnicking faclllties.
Carolers wander through the
Tickets are also avilable town which is decorated like
for $1.55 for adults and 80 an old-time Christmas card,
cents for children for the boat with holly and pine, red bows
ride, a 45-minute round trip and bright candles.
on a one-mile stretch of the
The ViUage is open yearcanal which has been round, except New Year's,
restpred. The boat is towed Christmas and Thanksgiving .
by horses.
A $2 admission for the four
"It Is the most restful trip buildings is charged for
you'll ever take," promised adults and $1 or youths
Montgomery,
between ages of 8 aild 18. '
He says a new project is Special rates of $1.50 are
undenray along the Vlllage to available for groups of 15 or
construct a bicycle and pede- more when arranged in
strian bridge over busy Ohio advance.
83, It :s expected to be
The
Warehouse
completed by, the first of the . Restaurant, with an Early
year.
' American a.tomsphere, is
Each year "during the week- open 11 a.m." to 2:30p.m. for
end clOsest to Aug. 21 the 1unch and 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. for
arrival DE the canal boat is dinner. Meeeting rooms are
commemorated 'with Canal
also available.
Day festivitiesc The entire
Coshocton is located on Oho
community provides the
76 and 83, north of Interstate
atmoap,re
of
old-time
70 and west of Interstate '17.

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DEAR READER - Your
experience is in line with
experimental studies. An old
experiment is to run a dog on
a treadmill without feeding ,
then give the dog some sugar
and repeat the test. The sugar
increases the dog's capacity
to exercise.
1
Your source of energy in
the body comes from food .
The food , whether it it carbohydrate, fat or protein, is a
hydrocarbon and has solar
energy locked in it. That is
the so'!'"ce af all energy on
planetearth. When the food is
brqk¢n· down by metaholish
theenergy is released so your
body functions and you can
run . You literally run on solar
energy.
Almost any food that you
find that doesn 't bother you
will provide the needed
energy. You might try an 8ounce glass of orange juice.
That won ' t overload the
stomach and will give you
readily available energy.
Another fruit juice of your
choice would. do the same
thing. Fruit juices will also
give you potassium. Many
runners who engage in
running every day gradually
deplete their potassium store
unless they include plenty of
potassium-rich foods in the
diet. This will lead to fatigue
and lessened capacity to
exercise.
PRICE REDUCED
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Standard Oil of Ohio ( Sohio)
reduced the price of its Octron regular gasoline at
company-operated
service
stations in certain areas of
the state by 2 to 3 cents per
gallon Saturday. The price
was reduced 2 cents to 57.9
cents per gallon in Franklin
County and the Chillicothe
area . The price was dropped
3 cents to 56.9 cents in the
Newark area,

Sunday Times-Sentinel
Published every - Sunday
by
The - Ohio
Valley
Publish ing Co .
GALLIPOLI·S
DAILY TRIBUNE

825 Third Ave ., Gallipolis,

Ohio 45631 .
Put?lished every w~ekday

eventng E')'.Cept Saturday .

I'JI

Dale E. Hathaway, a•
former Michigan economist'
who now heads the private
International Food Folicy:
Research Institute, said theU.N . Food and Agriculture·
Organization has begun d1
new food informatlon systeD\1
which provides more timelY ·
data than past efforta.
"·'
But the system doesnt(l
adequately cover the worl~
scene because it gets little
information from the world's
second and third largest
grain producers, the Sovi~
Union and the Peopll!ll
Republic of China, Hathaway
said.
"Thus the F AO food tn:,i
formation system .. .is totally
inadequate in terms ol
coverage of two of the world's
largest agricultural
producers and consumer~,
Until these countries choose
'"
to cooperate, no system can
be adequate in terms Of
coverage," Hathaway said
a statement Wednesday. '"
Agriculture
Department
officials, in a backgroUil(i
paper, said the agency ha.~
improved its analysis o!
Soviet crop conditions witli
information provided b'y
Russia under a 1973 exchange
agreement and "increased
use of corroborative data

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from other sources."

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Howard Hjort, a privaU!
economist, told the Congres;
sional study group in another
paper that the Agriculture
Department cannot improv~
its forecasts of world foQ\1
conditions much unless It
reorganizes its · analysis
operation. At present, Hj~t
said, it is difficult for the
agency to produce "ob~
jective" forecasts becaus'e
responsibility for predictions
is divided between researc;h
economists 1and operating
agencies which promote farm
trade .
The analyses, . Hjort said,
would be more effective if
they were put under the sole
control of economists.
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The Almaoac
United Press International
Today is SUnday, Sept. 28,
the 27lst day of 1975 with 94 to
follow.
The moon is in its laSt
quarter.
The morning stars are
Venus, Saturn, Mars
Jupiter.
"
The .evening star is Mer- ·
cury.
Those horn on this date
under the sign o( Libra. '
American entertainer E'd
Sullivan was born Sept. 28,

ai.!l

are

1902.
~:
Also on '!his day in history:

In 1920, basebaU's biggest·
Sec ond Class . Postage Paid
at Galll8ol is, Ohio 45631.
scandal broke. A grand jury
THE AlLY SENT INEL
111 Court St ., Pomeroy , 0 . indicted eight players of tile
. 45769 . Published every week - .
day evening except Satur - Chicago White Sox fijr
.day. Entered as second class
"throwing" the 1919 world
mailing matter at Pomero.y ,
Ohio Post Off tee . J.
Series games with the CincinBy carrier daily and
"
Sunday 75c per week . Motor nati Reds.
route S3 . 25 per montl) .
In 1937, President Franklln
MAIL
D. Roosevelt dedicated
SUBSCRIPTION RATE S
The
Gallipolis
Daily Bonneville . Dam on tile
Tr ibune in Ohio and West
Virginia one year $22.00; six Columbia RiVer tn Oregoo.
months $1 1:50 ; three months
In 1953, Robert Greenle8lie,
$7.00 . Elsewhere 526.00 pe r
year ; six mOnths $13 .50 ; Jr., was kidnaped. The "6three months $7 .50 ; · motor
year~ld son of a wealthy
route $3 .25 monthly .
·
The , -Da-lly Sentinel , one Kan5as City, Mo., automobiJe
year $22 ~ 0(); Six months
$11 .50 ; three m·o nths $7 .00. dealer was found dead ant.!
Elsewhere
526 . 00 ;
six
the :kidnaiHlluiderers
"
months S13 .SO ; three months
$7 .50 .
'
eventually were exec;utep.
The United Press ln .
In 1974, Mrs. Betty Ford,
ternational is exclus l v~ly
entitled to the use for'
wife
of President Gerald
Publication of l all news
dispatches credited to the Ford, uncier,went surgery 1 a
newspaper and also 'I he loc al
mastectomy) for brea'St
news puqlished h erei n .
·
I
cancer.

'

'

POMEROY - A crowd
pleaser at the Meigs-Waverly
B@llle was the performance of
J~e Meigs High School
lllarching band at half-time .
The band entered from the
north end of the field in four
~Qlllpany fronts to a perC)lsSion solo, then ~ into
~ fight song and marched
ljown field .
~-Reaching the center of the
field marchers went into a ISfile block band, and facing
the grandstand , played
·:Musical Cocktail" by Bill
Moffit, band director at
University of Houston, Texas.
.''Musical Cocktail" featured
different sections of the band
playing different melodies.
The flute section played " Our

Boys Will Shine Tonight"; the
clarinets, "Honey Babe ";
saxophones, " Blue Bells of
Scotland"; E-flat trumpets,
" She'll Be Coming Around
the Mountain";
entire
trumpet section, "Red River
Valley" ; F horns , " Do
Lord"; trombones, " When
The Saints Go Marching In'';
baritones, ' 'Annie Laurie"
and the sousaphones, " Swing
Low Sweet Chariot." The
band then played all the
songs at the same time .
The majorettes, fla g
bearers and rifle squad
performed with dance steps
to each style song that was
being played. The band then
did a short drill leaving the
field playing the light song.

143, 5:30-6 ; Hysell Run, 6:30- 4:30; L&lt;mg Bottom, 5-5:30;
7; Krogers Parking Lot, 7:30- Success
Road ,
6-~ .30;
Chester Community, 7-8.
8:30.
Friday - Racine Ele., 9-11
POMEIWY - The MeigsJackson :Vinton Co untie s a.m .; Por tland Ele.,. 12:30Bookmobile r Mr. Eddy) · 2:30 p.m . ; Por tland Comsc hedule next week in Meigs munity 3-3 :30; Great Bend, 4- ,
County :
Thursday . Oct. 2 - South·
ern Hi , 9~ 10 a.m .; RacineElm Street, 10: 1&gt;-Ji; Rt. 124
TON IGH'T THRU
Store, 11 :30-11 :45; SyracuseTUESDAY
Baers, 12,12 :30 p.m. ; 'Trailer
Park-syracuse,
12 : 4&gt;-1 :15 ;
Syracuse-Village North. I :30Sunday
2: Minersville Post Office,
Bulk Ashland Station, 2:152:40; Mc Ca llu ms. 2: 45-3 ;
BatUns Addition, 4:30-5; Rl.

Eddy's routes

Two injured

World's 1 Marauder band

and speed away . How many people lining the sfrl.'f' ts aetunlly
catch more tha n glimpse of the President"! How many have a
chance to say a word to him, much less conduct a "dialogue"
on · the problems of the day ?
A better method by which the President could meet the
people would be through a series of town hall-type meetings in
communities around the country. Because each meeting would
be prearranged and prescreened, security would he made
infinitely easier, even if the audience numbered in the sever~ I
thousands. In addition, some thoughtful questions and some
helpful answers might even he exchanged.
The President might also reconsider his position on gun
control. Now obviously, no matter how strict the controls, a
determined assassin wiD find a way to secure a weapon and an
opportunity to use it.
But that is precisely the point : We may not be able to do
very much about the determined assassin, but there is no
excuse for making it 30 ridiculously easy for even a certifiable
nut to obtain a gun.
Sarah Jane Moore, the woman in San Francisco, had been
arrested for illegal possession of a revolver. Yet somehow,
despite her record of erratic behavior, she managed to obtain
another r evolver which she fired at the President the very next
day,
. Are we saying that we can do nothing to keep guns out of
the hands of those who are unstable or potentially dangerous in
our society and still respect the rights of decent Americans
who collect and enjoy guns' II so, we can look forwarll to
continuing to pay a high price for the easy availabiUty of guns.
We are just plain lucky that in Gerald Ford's case, the ,
price has twice been averted.

GOP is winning Ohio's Six Day Wa·r

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
•
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Last
week 's Franklin County
Court of Appeals decision
upholding the invalidity of six
partisan Democratic bills
: rushed
through
the
legislature in
January
carried
a
timeworn
• message- those that live by
: the sword die by the sword.
;
The bills, it may be
• recalled, included a new
congressional redistricting
plan calculated to furnish an
" additional two to four seats in
the U.S. House for Ohio
Democrats in the 1976
: election.
'
There also were proposals
; to save more than 100
, Democratic jobs in the
•· executive branch, limit the

~·

.

Editorial comment,
opinion, features
.,
,.
··

,t

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in crash

CHARLIE WEBSTER
GALLIPOLIS - Carroll
Norris, owner of Norris
Dodge, . 50 Slate St., has
added Charlie Webster, 339
Fourtb Ave. , GaUipolis, to
his staff as sales manager.
Webster has had 28 years
experience in selling new
and used cars.

MIDDLEPORT - Two
persons were injured. two
vehicles heavily damage d ·
a nd one driver charged as the
result of a n accident on North
Second Ave., near King
Builders at 8:08p.m . Friday .
Middlepor( Police said that
a nor lhhoiUld pickup truck
driven by Woody Call, 43,
Pomeroy. crossed over the
·ce nterlin e an d collided
headon with a southbond car
oriven by Marilyn Miller, 26,
Middleport .
Call wa~ taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad
where he was admitted with
facial injuries. He will he
charged with driving while
intoxicated, police said.
Mrs . Miller who received
neck and hip injuries, was

COLO\'
. . ,.,,.,,,,.,.·

taken to Holzer Medi ca l
Center by the Middleport
Emergency Squad . She was
also admi t~d .
The pickup truck was
heavily damaged and police
listed the Mi ller car as a total
Joss .

UNIT CALLED
RAC INE - The Racine ER
squad was called Friday at
5: 15p .m . toRt . 2, Racine, for
Ray Roush who had a back
i·njury. He was ta ken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 8:20 p.m . the squad took
Greg Dunning, Racine , who
sustained a broken right leg
in the Southe rn-Wahama
game to Ve~rans Memorial
Hospital ·where he was admitted .

BITE
THE

MEIGS THEATRE
TO NI fE thru T UE SDAY

lti:
&lt;-..u, \ t

\ ',0..' [l o.l'; i'/'

·,~loii"['; A ..,

C)ol!

I I •f•l

( Tec hni colorl
1-! obe rt Redford
Bo Suen son

BULLET

rl•' • ~·AI

l"':f\~1

THE GREAT
W ALDO PEPPER

Ill

'1 .,,,
!,I

·· o '

PLUS

GENE HACKMAN
CArQ(E BtllGEN

BUSTER AND

.wt:S~

BILLY

Show Sta rl s el l 7 . 00 p .m

CARTOON

"'

Borne is damaged
·'
.POMEROY Damages
were estimated at $2,500 from
~ lire which hit the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Durward
Cumings on the Rock Springs
road at 4:49p.m . Friday.
"The fire apparently started
io the attached garage and
spread to the attic . Defective
~iring was believed to have
ll!len the cause. Neighbors of
tj)e couple arrived at the
scene with small fire extinguishers and garden hose
tv keep the fire under control
until arrival of the Pomeroy
F,ire Dept.

At 10:17 a .m . Saturday, the
department was called to the
Route 7 bypass to extinguish
a car on fire . Capt. Tom
Werry said damages were
under the hood to the vehicle
and amounted to about $200.
Owner of the car was not
identified.
At 10:56 a .m . Saturday the
Pomeroy E-R squad went to
126 State St. for two-year-old
James Braley who had fallen
down steps. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Midwinter ski

Boosters will
.,
sell jackets at
'·

home games
: RACINE
Southern
Athletic Booster jackets have
lleen ordered and will be sold
1
ccording
to
an
anrl'o uncement
when
the
Boosters met at the high
school.
· The jackets wiD be sold at
th.e home football games or
cim be purchased from Carl
\Volfe at the high school. The
p'rice is $15 for adults and $14
for students . .
' The Boosters endorsed a
ljQnd levy to be voted upon at
the Nov . 4 election with
Rroceeds to be used for an
addition to the high school.
Plans also were made for
selling pens on which is
imprinted the basketball
lichedule for the new year at

a

$1.
.,·, Plans were made for
~~lling pizza at the concession
~!and at home f?otball
&amp;ames. The next meeting was
set for 7:30p .m. on Oct. 7 at
!lie high school. Danny
~rown, president, was in
charge of the meeting.
w
,,

,,

SlL

lOGE

PLAZA STORE ONLY
BAMKAMUICARD
01 MASTU CHARGE

coNV£Nl£Nl

~==\

us£

oou~HARG£

N

AN

HOME AND FAMILY SUPER SAVINGS
THEFAMILYPLACETOSAVE LAYAWA:r.:~ITEMS
DAYS ONLY- SEPT. 28-29-30 AND
~================~ ' e\~~~~:S::::::::_________!O~C~T~.l~S~T~--------j

trip .west set
RIO GRANDE - A midwinter ski trip to either
Steamboat Springs or As_pen,
Colo., is being planned by
Professor Bob Rogers at Rio
Grande College. The trip is
s ponsored by Professor
Rogers. It is not a college
trip, and carries no college
credits.
The trip is open to the
public and will cost $250 per
person. This includes round
trip bus transportation from
Rio Grande to Colorado, ski
lift privileges and a condominium apartment with
kitchen.
The bus will leave Rio
Grande on December 10, and
return the 21st. A minimum
of 12 participants is required
to make the trip possible.
Space is limited and will be
offered on a first come, first
serve basis.
A deposit of $30 is required
by November I, with the $220
balance due November 25. If
there are not enough participants, the $30 deposit will
he refunded.
While in Colorado , ski
equipment and lessons are
available at additional
charges . For more information and reservations,
contact Professor Bob
Rogers at Rio Grande
College, Rio Grande, Ohio
45674. Telephone 245-5353.

REG. •12.88 2-PC.

CA'AOUPLAGI SUIT

SAVE

$9 9~ARGEIT

$10

Non-ruslle eolian drill. 4 pockel jacket, zipper panls . For
duck, bow hunlers.

DUSK·TO·DAWN
SECURITY· LIGHT

7 fl. X 10 FT. STEEL SHED

$2999 '
'

Photoelectric control
turns lighl on al dusk,
off ot down . Mast arm ,

acryli c refra cto r, cop lead wi res, mounthardware includecl

I

'

Rigid construction with weather tight
overlapping panels and strong gable
roof. Sliding doo rs.

CHARGE

12~:: $117~
$137.88

eBEN PEARSON BOWS
eBEAR GLASS POWERED
BOWS
eBEN PEASON
AND BEAR ACCESSORIES
eHUNTING ARROWS
eB0\'4 STRINGS
eBOW QUIVERS
•ARROW TIPS

REGULAR PRICE 1249.00

PECAN FINISH 60"
MEDITERRANEAN CONSOLE
With solid state and AM-FM Multiply
Radio and 8 Track
RADIO AND 8 TRACK
TAPE PLAYER PLUS
PHONOGRAPH

USE OUR CONVENIFNT NO cHARGE
XMAS LAYAWAY

SEE OUR COMPLETE
SELECTION OF
ARCHERY SUPPLIES.

•PLUS MANY

SAVE '50

OTHER ACCESSORIES

CHARGE IT!

Students are

required to
report change
"'
' " Meigs County school
.students over age 18 who are

)r'eceiving Social Security
,benefits should call the Social
:S..curity office if there has
been a change in their school
_;~ttendance.
Ed Peterson , Branch
Jlianager o the Athens Social
Security ltfice, reminds
..students ,,eneficiaries to
",i.eport chE .iges which could
· ' a ffect their. entitlement. This
. includes a ' change of schools,
,ihange from full-time at,
, t.endance, change of address,
~~~r marriage. Peterson also
·,votes that a student who is
: )leing paid by his employer to
:~~ttend school must report 11
as this makes him ineligible
ofor student benefits.
0, Social Security benefits for
9 children normally terminate
,,,..hen a child attains age 18.
.J::Iowever, benefits continue to
ebe paid to students :between ·
" :lhe ages of 18 and 23 if their
~ parents are receiving Social
o&amp;ecurity checks . Benefits are
· also payable to students
.!whose parents are deceased,
,[.provided on' of the parents
t ;worked long enough in em·
~ ploymenl or seif-&lt;!mployment
•-covered by· Social Security .

Thinking
Remodeling.
Think
about
us!

DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS ONLY

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA ONLY

of

----r--:-:-:-=--

REGULAR
PRICE

ITEM TO SELL

Jubilee Kitchen Wax
Men's Socks

84'

47'
44'

REGULAR
PRICE
5 PC.

00

$fi.44

HARDMAN'S
HOME
CENTER
Rt. 2 Bypass .
Point
W. Va.

E LE CTR lC

Single

$117 GARAGE DOOR OPENER
Dual Control

24"x36" CARPET Pieces

SOON II

$fi.94

.$8.94 BATH MAT SET

large 8'x8' Tent
Locking Gas Tank Caps

OPENING

ITEM TO SELL

. SAVE
.NOW

Marquis Blanket
Bath Towels (Gold on~&gt;
All fiShing Rods &amp;Supplies

Ladies

Fruit Of The
Loom

PIN UP

LAMPS
NO. 720

$1.27

MAGNUS ORGAN

N
88'
1JJ OFF

'7.99 &amp;
18.99

mplete Unit with
Tape Player, Rec~rd

$9goo

WOMEN'S BETTER

31%" TALL

$1.57 CASHEWS

l · lb .

9~

Size

G.C:. MURPHY CO~- THE FRIEN

$7.94

LV STORE

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE • DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS STORE

�I

I ,

,.,
•

3- The SIUlday Times, Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 28, 197S

2 --T~· Sunday Times - Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 28, 1975
'

'

Luck is not enough
A grotesque and unenviable record has·been set, one that
all Americans hope wiD never be surpasses or even approached. One of the best-liked and most personable presidents in
many years, Gerald R. Ford is nevertheless the first to ha ve
had two assaults made on his life - both in the same month
and in the same state, and both by women .
Again, an iricalculable element of luck saved the nation
from tragedy . Despite extra-strong security precautions instituted in San Francisco because of the assault against Mr.
Ford in Sacramento some two weeks previously, another
unbalanced person got dose enough to the President -1 with a
gun - to again have changed the course of history.
Is there someone else out there who even now is thinking
about making the third try a charm ' By "out there" we don 't
necessarily mean California or the San Francisco area, which
certainly have no monopoly on strange people. But surely it
would seem to be tempting late in the extreme lor the
President to try to prove something by exposing hirnseU to
another crowd anywhere near where his life has twice been put
in jeopardy . Yet that is what he presently plans to do, later in
October.
Mr . Ford has reiterated his determination not to ca pitulate
to those who, as he puts it; are trying to tear down wha t is best
in America . Of course, he cannot. He must continue to travel
the nation and meet the people .
But there must he better way s of doing it, than appearing
for a fleeting instant as he leaves a hotel to enter a limousine

•'
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the bills printed up in advance to ha5\en the process.
No changes fere to be made
in the versions passed by the
chamber of origin.
Republicans countered
with their primary weaponU. Gov. John W. Brown, a
ulame duck" who was to
remain in office exactly as
long as Gillig~·"·
As presiding officer of the
Senate, it was Brown's
constitutional job to certify
that
all
legislative
requirements were followed,
and he announced before the
session began that he aimed
to carry out that duty to the
end.
Indeed, Brown guarded his
authority so zealously that he
slept in the Statehouse for two
nights so the Democrats
couldn't legally make an end
run around him.
At last, the Democrats saw
powers of a Republican time running out and made
secretary of state and the end run anyway, sending
liberalize voter registration the bills to Gilligan without
provisions and unem· Brown's signature less than
ploy.ment compensation 48 hours before the adregulations-both traditional · ministration changed hands.
Democratic objectives.
Secretary of State Ted W.
Democrats assuming Brown, the real GOP ace-incontrol of both legislative
the-hole, blocked final
chambers for the first time in enactment and threw the
14 years, carefully chose the matter into Franklin County
priority bills to push through Common Pleas Court, where
during the first six days of the the bills were declared innew session, so they could get valid last June by a
them signed into law before Republican judge.
Democratic Gov. John J.
That decision was ;~ffirmed
Gllllgan left office.
last week, to no one's surThey limited the list so prise, by a panel of three
there would be no delay. A Republican judges, two of
bill must be considered for whom had served in the Ohio
three separate days in each House. Judge John W. Mcchamber, so they had littie Cormac, author of the
room for error. Seven days unanimous opinion, offered
from the start of the session, this summary:
Republican James A. Rhodes
"A valid constitutional
was to take office with veto provision was found perpower.
mitting speedy action by the
The Democrats carefully General Assembly and it was
rehearsed procedures so utilized. Another equally
nothing would go wrong. valid section of the ConCourt testimony shows they stitution required,_ as an
even had the final versions of essential element to the

Ohio politics

"

~ Berrys World
•

"\,i

,"

1/

..

'

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I

·~

•
•
••

.

·needs~~ ­

crowd
pleaser
food are.o:
'1

unknowt
"'

)

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'•
•
I . .:•
•
•

•••

•••

. •;

••••

••

•••

••

"Sometimes I wish

"

~-~­
CJ 111S br NEA, Int. ~
football was only·a garnet""
'

validity of this legislation,
that the lieutenant governor
certify
its
procedural
correctness. This provision
was ignored ."
John Brown has sa1d since
the so-&lt;:alled " Six-Day War"
that had the Democrats given
him the original bills as he
requested , he would have had
no choice but to return them
promptly for correction of
any procedural errors.
The Democrats, unwilling
to gamble on any delay,
bypassed Brown and took
their chances in court.
In their written opinion, the
three Republican appellate
judges used the opportunity
to rub salt in the Democrats'
wounds on this point:
"Even if devious conduct
(on Brown's part) had been
intended,'' McCormac wrote,
"no opporunity was given for
it to take place and it cannot

"I

the Fann Front ,,

Humphrey , D-Minn . He
asked government and ~·
nongovernmental experts
size up the gaps m the ability"'of American and international officials to spot
foc1"
developing world
problems in time to act odl

.'1

-.

be presumed."
The jurists determined that
the lieutenant governor "has
no veto power over the
substantive aspects of the
legislation and he may not
use a procedural subterfuge
in order to effect a substantive veto power."
" If wrongful activity by the
presiding officer had actually
taken place, the result in this
case may well have dif-

fered."
The Democrats no doubt
take a dim view of this interpretive hindsight. They
can't believe the result would
have differed any more than
they believe It wiD differ
when they make their final
appeal •to the Ohio Supreme
Court, also dominated 5 to 2
by Republicans.
In politics, the last weapon
in the arsenal counts, even a
technical sword.

Roscoe Village is ·
from canal days
Ohio Bicentennial Offering
By SANDI LATIMER
COSHOCTON, Ohio (UPI)
-It took nine years to dig the
Ohio-Erie
Canal
from
Cleveland to Portsmouth
between 1825 and 1834.
A lot of Irish laborers were
used. They received 30 cents
a day and all the whiskey
they could drink to keep them
on the job.
The canal provided a new
way for Ohio farmers to move
their goods and get produce
in from the East. It flourished
until the railroads appeared
in the 1860s and then began to
deteriorate.
The 1913 flood nearly wiped
the canal out of history.
Several years ago artist
Dean Cornwell was commissioned to paint a mural
for a Coshocton County bank.
He chose a scene of the former village of Roscoe, along
the Ohio-Erie Canal at what
is now Coshocton.
Several artists at the mural
dedication suggested the
buildings, falling into ruin,
should be restored.
In 1968, wealthy industrialist Ed Montgomery of
Edmont,Inc.; waslookingfor
a project for his family's
foundation, when he hit upori ·
. the idea of restoring Roscoe. ·
Today, Roscoe Village is a
two-blQCk area along Ohio 83
in Coshocton in east central
Ohio, with buildings restored
to the canal days era. It
contains private homes,
modern shops and stores with
· the canal-&lt;!ra atmosphere
where friends can riungle
around a pot-bellied stove.
Visitors can stroll up and
down the brick sidewalks,
visit the stores, and eat at the
Warehouse Restaurant.
" Mrs. Montgomery began
with the tollkeeper's hquse ,
and the project kept
growing;" said Montgomery.
"Nine buildings were
beyond ho~ and had to be
totally destroyed," he said.
The tollkeeper's house
today is the museum, one of
~

the four buildings where
admission is charged. Others
are the .Township Hall, the
Craft House and the JohnsonWilllams House where the
heritage of that era is
depicted in the furnishing.
There is no admiaslon just to
stroll through the Village.
Costumed girls perform
weaving on the looms and
offer demonstiations on the
spinning wheels at the
Township Hall. Craftsmen
show their skills in · tinworks
and pottery at the Craft
House.
All crafts made at tbe
Village are for sale. Although
the gnides do their work
mostly voluntarily, Montgomery said they are paid
for their work.
Once restoration of the
village began, the name of
the foundation was changed
to the Roscoe Village
Foundation, a private,
nonprofit foundation. MontRomery heads the office in a
building in the Vlllage.
The first canal boat arrived
Aug. 21, 1830. The village was
then known as Calderburg,
but the next year was
changed to Roscoe, in honor
of Englishman William
Roscoe, an abolitionist and
poet who never visited the
area.
"The
canals
were
necessary for opening of Ohio
and
the
Northwest
Territory,"
said
Mantgomery. "They gave farmers an outlet for produce.
Before, they had to get thelr
goods from the East by horse
and wagon."
··
Many of the boats on the
canal were packets - those
which earried passengers. It
was standard procedure to
· charge five cents a mile and
offer free meals. Often the
passengers would. board
around meal Uine, rush to the
table and eat, travel one mile,
pay, get off and walk home.
"This practice was soon
halted
because
of
economics," Montgomery

By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI Farm Editor
"."
WASHINGTON (UPI) .::J
Two private economists tol(fl
Cong r ess t his week that'
improvementlj•
substa ntial
are needed in domestic and
international forecasting oi1
world food production ani!i
"
needs.
"l •
The analysis was presente(f'
to one of Congress' leasC:.
known aims, its Office Of!
Technology Assessment',
headed by Sen. Hubert H,

them.

DR.UMB

Heart needs more blood
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Could
you tell me a little about
coronary insufficiency and
myocardial ischemia? Should
I have my personal property
fixed so my family will be
taken care of? I've had some
severe pain in the chest,
lasting only five to six
minutes, but severe while it
lasted.
DEAR
READER
Coronary insufficiency
means insufficient blood flow
through the coronary arteries
to your heart muscle. The
heart muscle (myocardium)
is unable to get enough
oxygen or eliminate the build
up of carbon dioxide , and this ·
is called ischemia], hence
myocardian ischemia.
You are describing angina
pectoris type pain . This
usually lasts "less than half a
quarter of an hour" as the
classic ·description of the
disease states.
Coronary artery disease is
unpredictable. You may even
cease to have these painful
episodes or you may have a
more severe episode in the
near future . You certainly
need to he under a doctor's
care. You will do better if you
get rid of all, and I mean all,
of your excess fat under your
skin, and if you have high
blood pressure get treated for
that.
You should get your affairs

in order. That is good advice
for every adult with a family
regardless of health status. It
is too late alter a fatal accident or an unexpected fatal
heart attack. In your case you
have had a warning so you
would be wise to heed it. Then
don 't expect the worst but
enjoy the peace of mind of
knowing you have your affairs in order.
If you want a more detailed
discussion 'of angina pectoris
and related heart diseases,
write to me in care of this
newspaper, P. 0 . Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019. Send 50
cents, a long, stamped, selfaddressed envelope, and ask
for The Health Letter number
2-10,
Heart
Attack:
Myocardial Infarction ,
Angina Pectoris .
DEAR DR. LAMB - I need
some information on the
subject of eating before
runnin~. I'm a 16-year-old
boy who runs approximately
two to three miles every
morning. I find it hard to
make it riUlning on an empty
stomach. When I have an
early breakfast and wait a
few hours and then run I find
it much easier. Could you
please tell me of some foods
that I would be able to eat
that would pep me up and
won '! upset my\ stomach? I
have no time to ) wait a few
hours after eating to run.

said. "They even had canal town festivity with arts
economic problems then." and crafts demonstrations,
There were 146 locks along entertainment, booths,
the length of the canal. Three contests and parades.
were just above Ro8coe .
Each October an Apple
They have been restored, Butter Stirrin' is held where
and today visitors can travel the apple butter is cooked in
to the locks, and ride the copper kettles over open
M011tlcello II, a replica of the fires. Corn husking, spellin,g
Monticello, the first boat to bee and children's games are
arrive at Roscoe.
held. Pumnins and corn
A horse-drawn trolley trip shocks decorate the Village.
is available spring through
Christmas in Roscoe
fall days. The fee is 50 cents Village begins with the anfor youths and 75 cents for nual candlelighting and
adults. The trolley goes tO the holiday stroll two to three
Triple Locks where there are weeks before the big day.
also picnicking faclllties.
Carolers wander through the
Tickets are also avilable town which is decorated like
for $1.55 for adults and 80 an old-time Christmas card,
cents for children for the boat with holly and pine, red bows
ride, a 45-minute round trip and bright candles.
on a one-mile stretch of the
The ViUage is open yearcanal which has been round, except New Year's,
restpred. The boat is towed Christmas and Thanksgiving .
by horses.
A $2 admission for the four
"It Is the most restful trip buildings is charged for
you'll ever take," promised adults and $1 or youths
Montgomery,
between ages of 8 aild 18. '
He says a new project is Special rates of $1.50 are
undenray along the Vlllage to available for groups of 15 or
construct a bicycle and pede- more when arranged in
strian bridge over busy Ohio advance.
83, It :s expected to be
The
Warehouse
completed by, the first of the . Restaurant, with an Early
year.
' American a.tomsphere, is
Each year "during the week- open 11 a.m." to 2:30p.m. for
end clOsest to Aug. 21 the 1unch and 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. for
arrival DE the canal boat is dinner. Meeeting rooms are
commemorated 'with Canal
also available.
Day festivitiesc The entire
Coshocton is located on Oho
community provides the
76 and 83, north of Interstate
atmoap,re
of
old-time
70 and west of Interstate '17.

•

DEAR READER - Your
experience is in line with
experimental studies. An old
experiment is to run a dog on
a treadmill without feeding ,
then give the dog some sugar
and repeat the test. The sugar
increases the dog's capacity
to exercise.
1
Your source of energy in
the body comes from food .
The food , whether it it carbohydrate, fat or protein, is a
hydrocarbon and has solar
energy locked in it. That is
the so'!'"ce af all energy on
planetearth. When the food is
brqk¢n· down by metaholish
theenergy is released so your
body functions and you can
run . You literally run on solar
energy.
Almost any food that you
find that doesn 't bother you
will provide the needed
energy. You might try an 8ounce glass of orange juice.
That won ' t overload the
stomach and will give you
readily available energy.
Another fruit juice of your
choice would. do the same
thing. Fruit juices will also
give you potassium. Many
runners who engage in
running every day gradually
deplete their potassium store
unless they include plenty of
potassium-rich foods in the
diet. This will lead to fatigue
and lessened capacity to
exercise.
PRICE REDUCED
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Standard Oil of Ohio ( Sohio)
reduced the price of its Octron regular gasoline at
company-operated
service
stations in certain areas of
the state by 2 to 3 cents per
gallon Saturday. The price
was reduced 2 cents to 57.9
cents per gallon in Franklin
County and the Chillicothe
area . The price was dropped
3 cents to 56.9 cents in the
Newark area,

Sunday Times-Sentinel
Published every - Sunday
by
The - Ohio
Valley
Publish ing Co .
GALLIPOLI·S
DAILY TRIBUNE

825 Third Ave ., Gallipolis,

Ohio 45631 .
Put?lished every w~ekday

eventng E')'.Cept Saturday .

I'JI

Dale E. Hathaway, a•
former Michigan economist'
who now heads the private
International Food Folicy:
Research Institute, said theU.N . Food and Agriculture·
Organization has begun d1
new food informatlon systeD\1
which provides more timelY ·
data than past efforta.
"·'
But the system doesnt(l
adequately cover the worl~
scene because it gets little
information from the world's
second and third largest
grain producers, the Sovi~
Union and the Peopll!ll
Republic of China, Hathaway
said.
"Thus the F AO food tn:,i
formation system .. .is totally
inadequate in terms ol
coverage of two of the world's
largest agricultural
producers and consumer~,
Until these countries choose
'"
to cooperate, no system can
be adequate in terms Of
coverage," Hathaway said
a statement Wednesday. '"
Agriculture
Department
officials, in a backgroUil(i
paper, said the agency ha.~
improved its analysis o!
Soviet crop conditions witli
information provided b'y
Russia under a 1973 exchange
agreement and "increased
use of corroborative data

m

from other sources."

..

Howard Hjort, a privaU!
economist, told the Congres;
sional study group in another
paper that the Agriculture
Department cannot improv~
its forecasts of world foQ\1
conditions much unless It
reorganizes its · analysis
operation. At present, Hj~t
said, it is difficult for the
agency to produce "ob~
jective" forecasts becaus'e
responsibility for predictions
is divided between researc;h
economists 1and operating
agencies which promote farm
trade .
The analyses, . Hjort said,
would be more effective if
they were put under the sole
control of economists.
-

-'
The Almaoac
United Press International
Today is SUnday, Sept. 28,
the 27lst day of 1975 with 94 to
follow.
The moon is in its laSt
quarter.
The morning stars are
Venus, Saturn, Mars
Jupiter.
"
The .evening star is Mer- ·
cury.
Those horn on this date
under the sign o( Libra. '
American entertainer E'd
Sullivan was born Sept. 28,

ai.!l

are

1902.
~:
Also on '!his day in history:

In 1920, basebaU's biggest·
Sec ond Class . Postage Paid
at Galll8ol is, Ohio 45631.
scandal broke. A grand jury
THE AlLY SENT INEL
111 Court St ., Pomeroy , 0 . indicted eight players of tile
. 45769 . Published every week - .
day evening except Satur - Chicago White Sox fijr
.day. Entered as second class
"throwing" the 1919 world
mailing matter at Pomero.y ,
Ohio Post Off tee . J.
Series games with the CincinBy carrier daily and
"
Sunday 75c per week . Motor nati Reds.
route S3 . 25 per montl) .
In 1937, President Franklln
MAIL
D. Roosevelt dedicated
SUBSCRIPTION RATE S
The
Gallipolis
Daily Bonneville . Dam on tile
Tr ibune in Ohio and West
Virginia one year $22.00; six Columbia RiVer tn Oregoo.
months $1 1:50 ; three months
In 1953, Robert Greenle8lie,
$7.00 . Elsewhere 526.00 pe r
year ; six mOnths $13 .50 ; Jr., was kidnaped. The "6three months $7 .50 ; · motor
year~ld son of a wealthy
route $3 .25 monthly .
·
The , -Da-lly Sentinel , one Kan5as City, Mo., automobiJe
year $22 ~ 0(); Six months
$11 .50 ; three m·o nths $7 .00. dealer was found dead ant.!
Elsewhere
526 . 00 ;
six
the :kidnaiHlluiderers
"
months S13 .SO ; three months
$7 .50 .
'
eventually were exec;utep.
The United Press ln .
In 1974, Mrs. Betty Ford,
ternational is exclus l v~ly
entitled to the use for'
wife
of President Gerald
Publication of l all news
dispatches credited to the Ford, uncier,went surgery 1 a
newspaper and also 'I he loc al
mastectomy) for brea'St
news puqlished h erei n .
·
I
cancer.

'

'

POMEROY - A crowd
pleaser at the Meigs-Waverly
B@llle was the performance of
J~e Meigs High School
lllarching band at half-time .
The band entered from the
north end of the field in four
~Qlllpany fronts to a perC)lsSion solo, then ~ into
~ fight song and marched
ljown field .
~-Reaching the center of the
field marchers went into a ISfile block band, and facing
the grandstand , played
·:Musical Cocktail" by Bill
Moffit, band director at
University of Houston, Texas.
.''Musical Cocktail" featured
different sections of the band
playing different melodies.
The flute section played " Our

Boys Will Shine Tonight"; the
clarinets, "Honey Babe ";
saxophones, " Blue Bells of
Scotland"; E-flat trumpets,
" She'll Be Coming Around
the Mountain";
entire
trumpet section, "Red River
Valley" ; F horns , " Do
Lord"; trombones, " When
The Saints Go Marching In'';
baritones, ' 'Annie Laurie"
and the sousaphones, " Swing
Low Sweet Chariot." The
band then played all the
songs at the same time .
The majorettes, fla g
bearers and rifle squad
performed with dance steps
to each style song that was
being played. The band then
did a short drill leaving the
field playing the light song.

143, 5:30-6 ; Hysell Run, 6:30- 4:30; L&lt;mg Bottom, 5-5:30;
7; Krogers Parking Lot, 7:30- Success
Road ,
6-~ .30;
Chester Community, 7-8.
8:30.
Friday - Racine Ele., 9-11
POMEIWY - The MeigsJackson :Vinton Co untie s a.m .; Por tland Ele.,. 12:30Bookmobile r Mr. Eddy) · 2:30 p.m . ; Por tland Comsc hedule next week in Meigs munity 3-3 :30; Great Bend, 4- ,
County :
Thursday . Oct. 2 - South·
ern Hi , 9~ 10 a.m .; RacineElm Street, 10: 1&gt;-Ji; Rt. 124
TON IGH'T THRU
Store, 11 :30-11 :45; SyracuseTUESDAY
Baers, 12,12 :30 p.m. ; 'Trailer
Park-syracuse,
12 : 4&gt;-1 :15 ;
Syracuse-Village North. I :30Sunday
2: Minersville Post Office,
Bulk Ashland Station, 2:152:40; Mc Ca llu ms. 2: 45-3 ;
BatUns Addition, 4:30-5; Rl.

Eddy's routes

Two injured

World's 1 Marauder band

and speed away . How many people lining the sfrl.'f' ts aetunlly
catch more tha n glimpse of the President"! How many have a
chance to say a word to him, much less conduct a "dialogue"
on · the problems of the day ?
A better method by which the President could meet the
people would be through a series of town hall-type meetings in
communities around the country. Because each meeting would
be prearranged and prescreened, security would he made
infinitely easier, even if the audience numbered in the sever~ I
thousands. In addition, some thoughtful questions and some
helpful answers might even he exchanged.
The President might also reconsider his position on gun
control. Now obviously, no matter how strict the controls, a
determined assassin wiD find a way to secure a weapon and an
opportunity to use it.
But that is precisely the point : We may not be able to do
very much about the determined assassin, but there is no
excuse for making it 30 ridiculously easy for even a certifiable
nut to obtain a gun.
Sarah Jane Moore, the woman in San Francisco, had been
arrested for illegal possession of a revolver. Yet somehow,
despite her record of erratic behavior, she managed to obtain
another r evolver which she fired at the President the very next
day,
. Are we saying that we can do nothing to keep guns out of
the hands of those who are unstable or potentially dangerous in
our society and still respect the rights of decent Americans
who collect and enjoy guns' II so, we can look forwarll to
continuing to pay a high price for the easy availabiUty of guns.
We are just plain lucky that in Gerald Ford's case, the ,
price has twice been averted.

GOP is winning Ohio's Six Day Wa·r

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
•
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Last
week 's Franklin County
Court of Appeals decision
upholding the invalidity of six
partisan Democratic bills
: rushed
through
the
legislature in
January
carried
a
timeworn
• message- those that live by
: the sword die by the sword.
;
The bills, it may be
• recalled, included a new
congressional redistricting
plan calculated to furnish an
" additional two to four seats in
the U.S. House for Ohio
Democrats in the 1976
: election.
'
There also were proposals
; to save more than 100
, Democratic jobs in the
•· executive branch, limit the

~·

.

Editorial comment,
opinion, features
.,
,.
··

,t

I

in crash

CHARLIE WEBSTER
GALLIPOLIS - Carroll
Norris, owner of Norris
Dodge, . 50 Slate St., has
added Charlie Webster, 339
Fourtb Ave. , GaUipolis, to
his staff as sales manager.
Webster has had 28 years
experience in selling new
and used cars.

MIDDLEPORT - Two
persons were injured. two
vehicles heavily damage d ·
a nd one driver charged as the
result of a n accident on North
Second Ave., near King
Builders at 8:08p.m . Friday .
Middlepor( Police said that
a nor lhhoiUld pickup truck
driven by Woody Call, 43,
Pomeroy. crossed over the
·ce nterlin e an d collided
headon with a southbond car
oriven by Marilyn Miller, 26,
Middleport .
Call wa~ taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad
where he was admitted with
facial injuries. He will he
charged with driving while
intoxicated, police said.
Mrs . Miller who received
neck and hip injuries, was

COLO\'
. . ,.,,.,,,,.,.·

taken to Holzer Medi ca l
Center by the Middleport
Emergency Squad . She was
also admi t~d .
The pickup truck was
heavily damaged and police
listed the Mi ller car as a total
Joss .

UNIT CALLED
RAC INE - The Racine ER
squad was called Friday at
5: 15p .m . toRt . 2, Racine, for
Ray Roush who had a back
i·njury. He was ta ken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 8:20 p.m . the squad took
Greg Dunning, Racine , who
sustained a broken right leg
in the Southe rn-Wahama
game to Ve~rans Memorial
Hospital ·where he was admitted .

BITE
THE

MEIGS THEATRE
TO NI fE thru T UE SDAY

lti:
&lt;-..u, \ t

\ ',0..' [l o.l'; i'/'

·,~loii"['; A ..,

C)ol!

I I •f•l

( Tec hni colorl
1-! obe rt Redford
Bo Suen son

BULLET

rl•' • ~·AI

l"':f\~1

THE GREAT
W ALDO PEPPER

Ill

'1 .,,,
!,I

·· o '

PLUS

GENE HACKMAN
CArQ(E BtllGEN

BUSTER AND

.wt:S~

BILLY

Show Sta rl s el l 7 . 00 p .m

CARTOON

"'

Borne is damaged
·'
.POMEROY Damages
were estimated at $2,500 from
~ lire which hit the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Durward
Cumings on the Rock Springs
road at 4:49p.m . Friday.
"The fire apparently started
io the attached garage and
spread to the attic . Defective
~iring was believed to have
ll!len the cause. Neighbors of
tj)e couple arrived at the
scene with small fire extinguishers and garden hose
tv keep the fire under control
until arrival of the Pomeroy
F,ire Dept.

At 10:17 a .m . Saturday, the
department was called to the
Route 7 bypass to extinguish
a car on fire . Capt. Tom
Werry said damages were
under the hood to the vehicle
and amounted to about $200.
Owner of the car was not
identified.
At 10:56 a .m . Saturday the
Pomeroy E-R squad went to
126 State St. for two-year-old
James Braley who had fallen
down steps. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Midwinter ski

Boosters will
.,
sell jackets at
'·

home games
: RACINE
Southern
Athletic Booster jackets have
lleen ordered and will be sold
1
ccording
to
an
anrl'o uncement
when
the
Boosters met at the high
school.
· The jackets wiD be sold at
th.e home football games or
cim be purchased from Carl
\Volfe at the high school. The
p'rice is $15 for adults and $14
for students . .
' The Boosters endorsed a
ljQnd levy to be voted upon at
the Nov . 4 election with
Rroceeds to be used for an
addition to the high school.
Plans also were made for
selling pens on which is
imprinted the basketball
lichedule for the new year at

a

$1.
.,·, Plans were made for
~~lling pizza at the concession
~!and at home f?otball
&amp;ames. The next meeting was
set for 7:30p .m. on Oct. 7 at
!lie high school. Danny
~rown, president, was in
charge of the meeting.
w
,,

,,

SlL

lOGE

PLAZA STORE ONLY
BAMKAMUICARD
01 MASTU CHARGE

coNV£Nl£Nl

~==\

us£

oou~HARG£

N

AN

HOME AND FAMILY SUPER SAVINGS
THEFAMILYPLACETOSAVE LAYAWA:r.:~ITEMS
DAYS ONLY- SEPT. 28-29-30 AND
~================~ ' e\~~~~:S::::::::_________!O~C~T~.l~S~T~--------j

trip .west set
RIO GRANDE - A midwinter ski trip to either
Steamboat Springs or As_pen,
Colo., is being planned by
Professor Bob Rogers at Rio
Grande College. The trip is
s ponsored by Professor
Rogers. It is not a college
trip, and carries no college
credits.
The trip is open to the
public and will cost $250 per
person. This includes round
trip bus transportation from
Rio Grande to Colorado, ski
lift privileges and a condominium apartment with
kitchen.
The bus will leave Rio
Grande on December 10, and
return the 21st. A minimum
of 12 participants is required
to make the trip possible.
Space is limited and will be
offered on a first come, first
serve basis.
A deposit of $30 is required
by November I, with the $220
balance due November 25. If
there are not enough participants, the $30 deposit will
he refunded.
While in Colorado , ski
equipment and lessons are
available at additional
charges . For more information and reservations,
contact Professor Bob
Rogers at Rio Grande
College, Rio Grande, Ohio
45674. Telephone 245-5353.

REG. •12.88 2-PC.

CA'AOUPLAGI SUIT

SAVE

$9 9~ARGEIT

$10

Non-ruslle eolian drill. 4 pockel jacket, zipper panls . For
duck, bow hunlers.

DUSK·TO·DAWN
SECURITY· LIGHT

7 fl. X 10 FT. STEEL SHED

$2999 '
'

Photoelectric control
turns lighl on al dusk,
off ot down . Mast arm ,

acryli c refra cto r, cop lead wi res, mounthardware includecl

I

'

Rigid construction with weather tight
overlapping panels and strong gable
roof. Sliding doo rs.

CHARGE

12~:: $117~
$137.88

eBEN PEARSON BOWS
eBEAR GLASS POWERED
BOWS
eBEN PEASON
AND BEAR ACCESSORIES
eHUNTING ARROWS
eB0\'4 STRINGS
eBOW QUIVERS
•ARROW TIPS

REGULAR PRICE 1249.00

PECAN FINISH 60"
MEDITERRANEAN CONSOLE
With solid state and AM-FM Multiply
Radio and 8 Track
RADIO AND 8 TRACK
TAPE PLAYER PLUS
PHONOGRAPH

USE OUR CONVENIFNT NO cHARGE
XMAS LAYAWAY

SEE OUR COMPLETE
SELECTION OF
ARCHERY SUPPLIES.

•PLUS MANY

SAVE '50

OTHER ACCESSORIES

CHARGE IT!

Students are

required to
report change
"'
' " Meigs County school
.students over age 18 who are

)r'eceiving Social Security
,benefits should call the Social
:S..curity office if there has
been a change in their school
_;~ttendance.
Ed Peterson , Branch
Jlianager o the Athens Social
Security ltfice, reminds
..students ,,eneficiaries to
",i.eport chE .iges which could
· ' a ffect their. entitlement. This
. includes a ' change of schools,
,ihange from full-time at,
, t.endance, change of address,
~~~r marriage. Peterson also
·,votes that a student who is
: )leing paid by his employer to
:~~ttend school must report 11
as this makes him ineligible
ofor student benefits.
0, Social Security benefits for
9 children normally terminate
,,,..hen a child attains age 18.
.J::Iowever, benefits continue to
ebe paid to students :between ·
" :lhe ages of 18 and 23 if their
~ parents are receiving Social
o&amp;ecurity checks . Benefits are
· also payable to students
.!whose parents are deceased,
,[.provided on' of the parents
t ;worked long enough in em·
~ ploymenl or seif-&lt;!mployment
•-covered by· Social Security .

Thinking
Remodeling.
Think
about
us!

DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS ONLY

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA ONLY

of

----r--:-:-:-=--

REGULAR
PRICE

ITEM TO SELL

Jubilee Kitchen Wax
Men's Socks

84'

47'
44'

REGULAR
PRICE
5 PC.

00

$fi.44

HARDMAN'S
HOME
CENTER
Rt. 2 Bypass .
Point
W. Va.

E LE CTR lC

Single

$117 GARAGE DOOR OPENER
Dual Control

24"x36" CARPET Pieces

SOON II

$fi.94

.$8.94 BATH MAT SET

large 8'x8' Tent
Locking Gas Tank Caps

OPENING

ITEM TO SELL

. SAVE
.NOW

Marquis Blanket
Bath Towels (Gold on~&gt;
All fiShing Rods &amp;Supplies

Ladies

Fruit Of The
Loom

PIN UP

LAMPS
NO. 720

$1.27

MAGNUS ORGAN

N
88'
1JJ OFF

'7.99 &amp;
18.99

mplete Unit with
Tape Player, Rec~rd

$9goo

WOMEN'S BETTER

31%" TALL

$1.57 CASHEWS

l · lb .

9~

Size

G.C:. MURPHY CO~- THE FRIEN

$7.94

LV STORE

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE • DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS STORE

�.

'
'

..

r:=~~==il::::J
1'.-1!!!

H:T!:tin~:: ~~~~::Ilia : ~
.1..

~{~~: Academy High School marching band captured top
':::':': honors (Class A Division ) during Saturday's annual
::::;::; Tri.State Marching Band Festival at Fairfield Stadium
in Huntington.
.
:::;::::
Seven Class A bands participated in the festival
?} and a total of 29 bands from Ohio, Kentucky and West
::;:::;: Virginia were entered in this year 's contest.
::::;:::
Following the contest, the GAHS musicians, who
?} gave a brilliant halftime show at Athens Friday night
:\':: attended the Marshall University-lllinois State game:

't:::

\t
:::':':
:':':';

?t

::;::;:;
}}
;:;:;:;;
{{

?}

::::::::

::;:::::

::::::::

·- ~~f:f~~~~~~~~~~;i~~:~:~:~:~~:~~:~:~:~:~~~:i:~:~~~:~::~~~~:~~::~~~::::::::::::::~::~:::::::::::::::~::~:~::::::~:;::;:~~;:::;~::::::~~=:~t~:1~:~:~r:::·: : :

Ferry can't pull
into local levee

Bainbridge man Stewart ·is elected to .
injured in wreck head area treasurers
GALLIPOLIS - Andrew
Aguson, 20, Bainbridge, was
slightly injured in an accident
at 12:30 a.m. Saturday on Rt.
325, north of County Road 217,
south of Vinton .
According to the GalliaMeigs Post State Highway
Patrol, Aguson was a
passenger in a car uperated
by Gary N. Wilcoxen, 20, of
Ashville, Ohio. Wilcoxen lost
control of his car on a curve.
His vehicle left the highway
and ran into a ditch.
Billy
Campbell,
52,
Gallipolis, was charged with
failure to sl&lt;&gt;p within the
assured clear distance

LOGAN
Gallia County
Treasurer Oty M. Stewart of Vinton
was elected president the past week

here of the Southeastern Ohio
Treasurers ' As:;ociatlon . The group is
composed of ~ireasurers from . 20
Southeastern Ohio coW'lties rangmg
from Franklin County to Belmont
CoWity.
Other officers are Bernard
McKnight, Lawrence County, vice
president and Francis E . Myers,
Hocking County, secretary-treasurer.
The association has chosen Ed
Ducey, former employee · of the
Department of Taxation, as lobbyist
in the State Legislature . Ducey will
inform the treasurers on all new
legislation, bills being submitted and
other valuable information.
Under his leadership, the
association hopes to bring to area
counties better management of local
government especially in budgeting .
Stewart is a former Gallia CoiU'lty

.,

OTY M. STEWART

commissioner and is currently serving his second term as treasurer.
Prior to his elec.tion to a coWIIY
office, Stewart operated a hardware
store in Vinton.

&lt;

"
;

TOM TIEDE

the State of Ohio and West
Virginia would listen to
proposals to upgrade the
Middleport levee and im·
prove the one at Clifton, W.
Va.
Hoffman recently met with
Glen Smith, Division 10
D.O.T. and McCoy, the ferry
operator . Smith indicated
that Ohio would cooperate in
any way possible on the
improvement of the levee in
Middleport .if he received
assurance that the ferry
could land in Middleport and
that West VIrginia would
repair the landing at Clifton .
McCoy agreed to bring his
boat to Middleport to see if he
could land there .
Later, McCoy, informed
MONDAY
Hoffman that the water was
REVIVAL at the Mt. not deep enough at the
Carmel Church at 7:30 p. m. Middleport levee for his boat
with Rice Browning, Logan, . to land. Smith was duly
w. Va., preaching.
notified of this, and therefore
could
not proceed on any plan
TUESDAY
SPECIAL MEETING, Vinton for upgrading the Middleport
Friendship Garden Club, 10 levee.
The possibility of securing
a.m. at Vinton Town Hall.
Members are to bring a a ferry in Middleport for next
sandwich. Beverages ·will be spring when the bridge wiD
furnished. Guest speaker will be closed once again Is being
be Patty Snyder from Smelt- considered by Middleport
officials.
zer Garden Center.
If a ferry could be secured
,•, •• •.•......-.-...A':o'•'..'",l! '•X •-:--.::;•· X•X•"o"o"o"o • ·
l!:j.
...-!·~;o;J&lt;if',._,.......:-.•, :-. ••• ..;.. -~-~~:;.:-: that could land in Middleport,
~­
and if West Virginia would
«
repair the Clifton levee,
Smith indicated action could
be started for securing state
help in upgrading the levee.

MIDDLEPORT
· Upgrading the Middleport
levee n so the present ferry
working between Pomeroy
and Mason can land there
apparently is out.
However, according to
Mayor Fred Hoffman , a
different kind of ferry with
less draft might be able to
land at Middleport. In that
case, the mayor has learned.

Not all Americans
welcome bicentennial
•

By Tom ,Tiede
CHEROKEE , N. C.
Roadside signs throughout
the mountain regions of this
and neighboring states
designate a rarely remembered and perhaps best
forgotten chapter of the
American
Revolution:
Battles in which native In·
dians teamed with British
interests against the patriots.
If the colonies were
foW'lded somewhat on the
basis of peaceful coexistence
with the redmen , the
Revolution was the beginning
of a split lasting to this day.
Indian participation in the
war was not of course confined to this area, known in
the 1700s as the Southwestern
frontier of the new land. Most
of the Six Nation tribes of the
Northeast
also
allied
themselv,es with the British
and fought the revolutionaries frO!Il the Catskills to Lake Erie. But it was
here in the Appalachian
region where the savagery
between the forces was
particularly intense, with the
legacy of all sides being
largely wretched .
Popular history has it that ·
the British bribed Indian
activity with booze and
bamboozli'lg, and some of
SUNDAY
that is pro~ably true. But in
HOMECOMING at Eagle
the main the Indians needed
Ridge CommWIIIy Church.
.
no
goading. The Cherokee,
SW1day School at 10 a .m.,
Creek,
Choctaw
and
basket dinner at noon and
Chickasaw
tribes
of
the
day
program at 1: 30 featuring
claimed land that stretched
Dan Hayman and Hymnfrom
Ohio to Mississippi,
timers.
Virginia to the Florida line,
GO TO CHURCH SUNDAY
.
and they were disinclined to
io be observed by Middleport
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Ftve - allow colonialist encroach
Lodge 363, F. and A.M. at the investor-owned electric ment. Besides what treatie~
Pomeroy First B~ptist utility companies in Ohio did
the redmen had with the
Church, 10:30 a .m . service. not pay federal income tax
whites bore the seal of King
THE REV . CARROLL last. year and one of them, George and tribal fathers
SHEETS, t:;olumbus, will Columbus ~d !'"uthern Ohio desperately wanted them
speak at the Church of Christ Electric, didn t pay state preserved.
in Christian Union at Pearl mcome tax either, Auditor of
Patriots of the home felt the
St., Middleport, at 7:30 p.m. State Thomas E. Ferguson
British utilization of the
revealed
Friday.
Indians
unfair and outside the
CHESTER
UNITED
"In fact, . Columbus and
bounds of what was then
Methodist Church
Southern ~hto Electric had a
perceived as acceptable
homecoming, with regular
Ia~ . cre.~tt of over $2.2 tactics. Not lightly did Tom
SWiday School and church
mtlhon, sald Ferguson, Jefferson indict the British
' services in the morning. A
king, in the Declaration of
basket
tlinner,
with "and because of that n:my not
tableware furnished, will be even have. to pay ~Y mcome( Independence, for bringing
"the Inhabitants of our
for this year.
.
served at 12:30 p.m. followed taxFerguson
satd he got hiB Frontiers, the merciless
by a 1:30 p.m. program. Rev. information from a Senate
Eddie Buffington, Pomeroy, subcommittee, which got it Indian Savages, whose known
Rule of Warfare is an W'l·
will be afternoon speaker and from the utility industry.
distinguished Destruction of
special music provided by the
Other firms not paying
all Ages, Sexes and ConAng~laires of Lancaster.
federal income tax in 1974 ditions."
CHESTER Fire Dept. were Ohio Power, Dayton
The Patriots' disgust was
thank-you dinner for those Power and Ught, Toledo perhaps better expressed by
who donated food or time and Edison and Ohio Electric.
a soldier in the command of
"Ironically, the utility that
their famili ~ s at departGen. John Sullivan, who,
ment's COW'lty fair booth; bas the lowest consumer rate
upon seeing the results of
take covered dish, 5 p.m. ~t ' charge in Ohio, Cl1lcinnati
Indian raiding, wrote of hls
Gas and Electric, paid over
fire house.
de!'d comrades:
"The
REUNION
of
the $10.7 million in fe&lt;jeral in· .
savages, having first put
descendants of Cal'! and Ella come tax," said ..,ergu.son,
them to the most exManley Sunday at State Park "while the t~tllity with the
cruciating torment by
on U.S. 33 on left traveling highest consumer rate,
plucking their nails from
north toward Athens. Potluck Columbus and Southern Ohio
hands and feet, and then
Electric, ended 1974 with a
at lp.m.
spearing,
cutting
and
REUNION of descendants tax credit of $2,206,400."
whipping
them,
and
Ferguson said ·Columbus
of W. L. and Marne Whaley,
mangling their bodies, and
12:30 at the Rqck Springs and Southern Ohio last year
received a 10 per cent then cutting off the flesh from
Grange.
property-tax rollback that their shoulders by pieces,
TIJESDAY
tomahawked their heads
MEIGS
COUNTY amounted to $697,282 in from their bodies and left
Education Assn. fall meeting, Franklin, County alone.
"I do not remember them a prey to their dogs. 0
Eastern High School, 6:30
. Britain, behold, and blush!"
p.m. dinner with Dr. Donald Columbus and Southern Ohio ~ Actually, some iri Britain
Leighty of Ohio University, Electric or any other electric did blush, and called for an
utility in Ohio asking the
guest speaker.
Public Utilities Commission end to the Indian ' alliance.
MEIGS TOPS meeting, for a decrease in its charges Hardliners won out, though,
7:30 p.m. at the American to
consumers,"
said agreeding with the influential
Earl of Suffolk that: "It is
Legion Hall in Middleport Ferguson.
allowable, and perfectly
· with Dr. Hanek, director of
justifiable, so use every
psychological services at
LOSES BOND
means
which God has put ln
Ohio University, guest
COLUMBUS,S. C. (UP!)fll)elllrer. Members urged to James Dickey, autitor of the . our hands."
Thus Indian raiding con'
attendandtakeaglll!st.
bestselling
novel
WEDN~AV' ·
"Deliverance" failed to tinued in the area, led by a
.MIDDLEPORT Firemen's appear in court and forfeited Cherokee Patton named
AIIDI!ary, 7:30 p.m. at the , a $132.50 jlond on charges of Dragging Canoe, to the
IWI. Loui1e McE:lblo!ly and driving whi'e intoxil:ated and 1780s, and to the eventual
destruction of what had been
J111lce Daniell, hostesses.
dislroerly conduct. ·
'
1
~
1
,
·
I
0 0

Social
Calendar

Five utilities in

Ohio paid no
federal tax

I.

following an accident Friday
on Rt. 7 in Kanauga . The
patrol said Campbell's truck
struck the rear end of a
vehicle driven by Lorenzo
Davis, 71, of Pomeroy . There
was minor damage.
A third accident occurred
on Rt. 588, one and seven
tenths miles east of Rt. 35
where a dump truck operated
by Greg M. Bryant, 22,
Rodney, met a car driven by
Cheryl Thompson, 20, Rio
Grande, on a curve. There
was no contact between the
two vehicles. However, the
truck went off the highway,
struck a tree and overturned.

I.

,

SHERRI YETZER
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
County sheriff's
department
Saturday requested the help of the
public in locating Sberrl Lyon
Yetzer, 18, of Shelly, Ohio. Sheriff
Oscar Baird said the girl was last
seen on Aug. 23. A missing person's
report has been flied by the girl's
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Trout of Shelly, Ohio. It is believed
that Miss Yetzer may be living In or
around Gallla County. Anyone
knowing her whereabouts is asked to
contact the Gallla County Sheriff's
Office Immediately.

for centuries an Indian nation
and what for even longer than
that had been an Indian way
of life.
And it was this total
destruction that blighted the
Patriots' part in all this .
Already shamed for wrongs
done to the redmen - the
patriots (with the British)
introduced at least two
devices that weakened the
Indians physically and
..morally: smallpox and
scalping . The colonialists set
out in the Revolution to not
only solve, but annihilate, the
Indian question.
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
To this end hW'ldreds of
lndia,n villages were wiped County Budget Commisswr.
out, croplands were burned, has approved the millage
and families split and scat- rate for the City of Gallipolis
tered. Carl Lambert, a which has been set at two and
Cherokee historian , says now one half mills.
According to a spokesman
that eventual, poverty · and
starvation killed more In- for the commission, the new
dians than patriot muskets. rate represents a decrease of
That's war, of course. Or is two tenths of a miD but will
it' Americans who have been not decrease the amount of
normally benevolent, even money the city wiD have
excessively generous to because of the re-valuation of
defeated enemies, have not in property .
The Gallipolis City Board of
200 years looked on the InEducation
has scheduled a
dians with the same reconstruction charity that they meeting Oct. 6 with . the
have, say, on the Japanese Budget . Commission to
and the Germans. And so it is discuss its budget. Also apthat the Cherokees, to name proved Thursday was the
just one former enemy tribe, rate for the Gallia County
has to the present continued Ubrary. The- rate for the
Jackson
Vinton
to suffer that defeat of two Gallia
Vocational School will be set
centuries past.
In 1776, according to a 'later date .
historian Lambert, the
Cherokee Nation consisted of
BURKE ON BOARD
20,000 people in control of
LOS
ANGELES (UP!)
235,000 square miles of
America. Today there are Rep. Yvonne Brathwaite
8,000 survivors on this Burke, D-Calif., the first
reservation of 56,000 acres. black woman elected to
Bicentennial? Lambert says Congress, has been named to
his people are preparing to the board of trustees of .the
observe th~. commemoration, University of Southern
"but we won't exactly California, the school an·
celebrate it ."
nOIU'ICed.

Millage rate
is approved

KENNEDY GUILTY
WOODSTOCK, Va. (UP!)
- David Kennedy, 20, son of
the late Sen. Robert F.
Kennedy, entered a guilty
plea Friday to a reckless
driving charge and was fined
$50 plus court costs in
Shenandoah County District
Court.

WOMEN BURNED
AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - A
fire bomb caused $11,500
damage and injured two
women Friday night at a
home here. Firemen said the
incendiary device was hurled
into a home on Sparhawk
Ave. about 9:22 p.m. It
burned the living room and
FAYE WATCH SET
kitchen and caused smoke
MIAMI (UP!) - New Engdamage throughout the land and the Canadian
house. Treated for shock and Mar time Provinces were
later released was a woman cautioned Saturday to keep
Identified as Beverly Allen of close tabs on hurricane Faye,
Akron. Firemen said Mary although forecasters said it
Oledski of Akron suffered appeared the storm would
second degree burns on one miss the U. s. mainland and
leg.
· .. ~kirt Nova Scotia with its 100
mph winds during ihe night.

Cigarettes stolen from A&amp;P
GALLIPOLIS -

Approximately

1600 worth of cigarettes were taken in

a breaking and entering Friday at the
A&amp;P Supermarket on Second A,ve.
City police said the store was entered some time between 9:30 p.m.
Thursday and 9 a.m. Friday by prying
a front door . open. Missing were 45
cartons of Salem; 12 cartons of
Winston ; 10 cartons of Kools, 20
cartons of Belair ; 10 cartons of
Raleigh; 30 cartons of Pall Mall; 15
cartons of Marlhoro and 15 cartons of

Lucky Strike. The Intruders also
attempted to enter an office desk but
were W'lsuccessful.
Officers Friday night investigated
a breaking and entering at George
Coleman's Pennzoll Service Station on
First Ave.
Entry was made by breaking a
window on the Southeast bay door.
The pop machine was opened and the
money box was taken. Missing was
$42 to $43 in change.

~~~~~w~~i~~!r~~~~~~t:~?~~t~~:~:::~:~::~~~~:r~:~~~~~~~~~~~~j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;:~i~:;:~j;;r;:;;:t;;;:t;;;;~;;~;;~;;;;;~;;;;; ;I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;{;;~;;;;;;t~:;;t;:;;r;;;;;t~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;~;;~~tt.

ll All~~~~•.:~~

;:;;:;:: Area Chamber of Commerce, Rotary Club,
} } Presbyterian Church, Q.nio Valley
:}~:' Regional Development Commission and a
:::::::: past director of the Southeastern Ohio
} ) Regional Council.
:~{:: "I'll miss the gang around here.''
i{: Allen remarked, but added, "I've got lots
;:::::::of things I want to do after my retirement.
'::'U plan to keep busy."
}}
Allen's successor will be named by the
(( home office in Columbus. Until a

'"'~~~~. I :

American College or. Surgeons, D~ ·
Morgan served as Prestdent of the OhiO
Chapter of the American College of
Surgeons in 1969 and is currently CoiU'lcilor
of the 9th District of the Ohio State Medical
Association.

~
••

_

~r::: ~

..

Miss Nancy Lou Lease
ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs. Richard (Tiny) Lease,
Sawyer, Mich., announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Nancy Lou,
Gallipolis, to John W. Goo! din, Jr., Gallipolis, son of Mr .
and Mrs. John W. Gooldin, Sr ., Crown City. The wedding
will be an event of Feb. 14 at 7:30p.m. at Grace United
Methodist Church in Gallipolis. Rev. Paul Hawks and
Rev. Hughey Jones will officiate at the open church
wedding . Miss ·Lease is a graduate of Gallia Academy
High School. She attended Ohio State University and is a
graduate of the Holzer Medical Center School of Nursing .
She is presently employed as a registered nurse in the
emergency room at Holzer Medical Center . Her fiance,
also a graduate of Gallia Academy, attended Gallipolis
Business College and is employed at G .S.I.

featuring
Annie Anybody

:

BY BEll IE CLARit

•

•
THREE KILLED
TEL AVIV, (UP!) - Israeli
soldiers killed a raiding party
of
three
Palestinian
guerrillas from Lebanon in a
gWibattle near the border
Saturday, the Israeli military
command said. Two Israeli
soldiers were woW'lded.

INSULATED

ARMSTRONG REITRES
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Harry Armstrong, 59, chief of
the Division of Oil and Gas of
the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, will
retire effective Oct. 15, it was
announced Friday.

,

Say "So long
to cold feet"

COUPLE KILLED
GENEVA, Ohio (UPI)
Russell Schaubert, 21, and
Brenda Clisby, 17, both of
Jefferson,
died
early
Saturday in a one-car crash
on Ohio 84.

We Srock
Safety Shoes

I AEDWING 1·~1

DAN THOMAS &amp; SON

'

324 SECOND AVE. GAUIPOUS

LOW-COST MEALS WITH A HIGH RETURN
GALIJPOLIS - Beans as nutritious as steak? Sounds a
little ridiculous, doesn't it? But a U.S. Department of
Agciculture economist found that a wide variety of foods, at
di~erent cost levels could provide approximately the same
nutcitional levels.
1 Menus from beans to steaks all figured out at about 1,000
calories (per portion), and had about the same amounts of
vitamins and minerals. But, prices of meals -all for a family
of four -ranged from $2.20 (for the beans), to $11.60 (for
steak). Sandwiched in between was a "standard" meal, (with
ground beef and fresh vegetables) that cost $3.60.
The low-cost and standard meals had adequate protein each provided about 'h of a day's requirements, while the
steak dinner had more than a day's requirement: But the low!XJSt diet was much lower in saturated fat.
· Low-cost menu - each serving - $2.20 (four servings):
l'h cups of peas, navy or greatnorthern cooked with ham hock,
cole
slaw, 2 pieces.of homemade cornbread with margarine, 1k
1
cup of applesauce, 2 oatmeal cookies, milk.
Standard dinner would cost approximately $3.80 (four
servings). One serving : 'h cup of tomato juice, saltines, 3
ounces of ground beef, catsup, 'h cup mashed potatoes (made
from scratch with margarine and milk), 'h cup canned green
beans, tossed salad with lettuce and radishes plus a dollop of
French dressing, bread and margarine, slice of homemade
apple pie, milk.
.
Or you can jump to the "expensive" meal at a cost of
$11.80 for four people - a higher priced cut of meat plus an
extensive use of ready .prepared foods jacked up the cost.
One serving: Ready-to-&lt;!erve shrimp cocktail, 'k pound
~ibeye steak, baked potato and sour cream, frozen peas with
liutter sauce, tossed salad with lettuce, green pepper, tomato,
.lnd radishes with purchased blue cheese dressing, brand
dame sesame seedrolls with butter, slice of purchased brahd
4ame apple pie, brewed coffee and table cream.
! The point of the survey is to show that meals can be
i)lexpensive and still be good for you. Ready-to-&lt;!erve items are
tpe ones you really pay for .
•

End the Third of the Month
Run-Around

L.__ _ __

We now offer the end of the third
of the month run-around.
Your Social Security Checks
may now be mailed directly
to the bank.
·
Your money will be safe. Just write
a ' check to pay your bills.

~ALE

OOMMERCIAL &amp; SAViNGS BANK
Silver Bridge Plaza
. Court Street, GalliP.Oiis
Member F .D . I.C ,
·
'

McKNIGHT-DAVIE$

... •

·I
I

'

I,

(;burch family gathers
: GALLIPOLIS
The
descendants of the Alex ·
Church family held the ann\tal reunion at the Gallia
County Junior Fairgrounds
Sept. 21.
' Attending were Mr. and
¥cs. Marvin Sheets, Parma;
Mr . and Mrs. E . W. Church,
S:ureka Star Rt., Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert Church,
~awn, Eddie and Karl,
~llance; Mr. and Mrs. Don
Thomas, Mr. and Mrs.
~ichael Langona and Sree,
(:heshire; Murray E. Church,
own City; Emogene and
ene Church, Eureka Star t. ; Myrtle Radekin and
francis LeNoir , Gallipolis.
~Mi . and Mrs . Henry Dillon,
[(im and Vickie, Rt . 2,
t;allipolis ; Mr. and Mrs.
lloward ' Church, Proc\brville; · Eva Daniels and
na Montgomery, Crown
ty; Mr . and Mrs . Denver
ho, Rt . 3, Gallipolis ; Unda

E
~

·.;.·

·.•••
.•:·
.·••.
·.•.

Pomeroy-Middleport i
•
992-2156
:

Seminars offered
on communication

:;:;:;:: ~

·~i~i~\~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~j;~~~~j;~{~~;~;~~;;~;; ~ ;: ;~;;~;;;;~;;;:;~;~;~;:;;;;;~::::: ~::~:::~:::::::::;~:~:~:~:;~t:~:::::::~:~:::;:~:t~~~;~;~;~~~~~~~~~~:;;~:~~~::~~;~;j:~~~~::::~:~:~~~~~~:~::;r:~:~t::~~:~~~~l~~~~;:~(f~f~

.·.
·.·,
'.
·.·••.
..

Sarah Carsey ~Charlene Hoeflich ~

Frey reunion
held in Rio

Homemakers'
Circle

.1.~.~-~-~-~.l.: ~

......

••

:Gallipolis-Point Pleasant
•
:
446-2342

GENERATIONS GATHER
RUTLAND- One of Meigs
County's five generation
families were together
recently. They are Angela
Rae Searles, her great-greatgrandmother, Estella
Searles; Kenneth E. Searles,
Angela's
grandfather;
Kenneth R. Searles, Angela's
father, and Dennis Searles,
Angela's great-grandfather .

::::::~: :-

•

Woman 's· World i

~

replacement is named, John R. Weeks,
assistant manager, will be in charge of:::;:;: •
operations in River District.
::::::: :

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Monday through Wednesday, fair Monday and
Tuesday and a chance of
showers Wednesday. Highs
wlll be to tbe upper 60s to
the 70s and lows will be In
tbe upper 40s to the 50s.

·······~······························ ~·····~················ r

•

LONG BOTTOM - Mr. and
Mrs. Uoyd E. McPeek will
observe their 40th wedding
anniversary at their new
mobile home here.Oct. 5 with
open house 2 to .5 p.m:
He is the yoW'lgest of eight
sons of the late Mr . and Mrs .
David McPeek of Belleville,
W. Va ., and has only his
oldest brother , Charley,
living at Parkersburg, W. Va.
She is the daughter of the late
Mr . and Mrs . A. F. Swan, of
Long Bottom . They were
married in Ripley, W. Va .
Oct. 5, 1935 by the late Rev .
Fred Slaughter.
Until a year ago when they
sold their West Virginia farm
he was a life long farmer in
the Belleville community .
They now live on a portion of
her birthplace . Both are
active in church and community affairs .
The observance will be
hosted by her three sisters,
Ada Bissell, Leota Ferrell
and Leona Hensley . Friends
and relatives are invited to
call during visiting hours. No
gifts preferred .

t:::: ~

:;::::::

· WATER SHORTED
NEWARK, Ohio (UPI) - A
water main break in this
central Ohio city's water
treatment
plant
early
Saturday left the commWiity
of about 50,000 persons with
only a limited water supply.
The break flooded the water
plant, causing a shutoff of
pumps which supply water to
the area.

I

.5- The SWiday Times. Sentinel, SW\day, sept. 211. 1975

:::::::: ~
:::::::: ~
::;:;:;: •

r---Getting your Socfal Security
Check from home to the bank '
each third day of the month
used to mean a lot of walking
or driving. It doesn't have
to be. a bother anymore:

•

I

Anniversary. ·
approaches

4- The SWiday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 211, 1975

..

Buckley and Richard Brown,
Rt. 1, Cheshire; Floyd
Drummond and Bryan
Cremeans, Gallipolis.
Three older members who
usually attend were W'lable to
be present this year because
of poor health. · They are
Willie Church, Eureka Star
Rt.; Vesta Rollyson, Ironton
and Clyde Yoho, Ona, W.Va.
The 1976 reunion will be at
the home of E. W. Church,
Lower
River
Road ,
Gallipolis, the third Sunday of
August.
-STILL HOSPITAJ&lt;IZED
MIDDLEPORT - E . M.
Blake remains a patient at
Holzer Medica1 Center . He
was discharged several
weeks ago following surgery
and was readmitted 'ahout
two weeks ago for medical
treatment.

RIO GRANDE - The 15th
annual Frey reW'lio~ was held
Aug. 31 at the home of John
Smith, Rio Grande, with 54
ATHENS - A series of nin e
friends and relatives present.
Russell Frey, president, led seminars ;.ill lie offered by
the group in prayer and a the Ohio University Sc hool of
noon meal was served. The Inter per s on a 1 Com .
business· meeting was held in munication during a 2.i-week
the ·afternoon . The group period to assist personnel in
elected to retain officers for s outheas tern Ohio soc ia l
s ervice
age nc ies
in
another year. New members
developin g
t heir
comwere welcomed and a
munication skills.
moment of silence i~
The series will begin with
remembrance of thos.!
an orientation meetin g at 7
deceased was held.
Attending were Mr . and
Mrs. Russell Frey and Mrs . Da vid Hopk ins and
grandchildren, Babbette and family, David, Mark and
Andrew Belcher from Mt. Russell , Richmond, Ky.; Mr.
Morris, Mich.; Mr . and Mrs. and Mrs . David Harkins and
Albert Frey, Sr., Uniontown ; children, David , Karen and
Mrs . George Frey, Mrs. Alayna, Russell, Ky.: Mr .
Arnold Harkins and Minnie and Mrs. C. T. Smith , Mr. and
Earl, Logan, W. Va. ; Mrs. Mrs . Roger Barr et t and
Harry Unroe and family, daughter Ca t he rin e, Hun Susie, Sandra, Cinda and tington , W.Va .: Mr . and Mrs.
Letha, Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Herb Smith and childr en
Unroe and daughter, DaQll , Brad, Kri stie, Al isa an d
all from lvor, Va.; Mrs. Gregg, Mr. and Mrs. Nelson
George Roberts and family , Brumfield and dau ght e r
Joey, Tammy and Timmy, Natalie, Gallipolis; Mr . an d
Mr . and Mrs . Ricky Roberts , Mrs . Robert Hengel, Rt. 2,
and
daughter
Selena, Bidwell: Mr . and Mrs. John
Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va .' Smith and children, U nda
Julie Minton, Point Pleasant; and Alan , Rio Gr ande.

p .m . Wednesday m Room 460
of the Ha dio - Television ·
Communic·a tions Building on
the OU cam pus. Inte rested
agency person nel are in vited
to atte nd .
Eac h se m in£t r will bt&gt; offe red fro m 7t o 9p.m. on th ree
consecu tive We dnes day s.
Part icpants may altend any
or al l of the seminars and
m ay

a lso

receive

college

credi t.
Topi cs

will
in c lud e
''C om mu n icatio n :
An
o,~ crvie v..·,·· " Meeting Par-

tici pation ," " Publi c Co m municat ion. " '' Interper sonal
Com m un i ca tion ,''
" Interv i e win g,"
" Proble m-

So lving." " Lead er s hip ."
" Long Range Plann ing" an d
" Com muni cation:

A

Re vie w."

The s~nunars are pa rt of a
year-long progr a m codirected by Gordon Wi seman
and Charles Carl son, faculty
members in the School of
In ter p erso nal
Co mmuni c ~ ti o n . The program is
fwllled by a $28,000 gran t
throug h Title I of the Higher

....
•

Miss Liruh jean Roush
TO WED - Mr. and Mrs. George E . Roush, Third St., •
New Haven , announce the approaching marriage of their
daughter, Unda Jean, to Anthony Lee Fields, son of Mr.
' and Mrs. Earl Fields, Hartford. Miss Roush, a 1972
graduate of Wahama High School, is employed by Ap- ·
palachian Power Company, Project 1301 Construction
Department, at New Haven . Mr. Fields, a 1969 graduate of
Wahama High School, is employed by Philip Sporn Plant,
also at New Haven. The double-cing ceremony will be
solemnized Oct. 18 at 6:30p.m. at the St. Paul's Lutheran
Ch urch, New Haven, by the Rev. John Haeberle. The
traditional custom of open church wiD be observed .

Education Act for community mWiication. Cost for each ...
servi ce and continuing seminar is $26 for uneducation.
dergraduation credit and $38 .·.
The seminars will tie taught for graduate credit. There Is ·.·
by Wiseman, Carlson and no fee for those who do not
other members of the School desire credit. For more in·
of Interpersonal Com- formation call 594-7237.

Party surprises

.

Bertha Smith

"'

•

on her birthday
CHESTER - A surprise
birthday party was held by
the Young Adult Class of
Chester United Methodist
Church for their teacher,
Mrs . Bertha Smith, last
SWiday at the home of Mr .
and Mrs . Virgil Windon .
The group assembled at the
Windon home while Mrs.
Smith was enroute home
from a family reunion at
Bashan. A potluck supper
was served with homemade
ice cream and a cake baked
by Mrs. Russell Spencer.
Cards and gifts were
presented to Mrs. Smith who
also received red roses from
her niece and family, Mrs.
Barber,
Helen Ritchie
Pastaskala and yellow roses
from her grandchildren.
Attending were Mr . . and
Mrs. Dana Fell, Washington
C. H. ; Mrs. Roy Wolfe,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs .
Raymond Wolfe and son
Heath, Carroll; Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Gooch, Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ritchie
and Mrs. Janice Ritchie,
Minersville.; Mr. and Mrs.
Alvin Tripp and sons Todd
and Rodney, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Riggs and
sons Kenny Ray and Jason,
Mr. and Mrs. Windon, Debra,
Brian, Becky and Blair and
Fred B. Smith.
Mot of the members of Mrs.
Smith's Sunday School class
who were there had been her
pupils in elementary school.
They were Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Machier, Mr. and Mrs. Pat
Morrissey and children
Tommy and Karey, Mr. and
Mrs. William Buckley and
son Jeremy, Miss Jane Karr,
Roger Karr, Mrs. Gary Wolfe
and daughter Susan, Mrs.
John Murphy and daughter
Amy, and Mrs. Ron Spencer.

DEPARTMENT
STORE

\

:~ )'t:'=:::::ilC:::={

REGULAR MEET
POMEROY - A regular
meeting of Pomeroy Lodge
164, F&amp;AM, will be held at
7:;!0 p.m . Wednesday . All
Master Masons are invited .

FLANNEL
SHIRTS
Regular $6.00
Size s : 6 to 16
NOW

SLEEPERS
SIZES 1 to 3

'299

Reg. $6.30 to $7.50
Large
Size
Only

$199

Odds and Ends

DRAPERIES
SALE
Values To $30. 00

%PRICE

900NLY
Ladies" Fancy Print"

SHIRTS

LADIES

Reg . $ 18.00
Sizes: 30 to 42
Solid Colors

60 ONLY

LONG SLEEVE TURnE

'2"

Values To $2.00
Broken
Sizes
NOW

15 ONLY

MEN'S SPORT COATS
" VALUES TO $55

'999

NOW

FAMOUS BRANDS
LEE AND CARWOOD

WORK JACK

BUT NOT LISTED

REGULAR 118.99 &amp; 119.99

LADIEs200 PAIR ONlY

SIZES 36 to 46

One Size Fits All
Assorted Colors
Reg. $1.00
NOW

$}3 99

2

POLYESTER KNIT
SLACKS

HANDBAGS

Regular $16.00 and $17 .00
Sizes: 8 to 18
NOW

$1Q49
.40

LA D! E S'

$89·9.

AND

•10"

-ONLY

SHIRT JACKETS

NECK TOPS
Sizes: S, M, &amp; L
Reg. $13.00
Assortect Stripes

Pair
For

120 PR. LADIES'

LADIES' 70 ONLY

•s••

•

BOOTY SOCKS

COAT STYLE. BLANK ET
LINED WITH CORDUROY
COLLAR, MACHINE WASHABLE

NOW ONLY

•1 4 ••

MANY, MANY
MORE
ITEMS
REDUCED •••
·'

DENIM

Vlues to $12.00
Assorted Styles
And
Colors

Regular $17 .00
Sizes: 8 to 18
Assorted
Faricv Print•

NOW

MEN'S POLYESTER
KNIT SLACKS

NOW ONlY

FLANNEL
SHIRTS

PANTY HOSE AND
SUPPORT STOCKINGS

tOO PAIR ONLY

REGULAR '6.00

SO ONLY
MEN'S

100 PAIR ONLY
LADIES

40 ONLY

I

NOW
FIRST CHILD BORN
REEDSVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs. William E . Francis, Rt.
1, Reedsville, announce the
birth of their first child, an
eight pound, 12 ounce
daughter, Susan Lynn, Sept.
14 at St. Joseph Hospital In
Parkersburg. Maternal
grandmother is Mrs. Mildred
Brooks, Reedsville and
paternal grandparents are
Mrs. Kathleen Fr.a ncis,
Syracuse,_and the late W. H.
Francis. -The paternal greatgrandmother is Mrs. Freda
Duffy, also of Syracuse .

NITETY NITE
CHILDREN'S

SilVER BRIDGE PlAZA

I

Sale Starts Monday At 10 A.M .

NOW
Regular $25 .00
Sizes : 8 to 18 .'

·. '159,9

I

••
\

·~
I

�.

'
'

..

r:=~~==il::::J
1'.-1!!!

H:T!:tin~:: ~~~~::Ilia : ~
.1..

~{~~: Academy High School marching band captured top
':::':': honors (Class A Division ) during Saturday's annual
::::;::; Tri.State Marching Band Festival at Fairfield Stadium
in Huntington.
.
:::;::::
Seven Class A bands participated in the festival
?} and a total of 29 bands from Ohio, Kentucky and West
::;:::;: Virginia were entered in this year 's contest.
::::;:::
Following the contest, the GAHS musicians, who
?} gave a brilliant halftime show at Athens Friday night
:\':: attended the Marshall University-lllinois State game:

't:::

\t
:::':':
:':':';

?t

::;::;:;
}}
;:;:;:;;
{{

?}

::::::::

::;:::::

::::::::

·- ~~f:f~~~~~~~~~~;i~~:~:~:~:~~:~~:~:~:~:~~~:i:~:~~~:~::~~~~:~~::~~~::::::::::::::~::~:::::::::::::::~::~:~::::::~:;::;:~~;:::;~::::::~~=:~t~:1~:~:~r:::·: : :

Ferry can't pull
into local levee

Bainbridge man Stewart ·is elected to .
injured in wreck head area treasurers
GALLIPOLIS - Andrew
Aguson, 20, Bainbridge, was
slightly injured in an accident
at 12:30 a.m. Saturday on Rt.
325, north of County Road 217,
south of Vinton .
According to the GalliaMeigs Post State Highway
Patrol, Aguson was a
passenger in a car uperated
by Gary N. Wilcoxen, 20, of
Ashville, Ohio. Wilcoxen lost
control of his car on a curve.
His vehicle left the highway
and ran into a ditch.
Billy
Campbell,
52,
Gallipolis, was charged with
failure to sl&lt;&gt;p within the
assured clear distance

LOGAN
Gallia County
Treasurer Oty M. Stewart of Vinton
was elected president the past week

here of the Southeastern Ohio
Treasurers ' As:;ociatlon . The group is
composed of ~ireasurers from . 20
Southeastern Ohio coW'lties rangmg
from Franklin County to Belmont
CoWity.
Other officers are Bernard
McKnight, Lawrence County, vice
president and Francis E . Myers,
Hocking County, secretary-treasurer.
The association has chosen Ed
Ducey, former employee · of the
Department of Taxation, as lobbyist
in the State Legislature . Ducey will
inform the treasurers on all new
legislation, bills being submitted and
other valuable information.
Under his leadership, the
association hopes to bring to area
counties better management of local
government especially in budgeting .
Stewart is a former Gallia CoiU'lty

.,

OTY M. STEWART

commissioner and is currently serving his second term as treasurer.
Prior to his elec.tion to a coWIIY
office, Stewart operated a hardware
store in Vinton.

&lt;

"
;

TOM TIEDE

the State of Ohio and West
Virginia would listen to
proposals to upgrade the
Middleport levee and im·
prove the one at Clifton, W.
Va.
Hoffman recently met with
Glen Smith, Division 10
D.O.T. and McCoy, the ferry
operator . Smith indicated
that Ohio would cooperate in
any way possible on the
improvement of the levee in
Middleport .if he received
assurance that the ferry
could land in Middleport and
that West VIrginia would
repair the landing at Clifton .
McCoy agreed to bring his
boat to Middleport to see if he
could land there .
Later, McCoy, informed
MONDAY
Hoffman that the water was
REVIVAL at the Mt. not deep enough at the
Carmel Church at 7:30 p. m. Middleport levee for his boat
with Rice Browning, Logan, . to land. Smith was duly
w. Va., preaching.
notified of this, and therefore
could
not proceed on any plan
TUESDAY
SPECIAL MEETING, Vinton for upgrading the Middleport
Friendship Garden Club, 10 levee.
The possibility of securing
a.m. at Vinton Town Hall.
Members are to bring a a ferry in Middleport for next
sandwich. Beverages ·will be spring when the bridge wiD
furnished. Guest speaker will be closed once again Is being
be Patty Snyder from Smelt- considered by Middleport
officials.
zer Garden Center.
If a ferry could be secured
,•, •• •.•......-.-...A':o'•'..'",l! '•X •-:--.::;•· X•X•"o"o"o"o • ·
l!:j.
...-!·~;o;J&lt;if',._,.......:-.•, :-. ••• ..;.. -~-~~:;.:-: that could land in Middleport,
~­
and if West Virginia would
«
repair the Clifton levee,
Smith indicated action could
be started for securing state
help in upgrading the levee.

MIDDLEPORT
· Upgrading the Middleport
levee n so the present ferry
working between Pomeroy
and Mason can land there
apparently is out.
However, according to
Mayor Fred Hoffman , a
different kind of ferry with
less draft might be able to
land at Middleport. In that
case, the mayor has learned.

Not all Americans
welcome bicentennial
•

By Tom ,Tiede
CHEROKEE , N. C.
Roadside signs throughout
the mountain regions of this
and neighboring states
designate a rarely remembered and perhaps best
forgotten chapter of the
American
Revolution:
Battles in which native In·
dians teamed with British
interests against the patriots.
If the colonies were
foW'lded somewhat on the
basis of peaceful coexistence
with the redmen , the
Revolution was the beginning
of a split lasting to this day.
Indian participation in the
war was not of course confined to this area, known in
the 1700s as the Southwestern
frontier of the new land. Most
of the Six Nation tribes of the
Northeast
also
allied
themselv,es with the British
and fought the revolutionaries frO!Il the Catskills to Lake Erie. But it was
here in the Appalachian
region where the savagery
between the forces was
particularly intense, with the
legacy of all sides being
largely wretched .
Popular history has it that ·
the British bribed Indian
activity with booze and
bamboozli'lg, and some of
SUNDAY
that is pro~ably true. But in
HOMECOMING at Eagle
the main the Indians needed
Ridge CommWIIIy Church.
.
no
goading. The Cherokee,
SW1day School at 10 a .m.,
Creek,
Choctaw
and
basket dinner at noon and
Chickasaw
tribes
of
the
day
program at 1: 30 featuring
claimed land that stretched
Dan Hayman and Hymnfrom
Ohio to Mississippi,
timers.
Virginia to the Florida line,
GO TO CHURCH SUNDAY
.
and they were disinclined to
io be observed by Middleport
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Ftve - allow colonialist encroach
Lodge 363, F. and A.M. at the investor-owned electric ment. Besides what treatie~
Pomeroy First B~ptist utility companies in Ohio did
the redmen had with the
Church, 10:30 a .m . service. not pay federal income tax
whites bore the seal of King
THE REV . CARROLL last. year and one of them, George and tribal fathers
SHEETS, t:;olumbus, will Columbus ~d !'"uthern Ohio desperately wanted them
speak at the Church of Christ Electric, didn t pay state preserved.
in Christian Union at Pearl mcome tax either, Auditor of
Patriots of the home felt the
St., Middleport, at 7:30 p.m. State Thomas E. Ferguson
British utilization of the
revealed
Friday.
Indians
unfair and outside the
CHESTER
UNITED
"In fact, . Columbus and
bounds of what was then
Methodist Church
Southern ~hto Electric had a
perceived as acceptable
homecoming, with regular
Ia~ . cre.~tt of over $2.2 tactics. Not lightly did Tom
SWiday School and church
mtlhon, sald Ferguson, Jefferson indict the British
' services in the morning. A
king, in the Declaration of
basket
tlinner,
with "and because of that n:my not
tableware furnished, will be even have. to pay ~Y mcome( Independence, for bringing
"the Inhabitants of our
for this year.
.
served at 12:30 p.m. followed taxFerguson
satd he got hiB Frontiers, the merciless
by a 1:30 p.m. program. Rev. information from a Senate
Eddie Buffington, Pomeroy, subcommittee, which got it Indian Savages, whose known
Rule of Warfare is an W'l·
will be afternoon speaker and from the utility industry.
distinguished Destruction of
special music provided by the
Other firms not paying
all Ages, Sexes and ConAng~laires of Lancaster.
federal income tax in 1974 ditions."
CHESTER Fire Dept. were Ohio Power, Dayton
The Patriots' disgust was
thank-you dinner for those Power and Ught, Toledo perhaps better expressed by
who donated food or time and Edison and Ohio Electric.
a soldier in the command of
"Ironically, the utility that
their famili ~ s at departGen. John Sullivan, who,
ment's COW'lty fair booth; bas the lowest consumer rate
upon seeing the results of
take covered dish, 5 p.m. ~t ' charge in Ohio, Cl1lcinnati
Indian raiding, wrote of hls
Gas and Electric, paid over
fire house.
de!'d comrades:
"The
REUNION
of
the $10.7 million in fe&lt;jeral in· .
savages, having first put
descendants of Cal'! and Ella come tax," said ..,ergu.son,
them to the most exManley Sunday at State Park "while the t~tllity with the
cruciating torment by
on U.S. 33 on left traveling highest consumer rate,
plucking their nails from
north toward Athens. Potluck Columbus and Southern Ohio
hands and feet, and then
Electric, ended 1974 with a
at lp.m.
spearing,
cutting
and
REUNION of descendants tax credit of $2,206,400."
whipping
them,
and
Ferguson said ·Columbus
of W. L. and Marne Whaley,
mangling their bodies, and
12:30 at the Rqck Springs and Southern Ohio last year
received a 10 per cent then cutting off the flesh from
Grange.
property-tax rollback that their shoulders by pieces,
TIJESDAY
tomahawked their heads
MEIGS
COUNTY amounted to $697,282 in from their bodies and left
Education Assn. fall meeting, Franklin, County alone.
"I do not remember them a prey to their dogs. 0
Eastern High School, 6:30
. Britain, behold, and blush!"
p.m. dinner with Dr. Donald Columbus and Southern Ohio ~ Actually, some iri Britain
Leighty of Ohio University, Electric or any other electric did blush, and called for an
utility in Ohio asking the
guest speaker.
Public Utilities Commission end to the Indian ' alliance.
MEIGS TOPS meeting, for a decrease in its charges Hardliners won out, though,
7:30 p.m. at the American to
consumers,"
said agreeding with the influential
Earl of Suffolk that: "It is
Legion Hall in Middleport Ferguson.
allowable, and perfectly
· with Dr. Hanek, director of
justifiable, so use every
psychological services at
LOSES BOND
means
which God has put ln
Ohio University, guest
COLUMBUS,S. C. (UP!)fll)elllrer. Members urged to James Dickey, autitor of the . our hands."
Thus Indian raiding con'
attendandtakeaglll!st.
bestselling
novel
WEDN~AV' ·
"Deliverance" failed to tinued in the area, led by a
.MIDDLEPORT Firemen's appear in court and forfeited Cherokee Patton named
AIIDI!ary, 7:30 p.m. at the , a $132.50 jlond on charges of Dragging Canoe, to the
IWI. Loui1e McE:lblo!ly and driving whi'e intoxil:ated and 1780s, and to the eventual
destruction of what had been
J111lce Daniell, hostesses.
dislroerly conduct. ·
'
1
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1
,
·
I
0 0

Social
Calendar

Five utilities in

Ohio paid no
federal tax

I.

following an accident Friday
on Rt. 7 in Kanauga . The
patrol said Campbell's truck
struck the rear end of a
vehicle driven by Lorenzo
Davis, 71, of Pomeroy . There
was minor damage.
A third accident occurred
on Rt. 588, one and seven
tenths miles east of Rt. 35
where a dump truck operated
by Greg M. Bryant, 22,
Rodney, met a car driven by
Cheryl Thompson, 20, Rio
Grande, on a curve. There
was no contact between the
two vehicles. However, the
truck went off the highway,
struck a tree and overturned.

I.

,

SHERRI YETZER
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
County sheriff's
department
Saturday requested the help of the
public in locating Sberrl Lyon
Yetzer, 18, of Shelly, Ohio. Sheriff
Oscar Baird said the girl was last
seen on Aug. 23. A missing person's
report has been flied by the girl's
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Trout of Shelly, Ohio. It is believed
that Miss Yetzer may be living In or
around Gallla County. Anyone
knowing her whereabouts is asked to
contact the Gallla County Sheriff's
Office Immediately.

for centuries an Indian nation
and what for even longer than
that had been an Indian way
of life.
And it was this total
destruction that blighted the
Patriots' part in all this .
Already shamed for wrongs
done to the redmen - the
patriots (with the British)
introduced at least two
devices that weakened the
Indians physically and
..morally: smallpox and
scalping . The colonialists set
out in the Revolution to not
only solve, but annihilate, the
Indian question.
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
To this end hW'ldreds of
lndia,n villages were wiped County Budget Commisswr.
out, croplands were burned, has approved the millage
and families split and scat- rate for the City of Gallipolis
tered. Carl Lambert, a which has been set at two and
Cherokee historian , says now one half mills.
According to a spokesman
that eventual, poverty · and
starvation killed more In- for the commission, the new
dians than patriot muskets. rate represents a decrease of
That's war, of course. Or is two tenths of a miD but will
it' Americans who have been not decrease the amount of
normally benevolent, even money the city wiD have
excessively generous to because of the re-valuation of
defeated enemies, have not in property .
The Gallipolis City Board of
200 years looked on the InEducation
has scheduled a
dians with the same reconstruction charity that they meeting Oct. 6 with . the
have, say, on the Japanese Budget . Commission to
and the Germans. And so it is discuss its budget. Also apthat the Cherokees, to name proved Thursday was the
just one former enemy tribe, rate for the Gallia County
has to the present continued Ubrary. The- rate for the
Jackson
Vinton
to suffer that defeat of two Gallia
Vocational School will be set
centuries past.
In 1776, according to a 'later date .
historian Lambert, the
Cherokee Nation consisted of
BURKE ON BOARD
20,000 people in control of
LOS
ANGELES (UP!)
235,000 square miles of
America. Today there are Rep. Yvonne Brathwaite
8,000 survivors on this Burke, D-Calif., the first
reservation of 56,000 acres. black woman elected to
Bicentennial? Lambert says Congress, has been named to
his people are preparing to the board of trustees of .the
observe th~. commemoration, University of Southern
"but we won't exactly California, the school an·
celebrate it ."
nOIU'ICed.

Millage rate
is approved

KENNEDY GUILTY
WOODSTOCK, Va. (UP!)
- David Kennedy, 20, son of
the late Sen. Robert F.
Kennedy, entered a guilty
plea Friday to a reckless
driving charge and was fined
$50 plus court costs in
Shenandoah County District
Court.

WOMEN BURNED
AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - A
fire bomb caused $11,500
damage and injured two
women Friday night at a
home here. Firemen said the
incendiary device was hurled
into a home on Sparhawk
Ave. about 9:22 p.m. It
burned the living room and
FAYE WATCH SET
kitchen and caused smoke
MIAMI (UP!) - New Engdamage throughout the land and the Canadian
house. Treated for shock and Mar time Provinces were
later released was a woman cautioned Saturday to keep
Identified as Beverly Allen of close tabs on hurricane Faye,
Akron. Firemen said Mary although forecasters said it
Oledski of Akron suffered appeared the storm would
second degree burns on one miss the U. s. mainland and
leg.
· .. ~kirt Nova Scotia with its 100
mph winds during ihe night.

Cigarettes stolen from A&amp;P
GALLIPOLIS -

Approximately

1600 worth of cigarettes were taken in

a breaking and entering Friday at the
A&amp;P Supermarket on Second A,ve.
City police said the store was entered some time between 9:30 p.m.
Thursday and 9 a.m. Friday by prying
a front door . open. Missing were 45
cartons of Salem; 12 cartons of
Winston ; 10 cartons of Kools, 20
cartons of Belair ; 10 cartons of
Raleigh; 30 cartons of Pall Mall; 15
cartons of Marlhoro and 15 cartons of

Lucky Strike. The Intruders also
attempted to enter an office desk but
were W'lsuccessful.
Officers Friday night investigated
a breaking and entering at George
Coleman's Pennzoll Service Station on
First Ave.
Entry was made by breaking a
window on the Southeast bay door.
The pop machine was opened and the
money box was taken. Missing was
$42 to $43 in change.

~~~~~w~~i~~!r~~~~~~t:~?~~t~~:~:::~:~::~~~~:r~:~~~~~~~~~~~~j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;:~i~:;:~j;;r;:;;:t;;;:t;;;;~;;~;;~;;;;;~;;;;; ;I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;{;;~;;;;;;t~:;;t;:;;r;;;;;t~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;~;;~~tt.

ll All~~~~•.:~~

;:;;:;:: Area Chamber of Commerce, Rotary Club,
} } Presbyterian Church, Q.nio Valley
:}~:' Regional Development Commission and a
:::::::: past director of the Southeastern Ohio
} ) Regional Council.
:~{:: "I'll miss the gang around here.''
i{: Allen remarked, but added, "I've got lots
;:::::::of things I want to do after my retirement.
'::'U plan to keep busy."
}}
Allen's successor will be named by the
(( home office in Columbus. Until a

'"'~~~~. I :

American College or. Surgeons, D~ ·
Morgan served as Prestdent of the OhiO
Chapter of the American College of
Surgeons in 1969 and is currently CoiU'lcilor
of the 9th District of the Ohio State Medical
Association.

~
••

_

~r::: ~

..

Miss Nancy Lou Lease
ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs. Richard (Tiny) Lease,
Sawyer, Mich., announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Nancy Lou,
Gallipolis, to John W. Goo! din, Jr., Gallipolis, son of Mr .
and Mrs. John W. Gooldin, Sr ., Crown City. The wedding
will be an event of Feb. 14 at 7:30p.m. at Grace United
Methodist Church in Gallipolis. Rev. Paul Hawks and
Rev. Hughey Jones will officiate at the open church
wedding . Miss ·Lease is a graduate of Gallia Academy
High School. She attended Ohio State University and is a
graduate of the Holzer Medical Center School of Nursing .
She is presently employed as a registered nurse in the
emergency room at Holzer Medical Center . Her fiance,
also a graduate of Gallia Academy, attended Gallipolis
Business College and is employed at G .S.I.

featuring
Annie Anybody

:

BY BEll IE CLARit

•

•
THREE KILLED
TEL AVIV, (UP!) - Israeli
soldiers killed a raiding party
of
three
Palestinian
guerrillas from Lebanon in a
gWibattle near the border
Saturday, the Israeli military
command said. Two Israeli
soldiers were woW'lded.

INSULATED

ARMSTRONG REITRES
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Harry Armstrong, 59, chief of
the Division of Oil and Gas of
the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, will
retire effective Oct. 15, it was
announced Friday.

,

Say "So long
to cold feet"

COUPLE KILLED
GENEVA, Ohio (UPI)
Russell Schaubert, 21, and
Brenda Clisby, 17, both of
Jefferson,
died
early
Saturday in a one-car crash
on Ohio 84.

We Srock
Safety Shoes

I AEDWING 1·~1

DAN THOMAS &amp; SON

'

324 SECOND AVE. GAUIPOUS

LOW-COST MEALS WITH A HIGH RETURN
GALIJPOLIS - Beans as nutritious as steak? Sounds a
little ridiculous, doesn't it? But a U.S. Department of
Agciculture economist found that a wide variety of foods, at
di~erent cost levels could provide approximately the same
nutcitional levels.
1 Menus from beans to steaks all figured out at about 1,000
calories (per portion), and had about the same amounts of
vitamins and minerals. But, prices of meals -all for a family
of four -ranged from $2.20 (for the beans), to $11.60 (for
steak). Sandwiched in between was a "standard" meal, (with
ground beef and fresh vegetables) that cost $3.60.
The low-cost and standard meals had adequate protein each provided about 'h of a day's requirements, while the
steak dinner had more than a day's requirement: But the low!XJSt diet was much lower in saturated fat.
· Low-cost menu - each serving - $2.20 (four servings):
l'h cups of peas, navy or greatnorthern cooked with ham hock,
cole
slaw, 2 pieces.of homemade cornbread with margarine, 1k
1
cup of applesauce, 2 oatmeal cookies, milk.
Standard dinner would cost approximately $3.80 (four
servings). One serving : 'h cup of tomato juice, saltines, 3
ounces of ground beef, catsup, 'h cup mashed potatoes (made
from scratch with margarine and milk), 'h cup canned green
beans, tossed salad with lettuce and radishes plus a dollop of
French dressing, bread and margarine, slice of homemade
apple pie, milk.
.
Or you can jump to the "expensive" meal at a cost of
$11.80 for four people - a higher priced cut of meat plus an
extensive use of ready .prepared foods jacked up the cost.
One serving: Ready-to-&lt;!erve shrimp cocktail, 'k pound
~ibeye steak, baked potato and sour cream, frozen peas with
liutter sauce, tossed salad with lettuce, green pepper, tomato,
.lnd radishes with purchased blue cheese dressing, brand
dame sesame seedrolls with butter, slice of purchased brahd
4ame apple pie, brewed coffee and table cream.
! The point of the survey is to show that meals can be
i)lexpensive and still be good for you. Ready-to-&lt;!erve items are
tpe ones you really pay for .
•

End the Third of the Month
Run-Around

L.__ _ __

We now offer the end of the third
of the month run-around.
Your Social Security Checks
may now be mailed directly
to the bank.
·
Your money will be safe. Just write
a ' check to pay your bills.

~ALE

OOMMERCIAL &amp; SAViNGS BANK
Silver Bridge Plaza
. Court Street, GalliP.Oiis
Member F .D . I.C ,
·
'

McKNIGHT-DAVIE$

... •

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(;burch family gathers
: GALLIPOLIS
The
descendants of the Alex ·
Church family held the ann\tal reunion at the Gallia
County Junior Fairgrounds
Sept. 21.
' Attending were Mr. and
¥cs. Marvin Sheets, Parma;
Mr . and Mrs. E . W. Church,
S:ureka Star Rt., Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert Church,
~awn, Eddie and Karl,
~llance; Mr. and Mrs. Don
Thomas, Mr. and Mrs.
~ichael Langona and Sree,
(:heshire; Murray E. Church,
own City; Emogene and
ene Church, Eureka Star t. ; Myrtle Radekin and
francis LeNoir , Gallipolis.
~Mi . and Mrs . Henry Dillon,
[(im and Vickie, Rt . 2,
t;allipolis ; Mr. and Mrs.
lloward ' Church, Proc\brville; · Eva Daniels and
na Montgomery, Crown
ty; Mr . and Mrs . Denver
ho, Rt . 3, Gallipolis ; Unda

E
~

·.;.·

·.•••
.•:·
.·••.
·.•.

Pomeroy-Middleport i
•
992-2156
:

Seminars offered
on communication

:;:;:;:: ~

·~i~i~\~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~j;~~~~j;~{~~;~;~~;;~;; ~ ;: ;~;;~;;;;~;;;:;~;~;~;:;;;;;~::::: ~::~:::~:::::::::;~:~:~:~:;~t:~:::::::~:~:::;:~:t~~~;~;~;~~~~~~~~~~:;;~:~~~::~~;~;j:~~~~::::~:~:~~~~~~:~::;r:~:~t::~~:~~~~l~~~~;:~(f~f~

.·.
·.·,
'.
·.·••.
..

Sarah Carsey ~Charlene Hoeflich ~

Frey reunion
held in Rio

Homemakers'
Circle

.1.~.~-~-~-~.l.: ~

......

••

:Gallipolis-Point Pleasant
•
:
446-2342

GENERATIONS GATHER
RUTLAND- One of Meigs
County's five generation
families were together
recently. They are Angela
Rae Searles, her great-greatgrandmother, Estella
Searles; Kenneth E. Searles,
Angela's
grandfather;
Kenneth R. Searles, Angela's
father, and Dennis Searles,
Angela's great-grandfather .

::::::~: :-

•

Woman 's· World i

~

replacement is named, John R. Weeks,
assistant manager, will be in charge of:::;:;: •
operations in River District.
::::::: :

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Monday through Wednesday, fair Monday and
Tuesday and a chance of
showers Wednesday. Highs
wlll be to tbe upper 60s to
the 70s and lows will be In
tbe upper 40s to the 50s.

·······~······························ ~·····~················ r

•

LONG BOTTOM - Mr. and
Mrs. Uoyd E. McPeek will
observe their 40th wedding
anniversary at their new
mobile home here.Oct. 5 with
open house 2 to .5 p.m:
He is the yoW'lgest of eight
sons of the late Mr . and Mrs .
David McPeek of Belleville,
W. Va ., and has only his
oldest brother , Charley,
living at Parkersburg, W. Va.
She is the daughter of the late
Mr . and Mrs . A. F. Swan, of
Long Bottom . They were
married in Ripley, W. Va .
Oct. 5, 1935 by the late Rev .
Fred Slaughter.
Until a year ago when they
sold their West Virginia farm
he was a life long farmer in
the Belleville community .
They now live on a portion of
her birthplace . Both are
active in church and community affairs .
The observance will be
hosted by her three sisters,
Ada Bissell, Leota Ferrell
and Leona Hensley . Friends
and relatives are invited to
call during visiting hours. No
gifts preferred .

t:::: ~

:;::::::

· WATER SHORTED
NEWARK, Ohio (UPI) - A
water main break in this
central Ohio city's water
treatment
plant
early
Saturday left the commWiity
of about 50,000 persons with
only a limited water supply.
The break flooded the water
plant, causing a shutoff of
pumps which supply water to
the area.

I

.5- The SWiday Times. Sentinel, SW\day, sept. 211. 1975

:::::::: ~
:::::::: ~
::;:;:;: •

r---Getting your Socfal Security
Check from home to the bank '
each third day of the month
used to mean a lot of walking
or driving. It doesn't have
to be. a bother anymore:

•

I

Anniversary. ·
approaches

4- The SWiday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 211, 1975

..

Buckley and Richard Brown,
Rt. 1, Cheshire; Floyd
Drummond and Bryan
Cremeans, Gallipolis.
Three older members who
usually attend were W'lable to
be present this year because
of poor health. · They are
Willie Church, Eureka Star
Rt.; Vesta Rollyson, Ironton
and Clyde Yoho, Ona, W.Va.
The 1976 reunion will be at
the home of E. W. Church,
Lower
River
Road ,
Gallipolis, the third Sunday of
August.
-STILL HOSPITAJ&lt;IZED
MIDDLEPORT - E . M.
Blake remains a patient at
Holzer Medica1 Center . He
was discharged several
weeks ago following surgery
and was readmitted 'ahout
two weeks ago for medical
treatment.

RIO GRANDE - The 15th
annual Frey reW'lio~ was held
Aug. 31 at the home of John
Smith, Rio Grande, with 54
ATHENS - A series of nin e
friends and relatives present.
Russell Frey, president, led seminars ;.ill lie offered by
the group in prayer and a the Ohio University Sc hool of
noon meal was served. The Inter per s on a 1 Com .
business· meeting was held in munication during a 2.i-week
the ·afternoon . The group period to assist personnel in
elected to retain officers for s outheas tern Ohio soc ia l
s ervice
age nc ies
in
another year. New members
developin g
t heir
comwere welcomed and a
munication skills.
moment of silence i~
The series will begin with
remembrance of thos.!
an orientation meetin g at 7
deceased was held.
Attending were Mr . and
Mrs. Russell Frey and Mrs . Da vid Hopk ins and
grandchildren, Babbette and family, David, Mark and
Andrew Belcher from Mt. Russell , Richmond, Ky.; Mr.
Morris, Mich.; Mr . and Mrs. and Mrs . David Harkins and
Albert Frey, Sr., Uniontown ; children, David , Karen and
Mrs . George Frey, Mrs. Alayna, Russell, Ky.: Mr .
Arnold Harkins and Minnie and Mrs. C. T. Smith , Mr. and
Earl, Logan, W. Va. ; Mrs. Mrs . Roger Barr et t and
Harry Unroe and family, daughter Ca t he rin e, Hun Susie, Sandra, Cinda and tington , W.Va .: Mr . and Mrs.
Letha, Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Herb Smith and childr en
Unroe and daughter, DaQll , Brad, Kri stie, Al isa an d
all from lvor, Va.; Mrs. Gregg, Mr. and Mrs. Nelson
George Roberts and family , Brumfield and dau ght e r
Joey, Tammy and Timmy, Natalie, Gallipolis; Mr . an d
Mr . and Mrs . Ricky Roberts , Mrs . Robert Hengel, Rt. 2,
and
daughter
Selena, Bidwell: Mr . and Mrs. John
Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va .' Smith and children, U nda
Julie Minton, Point Pleasant; and Alan , Rio Gr ande.

p .m . Wednesday m Room 460
of the Ha dio - Television ·
Communic·a tions Building on
the OU cam pus. Inte rested
agency person nel are in vited
to atte nd .
Eac h se m in£t r will bt&gt; offe red fro m 7t o 9p.m. on th ree
consecu tive We dnes day s.
Part icpants may altend any
or al l of the seminars and
m ay

a lso

receive

college

credi t.
Topi cs

will
in c lud e
''C om mu n icatio n :
An
o,~ crvie v..·,·· " Meeting Par-

tici pation ," " Publi c Co m municat ion. " '' Interper sonal
Com m un i ca tion ,''
" Interv i e win g,"
" Proble m-

So lving." " Lead er s hip ."
" Long Range Plann ing" an d
" Com muni cation:

A

Re vie w."

The s~nunars are pa rt of a
year-long progr a m codirected by Gordon Wi seman
and Charles Carl son, faculty
members in the School of
In ter p erso nal
Co mmuni c ~ ti o n . The program is
fwllled by a $28,000 gran t
throug h Title I of the Higher

....
•

Miss Liruh jean Roush
TO WED - Mr. and Mrs. George E . Roush, Third St., •
New Haven , announce the approaching marriage of their
daughter, Unda Jean, to Anthony Lee Fields, son of Mr.
' and Mrs. Earl Fields, Hartford. Miss Roush, a 1972
graduate of Wahama High School, is employed by Ap- ·
palachian Power Company, Project 1301 Construction
Department, at New Haven . Mr. Fields, a 1969 graduate of
Wahama High School, is employed by Philip Sporn Plant,
also at New Haven. The double-cing ceremony will be
solemnized Oct. 18 at 6:30p.m. at the St. Paul's Lutheran
Ch urch, New Haven, by the Rev. John Haeberle. The
traditional custom of open church wiD be observed .

Education Act for community mWiication. Cost for each ...
servi ce and continuing seminar is $26 for uneducation.
dergraduation credit and $38 .·.
The seminars will tie taught for graduate credit. There Is ·.·
by Wiseman, Carlson and no fee for those who do not
other members of the School desire credit. For more in·
of Interpersonal Com- formation call 594-7237.

Party surprises

.

Bertha Smith

"'

•

on her birthday
CHESTER - A surprise
birthday party was held by
the Young Adult Class of
Chester United Methodist
Church for their teacher,
Mrs . Bertha Smith, last
SWiday at the home of Mr .
and Mrs . Virgil Windon .
The group assembled at the
Windon home while Mrs.
Smith was enroute home
from a family reunion at
Bashan. A potluck supper
was served with homemade
ice cream and a cake baked
by Mrs. Russell Spencer.
Cards and gifts were
presented to Mrs. Smith who
also received red roses from
her niece and family, Mrs.
Barber,
Helen Ritchie
Pastaskala and yellow roses
from her grandchildren.
Attending were Mr . . and
Mrs. Dana Fell, Washington
C. H. ; Mrs. Roy Wolfe,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs .
Raymond Wolfe and son
Heath, Carroll; Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Gooch, Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ritchie
and Mrs. Janice Ritchie,
Minersville.; Mr. and Mrs.
Alvin Tripp and sons Todd
and Rodney, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Riggs and
sons Kenny Ray and Jason,
Mr. and Mrs. Windon, Debra,
Brian, Becky and Blair and
Fred B. Smith.
Mot of the members of Mrs.
Smith's Sunday School class
who were there had been her
pupils in elementary school.
They were Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Machier, Mr. and Mrs. Pat
Morrissey and children
Tommy and Karey, Mr. and
Mrs. William Buckley and
son Jeremy, Miss Jane Karr,
Roger Karr, Mrs. Gary Wolfe
and daughter Susan, Mrs.
John Murphy and daughter
Amy, and Mrs. Ron Spencer.

DEPARTMENT
STORE

\

:~ )'t:'=:::::ilC:::={

REGULAR MEET
POMEROY - A regular
meeting of Pomeroy Lodge
164, F&amp;AM, will be held at
7:;!0 p.m . Wednesday . All
Master Masons are invited .

FLANNEL
SHIRTS
Regular $6.00
Size s : 6 to 16
NOW

SLEEPERS
SIZES 1 to 3

'299

Reg. $6.30 to $7.50
Large
Size
Only

$199

Odds and Ends

DRAPERIES
SALE
Values To $30. 00

%PRICE

900NLY
Ladies" Fancy Print"

SHIRTS

LADIES

Reg . $ 18.00
Sizes: 30 to 42
Solid Colors

60 ONLY

LONG SLEEVE TURnE

'2"

Values To $2.00
Broken
Sizes
NOW

15 ONLY

MEN'S SPORT COATS
" VALUES TO $55

'999

NOW

FAMOUS BRANDS
LEE AND CARWOOD

WORK JACK

BUT NOT LISTED

REGULAR 118.99 &amp; 119.99

LADIEs200 PAIR ONlY

SIZES 36 to 46

One Size Fits All
Assorted Colors
Reg. $1.00
NOW

$}3 99

2

POLYESTER KNIT
SLACKS

HANDBAGS

Regular $16.00 and $17 .00
Sizes: 8 to 18
NOW

$1Q49
.40

LA D! E S'

$89·9.

AND

•10"

-ONLY

SHIRT JACKETS

NECK TOPS
Sizes: S, M, &amp; L
Reg. $13.00
Assortect Stripes

Pair
For

120 PR. LADIES'

LADIES' 70 ONLY

•s••

•

BOOTY SOCKS

COAT STYLE. BLANK ET
LINED WITH CORDUROY
COLLAR, MACHINE WASHABLE

NOW ONLY

•1 4 ••

MANY, MANY
MORE
ITEMS
REDUCED •••
·'

DENIM

Vlues to $12.00
Assorted Styles
And
Colors

Regular $17 .00
Sizes: 8 to 18
Assorted
Faricv Print•

NOW

MEN'S POLYESTER
KNIT SLACKS

NOW ONlY

FLANNEL
SHIRTS

PANTY HOSE AND
SUPPORT STOCKINGS

tOO PAIR ONLY

REGULAR '6.00

SO ONLY
MEN'S

100 PAIR ONLY
LADIES

40 ONLY

I

NOW
FIRST CHILD BORN
REEDSVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs. William E . Francis, Rt.
1, Reedsville, announce the
birth of their first child, an
eight pound, 12 ounce
daughter, Susan Lynn, Sept.
14 at St. Joseph Hospital In
Parkersburg. Maternal
grandmother is Mrs. Mildred
Brooks, Reedsville and
paternal grandparents are
Mrs. Kathleen Fr.a ncis,
Syracuse,_and the late W. H.
Francis. -The paternal greatgrandmother is Mrs. Freda
Duffy, also of Syracuse .

NITETY NITE
CHILDREN'S

SilVER BRIDGE PlAZA

I

Sale Starts Monday At 10 A.M .

NOW
Regular $25 .00
Sizes : 8 to 18 .'

·. '159,9

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I
6 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 28, 1975

l~r'c~;;~;;,i;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;:;:;:;::::::::.)jr

.If

j

Corner .

8~,(~~~~~ne

Study-club hears
report on history

.:!!

1

GA Ll.lPOl.lS - Mrs. J ohn
Baker entertained Hiverside
Study Club Sept. 23 at the
country
home of he r
daugh te r,
Mrs .
Alfr ed
Ga bnilla. Assisted by her
daughter, Mrs. Baker served
a dessert course.
Mrs . Allen , the pres ident,
had a sked the vice pres ident
to preside so Mrs. L. H.
Wi ckline called the club to
ord er . Mrs. Har ry Kin g.
chaplain , led the club pra yer .
Pr octorv ill e, the home of
the
Ohio
F e de rati on
Presid ent, Mrs . Ollie White,
will be th e host city for the
District Mee tin g Oc t. 9.
Several members have in ~
diCated they will attend .

POMEROY - Hesponse lo the appea l for financ ial support
by the Meigs Coun ty Coun ci l on Aging has been good, it 's
repor ted, bu t more money is needed if the m a ny serv'ices a r e to
be continued.
This year the local sh11re of funding is $22,500, and while
the se nior ci ti zens are · work ing toward this goal t hroutjh a
membership drive, donations and fund rais ing activiti es, they
need other he lp ... your help.
This past week, Elea nor Thomas, executive director, sent
out let ter s to the churc hes and or ga nizations asking for contributions to the progr am which se rves nea r ly 2,000 senior
d.tizens many living on a low rixed incom e.
The Counc il on Aging is aski ng indi viduals, churches and
organizations if they wi ll obligate themselves for a certain
amount monthly - $1, $5, $10, or any a mount - or if they are
unable to do th~1t to make some cOntribu tion now.
A5 you perha ps know , the se nior citizens programs a re
partia lly fu nded with federal and s tate m on ies, but a cer tain
perce nwge of the budget has to be contributed locally in order
to be eligib le for these fund s . Ea ch year the fede ra l and state
funds decrease and the loca l funds have to be increased.lt isn't
a brig ht pi cture fina ncially, but if pledges, small or large,
come thro ugh the n there is a rea l po.si bility that a ll of the
programs ca n be con llnued. Won't you help'?
GEMMA CASCI HAS HAD quite a summer vacation
returning from E urope earlier this month af ter 10 weeks
abroad visiting relatives, sightseeing and ~oaking up the sun
on Italian beaches.
Gemma left on June 27 for Home, Pisa, and the Mountai ns
of Lucca to sec her many aunts , uncles a nd cousins st ill
res iding in Italy. She a lso went to the village of San Cansia no
where her parents lived before coming to the United States.
On July 2, she left for Frankfort, Germany where she met
Phyllis Hac kett and Ba rbara Mullen for three weeks of sightsee ing whi ch took them across Germany into Holland where
they took a canal tour a nd stopped at diamond fa ctories and
museums, across the Channel in to Harwich , England, and into
th e home of former Middleport r esidents, Gene and Janet
Harris, at Holyhead, Wales. There Janet guided the trio on a
lour which took them into castles and cathedrals.
Then there was a dsy of touring in London before leaving
for France by way of Dover. Once in Paris they took in all the
sights traveling about on the Metro (subway). There Paul
Casci's cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Ardoin, joined them for
some sight seeing an d then ente rtained the three with a dinner
party at the ir home.
From there they too k a tra in to Switzerland for a couple of
day s, and then into Italy to spend two days at Lido Camaiore
and on to Rome for five days. They toured the city, took a trip
to the Fountains of Tivioli, a nd had an audience with the Pope
in St. Peter's Square. This was of specia l significance to
Gemma , Phyllis and Barbara , a ll members of Sacred Heart
Church, since this is Holy Year : and the Holy Door, opened
only once eve ry 25 years, was open and they were able to pass
through.
Leaving Rome they went to Lucca, on to Florence and then
to Austria a nd back into Germany where they visited the site of
the Passion Play . Phyllis and Barbara returned home July 29,
but Gemma went back to Lucca to spend more time with
relatives there , before returning this month.

Sorority supports levy
POMEROY - The twotenths of a mill renewal levy
for the Gallia - Jackson Meigs mental health and
retardation program on the
November ballot received the
endorsement of the Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority at a
meeting Thursday night.
Mrs . Maxine Plummer ,
director of the program, was
guest speaker at the meeting
·at the home of Mrs. Nellie
Brown with Mrs. Ruby Baer ,
co-hostess. Introduced by

I
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Mrs . Norma Amsbary, Mrs.
Plummer outlined the services offered now , plans for
the future including the new
facility opposite Holzer
Medical Center and planned
expansion of staff, programs
and services.
She noted that the Meigs
County Center, now located in
the Meigs General Hospital
building, will continue to
function. Both Gallia and
Jackson have. passed a 10year levy, she reported , to
suppor t the program. Mrs .

CARPETS
STEAM
CLEANED
__ I}IRT EXTRACTION METHOD
.

'
R ESWENTIAL:- c:o
Streakless Machine Wall Washing
Uoholsterv - Windows - Floors
Complete Line of . . .
Cleaning Equipment &amp;, Supplies

I

I
1
1
1

I

I
I
I

II FOR
ADVANCED CLEANING SERVICE
FRlEN.DLY FREE ESTIMATES

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Call 675·5572 After 4 P.M.
1
~--------------------------)

i Got

Mr. and Mrs. Leland Burd

Candlelight ceremony
weds Burd-Brumfield
GALLIPOLIS
Miss
Connie Brumfield, daughter
of Mr . a nd Mr s. Clyne
Brumfield , Gallipohs and
Le land E ugene Burd. son of
Mr . and Mr s. Lyle Burd,
Mill er . wer e united in
marriage Wednesday, Jul y
30, at 6:30p.m . at Bell Chapel
Church .
The Rev. Everett Delaney
performed th e c and lelight
double ring ceremony before
an altar decora ted with a 15branch candelabra and tw o
vases of yell ow and blue
summer fl owers.
Organis t Jan Du ncan
played "Oh , Promise Me," " I
Love You Truly, " " Bridal
Chor us" and " Wedding
March ." Soloist Lynn Hice
sang " A Time for Us" and the
" Lord's Prayer" while the
bridg e and groom were
kneeling in prayer .
Given in marriage by her
father , the bride was atti red
in a gown of nylon with an Aline skirt trimmed in chan tilly lace and long sleeves
tapered to a point at the
wrists and trimmed in the
same type of lace . A semisc oop neckline ·trimmed in
chantilly lace and seed pearls
accented the gown . The
bodice and detachable chapel
ttain made of nylon and

Plummer pointed out that the
renewal levy will amount to
approximately 96 cents per
$12,000 in real estate value .
Approximately 5,000 people
have been seen so far, she

reported , and approximately
400 of them are from Meigs
County.
A letter wa s read from
International urging eac h
member to write to her
se nator asking that the week
of April 30 be proclaimed
Beta Sigma Phi Week. Mrs.
Lillian Moore announced a
theater party for Oct. 23 at
the Mountaineer Theater ,

Hurricane , W. Va.
The next meeting will be
Oct. 9 at the home of Mrs .
Mildred Karr with Mrs .
Shirley Custer as co-hostess.
Heports will be given by the
Buckeye Boy and Girl State
Delegates.

A Good ~ecipe For Making Money?

If you've go t lhe hocus pocus tor making your

money grow . then you don 't need us - but. if

0

you're look ing lor a Sdfe ~ay to put yo ur money

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fO w ork and earn highest int ereS1, come in and

inquire about a passbook or ce rtific~t e sav•n gs

account today'

3 LOCATIONS
TO SERVE YOU!
MAifi OFFICE SECOND AVE. ·
AUTO BANK.
THIRD AVE.

.,

VINTON BRANCH
VINTON, OHIO

Ira Watson
turns 72

"Your Commu"ify Ow"etf Ba"l/'
SINCE 1863

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THE OHIO BELL TELEPHONE "COMPANY

a,, C. K. E.ler,
Vir~

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/'rr11idrnt

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Training ·underway Sewing .Club contributes
for Holzer, nurses to senior citizens program

n

many varied backgrounds
reg istered in the freshman
cla ss Monday at Holze r
Medical Center School of

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FRESHMEN CLASS ENTERS - Fifty .four men and
women registered Monday in the Holzer Medi cal Center
School of Nursing. The new students are (How I, 1"1') Carla
Morgan , Ironton; Tami Weiher, ROOney ; Shelley Wright ,
Gallipolis; Cathy Wall, Gallipolis; Holly Dever, Minford;
Linda Duteil, Portsmouth ; Judy Weber, West Portsmouth; Dee Hickman, West Portsmouth, and Laura Jean
Markel, Pedro. (Row 2) Judy Hennessey, Gallipolis;
Debbie Boatright, Long Bottom; Arlene Kohut , Waverly ;
Nancy Brown, Beaver ; Carlene Kohut, Waverly ; Barbara
Sims, Gallipolis; Diana Woodruff, Oak Hill; Beth
Christian, Oak Hill; Kathy Clark , Jackson ; Marsha
Drum, Amanda and Clifford Queen, Gallipolis. (Row 3)
Diane Neptune, Piketon ; Becky Burger, Vienna, W. Va.;
Pamela Hoss, Chillicothe ; Melonie Hichter, Chillicothe;
Stephanie Gillispie, Wellston ; Bonnie Wyckoff, Wellston;

HITES PLANNED - Mr. and Mrs. John L. VanMeter , Mason , a nnounce the eng agement an d fo rthcoming ma rria ge of their daughter, Teresa Lynn, to John
Elmer Ord , son of Mr. and Mrs. J ohn E. Ord of Leta rt .
Miss VanMeter is a 1975 graduate of Wahama High
School. Mr. Ord is a 1973 graduate of Wahama High School
and is employed by Southern Ohio Coa l Company at
Haccoon No. 3 Mine in Wilkes ville , Ohio. The we dding will
ta ke place on Oct. 18 at the Christian Brethren Church in
Mason at 7:30p .m. The custom of open ehurch will be
obser ved.

Mary Anne Harper, Wellston ; Cindy Ghearlng, Wellston ;
Hhonda Clark , Jackson ; Vivian Bentley, Jackson and
Teresa Matheny, New ·Marshfield. (Row 4) Jacob
Howard, New Haven, W. Va .; Debbie McLaughlin,
Pomeroy; Lynn Griffis, Belpre ; Kristen Wagner,
Beverly; Connie Hickman, Portsmouth; Carolyn Irvine,
Ashland, Ky .; Kristi Olambers, Ravenswood, W. Va . ;
Kim Nutter, Clarksburg, W. Va.; Cheryl Nichols,
Jackson; Erin Smales, Jackson ; Kim Bush, Mt. Alto, W.
Va . and Jackie Woodward, Gallipolis; (Row 5( Susan
Etter ling, Portsmouth; Anne Ternasky, Columbus;
Vickie Henzmann, Huntington, W. Va. ; Judie Rardin ,
Ravenswood, W. Va.; Alice Baughman Mullins,
Gallipolis ; Cindy Jones, Hio Grande ; Jeanie Grate,
Patriot ; Michael Stout, Bidwell and Douglas Adkins, Pt.
Pleasant, W. Va.

wh o donated 1,268 hour s to
var ious organizations in the
county .

The Galli a Co un ty HSVP van
drove 1,665.7 miles wh il e
transporting 131 volunteers

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POMEROY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Ce nter Ac tivities at Pomeroy Junior
High SchooL Qpen 9 a.m.-4
p .m . Monday throug h Friday
unless otherwise stated.
Monday, Sept. 29 - Crafts ;
Square dancing, 1-3 p.m .;
" Nutrition
for
Senior
Citizens," by Marta Gilkey at

Peddler's PantrY
proudly presents

Norman &amp; Judith Brumm

noon .
Tuesday, Sept . 30 - Chair
caning, bring chair . Chorus,
12 :30-2 p .m . 'Home Nursing
Class postponed until after
move. Will announce later.
Wednesday, Oct. I Quilting . Games 12:30-2 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 2 - Closed ·
to move to new rooms. No
lunch served and no buses
running .
Friday, Oct. 3 - Closed to
•
SfOP SMOKING ADVOCATES- The Heart Assocation, Cancer Society and Seventh
move to new rooms. No lunch
Day Adventist Church sponsored Stop Smoking Clinic will be held Sept. 29 through Oct . 3 a l
served and no buses running.
". the Appalachian Power Auditorium in Point Pleasant. Pictured here from left to rig hi are
Senior Citizens Nutrition
: Patricia Lee of the Mason County Heart Association , Becky Wood , of the Cancer Society and
program, 11 : 30 a.m.-12 : 30
~ Pastor Bill Clark of the Seventh Day Adventist.
p.m . Monday through Friday
except Thursday and Friday,
Begins Wednesday, Oct. 1, 9- Oct. 2 and 3, when the center
11 a.m. for 12 weeks. Cost to will be cleaning and moving
members $Z4 and non - to another room .
members, $30.
•
: GALLIPOLIS - There are p.m . The cost for French Art
Ceramics - Marcy Kubbs .
!;till a few openings in classes Colony members is $16 and Begins Tuesday, Oct. 7, 7-9
) t the French Art Colony.
non-members, $20. This class p.m. for eight weeks. Cost is
• Openings are :
runs eight weeks.
$16 members . $20 non- Begins Tuesday, Sept. 30
•, ' Beginning painting Beginning
and
In- members.
from 4-5 :30p .m . Eight weeks,
:instructor is Corinne Lund. termediate painting
InChildren, ages five to eight $12.
&amp;gins Tuesday, Sept. 30. 7-9 structor, Joy Prendergast. - Instructor, Corinne Lund.
Children, ages 8-12 •
Corinne
Lund.
Begins
Saturday, Oct. 11 , 10 a .m .-12
noon for eight weeks. $16.
For registration or information, call Mrs. John
Byers at 446-1903 .

"Tiny bits of nature
zn copper enamel ''

from s1.50
-State &amp; Third---Gallipolis, Ohio-_.

W®WIJ@w~w
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SUNDAYthru SA

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GALLIPOLIS ~ Salem
Missionary Society met Sept.
18 in the church basement.
A potluck dinner was
served at noon. The afternoon
program consisted of a song,
" Work for the Night is
Coming." Scripture reading
was Timothy 1: 6-11 by
Bernice Wood, and a prayer
was given by Helen J . Wood.
The minutes were read by
Shirley Hudson. Headings
were by Gladys Davis,
" When Father Shook the
Stove", and Helen J. Wood,
"When September Comes ."
A rummage sale Oct. 3 and
4 at 510 Third Ave. was
discussed. The group worked
on a quilt which they will also
be quilting at the Bob Evans
Farm FestivaL
Bible questions were
presented by Bernice Wood,
and closing prayer was given
by Gladys Davis.
Attending were Sylvia
Gilliam, Janet Pitchford,
Alice Salisbury, Norma
Huthford, Helen J. Wood,
' Anna Davis; Helen Dailey,
Gladys Davis', Bernice Wood ,
Shirley
Hudson,
Robin
Hud son and Beth Salisbury .
I
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.fOOTLONG
HOT DOGS

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"Fixed The Way
You Like 'Em"
PACER

POPULU
UTU.TI
Store.HoUrs

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G.O Ll!!&gt;OU a , OKoO

POMEROY - A $25 contribution to the-Meigs County
Coun ci l on' Aging lor the
senior citizens program was
made by the Sew-Hite Sewing
Dub at a meeting Wednesday
night at th e home of Mrs. Flo

BIRTH ANI'- OUNCED
FT. WORTH, Tex. - Capt.
and Mrs. Ken Ma tre an nounce the birth of a son ,
J effrey Scott, Sept. J in the
Air Force Carswell Hospital
where his father is stationed .
He weighed seven poWtds,
three ounces. This is the first
grandchild for both Mr . and
till's. Daniel Evans and Mr .
and Mrs . Anthony Maire,
Heading .
WEEKEND VISITORS
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs . Leonard Babcock of
Elwood City, Pa. and Mrs . E .
M. Schmidt of Rochester , Pa .
we re weekend guests of Mrs.
Malcolm Roller and other
re latives. On Saturday Mr .
and Mrs. George Freeland
entertained with a dinner for
the m .

Gallipolis, 0.

Mon . &amp; Fri.
9:30 fill p.m.
Tues. Wed . Sat.
9: 30 til s p. m.
Thurs .• 9 : 30 til u noo'n

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Strickland.
Mrs .
Ann
Browning
presided . The group voted to
send $10 to the Lonnie
LeMaster fund , and plans
were di scusse d for a
Halloween dinner in October.
The program was a jewelry
party by Mrs . Loretta
Ti emeyer, demonstrator.
Mr s . Pandora Collins will be
hostess for the next meeting .
Others attending were Mrs .
Betty Wehrun g , Mrs . Mildred
Wells, Mrs. Barbara Mullen,
Mrs. Carolyn Mc Daniel, Mrs.
Lenora McKn igh t, Mrs .
Shirley Baity , Mrs. Martha
Hoffman and Mrs. Evelyn
Gilmore .

FREE
MACRAME
DEMONSTRATION
Sun .• Sept . 28
2P.M.

SUSIE'S
GREENHOUSES
Phon e 245·9192

SPONSORED BY
HEART ASSOCIATION - CANCER SOCIETl
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH

Stop Smoking Clinic
Place-Appalachian Power Auditorium
Tlme-7:30 p.m. Nightly
Date-September 29-0ctober 3, 1975
For Registration Phone
446-2688-Ga llipolis, Olio, Point Pleasam
773-5119- Point Pleasant, West Va .
992-5807-Pomeroy , Ohio
Babysitting Available .
$5 .00 fee , if you attend all 5 nights your $5.00 will be refunded :

WEATHERED PINE SUITE
MAPLE

REG. s1499.95
NOW

SUITE
.
REG. •749.95

NOW

$59995

sggggs

LIGHT PINE SUITE

DARK PINE SUITE
REG. '999.95, NOW

REG. 51299.95
NOW

95
$799

sggggs

2 DARK PINE SUITES
REG. s699.95

.'

SEPT. 28 THRU OCT. 4

)28 S ~C OND ..V~NUf

Nursing in Gallipolis.
Forty .four members of the
class are from Central and
Southern Ohio, one is from
Kentucky and nine are Wes t
Virginians.
.
Th e backg rounds of th e
students vary in both age and
ex perience. One is a
housewife and mother of fiv e
school-age childre n. Another·
has a bachelor of arts degree
from Rio Grande College .
Two have been nurse aides at
Ross County Medical Center
and another has been a
lice nsed prac tical nurse at
Lakin State Hospital. Two are
former medical corpsmen.
Comi ng from Holzer Medical
Center 's s ta ff are two nur se
aides , an operating room
technician, a nursing service
orderly and a respiratory
therapist who have enrolled
in this year 's class .
Among the students, four
are men, which is an increase
over any previous year , and
:&gt;0 are women . This exceeds
last year's freshman class
enrollment by eight.

potluck meal

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GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
Citizens Center, located at 220
Jackson Pike in the County
Home Building , is open
Monday through Friday from
9 a :m. to 3 p .m . The schedule
of activities for this week is
as follow s:
Monday , Sept. 29 - Blood
Pressure Check, I - 2 p.m .;
Special informative meeting
concerning levy , 7 p.m.
Tuesday , Sept. 30 Quilting, 9 a .m . - 3 p.m.
Wednesday ; Oct. I - Cards
and Games, 1-3 p.m . Balance
of Williamsburg-Washington
Trip due .
Thursday, Oct . 2
Quilting , 9 a .m . - 3 p.m .
Friday , Od . 3 - Carry-In
Dinner , 12 noon; Center
Chairperson 's Meeting, 1-3
p.m.; Art Class, 1-3 p.m . ;
Social hour , 7 p.m.
Senior Nutrition meals are
served at 11:30 p.m . Seniors'
Coop Store is open from 12:30
to 1:30 p.m . Monday through
Friday .

classes still open

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Miss Teresa Lynn VanMeter

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GALLIPOLIS - Fifty.four
yoWlg m en and women from

Wedding
and
engagement notices for the
Sunday Times-Sentinel
must be In our hands by 12
noon on the Tbursday
preceding publication.
lnlonnallon may be turned
In or mailed to th e
Gallipolis Dally Tribune or
Pomeroy Dally Sentinel.
Engagement and wedding
forms are· also available on
request

RSVP transported to program

Publi c notice is hereby given that The Ohio Bell Telephone
Company has filed with The Public Utilities Commission of Oh.io
an Application stating that the Company is ent itl ed, because of
the reasons set forth in nid Application , to reasonable and
equitable increases and adjustments in its rates and charges f or
exchange telephone service, intrastate message toll telephon e
service, intra.s tate mobile te lephone service, intrastate private lin e
services and intrastate wide area tel~ o mmuni ca tions service,
and to change t!':.e regulations and practices affecting the same,
and to revi se its Exchange Rate Tariff P .U.C.O. No.3, its General
Exchange Tariff P.U .C.O. No.4, ita Message Toll Teleph on~ Serv~
ice Tariff P .U.C.O . No. 7, its Mobile Telephone Service Tariff
P .U.C.O. No.2, its Private Line Service Tariff P.U.C.O. No.2
and its Wide Area Telec ommunications Service Tariff P.U .c.o:
No . 1, to effect such increases, adjustments arid. changes, a ll as
more fully set forth in the Application on file with the Commis·
sion and in the exhibits attached thereto and made a part thereof.
The proposed revisions Wifl effect increases and adjustments in
rates and charges and changes in the regulations and practices
affecting the same throughout the territory in which t he Com~
pany operates.
'J'he prayer of the Application requests the Commission to do
.he following :
(a) Approve the pr oposed rates and charges and changes
.pplied for herein;
(b) Approve the filing of said proposed schedule sheets con ~
.. ained in Exhibit "B" hereto, modified to t-eftect such revi!1ions
thereof as may ;become effective pursuant to orders of your Commission, during the interim between the filing of this Appli cation
and the date upon which said proposed schedule sheets become
effective;
(c) Establish an effective date for said proposed schedule
sheets; and
(d) Grant such other and further relief as Applicant is reasonably entitled to in the premi11es.
A copy of the Application , including a copy of the present and
propoa.ed sehedule sheets, a :etatetJ?.~mt showing the amount of pro~
posed mcreaae or dec~eaee m each changed rat e or charge which
1s not affected ~1 changes in regulations and practice~~, and a
atatement descnbing the proposed changes in regulations and
practices affecting rates and charges, may be inspected by any
mterested party at the office of the Commission, 111 North High
Street, Columbus, Ohio, and at any public business . office of
the Company.
This matter. is scheduled for public he aring beginning on
Tue sd~y, October . 21, 1975, at 9:30 A.M ., at the office of the
Commission, ~11 ''North High Street, Columbus, Ohio.
The ·form of this notice has been approved by The ·Public Utili ties Commission of Ohio.
·

The.~day Times - Sentinel, Sundav . seot . 2tt t975•

--.;..

The two vacation trips were
prese nted . In Nove mber
there will be a fli ght from
Colum bus to Miami followed
by a Caribbean cruise. The
other trip, in February, will
leave Columbus by air to
Hawa ii. These are sponsored
by the Ohio Federation·.
Mr s. Earllus co ~tin u ed
reading the U.S. Constitution .
(lolr s. Herman Candee
· presented the program . Last
year, the club studied the
firs t 100 years of the United
States. This year t hey will
continue with the second 100
years.
Mrs.
Condee 's
program last year was "The
Pres id ent s of Manifes t
Des tiny" to 1886.. Since 1886
there have been 16 presidents
including six Democrats a11d
10 He publi eans. Gr ove r
Oeveland was elected for his
first term in 1885. Since then,
the country has engaged in
five war s: The Spanish
Am e rican, World War I .
Declare d April 17, 1917 ,
World War II , Korea , and

GALLIPOLIS
Ira
Watson , HI. 2, Gallipolis,
celebrated hi s 72nd birthday
·
Se pt. 21 at his home. A buffet Vietnam.
Mrs . Con dee li sted th e
chantilly lace was a ttached at dinner was served in his
important
events .in each
the wai st. A fingertip veil of honor by his wife, Nellie .
illusion fell from a Juliet cap
Helping Watson celebrate administration . Following a
of chan tilly lace and seed were Mr. and Mrs. William di sc uss ion , the c lub adpear ls border . Th e bride Curtis and family, Qpal and journed to meet again Oc t. 14
carri ed a bouquet of bl ue and Danny, Chillicothe; Charles with Mrs. Ben F:achus .
whit e car nation s, ye ll ow Eddie Watson , Mr . and Mrs .
roses and baby's brea th with James Haner and son Dennis,
yellow and blue streamers. Mrs . Diana Shillington , all of
Maid of honor Brenda Gall ipo lis; Mr . and Mrs.
Kemper wore a blue halter Donald Leeth and family,
gown with a matching jacket! Shawn. Teddy and Donnie,
Tammy Brumfield , sister of Bainbridge; Mr . and Mrs.
BY RENE BHOYULES
the bride. wore a yellow Hobert Richte r, Ch illi cothe ;
GALLIPOLIS - Eleven
halter gown with a yellow Mr s. My ra Gi l.more and
jac ke t. Melody Burd, sister of Charles Chevalier, J effery members of the HSVP were
the groom , wore a yellow Watson, all of Gallipolis; tran sported to the Chillicothe
gown of la ce over taffeta with Alva McG uire and Unda Ve te rans Hospital by the van
driver , Hene
Broyles,
a yellow lace cape. All at- McGuire, Mercerville .
tendants wore hats to match
Watso n
opened
and Monday.
Me mber s a tt e nding th e
the color of their dre sses. acknowledged several gifts.
Flower girl Michelle Unroe, Unable to attend, but sending orientation program were
Lawrence , Mab el
cousin of the bride, wore a
gifts and best wishes were Ma e
blue satin go wn with mal· Mr . and Mrs. Billy Curtis and Brown, Huth Campbell, Bill
chin g ribbon s in her hair.
famil y, Chill icothe; Lyl e Menshouse, Bertis Halley,
Walt er
She carried a white basket Shillingt on , Gallip olis. Nellie Stan ley,
of s umme r flow ers . The Watson rece ive d se veral Bartram , Annie Galloway,
and
Charlie
a t tendants
all
carried ph one ca ll s wi s hing him Elizabeth
Mcinturff and Elias Sisson .
bouquets of summer flowers " Happy Birthday".
The group wa s welcomed
with stream ers to match
and given a preview of a
their dresses .
course
by Hichard L. ComBes t man wa s Burnie
seen and hard
stoc k, chief, Voluntary
Watson . Dal e Burd, brother
Service
.
Comstock in ~
of th e groom, a nd Tom
GALLIPOLIS - Miss Dena
Brumfield, brother of the
Noele Greene was honored trad uced Jack D. Graham,
bride, were usher s.
recently on her second birth- Assistant Hospital Director ,
Mother of the bride wore a day by her parents , Mr. and who gave a talk on the
pink dotted swi ss gown with
Mrs. Dannie Greene . Sharing History and Organization of
puffy white lace sleeves. Her in the celebration were her the Veterans Admini stration .
Alnita
Morgan ,
corsage was a pink carnation . two sisters, Danella Hence Mrs.
The bridegroom's mo.ther and Deborah Denise and her Associate Ch ief, Nursing
wore a street length dress of brother, Scott Daniel, along Service £or Education, Spoke
blue polyester with multi- with Mr. a nd Mrs. James to the group about uncolored flow ers . She chose a
Edwards , Mr . and Mrs . derstandin g and working
with patients .
corsage of white carnatons.
Arthur Rupe , Jr ., Becky and
The volunteers enjoyed a
A reception followed the Cynthia Rupe, Mr. and Mrs.
film
entitled "The Gift You
ceremony a t the home of the
Carl Elliott, and Mr. and Mr s.
Bring " before retiring for
bride 's parents on the lawn. A Hussell Fellure.
lunch
.
three-tiered ca ke was placed
O l iver
Stringer,
at the center of the table and
GALLIPOLIS - Mr . and
Rehabilitation
Medicine
was
topped
with
the Mrs . James Haner, Lower
traditional miniature bride Hiver Rd., celebrated their Service Co-ordinator,
and groom. Two white 21st wedding ann iv ersary escorted the volunteers from
wedding bells were on each Thursday. In honor of the Jackson, Ross, Vinton and
side of the cake . Mrs. Doris occasion, they were dinner Gallia Counties on a guided
John son and Mr s . Jean guests of Mr. and Mrs . Lyle tour of the hospital and its
grounds. The VA Hospital sits
Johnson presided over the Shellington at the Colonial in
on a 150 acre tract in Hoss
reception table. Miss Cindy Jackson. Mr. and Mrs . Haner
County, near Chilli cothe.
Brumfield , sister of the bride, are the parents of two
The s ame group of
reg istered the guests.
chi ldren, They are a
volunteers will convene at the
The new Mrs . Bwd is a 1975 daughter, Mrs . Lyle (Diana)
hospital tomorrow for the
graduate of Gallia Academy Shellington and a son , Dennis
second day of orientation .
High School and Mr. Burd is a
Haner, both of Gallipolis.
1975 Fairland High School
graduate, and is now emLEGAL NOTICE
ployed at Jackson Skill
Center .

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$499

95
•

SAVE

1 3 OFF

WEATHERED PINE

DRY SINK
REG. 1399.95, NOW

ON DISOONTINUED

ON All EARLY AMERICAN

BASSETT
GROUP

DINING ROOM
SUITES
8.C2

Ave.

Phon• .446,- UOS
Callipolit.

$19995

�''

I
6 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 28, 1975

l~r'c~;;~;;,i;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;:;:;:;::::::::.)jr

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8~,(~~~~~ne

Study-club hears
report on history

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GA Ll.lPOl.lS - Mrs. J ohn
Baker entertained Hiverside
Study Club Sept. 23 at the
country
home of he r
daugh te r,
Mrs .
Alfr ed
Ga bnilla. Assisted by her
daughter, Mrs. Baker served
a dessert course.
Mrs . Allen , the pres ident,
had a sked the vice pres ident
to preside so Mrs. L. H.
Wi ckline called the club to
ord er . Mrs. Har ry Kin g.
chaplain , led the club pra yer .
Pr octorv ill e, the home of
the
Ohio
F e de rati on
Presid ent, Mrs . Ollie White,
will be th e host city for the
District Mee tin g Oc t. 9.
Several members have in ~
diCated they will attend .

POMEROY - Hesponse lo the appea l for financ ial support
by the Meigs Coun ty Coun ci l on Aging has been good, it 's
repor ted, bu t more money is needed if the m a ny serv'ices a r e to
be continued.
This year the local sh11re of funding is $22,500, and while
the se nior ci ti zens are · work ing toward this goal t hroutjh a
membership drive, donations and fund rais ing activiti es, they
need other he lp ... your help.
This past week, Elea nor Thomas, executive director, sent
out let ter s to the churc hes and or ga nizations asking for contributions to the progr am which se rves nea r ly 2,000 senior
d.tizens many living on a low rixed incom e.
The Counc il on Aging is aski ng indi viduals, churches and
organizations if they wi ll obligate themselves for a certain
amount monthly - $1, $5, $10, or any a mount - or if they are
unable to do th~1t to make some cOntribu tion now.
A5 you perha ps know , the se nior citizens programs a re
partia lly fu nded with federal and s tate m on ies, but a cer tain
perce nwge of the budget has to be contributed locally in order
to be eligib le for these fund s . Ea ch year the fede ra l and state
funds decrease and the loca l funds have to be increased.lt isn't
a brig ht pi cture fina ncially, but if pledges, small or large,
come thro ugh the n there is a rea l po.si bility that a ll of the
programs ca n be con llnued. Won't you help'?
GEMMA CASCI HAS HAD quite a summer vacation
returning from E urope earlier this month af ter 10 weeks
abroad visiting relatives, sightseeing and ~oaking up the sun
on Italian beaches.
Gemma left on June 27 for Home, Pisa, and the Mountai ns
of Lucca to sec her many aunts , uncles a nd cousins st ill
res iding in Italy. She a lso went to the village of San Cansia no
where her parents lived before coming to the United States.
On July 2, she left for Frankfort, Germany where she met
Phyllis Hac kett and Ba rbara Mullen for three weeks of sightsee ing whi ch took them across Germany into Holland where
they took a canal tour a nd stopped at diamond fa ctories and
museums, across the Channel in to Harwich , England, and into
th e home of former Middleport r esidents, Gene and Janet
Harris, at Holyhead, Wales. There Janet guided the trio on a
lour which took them into castles and cathedrals.
Then there was a dsy of touring in London before leaving
for France by way of Dover. Once in Paris they took in all the
sights traveling about on the Metro (subway). There Paul
Casci's cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Ardoin, joined them for
some sight seeing an d then ente rtained the three with a dinner
party at the ir home.
From there they too k a tra in to Switzerland for a couple of
day s, and then into Italy to spend two days at Lido Camaiore
and on to Rome for five days. They toured the city, took a trip
to the Fountains of Tivioli, a nd had an audience with the Pope
in St. Peter's Square. This was of specia l significance to
Gemma , Phyllis and Barbara , a ll members of Sacred Heart
Church, since this is Holy Year : and the Holy Door, opened
only once eve ry 25 years, was open and they were able to pass
through.
Leaving Rome they went to Lucca, on to Florence and then
to Austria a nd back into Germany where they visited the site of
the Passion Play . Phyllis and Barbara returned home July 29,
but Gemma went back to Lucca to spend more time with
relatives there , before returning this month.

Sorority supports levy
POMEROY - The twotenths of a mill renewal levy
for the Gallia - Jackson Meigs mental health and
retardation program on the
November ballot received the
endorsement of the Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority at a
meeting Thursday night.
Mrs . Maxine Plummer ,
director of the program, was
guest speaker at the meeting
·at the home of Mrs. Nellie
Brown with Mrs. Ruby Baer ,
co-hostess. Introduced by

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Mrs . Norma Amsbary, Mrs.
Plummer outlined the services offered now , plans for
the future including the new
facility opposite Holzer
Medical Center and planned
expansion of staff, programs
and services.
She noted that the Meigs
County Center, now located in
the Meigs General Hospital
building, will continue to
function. Both Gallia and
Jackson have. passed a 10year levy, she reported , to
suppor t the program. Mrs .

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Call 675·5572 After 4 P.M.
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i Got

Mr. and Mrs. Leland Burd

Candlelight ceremony
weds Burd-Brumfield
GALLIPOLIS
Miss
Connie Brumfield, daughter
of Mr . a nd Mr s. Clyne
Brumfield , Gallipohs and
Le land E ugene Burd. son of
Mr . and Mr s. Lyle Burd,
Mill er . wer e united in
marriage Wednesday, Jul y
30, at 6:30p.m . at Bell Chapel
Church .
The Rev. Everett Delaney
performed th e c and lelight
double ring ceremony before
an altar decora ted with a 15branch candelabra and tw o
vases of yell ow and blue
summer fl owers.
Organis t Jan Du ncan
played "Oh , Promise Me," " I
Love You Truly, " " Bridal
Chor us" and " Wedding
March ." Soloist Lynn Hice
sang " A Time for Us" and the
" Lord's Prayer" while the
bridg e and groom were
kneeling in prayer .
Given in marriage by her
father , the bride was atti red
in a gown of nylon with an Aline skirt trimmed in chan tilly lace and long sleeves
tapered to a point at the
wrists and trimmed in the
same type of lace . A semisc oop neckline ·trimmed in
chantilly lace and seed pearls
accented the gown . The
bodice and detachable chapel
ttain made of nylon and

Plummer pointed out that the
renewal levy will amount to
approximately 96 cents per
$12,000 in real estate value .
Approximately 5,000 people
have been seen so far, she

reported , and approximately
400 of them are from Meigs
County.
A letter wa s read from
International urging eac h
member to write to her
se nator asking that the week
of April 30 be proclaimed
Beta Sigma Phi Week. Mrs.
Lillian Moore announced a
theater party for Oct. 23 at
the Mountaineer Theater ,

Hurricane , W. Va.
The next meeting will be
Oct. 9 at the home of Mrs .
Mildred Karr with Mrs .
Shirley Custer as co-hostess.
Heports will be given by the
Buckeye Boy and Girl State
Delegates.

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TO SERVE YOU!
MAifi OFFICE SECOND AVE. ·
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VINTON, OHIO

Ira Watson
turns 72

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SINCE 1863

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THE OHIO BELL TELEPHONE "COMPANY

a,, C. K. E.ler,
Vir~

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/'rr11idrnt

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Training ·underway Sewing .Club contributes
for Holzer, nurses to senior citizens program

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many varied backgrounds
reg istered in the freshman
cla ss Monday at Holze r
Medical Center School of

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FRESHMEN CLASS ENTERS - Fifty .four men and
women registered Monday in the Holzer Medi cal Center
School of Nursing. The new students are (How I, 1"1') Carla
Morgan , Ironton; Tami Weiher, ROOney ; Shelley Wright ,
Gallipolis; Cathy Wall, Gallipolis; Holly Dever, Minford;
Linda Duteil, Portsmouth ; Judy Weber, West Portsmouth; Dee Hickman, West Portsmouth, and Laura Jean
Markel, Pedro. (Row 2) Judy Hennessey, Gallipolis;
Debbie Boatright, Long Bottom; Arlene Kohut , Waverly ;
Nancy Brown, Beaver ; Carlene Kohut, Waverly ; Barbara
Sims, Gallipolis; Diana Woodruff, Oak Hill; Beth
Christian, Oak Hill; Kathy Clark , Jackson ; Marsha
Drum, Amanda and Clifford Queen, Gallipolis. (Row 3)
Diane Neptune, Piketon ; Becky Burger, Vienna, W. Va.;
Pamela Hoss, Chillicothe ; Melonie Hichter, Chillicothe;
Stephanie Gillispie, Wellston ; Bonnie Wyckoff, Wellston;

HITES PLANNED - Mr. and Mrs. John L. VanMeter , Mason , a nnounce the eng agement an d fo rthcoming ma rria ge of their daughter, Teresa Lynn, to John
Elmer Ord , son of Mr. and Mrs. J ohn E. Ord of Leta rt .
Miss VanMeter is a 1975 graduate of Wahama High
School. Mr. Ord is a 1973 graduate of Wahama High School
and is employed by Southern Ohio Coa l Company at
Haccoon No. 3 Mine in Wilkes ville , Ohio. The we dding will
ta ke place on Oct. 18 at the Christian Brethren Church in
Mason at 7:30p .m. The custom of open ehurch will be
obser ved.

Mary Anne Harper, Wellston ; Cindy Ghearlng, Wellston ;
Hhonda Clark , Jackson ; Vivian Bentley, Jackson and
Teresa Matheny, New ·Marshfield. (Row 4) Jacob
Howard, New Haven, W. Va .; Debbie McLaughlin,
Pomeroy; Lynn Griffis, Belpre ; Kristen Wagner,
Beverly; Connie Hickman, Portsmouth; Carolyn Irvine,
Ashland, Ky .; Kristi Olambers, Ravenswood, W. Va . ;
Kim Nutter, Clarksburg, W. Va.; Cheryl Nichols,
Jackson; Erin Smales, Jackson ; Kim Bush, Mt. Alto, W.
Va . and Jackie Woodward, Gallipolis; (Row 5( Susan
Etter ling, Portsmouth; Anne Ternasky, Columbus;
Vickie Henzmann, Huntington, W. Va. ; Judie Rardin ,
Ravenswood, W. Va.; Alice Baughman Mullins,
Gallipolis ; Cindy Jones, Hio Grande ; Jeanie Grate,
Patriot ; Michael Stout, Bidwell and Douglas Adkins, Pt.
Pleasant, W. Va.

wh o donated 1,268 hour s to
var ious organizations in the
county .

The Galli a Co un ty HSVP van
drove 1,665.7 miles wh il e
transporting 131 volunteers

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POMEROY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Ce nter Ac tivities at Pomeroy Junior
High SchooL Qpen 9 a.m.-4
p .m . Monday throug h Friday
unless otherwise stated.
Monday, Sept. 29 - Crafts ;
Square dancing, 1-3 p.m .;
" Nutrition
for
Senior
Citizens," by Marta Gilkey at

Peddler's PantrY
proudly presents

Norman &amp; Judith Brumm

noon .
Tuesday, Sept . 30 - Chair
caning, bring chair . Chorus,
12 :30-2 p .m . 'Home Nursing
Class postponed until after
move. Will announce later.
Wednesday, Oct. I Quilting . Games 12:30-2 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 2 - Closed ·
to move to new rooms. No
lunch served and no buses
running .
Friday, Oct. 3 - Closed to
•
SfOP SMOKING ADVOCATES- The Heart Assocation, Cancer Society and Seventh
move to new rooms. No lunch
Day Adventist Church sponsored Stop Smoking Clinic will be held Sept. 29 through Oct . 3 a l
served and no buses running.
". the Appalachian Power Auditorium in Point Pleasant. Pictured here from left to rig hi are
Senior Citizens Nutrition
: Patricia Lee of the Mason County Heart Association , Becky Wood , of the Cancer Society and
program, 11 : 30 a.m.-12 : 30
~ Pastor Bill Clark of the Seventh Day Adventist.
p.m . Monday through Friday
except Thursday and Friday,
Begins Wednesday, Oct. 1, 9- Oct. 2 and 3, when the center
11 a.m. for 12 weeks. Cost to will be cleaning and moving
members $Z4 and non - to another room .
members, $30.
•
: GALLIPOLIS - There are p.m . The cost for French Art
Ceramics - Marcy Kubbs .
!;till a few openings in classes Colony members is $16 and Begins Tuesday, Oct. 7, 7-9
) t the French Art Colony.
non-members, $20. This class p.m. for eight weeks. Cost is
• Openings are :
runs eight weeks.
$16 members . $20 non- Begins Tuesday, Sept. 30
•, ' Beginning painting Beginning
and
In- members.
from 4-5 :30p .m . Eight weeks,
:instructor is Corinne Lund. termediate painting
InChildren, ages five to eight $12.
&amp;gins Tuesday, Sept. 30. 7-9 structor, Joy Prendergast. - Instructor, Corinne Lund.
Children, ages 8-12 •
Corinne
Lund.
Begins
Saturday, Oct. 11 , 10 a .m .-12
noon for eight weeks. $16.
For registration or information, call Mrs. John
Byers at 446-1903 .

"Tiny bits of nature
zn copper enamel ''

from s1.50
-State &amp; Third---Gallipolis, Ohio-_.

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C?~[)GuO

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SUNDAYthru SA

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GALLIPOLIS ~ Salem
Missionary Society met Sept.
18 in the church basement.
A potluck dinner was
served at noon. The afternoon
program consisted of a song,
" Work for the Night is
Coming." Scripture reading
was Timothy 1: 6-11 by
Bernice Wood, and a prayer
was given by Helen J . Wood.
The minutes were read by
Shirley Hudson. Headings
were by Gladys Davis,
" When Father Shook the
Stove", and Helen J. Wood,
"When September Comes ."
A rummage sale Oct. 3 and
4 at 510 Third Ave. was
discussed. The group worked
on a quilt which they will also
be quilting at the Bob Evans
Farm FestivaL
Bible questions were
presented by Bernice Wood,
and closing prayer was given
by Gladys Davis.
Attending were Sylvia
Gilliam, Janet Pitchford,
Alice Salisbury, Norma
Huthford, Helen J. Wood,
' Anna Davis; Helen Dailey,
Gladys Davis', Bernice Wood ,
Shirley
Hudson,
Robin
Hud son and Beth Salisbury .
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.fOOTLONG
HOT DOGS

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"Fixed The Way
You Like 'Em"
PACER

POPULU
UTU.TI
Store.HoUrs

f

G.O Ll!!&gt;OU a , OKoO

POMEROY - A $25 contribution to the-Meigs County
Coun ci l on' Aging lor the
senior citizens program was
made by the Sew-Hite Sewing
Dub at a meeting Wednesday
night at th e home of Mrs. Flo

BIRTH ANI'- OUNCED
FT. WORTH, Tex. - Capt.
and Mrs. Ken Ma tre an nounce the birth of a son ,
J effrey Scott, Sept. J in the
Air Force Carswell Hospital
where his father is stationed .
He weighed seven poWtds,
three ounces. This is the first
grandchild for both Mr . and
till's. Daniel Evans and Mr .
and Mrs . Anthony Maire,
Heading .
WEEKEND VISITORS
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs . Leonard Babcock of
Elwood City, Pa. and Mrs . E .
M. Schmidt of Rochester , Pa .
we re weekend guests of Mrs.
Malcolm Roller and other
re latives. On Saturday Mr .
and Mrs. George Freeland
entertained with a dinner for
the m .

Gallipolis, 0.

Mon . &amp; Fri.
9:30 fill p.m.
Tues. Wed . Sat.
9: 30 til s p. m.
Thurs .• 9 : 30 til u noo'n

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Strickland.
Mrs .
Ann
Browning
presided . The group voted to
send $10 to the Lonnie
LeMaster fund , and plans
were di scusse d for a
Halloween dinner in October.
The program was a jewelry
party by Mrs . Loretta
Ti emeyer, demonstrator.
Mr s . Pandora Collins will be
hostess for the next meeting .
Others attending were Mrs .
Betty Wehrun g , Mrs . Mildred
Wells, Mrs. Barbara Mullen,
Mrs. Carolyn Mc Daniel, Mrs.
Lenora McKn igh t, Mrs .
Shirley Baity , Mrs. Martha
Hoffman and Mrs. Evelyn
Gilmore .

FREE
MACRAME
DEMONSTRATION
Sun .• Sept . 28
2P.M.

SUSIE'S
GREENHOUSES
Phon e 245·9192

SPONSORED BY
HEART ASSOCIATION - CANCER SOCIETl
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH

Stop Smoking Clinic
Place-Appalachian Power Auditorium
Tlme-7:30 p.m. Nightly
Date-September 29-0ctober 3, 1975
For Registration Phone
446-2688-Ga llipolis, Olio, Point Pleasam
773-5119- Point Pleasant, West Va .
992-5807-Pomeroy , Ohio
Babysitting Available .
$5 .00 fee , if you attend all 5 nights your $5.00 will be refunded :

WEATHERED PINE SUITE
MAPLE

REG. s1499.95
NOW

SUITE
.
REG. •749.95

NOW

$59995

sggggs

LIGHT PINE SUITE

DARK PINE SUITE
REG. '999.95, NOW

REG. 51299.95
NOW

95
$799

sggggs

2 DARK PINE SUITES
REG. s699.95

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SEPT. 28 THRU OCT. 4

)28 S ~C OND ..V~NUf

Nursing in Gallipolis.
Forty .four members of the
class are from Central and
Southern Ohio, one is from
Kentucky and nine are Wes t
Virginians.
.
Th e backg rounds of th e
students vary in both age and
ex perience. One is a
housewife and mother of fiv e
school-age childre n. Another·
has a bachelor of arts degree
from Rio Grande College .
Two have been nurse aides at
Ross County Medical Center
and another has been a
lice nsed prac tical nurse at
Lakin State Hospital. Two are
former medical corpsmen.
Comi ng from Holzer Medical
Center 's s ta ff are two nur se
aides , an operating room
technician, a nursing service
orderly and a respiratory
therapist who have enrolled
in this year 's class .
Among the students, four
are men, which is an increase
over any previous year , and
:&gt;0 are women . This exceeds
last year's freshman class
enrollment by eight.

potluck meal

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GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
Citizens Center, located at 220
Jackson Pike in the County
Home Building , is open
Monday through Friday from
9 a :m. to 3 p .m . The schedule
of activities for this week is
as follow s:
Monday , Sept. 29 - Blood
Pressure Check, I - 2 p.m .;
Special informative meeting
concerning levy , 7 p.m.
Tuesday , Sept. 30 Quilting, 9 a .m . - 3 p.m.
Wednesday ; Oct. I - Cards
and Games, 1-3 p.m . Balance
of Williamsburg-Washington
Trip due .
Thursday, Oct . 2
Quilting , 9 a .m . - 3 p.m .
Friday , Od . 3 - Carry-In
Dinner , 12 noon; Center
Chairperson 's Meeting, 1-3
p.m.; Art Class, 1-3 p.m . ;
Social hour , 7 p.m.
Senior Nutrition meals are
served at 11:30 p.m . Seniors'
Coop Store is open from 12:30
to 1:30 p.m . Monday through
Friday .

classes still open

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Miss Teresa Lynn VanMeter

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GALLIPOLIS - Fifty.four
yoWlg m en and women from

Wedding
and
engagement notices for the
Sunday Times-Sentinel
must be In our hands by 12
noon on the Tbursday
preceding publication.
lnlonnallon may be turned
In or mailed to th e
Gallipolis Dally Tribune or
Pomeroy Dally Sentinel.
Engagement and wedding
forms are· also available on
request

RSVP transported to program

Publi c notice is hereby given that The Ohio Bell Telephone
Company has filed with The Public Utilities Commission of Oh.io
an Application stating that the Company is ent itl ed, because of
the reasons set forth in nid Application , to reasonable and
equitable increases and adjustments in its rates and charges f or
exchange telephone service, intrastate message toll telephon e
service, intra.s tate mobile te lephone service, intrastate private lin e
services and intrastate wide area tel~ o mmuni ca tions service,
and to change t!':.e regulations and practices affecting the same,
and to revi se its Exchange Rate Tariff P .U.C.O. No.3, its General
Exchange Tariff P.U .C.O. No.4, ita Message Toll Teleph on~ Serv~
ice Tariff P .U.C.O . No. 7, its Mobile Telephone Service Tariff
P .U.C.O. No.2, its Private Line Service Tariff P.U.C.O. No.2
and its Wide Area Telec ommunications Service Tariff P.U .c.o:
No . 1, to effect such increases, adjustments arid. changes, a ll as
more fully set forth in the Application on file with the Commis·
sion and in the exhibits attached thereto and made a part thereof.
The proposed revisions Wifl effect increases and adjustments in
rates and charges and changes in the regulations and practices
affecting the same throughout the territory in which t he Com~
pany operates.
'J'he prayer of the Application requests the Commission to do
.he following :
(a) Approve the pr oposed rates and charges and changes
.pplied for herein;
(b) Approve the filing of said proposed schedule sheets con ~
.. ained in Exhibit "B" hereto, modified to t-eftect such revi!1ions
thereof as may ;become effective pursuant to orders of your Commission, during the interim between the filing of this Appli cation
and the date upon which said proposed schedule sheets become
effective;
(c) Establish an effective date for said proposed schedule
sheets; and
(d) Grant such other and further relief as Applicant is reasonably entitled to in the premi11es.
A copy of the Application , including a copy of the present and
propoa.ed sehedule sheets, a :etatetJ?.~mt showing the amount of pro~
posed mcreaae or dec~eaee m each changed rat e or charge which
1s not affected ~1 changes in regulations and practice~~, and a
atatement descnbing the proposed changes in regulations and
practices affecting rates and charges, may be inspected by any
mterested party at the office of the Commission, 111 North High
Street, Columbus, Ohio, and at any public business . office of
the Company.
This matter. is scheduled for public he aring beginning on
Tue sd~y, October . 21, 1975, at 9:30 A.M ., at the office of the
Commission, ~11 ''North High Street, Columbus, Ohio.
The ·form of this notice has been approved by The ·Public Utili ties Commission of Ohio.
·

The.~day Times - Sentinel, Sundav . seot . 2tt t975•

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The two vacation trips were
prese nted . In Nove mber
there will be a fli ght from
Colum bus to Miami followed
by a Caribbean cruise. The
other trip, in February, will
leave Columbus by air to
Hawa ii. These are sponsored
by the Ohio Federation·.
Mr s. Earllus co ~tin u ed
reading the U.S. Constitution .
(lolr s. Herman Candee
· presented the program . Last
year, the club studied the
firs t 100 years of the United
States. This year t hey will
continue with the second 100
years.
Mrs.
Condee 's
program last year was "The
Pres id ent s of Manifes t
Des tiny" to 1886.. Since 1886
there have been 16 presidents
including six Democrats a11d
10 He publi eans. Gr ove r
Oeveland was elected for his
first term in 1885. Since then,
the country has engaged in
five war s: The Spanish
Am e rican, World War I .
Declare d April 17, 1917 ,
World War II , Korea , and

GALLIPOLIS
Ira
Watson , HI. 2, Gallipolis,
celebrated hi s 72nd birthday
·
Se pt. 21 at his home. A buffet Vietnam.
Mrs . Con dee li sted th e
chantilly lace was a ttached at dinner was served in his
important
events .in each
the wai st. A fingertip veil of honor by his wife, Nellie .
illusion fell from a Juliet cap
Helping Watson celebrate administration . Following a
of chan tilly lace and seed were Mr. and Mrs. William di sc uss ion , the c lub adpear ls border . Th e bride Curtis and family, Qpal and journed to meet again Oc t. 14
carri ed a bouquet of bl ue and Danny, Chillicothe; Charles with Mrs. Ben F:achus .
whit e car nation s, ye ll ow Eddie Watson , Mr . and Mrs .
roses and baby's brea th with James Haner and son Dennis,
yellow and blue streamers. Mrs . Diana Shillington , all of
Maid of honor Brenda Gall ipo lis; Mr . and Mrs.
Kemper wore a blue halter Donald Leeth and family,
gown with a matching jacket! Shawn. Teddy and Donnie,
Tammy Brumfield , sister of Bainbridge; Mr . and Mrs.
BY RENE BHOYULES
the bride. wore a yellow Hobert Richte r, Ch illi cothe ;
GALLIPOLIS - Eleven
halter gown with a yellow Mr s. My ra Gi l.more and
jac ke t. Melody Burd, sister of Charles Chevalier, J effery members of the HSVP were
the groom , wore a yellow Watson, all of Gallipolis; tran sported to the Chillicothe
gown of la ce over taffeta with Alva McG uire and Unda Ve te rans Hospital by the van
driver , Hene
Broyles,
a yellow lace cape. All at- McGuire, Mercerville .
tendants wore hats to match
Watso n
opened
and Monday.
Me mber s a tt e nding th e
the color of their dre sses. acknowledged several gifts.
Flower girl Michelle Unroe, Unable to attend, but sending orientation program were
Lawrence , Mab el
cousin of the bride, wore a
gifts and best wishes were Ma e
blue satin go wn with mal· Mr . and Mrs. Billy Curtis and Brown, Huth Campbell, Bill
chin g ribbon s in her hair.
famil y, Chill icothe; Lyl e Menshouse, Bertis Halley,
Walt er
She carried a white basket Shillingt on , Gallip olis. Nellie Stan ley,
of s umme r flow ers . The Watson rece ive d se veral Bartram , Annie Galloway,
and
Charlie
a t tendants
all
carried ph one ca ll s wi s hing him Elizabeth
Mcinturff and Elias Sisson .
bouquets of summer flowers " Happy Birthday".
The group wa s welcomed
with stream ers to match
and given a preview of a
their dresses .
course
by Hichard L. ComBes t man wa s Burnie
seen and hard
stoc k, chief, Voluntary
Watson . Dal e Burd, brother
Service
.
Comstock in ~
of th e groom, a nd Tom
GALLIPOLIS - Miss Dena
Brumfield, brother of the
Noele Greene was honored trad uced Jack D. Graham,
bride, were usher s.
recently on her second birth- Assistant Hospital Director ,
Mother of the bride wore a day by her parents , Mr. and who gave a talk on the
pink dotted swi ss gown with
Mrs. Dannie Greene . Sharing History and Organization of
puffy white lace sleeves. Her in the celebration were her the Veterans Admini stration .
Alnita
Morgan ,
corsage was a pink carnation . two sisters, Danella Hence Mrs.
The bridegroom's mo.ther and Deborah Denise and her Associate Ch ief, Nursing
wore a street length dress of brother, Scott Daniel, along Service £or Education, Spoke
blue polyester with multi- with Mr. a nd Mrs. James to the group about uncolored flow ers . She chose a
Edwards , Mr . and Mrs . derstandin g and working
with patients .
corsage of white carnatons.
Arthur Rupe , Jr ., Becky and
The volunteers enjoyed a
A reception followed the Cynthia Rupe, Mr. and Mrs.
film
entitled "The Gift You
ceremony a t the home of the
Carl Elliott, and Mr. and Mr s.
Bring " before retiring for
bride 's parents on the lawn. A Hussell Fellure.
lunch
.
three-tiered ca ke was placed
O l iver
Stringer,
at the center of the table and
GALLIPOLIS - Mr . and
Rehabilitation
Medicine
was
topped
with
the Mrs . James Haner, Lower
traditional miniature bride Hiver Rd., celebrated their Service Co-ordinator,
and groom. Two white 21st wedding ann iv ersary escorted the volunteers from
wedding bells were on each Thursday. In honor of the Jackson, Ross, Vinton and
side of the cake . Mrs. Doris occasion, they were dinner Gallia Counties on a guided
John son and Mr s . Jean guests of Mr. and Mrs . Lyle tour of the hospital and its
grounds. The VA Hospital sits
Johnson presided over the Shellington at the Colonial in
on a 150 acre tract in Hoss
reception table. Miss Cindy Jackson. Mr. and Mrs . Haner
County, near Chilli cothe.
Brumfield , sister of the bride, are the parents of two
The s ame group of
reg istered the guests.
chi ldren, They are a
volunteers will convene at the
The new Mrs . Bwd is a 1975 daughter, Mrs . Lyle (Diana)
hospital tomorrow for the
graduate of Gallia Academy Shellington and a son , Dennis
second day of orientation .
High School and Mr. Burd is a
Haner, both of Gallipolis.
1975 Fairland High School
graduate, and is now emLEGAL NOTICE
ployed at Jackson Skill
Center .

.

I

7-

\

$499

95
•

SAVE

1 3 OFF

WEATHERED PINE

DRY SINK
REG. 1399.95, NOW

ON DISOONTINUED

ON All EARLY AMERICAN

BASSETT
GROUP

DINING ROOM
SUITES
8.C2

Ave.

Phon• .446,- UOS
Callipolit.

$19995

�.I

. I

.•

••

..•

'Z: ..

September girl picked

Katie's Korner

PATRIOT - Miss Lori
McNeal, a senior a t South·
wes tern High School, has
been chosen September Girl
of the Month for the Future
Homemakers of America of
Southwes tern . She is t he
daug hte r of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack McNeal , Rt. 4, Oa k Hill .
Lori has received both the
Junior
and
Chapt e r
Hom ema kers Degrees and
received the a wa rd for Most
Outs ta ndin g FHA J unior
dur in g her juni or yea r .
Durin g her sophomore year ,
s he was capta in of th e
r ese r ve cheerleade r s, and
she IS lis!Aed in Who's Wh o In
Am e ri ca n Hi gh School
Studenls. Her other school
ac tivities include pres iden t of
th e Library Club , vi ce
president of th e Pep Club .
member of the girls' volley·
ball and basketball teams.
She is secretary of th e Gallia
Cloverettes 4-H Club, and was
a participant in the 1975 Ohio
State Fair Style Review. Her

By Katie Crow
POMEROY - There are still honest people in this wor ld as
was proven last Sa turday mornin g.
Byrne Va ughan of the Pome roy Police Dept. reporte\1 tha t
Mrs. J ohn I J a net ) Arnott was a ttempting to get in her ca r in
the pa rking a r ea a t Meigs Stadium in Pomeroy . aft er a ttending the Meigs-Ripley game. She took her wa llet from her
purse and other items looking for her keys to her ca r an d laid
them on another car parked next to her . Th e lights were out at
the stadium a nd she w a3 holding her small so n in her arm s plus
two bla;kets a nd also had to kee p an eye on her older child.
Alter fi nding her keys and loading her children in the ca r ,
she missed putting her wallet back into her purse . She said it
would not have happened if th e lights of the stadium had not
gone out.
Whe n she di scovered her wallet mi ssing , whi ch cont.uined
$120plus credit cards , she notified the Pomeroy Police Depa rtment. Members of the department went to th e a rea very late a t
night in pouring rain with fl ashlights a nd looked, but could not
find the missing wallet.
Saturda y morning Bill Pullins, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, was
dri ving to ward Pomeroy, when he saw the wa ll et on the s_t r ee~ .
He stopped a nd picked up the wallet and found the dn ve r s
license. His young son recognized Mrs . Arnott's ptcture as l1e
had gone to Kings Island with oth er school children with Mrs .
Arnott and her husband , John . who is a teacher a t Salis bury.
They notified her and she came from her home in Sy racuse
and met Pullins. All the money was in I he wallet but the papers
and ca rds were not. Pullins searched for them a nd they were
all loca ted. They were on both sides of the highway.
Mrs. Arnott extended her deepest thanks to Pullins , his so n
and to the members of the Pomeroy Police Department.

Mr. and Mrs. john Thomas

Vows repeated

OES Friends
Night observed
VINTON - Vinton Chapter
O.E.S. 375 held its Friendship
Night and Recept ion for
Distric t 24 President Opal
Payn e Sep t. 13 at the Mason ic
Temple.
The program was opened
with singing led by Vickie
Powell, and a readin g, "Old
Friends ," by Eli za be th
Cloud . The organi st, Robert
Powell. played a few selec·
tions and members were
asked to identify the songs.
circled by leatherleaf fern
and painted daisies carrying
out the colors of the wedding
party. The cake featured a
water fountain between the
. firs t and second layers which
were separated by Grecian
columns . The cake was
covered entirely by daisies.
Four cupids and the
traditional bride and groom
completed
the
cake
decorations.
Th·e bride 's four aunts
assisted at the bride 's table .
Miss Martha Howell was at
the coffee service, Mrs. Uoyd
Blackwood served the cake.
and Mrs . Gene Houdashelt
and Mrs. Jack Kelly presided
at the punch bowls.
Mrs . Everett Bachner .
Mrs. Thomas Darst and Mrs . I
Kenneth Imboden of th e
Middleport
Firemen's
Auxiliary, assisted with the
reception . Guests were
registered by Mrs. Garnet
Demoskey.
The bride and groom are
both graduates of Meigs High
School , class of 1972. She is
employed at Village Pharmacy , and Mr . Thomas
works at Southern Coal Co.
The couple resides in their
new home, Rt. I, Middleport.

All join ed in singi ng
" Ameri ca •· followed by a
hi storical ski t. A poem entitled " Friendship" was read
by Mildred Donahue followed
by a short program honoring
the Station of Huth . The
District Pres ident holds th at
station . Also enjoyed was a
son g· 'When You Wi sh Upon a
Star", Laura Brown ; a s kit
by all membe rs , " Is She or is
she not a membe r ," a rranged
by Jean Moore and Mildred
Donahue; solo . Daniel Evans.
Mildr e d
D o n a hu e
presented th e president a
plant. A gracious " than kyou" and a short speech
followed.
Deputy Gnin d Ma tr on
Marie Turner was presented.
She thanked everyone for
their interes t in her year as
deputy.
Special g ue s t was a
member now living in Florida
and a former representative,
Mary K. Stambaugh .
Cha pt ers pr es en t we r e
Wilke s ville , Ga lli po li s,
Thurman, l'later!oo, South
Point, McArthur . Wellston,
Wor thingt on, Ohio a nd
Sallanbee , W. Va . A social
hour followed the evening's
prog ram .
A thought for the day :
En gland nov eli st William
Makepeace Thackeray said,
" Next to the very young, I
suppose the very old are the
most selfish."

lr==========c~=~=r~,,g,,,,,,,,1

Uni on. in Ew in gton. Circleville Bible College Singers.
Rev . Me lvin Maxwell is
preac her .
HOM E COMING at Mer jii
cerv ille Ba pt ist Chur ch .
~
» Sunday school at 9: 30 a . m .
SUNDAY
'
HOME COMI NG a t Clar k Rev . Ea rl Hinkl e will speak
Cha pel Churc h. Rev . Clyde m the morning. Basket lun ch
Ferrell will preach in the at nuon . Re v. Bruce Unroe to
morn ing. Baske t lun ch. The brin g the a fte rn oon message.
Gospel Bells of Columbus will
per fo rm , I :30 p .m.

::;

Events

=
t

~

HEVIV AL. Cheshire Baptist
Chur c h thr ough Oct. 3.
F:va ngelist Rev. Haymond
Bac h. Specia l music each
night. Ever yo ne we lcom e.
SONG F EST a t the Mt.
Carm el Church a t 7:30 p .m .
SPECIA L YOUTH Service,
7: 30 p . m . a t E win g ton
Church of Ch n st in Chris tia n
S EPT . SPECIAL
25t h ·30th

D&amp;J's

( Wash &amp; Tu mb l e D r y )
2 .'ilS y d .
Compar e a l4 .98 y d .

LOW
PRI C E S
THE
THROU G HO U T
STORE.

Men 's White
T. SHlRTS

9Bc ea .

(Seconds)
Ph . 992 -2810

only$44800
~~~~~~iiif~Eo~rly

•

JOB-FITTED
WORK SHOE

i

Regular

$1·5

s2o.oo

1

"Prrfect Touch "
.Re'oular s11.so
. PERMANENT

$}2!'11

"Zoto' s"

· Diane specializes in blow
.cuts

and

high

fashion

styling.
3 OPERATORS

DIANE ~EWIS
KARE'N LYONS
· lOLA bAMEWOOD

Open Fri. &amp; 'sat. Eves.
· by Appointment

lola's Beauty Salon

John St.· 992-2549 SyracUs~ 1
AcrosS From School Lot
MERLE NORMAL
I COSMETICS

The trusted nam e in
workingmen ' s footwe ar

since 1898. For men
who spend a Jot of
time on their feet .
Thorogood - the
standard by which
all other work
shoes are

.. Inflation Beater"

..

Pr ic e s that we sold for in 1974 are now in.
effect. You can save $300.00 on add -a . rooms
(two in s tock). $1 ,000 .00on 12' and 14' wides .
$2 ,000 .00 on sectional homes . And an added
pi us - s om e ol these homes have a 5 pet .
tax credit on them .

MEDITERRANEAN STYLED FULL
BASE CONSOLE WITH CASTERS
Ca b ine t in d ar k f ini s h ed Oa k ca l o r
(E47 19DE) or Peca n color (E47 19P), wi th
the look of fine di stressing . Fro nt, ends
and base in d urable, ri chly· gra ined sim ulated

Other Styles $24.95 . $46.95
Men's and Boy's Sizes

''

'

,

.

','

'

' 'r'

fathers wore soft blue and
white brocade tux edoes
trimmed in black with black
pants . The
white ruffled
shirts were trimmed in black
also with black bow ties . The
groom's boutonniere was a
yellow rosebud from the
bride 's bouquet, and the best
man , ushers , and fathers
wore white daisie s as
boutonnieres .
Miss Rita Hill , sister of the
groom, served as the flower
girl. Her gown was styled
identical to the attendanls '
gowns and was made of
·yellow and white checked
gingham .
Jon Hill, brother of the
groom , served as ringbearer.
He wore a white tuxedo
jacket with black pan ts and a
black bow tie .
The mother of the bride
wore an A-line knit gown with
two-inch lace on the bodice
uThe Lord's Prayer" as the and belled sleeves, all in
couple knelt.
·
peach. Her corsage was of
Given in marriage by her white daisies accented by a
father. the bride's gown was ·White ribbon . ,
fashioned of raw Irish linen .
-The bridegroom 's mother
Full sleeves gathered at the was attired in a lime green
wrist and re-embroidered halter dress featuring a white
alencon lace in rose motif and· ·green polkadotted top
accentuated the bodice of the with tiiatching green jacket.
empire waist of the gown. She Her corsage was of white
wore a white picture-frame daisies with a white ribbon
hat accented with a white accenting it.
ribbon . Her accessories were
A reception followed the
a silver necklace with a cross ceremony in the dining room
and pearl earrings, both gifts of the church. Featured on
from the groom. She carried the bride's table was a threea bouquet of yellow rosebuds tiered white cake trimmed
and white daisies accented with pale yellow and light
with light blue baby's breath . blue roses. The top of the
Mrs. Richard Kuhn served cake was adorned with the
as the matron of honor, and traditional bride and groom
Miss Susan Thompson was surrounded by white daisies.
the maid of honor. The at- Presiding at the bride 's table
tendants .were Mrs. Lelani::i were Martha Cornwell, Lisa
Hamilton, sister-in-law of the Saunders, Patty Burnett and
bride and Miss Amy Hill, Mrs. Ron Janey. all friends of
sister of the groom. The at- the bride and groom. Miss
tendants and the maid of Martha Cornwell and Mrs.
honor wore gowns with Ron Janey also registered the
empire waists made of blue guests.
and white checked gingham
The couple now resides on
with a rounded neckline and Portsmouth
Road
in
short puffed sleeves. Mrs. Gallipolis. The new Mrs . Hill
Kuhn wore the same style is employed at Nelsonville
gown made of yellow and Police Department . Mr . Hill
white checked gingham. is a deputy at the Gallia
They each wore wide- County Sheriff's Department.
brimmed natural straw hats
Out-of-town guests were
trimmed with ribbons to Tim McKim, Debbie Donley,
match their dresses. Each Kris . Warne, Mr. and Mrs.
wore choker necklaces, gifts Harry Eynon , Mr. and Mrs.
from the bride. They carried Don McKim, Cathy McKim
.nosegays of yellow daisies. and Audrey Morgan , all of
Jeff Hill served his brother CamtJridge; Randall W.
as best man . Ushers were Thomas, Mr . and Mrs. Larry
Mike and Tracey Hill, Loel, Chillicothe; Mr. and
brothers of the groom and Mrs. Harold E. Bell, NashLeland Hamilton, brother of ville, Tenn .; Mr . and Mrs.
the bride.
Mike Whyte and Lesley, Bill
The groom, ushers and Puckett, Columbus ; Mrs.

F o r
th e
pro fess ional
wom e n w ho don' t
have time to k ee p
new w hite shoes
clea n a nd brig ht.

Television Cabinets

Also- Safety Toe In
Oxford 6" Shoe or 8" Shoe

'.
EARLY AMERICAN STYLED .
CONSOLE WITH BRACKET FEET
AND CASTERS

S VE YO

j:j!
~~

GAIJJPOLIS - Exhibit for the mo nth of Septe mbe r :
Watercolors by James Godwin Sco tt. Riverby.
Sept. 28, Sunday, 2 p.m . - 4 p.m . Parent-Child Works hop
conduc ted by Saundra Koby on The Art of Oraga mi, oriental
paper folding. Anima ls ca n be made tha t ca n then be
suspended as mobiles. This workshop is being repeated by
request. Small children should be accompanied by a responsible teenager or adult. Open to everyone, do not need to be
members of French Art Colony to attend: Rive rby.
Exhibit for the month of October :
An tiques, particularly primitive antiques native to the
Ohio Valley region , pre-1900. Riverby.
Oc t: 10-11, Friday and Sa turday, Annual Antique Semina r
conduc ted by Orva Heissenbuttel of Ca mp Springs, Md .. along
with Iris Heissenbuttel and Francis Ca rey Howlett of the
Acanthus Studio, Chaptico. Md. Registra tion for two day
seminar is $10 per person, or register for just one day for $5.
Registration includes luncheon to be served both days at
Riverby. Contact Mrs . Gene Wetherholt , 446-9634 or Mrs. Berc
Tap at 446-4358, Riverby.

'

"Super-B~y"

A&amp;P

SUPER
BUY

.

I

Mr. and Mrs. William Watson

Watsons honor 50th
POMEROY - Mr. a nd
Mrs . William E . Wa tso n, 204
Lasle y St.. Pome roy . will
observe their 50th wedding
anniversary Sunday. Oct. 5,
at the Pomeroy First Baptis t
Churc h with a n ope n
reception from 2 to 5 p.m .
Mr. and Mrs . Wa tson
were married on Oct. 3, 1925
by the Rev . J . R. Fields a t the
Gallipolis Me thodi s t Church
Tom Steenrod , Jamie , Sarah
and Greg , Mrs. Meade Whyte
and Toni U ewellyn. all of
Nelsonvill e ; Mrs . Ludlow
Tracey Sr ., New Lexington;
Mr. and Mrs. Ludlow Tracey,
Canton;
Mrs .
Willi a m
Stewart and Deneen , Athens;
Mr . and Mrs. William Glover .
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Glover and
family, Thornville ; Mr . and
Mrs . Don Hill, Mr . and Mrs.
Robert E. Hill , Jackson ; Mr .
and Mrs. Don Reed , Don na
and Sharon , Mason ; Mrs.
Thomas McNeal, Oak Hill ;
Mrs .
Goldie
Harmon ,
Hurricane, W. Va .

par sona ge . They have on
daughter , Patric ia Watson
Buck, Springfi eld , a nd four
g ra nd c hildr e n , Ra ndy,
Ca rolyn, Barba ra ond Kyle .
Mrs . Buc k , Ca rolyn a nd
Barbara will hos t th e
rece ption .
Both Mr . and Mrs. Watson
are members of the Pomeroy
Baptist Churc h a nd belong to
the Pomeroy Cha pter 186,
Order of th e Ea stern Star .
Watson is als o a member of
the Middleport Lodge, F. and
A. M. and several other
Masonic bodies . Mrs . Watson
is a member of the Magnolia
Club and both she and her
hus band are ac tive in the
Senior Citi zens Club.
For 21 years. Mr. Watson
own ed and operated the
Watson 's Pres s Shop in
Pome r oy. He retir ed s ix
years ago afcer working on

dozen
carton

A&amp;P--

SUPER
BUY

'

cons truction ror a number of

ye:~~;tives and friends of thf
couple are in vi ted to cal
during the open reception
hours.
·

RANCISCAN'
lOQth BIRTHDAY

REFRESHING

16-oz. ·
Bottles

of

Middle
Upper Block, Pomeroy
Open All Day Thursdays- Friday Til8

RIDENOUR
985-3307

l1 1;,

GAS SERVICE

Chester, Ohio
'

"l' t:- ~

l"Clch di n n~._T pLHL', -.~ 1/a ll pla re. b q' .m~ l -.., t un·r.
·l lup /Cl'rca l.

A&amp;P

SUPER
BUY

c ~ 20°t . 1ll1 9m l)Sf ·wanrcd d 1 ~ hcc-~

;;l \ ...

The
Uniform Center
.)66

Second ~ ve .

Sale e nds S erte mhe r 30 .
Don 't m iss it ! .

CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE

Gallipoli s. Oh io ·

.,

...
•I
I

Frui t, ~ ~~up lct: rl· ;d . hr l',\1..1 &amp; hurt L' r p l ; tt ~._'. ..,, d ~ ~~..l
late, cr~...·t llll L'f , sug&lt;lf wit h lkl. mc.: d iwn \" L'gt:r&lt;~ hk .'
argc \ "l' J.!L'C,H ~~.· . ,ul l i s;dr /r t.? rrer.
ilYe 2("'lX, lm \ 2 f;I\" Uf ifL' p;!Ht'm &lt;

I

I

I Plu •
Deposit l

ave l0 X1o n 2 0~ p icc c

is l inished in grained Map le color.

TV &amp; APPLIANCE "

'

ALE!

20%0FFON
RANCISCAN
ARTHENWARE!

,

342 SECOND
AVE.
I

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

sPECIALs

Prices Goad Sunday. lolanday, And
Tuesday September Z8. 29. 30!

GRADE "A"
LARGE

4

Di sti nctive w rap-aro und gal lery, t iered
overhanging top, simu lated drawer with
co loni al styled hardware . and contoured
b racke t feet wi th co ncealed cas ters . Ca b ~

f·,,·,-

&gt;11

GALLIPOLIS - Miss
Sharon Hamilton, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Silas J.
Hamilton, Gallipolis , and
Robert F . Hill, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Hill, Cambridge,
were united in marriage
Saturday, Aug. 23 at 2:30p.m.
at Grace United Methodist
Church .
Rev. Paul Hawks officiated
at the double ring ceremony
before an altar decorated
with yellow pompons and
white gladioli flanked by two
seven-branch candelabra.
The half hour . of music
preceding the ceremony was
presented by Mrs. · James
Samders with Mrs. Merlyn
Ross as the organist. Songs
sung by Mrs. Saunders in,
eluded "We've Only Just ·
Begun," "A Time For Us,"
"One Hand· One Heart" and
" Sunshine
On
My
Shoulders." She also sang

()

Calendar

Hill-Hamilton united
in a'fternoon ceremony

Fine Zenith

~===~::;~;:::.: inet

larry's Mobile Home
Sales, Inc.
1 ,' 1

Mr. and Mrs. Robert F Hill

::

professional shoes

~52800

Starting Sept. 28 Closed on Sundays

I '• • I r •

•

/

:.;

measured .

Stop today and look these values over . We
think you will be glad you did .

"••

and apartments!

Of These Popular Styles

Values galore are in sh1re for you with
the Big Fall Sale now going on, at Larry's.

..

just the console
for small homes

Over 90% Solid State

Thru Ocf.

PERMANENT

I

992 -2284
Pomeroy, Ohio

TITAN 101 CH.AS.SIS

SALE
'f

&amp; Semce

Mediterranean styled con sole . Oeco ralive
end pan els, simu la ted drawers, full base
with concealed casters. Dark finished Oak
co lor (F40880E) or Pecan color (F406aP).

Dec orative end
panels, trad iti onal
bra cket loo t de sign
and conc ealed
cas ters.

our staff.

I

Singer Sales

Tho TITIAN • F4036

F4086M
Thi s Early Americar,
~tyl e d console

®

J

_,/ PERMANENT
···; SPECIALS

• Simplicity

~-u

··:

....

• McCalls

d'M- at..,

»

t

hobbies include sewing,
knittin g, hikin g a nd bike
ridi ng.

American

1 Mile South of
Middl eport on Rt. 7

~

LORI McNEAL

• Kwik-Sew

0

::

i

With patterns from

t

:;:

•

Show you the largest
selection of fabrics in
our area.

~

I

'"

Let The~
Fabric Shop

~

~

•

Mediterranean

Th' AUDUBON

~

"'"'

choice
OF THESE POPULAR STYLES

Supe r Sued e

.......
-.......•
....

House of Fabrics
Poly es t e r D o uble Knit
R'(' g .2 .98
Now 2.5 9 y d .

!(t::;:;:;:::::: :::::::::::: :::::;:: :::·:; :;::: ::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::j~;~

--

Brilliant Chromacolor picture tube
100% solid-state chassis
Patented Power Sentry voltage
regulator .
Chromatic one-button tuning

ij'npa rts the wa rmth of
c olonial!1mes.

~~#ak.sY-~,4
DIANE
LEWIS
has now ioined

WEDDING TODAY - The open churc h weddin g of
Sa ndra J . Murray, da ughte r of Willia m 0. Murray , Rt. I ,
Elizabet h, a nd the late Bertha E. Murray and Patric k 0 .
Arnold , son of Mr . a nd Mrs. Sam uel N. Arnold , Water St. ,
Sy racuse, will take place this afte rnoon a t 2:30p.m . at the
E lizabet h Me thodist Ch urch. The Rev. Ruby Wilkinson
and the Rev. Charles Wilkinson will officiate at the
ceremony. The bride-elect is a 1972 graduate of Wirt
County High School, and her fi ance is a 1972 gradua te of
Southern Local Hi gh School and a 1974 gra duate of
Pa rkersburg Community College with a degree in
retailing. He is employed by Long J ohn Silver 's.

0 . L. LEMASTER , who is retired from the U.S. N.. has
enrolled for two years in the Ga llipolis Business Coll ege.

POMEROY - The Sacred V-neckline edged with a self
Heart Church , Pomeroy , was ruffle . The bridesmaid s were
the se tting for the July 12 Miss Lisa Thomas , sister of
wedding of Miss Bronwyn the groom, in yellow. Miss
Ann Dailey and John Stewart Debbie J effe rs in lavender.
Thomas.
and Mrs. Jerr y Swartz in
The Rev. Fr . Paul Welton blue.
Their gowns were styled
officiated at the double ring
ceremony . TWo large stan- . identical to that of the matron
ding vases filled with painted of honor . All wore white
daisies in yellow. green, blue horsehair lace picture hats
and lavender, centered with with s tr eamers matc hin g
large satin bows, were placed their gowns. The attendants
on either side of th e main carried small natural s traw
altar .
gard en baskets filled with
A half-hour of prenuptial painted dai sies and streamer
music was presented by Mrs . bows matching their gowns.
Car rie Neutzling. Selections
Flower girl was Davida
included Shubert 's " Ava Williams . She wore a gown of
Maria, " "God Gave Me mint green crepe with the
You, " "Speak Loftly Love ," neckline and sleeves outlined
"The Greatest of These is in tiny white daisies. She
Love " and "Thy People Shall carried a garden basket of·
be My People."
daisy petals. Mas ter Patrick
. The bride is the daughter of Shrimplin was ringbearer
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Dailey, and he carried a white satin
Middleport and Mr. Thomas hear t-shaped pillow.
is th.e son of Paul Thomas,
Best
man
for
the
Point Pleasant, W. Va. and bridegroom was Michael
Mrs. Evelyn Thomas, Mid- Williams. Groomsmen were
Kevin. Dailey, brother of the
dleport.
Given in marriage by her .bride, Wheeler Thomas ,
parents and escorted to · the brother of the groom and
altar by her father, the bride Edward Young.
chose a princess style gown of
The groom wore a light
white peau de sole featuring a blue summer tuxedo and the
mandarin collar and front groomsmen wore white
panel of lace with lace jackets edged in navy blue
edging.
with , navy trousers. Their
The full bishop sleeves shirts matched the colors of
were enhanced by self- the bride 's attendants.
covered buttons. The back
At the close of the
panel of the gown ended in a . ceremony , th e couple placed
cour t train. Her veil of silk a rose on the altar of the
illusion was held by a head- Blessed Mother while the
piece of lace'and satin petals . organist played , " Mother
The gown was fashioned by Dear , Oh Pray for Me."
Mrs. Ella Shinn.
The m other of the bride
The bride 's bouquet of chose .a black and white print
shasta daisies was tied with jacket dress with black acblue sweetheart bows and ·cessories.
streamers . For "something
The groom's mother was in
old," the bride carried an a blue and white print dress
Irish lace handkerchief with white accessories and
belonging to her late Grand- both mothers wore white
mother
Howell.
Her carnation corsages.
" something blue " was a blue
The reception was held at
garter made by the late Kath- the Firemen's Lounge in
ryn Wise, and for " something Middleport. The bride's table
borrowed," she wore a rock was centered by a threecrystal pendant and earrings tiered wedding .cake en from her aunt.
Atte ndants we r e Mrs.
J uanita Williams. matron of
honor . attired in a gown of
mi'nt gr een crepe . The gown
featured an empire waist,
butterfl y sleeves and a deep

N~w At l~la·,::"

Miss Sandra Murray

Spec ia l sing ing . Eve ryo ne
welcome.
THE GOSPEL Messe ngers
will appear at 10:30 a .m. a t
Chri s t United Me thodi s t
Churc h. Lower Ri ver Road . A
potluck dinner will be served
at noon in the Fellowship
room. Everyone invited.
HEVIVAL services 7:30p.m .
a t Vic tory Baptis t Church
through Oct. 3. Evangelist
Grady Crowell of Louisville,
Mississ ippi will be gues t
s peaker . Pastor Kenneth
Sanders invites the public.
SONGFEST, 2 p .m. at the
Enterprise Baptis t Youth
Camp Tabernacle on White
Oak Road. Singers include
Peaceful Valley Quartet,
Christianaires. Herb and
Barb and the Young Gospels,
Liberty Gospel Singers, New
Start Singers, B. G. Revuee,
The Lavender Family and the
Joyful Echoes .

9 - The Sunday Times· Sentipel, Stinday, Sept. 28, 197~

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September girl picked

Katie's Korner

PATRIOT - Miss Lori
McNeal, a senior a t South·
wes tern High School, has
been chosen September Girl
of the Month for the Future
Homemakers of America of
Southwes tern . She is t he
daug hte r of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack McNeal , Rt. 4, Oa k Hill .
Lori has received both the
Junior
and
Chapt e r
Hom ema kers Degrees and
received the a wa rd for Most
Outs ta ndin g FHA J unior
dur in g her juni or yea r .
Durin g her sophomore year ,
s he was capta in of th e
r ese r ve cheerleade r s, and
she IS lis!Aed in Who's Wh o In
Am e ri ca n Hi gh School
Studenls. Her other school
ac tivities include pres iden t of
th e Library Club , vi ce
president of th e Pep Club .
member of the girls' volley·
ball and basketball teams.
She is secretary of th e Gallia
Cloverettes 4-H Club, and was
a participant in the 1975 Ohio
State Fair Style Review. Her

By Katie Crow
POMEROY - There are still honest people in this wor ld as
was proven last Sa turday mornin g.
Byrne Va ughan of the Pome roy Police Dept. reporte\1 tha t
Mrs. J ohn I J a net ) Arnott was a ttempting to get in her ca r in
the pa rking a r ea a t Meigs Stadium in Pomeroy . aft er a ttending the Meigs-Ripley game. She took her wa llet from her
purse and other items looking for her keys to her ca r an d laid
them on another car parked next to her . Th e lights were out at
the stadium a nd she w a3 holding her small so n in her arm s plus
two bla;kets a nd also had to kee p an eye on her older child.
Alter fi nding her keys and loading her children in the ca r ,
she missed putting her wallet back into her purse . She said it
would not have happened if th e lights of the stadium had not
gone out.
Whe n she di scovered her wallet mi ssing , whi ch cont.uined
$120plus credit cards , she notified the Pomeroy Police Depa rtment. Members of the department went to th e a rea very late a t
night in pouring rain with fl ashlights a nd looked, but could not
find the missing wallet.
Saturda y morning Bill Pullins, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, was
dri ving to ward Pomeroy, when he saw the wa ll et on the s_t r ee~ .
He stopped a nd picked up the wallet and found the dn ve r s
license. His young son recognized Mrs . Arnott's ptcture as l1e
had gone to Kings Island with oth er school children with Mrs .
Arnott and her husband , John . who is a teacher a t Salis bury.
They notified her and she came from her home in Sy racuse
and met Pullins. All the money was in I he wallet but the papers
and ca rds were not. Pullins searched for them a nd they were
all loca ted. They were on both sides of the highway.
Mrs. Arnott extended her deepest thanks to Pullins , his so n
and to the members of the Pomeroy Police Department.

Mr. and Mrs. john Thomas

Vows repeated

OES Friends
Night observed
VINTON - Vinton Chapter
O.E.S. 375 held its Friendship
Night and Recept ion for
Distric t 24 President Opal
Payn e Sep t. 13 at the Mason ic
Temple.
The program was opened
with singing led by Vickie
Powell, and a readin g, "Old
Friends ," by Eli za be th
Cloud . The organi st, Robert
Powell. played a few selec·
tions and members were
asked to identify the songs.
circled by leatherleaf fern
and painted daisies carrying
out the colors of the wedding
party. The cake featured a
water fountain between the
. firs t and second layers which
were separated by Grecian
columns . The cake was
covered entirely by daisies.
Four cupids and the
traditional bride and groom
completed
the
cake
decorations.
Th·e bride 's four aunts
assisted at the bride 's table .
Miss Martha Howell was at
the coffee service, Mrs. Uoyd
Blackwood served the cake.
and Mrs . Gene Houdashelt
and Mrs. Jack Kelly presided
at the punch bowls.
Mrs . Everett Bachner .
Mrs. Thomas Darst and Mrs . I
Kenneth Imboden of th e
Middleport
Firemen's
Auxiliary, assisted with the
reception . Guests were
registered by Mrs. Garnet
Demoskey.
The bride and groom are
both graduates of Meigs High
School , class of 1972. She is
employed at Village Pharmacy , and Mr . Thomas
works at Southern Coal Co.
The couple resides in their
new home, Rt. I, Middleport.

All join ed in singi ng
" Ameri ca •· followed by a
hi storical ski t. A poem entitled " Friendship" was read
by Mildred Donahue followed
by a short program honoring
the Station of Huth . The
District Pres ident holds th at
station . Also enjoyed was a
son g· 'When You Wi sh Upon a
Star", Laura Brown ; a s kit
by all membe rs , " Is She or is
she not a membe r ," a rranged
by Jean Moore and Mildred
Donahue; solo . Daniel Evans.
Mildr e d
D o n a hu e
presented th e president a
plant. A gracious " than kyou" and a short speech
followed.
Deputy Gnin d Ma tr on
Marie Turner was presented.
She thanked everyone for
their interes t in her year as
deputy.
Special g ue s t was a
member now living in Florida
and a former representative,
Mary K. Stambaugh .
Cha pt ers pr es en t we r e
Wilke s ville , Ga lli po li s,
Thurman, l'later!oo, South
Point, McArthur . Wellston,
Wor thingt on, Ohio a nd
Sallanbee , W. Va . A social
hour followed the evening's
prog ram .
A thought for the day :
En gland nov eli st William
Makepeace Thackeray said,
" Next to the very young, I
suppose the very old are the
most selfish."

lr==========c~=~=r~,,g,,,,,,,,1

Uni on. in Ew in gton. Circleville Bible College Singers.
Rev . Me lvin Maxwell is
preac her .
HOM E COMING at Mer jii
cerv ille Ba pt ist Chur ch .
~
» Sunday school at 9: 30 a . m .
SUNDAY
'
HOME COMI NG a t Clar k Rev . Ea rl Hinkl e will speak
Cha pel Churc h. Rev . Clyde m the morning. Basket lun ch
Ferrell will preach in the at nuon . Re v. Bruce Unroe to
morn ing. Baske t lun ch. The brin g the a fte rn oon message.
Gospel Bells of Columbus will
per fo rm , I :30 p .m.

::;

Events

=
t

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HEVIV AL. Cheshire Baptist
Chur c h thr ough Oct. 3.
F:va ngelist Rev. Haymond
Bac h. Specia l music each
night. Ever yo ne we lcom e.
SONG F EST a t the Mt.
Carm el Church a t 7:30 p .m .
SPECIA L YOUTH Service,
7: 30 p . m . a t E win g ton
Church of Ch n st in Chris tia n
S EPT . SPECIAL
25t h ·30th

D&amp;J's

( Wash &amp; Tu mb l e D r y )
2 .'ilS y d .
Compar e a l4 .98 y d .

LOW
PRI C E S
THE
THROU G HO U T
STORE.

Men 's White
T. SHlRTS

9Bc ea .

(Seconds)
Ph . 992 -2810

only$44800
~~~~~~iiif~Eo~rly

•

JOB-FITTED
WORK SHOE

i

Regular

$1·5

s2o.oo

1

"Prrfect Touch "
.Re'oular s11.so
. PERMANENT

$}2!'11

"Zoto' s"

· Diane specializes in blow
.cuts

and

high

fashion

styling.
3 OPERATORS

DIANE ~EWIS
KARE'N LYONS
· lOLA bAMEWOOD

Open Fri. &amp; 'sat. Eves.
· by Appointment

lola's Beauty Salon

John St.· 992-2549 SyracUs~ 1
AcrosS From School Lot
MERLE NORMAL
I COSMETICS

The trusted nam e in
workingmen ' s footwe ar

since 1898. For men
who spend a Jot of
time on their feet .
Thorogood - the
standard by which
all other work
shoes are

.. Inflation Beater"

..

Pr ic e s that we sold for in 1974 are now in.
effect. You can save $300.00 on add -a . rooms
(two in s tock). $1 ,000 .00on 12' and 14' wides .
$2 ,000 .00 on sectional homes . And an added
pi us - s om e ol these homes have a 5 pet .
tax credit on them .

MEDITERRANEAN STYLED FULL
BASE CONSOLE WITH CASTERS
Ca b ine t in d ar k f ini s h ed Oa k ca l o r
(E47 19DE) or Peca n color (E47 19P), wi th
the look of fine di stressing . Fro nt, ends
and base in d urable, ri chly· gra ined sim ulated

Other Styles $24.95 . $46.95
Men's and Boy's Sizes

''

'

,

.

','

'

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fathers wore soft blue and
white brocade tux edoes
trimmed in black with black
pants . The
white ruffled
shirts were trimmed in black
also with black bow ties . The
groom's boutonniere was a
yellow rosebud from the
bride 's bouquet, and the best
man , ushers , and fathers
wore white daisie s as
boutonnieres .
Miss Rita Hill , sister of the
groom, served as the flower
girl. Her gown was styled
identical to the attendanls '
gowns and was made of
·yellow and white checked
gingham .
Jon Hill, brother of the
groom , served as ringbearer.
He wore a white tuxedo
jacket with black pan ts and a
black bow tie .
The mother of the bride
wore an A-line knit gown with
two-inch lace on the bodice
uThe Lord's Prayer" as the and belled sleeves, all in
couple knelt.
·
peach. Her corsage was of
Given in marriage by her white daisies accented by a
father. the bride's gown was ·White ribbon . ,
fashioned of raw Irish linen .
-The bridegroom 's mother
Full sleeves gathered at the was attired in a lime green
wrist and re-embroidered halter dress featuring a white
alencon lace in rose motif and· ·green polkadotted top
accentuated the bodice of the with tiiatching green jacket.
empire waist of the gown. She Her corsage was of white
wore a white picture-frame daisies with a white ribbon
hat accented with a white accenting it.
ribbon . Her accessories were
A reception followed the
a silver necklace with a cross ceremony in the dining room
and pearl earrings, both gifts of the church. Featured on
from the groom. She carried the bride's table was a threea bouquet of yellow rosebuds tiered white cake trimmed
and white daisies accented with pale yellow and light
with light blue baby's breath . blue roses. The top of the
Mrs. Richard Kuhn served cake was adorned with the
as the matron of honor, and traditional bride and groom
Miss Susan Thompson was surrounded by white daisies.
the maid of honor. The at- Presiding at the bride 's table
tendants .were Mrs. Lelani::i were Martha Cornwell, Lisa
Hamilton, sister-in-law of the Saunders, Patty Burnett and
bride and Miss Amy Hill, Mrs. Ron Janey. all friends of
sister of the groom. The at- the bride and groom. Miss
tendants and the maid of Martha Cornwell and Mrs.
honor wore gowns with Ron Janey also registered the
empire waists made of blue guests.
and white checked gingham
The couple now resides on
with a rounded neckline and Portsmouth
Road
in
short puffed sleeves. Mrs. Gallipolis. The new Mrs . Hill
Kuhn wore the same style is employed at Nelsonville
gown made of yellow and Police Department . Mr . Hill
white checked gingham. is a deputy at the Gallia
They each wore wide- County Sheriff's Department.
brimmed natural straw hats
Out-of-town guests were
trimmed with ribbons to Tim McKim, Debbie Donley,
match their dresses. Each Kris . Warne, Mr. and Mrs.
wore choker necklaces, gifts Harry Eynon , Mr. and Mrs.
from the bride. They carried Don McKim, Cathy McKim
.nosegays of yellow daisies. and Audrey Morgan , all of
Jeff Hill served his brother CamtJridge; Randall W.
as best man . Ushers were Thomas, Mr . and Mrs. Larry
Mike and Tracey Hill, Loel, Chillicothe; Mr. and
brothers of the groom and Mrs. Harold E. Bell, NashLeland Hamilton, brother of ville, Tenn .; Mr . and Mrs.
the bride.
Mike Whyte and Lesley, Bill
The groom, ushers and Puckett, Columbus ; Mrs.

F o r
th e
pro fess ional
wom e n w ho don' t
have time to k ee p
new w hite shoes
clea n a nd brig ht.

Television Cabinets

Also- Safety Toe In
Oxford 6" Shoe or 8" Shoe

'.
EARLY AMERICAN STYLED .
CONSOLE WITH BRACKET FEET
AND CASTERS

S VE YO

j:j!
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GAIJJPOLIS - Exhibit for the mo nth of Septe mbe r :
Watercolors by James Godwin Sco tt. Riverby.
Sept. 28, Sunday, 2 p.m . - 4 p.m . Parent-Child Works hop
conduc ted by Saundra Koby on The Art of Oraga mi, oriental
paper folding. Anima ls ca n be made tha t ca n then be
suspended as mobiles. This workshop is being repeated by
request. Small children should be accompanied by a responsible teenager or adult. Open to everyone, do not need to be
members of French Art Colony to attend: Rive rby.
Exhibit for the month of October :
An tiques, particularly primitive antiques native to the
Ohio Valley region , pre-1900. Riverby.
Oc t: 10-11, Friday and Sa turday, Annual Antique Semina r
conduc ted by Orva Heissenbuttel of Ca mp Springs, Md .. along
with Iris Heissenbuttel and Francis Ca rey Howlett of the
Acanthus Studio, Chaptico. Md. Registra tion for two day
seminar is $10 per person, or register for just one day for $5.
Registration includes luncheon to be served both days at
Riverby. Contact Mrs . Gene Wetherholt , 446-9634 or Mrs. Berc
Tap at 446-4358, Riverby.

'

"Super-B~y"

A&amp;P

SUPER
BUY

.

I

Mr. and Mrs. William Watson

Watsons honor 50th
POMEROY - Mr. a nd
Mrs . William E . Wa tso n, 204
Lasle y St.. Pome roy . will
observe their 50th wedding
anniversary Sunday. Oct. 5,
at the Pomeroy First Baptis t
Churc h with a n ope n
reception from 2 to 5 p.m .
Mr. and Mrs . Wa tson
were married on Oct. 3, 1925
by the Rev . J . R. Fields a t the
Gallipolis Me thodi s t Church
Tom Steenrod , Jamie , Sarah
and Greg , Mrs. Meade Whyte
and Toni U ewellyn. all of
Nelsonvill e ; Mrs . Ludlow
Tracey Sr ., New Lexington;
Mr. and Mrs. Ludlow Tracey,
Canton;
Mrs .
Willi a m
Stewart and Deneen , Athens;
Mr . and Mrs. William Glover .
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Glover and
family, Thornville ; Mr . and
Mrs . Don Hill, Mr . and Mrs.
Robert E. Hill , Jackson ; Mr .
and Mrs. Don Reed , Don na
and Sharon , Mason ; Mrs.
Thomas McNeal, Oak Hill ;
Mrs .
Goldie
Harmon ,
Hurricane, W. Va .

par sona ge . They have on
daughter , Patric ia Watson
Buck, Springfi eld , a nd four
g ra nd c hildr e n , Ra ndy,
Ca rolyn, Barba ra ond Kyle .
Mrs . Buc k , Ca rolyn a nd
Barbara will hos t th e
rece ption .
Both Mr . and Mrs. Watson
are members of the Pomeroy
Baptist Churc h a nd belong to
the Pomeroy Cha pter 186,
Order of th e Ea stern Star .
Watson is als o a member of
the Middleport Lodge, F. and
A. M. and several other
Masonic bodies . Mrs . Watson
is a member of the Magnolia
Club and both she and her
hus band are ac tive in the
Senior Citi zens Club.
For 21 years. Mr. Watson
own ed and operated the
Watson 's Pres s Shop in
Pome r oy. He retir ed s ix
years ago afcer working on

dozen
carton

A&amp;P--

SUPER
BUY

'

cons truction ror a number of

ye:~~;tives and friends of thf
couple are in vi ted to cal
during the open reception
hours.
·

RANCISCAN'
lOQth BIRTHDAY

REFRESHING

16-oz. ·
Bottles

of

Middle
Upper Block, Pomeroy
Open All Day Thursdays- Friday Til8

RIDENOUR
985-3307

l1 1;,

GAS SERVICE

Chester, Ohio
'

"l' t:- ~

l"Clch di n n~._T pLHL', -.~ 1/a ll pla re. b q' .m~ l -.., t un·r.
·l lup /Cl'rca l.

A&amp;P

SUPER
BUY

c ~ 20°t . 1ll1 9m l)Sf ·wanrcd d 1 ~ hcc-~

;;l \ ...

The
Uniform Center
.)66

Second ~ ve .

Sale e nds S erte mhe r 30 .
Don 't m iss it ! .

CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE

Gallipoli s. Oh io ·

.,

...
•I
I

Frui t, ~ ~~up lct: rl· ;d . hr l',\1..1 &amp; hurt L' r p l ; tt ~._'. ..,, d ~ ~~..l
late, cr~...·t llll L'f , sug&lt;lf wit h lkl. mc.: d iwn \" L'gt:r&lt;~ hk .'
argc \ "l' J.!L'C,H ~~.· . ,ul l i s;dr /r t.? rrer.
ilYe 2("'lX, lm \ 2 f;I\" Uf ifL' p;!Ht'm &lt;

I

I

I Plu •
Deposit l

ave l0 X1o n 2 0~ p icc c

is l inished in grained Map le color.

TV &amp; APPLIANCE "

'

ALE!

20%0FFON
RANCISCAN
ARTHENWARE!

,

342 SECOND
AVE.
I

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

sPECIALs

Prices Goad Sunday. lolanday, And
Tuesday September Z8. 29. 30!

GRADE "A"
LARGE

4

Di sti nctive w rap-aro und gal lery, t iered
overhanging top, simu lated drawer with
co loni al styled hardware . and contoured
b racke t feet wi th co ncealed cas ters . Ca b ~

f·,,·,-

&gt;11

GALLIPOLIS - Miss
Sharon Hamilton, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Silas J.
Hamilton, Gallipolis , and
Robert F . Hill, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Hill, Cambridge,
were united in marriage
Saturday, Aug. 23 at 2:30p.m.
at Grace United Methodist
Church .
Rev. Paul Hawks officiated
at the double ring ceremony
before an altar decorated
with yellow pompons and
white gladioli flanked by two
seven-branch candelabra.
The half hour . of music
preceding the ceremony was
presented by Mrs. · James
Samders with Mrs. Merlyn
Ross as the organist. Songs
sung by Mrs. Saunders in,
eluded "We've Only Just ·
Begun," "A Time For Us,"
"One Hand· One Heart" and
" Sunshine
On
My
Shoulders." She also sang

()

Calendar

Hill-Hamilton united
in a'fternoon ceremony

Fine Zenith

~===~::;~;:::.: inet

larry's Mobile Home
Sales, Inc.
1 ,' 1

Mr. and Mrs. Robert F Hill

::

professional shoes

~52800

Starting Sept. 28 Closed on Sundays

I '• • I r •

•

/

:.;

measured .

Stop today and look these values over . We
think you will be glad you did .

"••

and apartments!

Of These Popular Styles

Values galore are in sh1re for you with
the Big Fall Sale now going on, at Larry's.

..

just the console
for small homes

Over 90% Solid State

Thru Ocf.

PERMANENT

I

992 -2284
Pomeroy, Ohio

TITAN 101 CH.AS.SIS

SALE
'f

&amp; Semce

Mediterranean styled con sole . Oeco ralive
end pan els, simu la ted drawers, full base
with concealed casters. Dark finished Oak
co lor (F40880E) or Pecan color (F406aP).

Dec orative end
panels, trad iti onal
bra cket loo t de sign
and conc ealed
cas ters.

our staff.

I

Singer Sales

Tho TITIAN • F4036

F4086M
Thi s Early Americar,
~tyl e d console

®

J

_,/ PERMANENT
···; SPECIALS

• Simplicity

~-u

··:

....

• McCalls

d'M- at..,

»

t

hobbies include sewing,
knittin g, hikin g a nd bike
ridi ng.

American

1 Mile South of
Middl eport on Rt. 7

~

LORI McNEAL

• Kwik-Sew

0

::

i

With patterns from

t

:;:

•

Show you the largest
selection of fabrics in
our area.

~

I

'"

Let The~
Fabric Shop

~

~

•

Mediterranean

Th' AUDUBON

~

"'"'

choice
OF THESE POPULAR STYLES

Supe r Sued e

.......
-.......•
....

House of Fabrics
Poly es t e r D o uble Knit
R'(' g .2 .98
Now 2.5 9 y d .

!(t::;:;:;:::::: :::::::::::: :::::;:: :::·:; :;::: ::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::j~;~

--

Brilliant Chromacolor picture tube
100% solid-state chassis
Patented Power Sentry voltage
regulator .
Chromatic one-button tuning

ij'npa rts the wa rmth of
c olonial!1mes.

~~#ak.sY-~,4
DIANE
LEWIS
has now ioined

WEDDING TODAY - The open churc h weddin g of
Sa ndra J . Murray, da ughte r of Willia m 0. Murray , Rt. I ,
Elizabet h, a nd the late Bertha E. Murray and Patric k 0 .
Arnold , son of Mr . a nd Mrs. Sam uel N. Arnold , Water St. ,
Sy racuse, will take place this afte rnoon a t 2:30p.m . at the
E lizabet h Me thodist Ch urch. The Rev. Ruby Wilkinson
and the Rev. Charles Wilkinson will officiate at the
ceremony. The bride-elect is a 1972 graduate of Wirt
County High School, and her fi ance is a 1972 gradua te of
Southern Local Hi gh School and a 1974 gra duate of
Pa rkersburg Community College with a degree in
retailing. He is employed by Long J ohn Silver 's.

0 . L. LEMASTER , who is retired from the U.S. N.. has
enrolled for two years in the Ga llipolis Business Coll ege.

POMEROY - The Sacred V-neckline edged with a self
Heart Church , Pomeroy , was ruffle . The bridesmaid s were
the se tting for the July 12 Miss Lisa Thomas , sister of
wedding of Miss Bronwyn the groom, in yellow. Miss
Ann Dailey and John Stewart Debbie J effe rs in lavender.
Thomas.
and Mrs. Jerr y Swartz in
The Rev. Fr . Paul Welton blue.
Their gowns were styled
officiated at the double ring
ceremony . TWo large stan- . identical to that of the matron
ding vases filled with painted of honor . All wore white
daisies in yellow. green, blue horsehair lace picture hats
and lavender, centered with with s tr eamers matc hin g
large satin bows, were placed their gowns. The attendants
on either side of th e main carried small natural s traw
altar .
gard en baskets filled with
A half-hour of prenuptial painted dai sies and streamer
music was presented by Mrs . bows matching their gowns.
Car rie Neutzling. Selections
Flower girl was Davida
included Shubert 's " Ava Williams . She wore a gown of
Maria, " "God Gave Me mint green crepe with the
You, " "Speak Loftly Love ," neckline and sleeves outlined
"The Greatest of These is in tiny white daisies. She
Love " and "Thy People Shall carried a garden basket of·
be My People."
daisy petals. Mas ter Patrick
. The bride is the daughter of Shrimplin was ringbearer
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Dailey, and he carried a white satin
Middleport and Mr. Thomas hear t-shaped pillow.
is th.e son of Paul Thomas,
Best
man
for
the
Point Pleasant, W. Va. and bridegroom was Michael
Mrs. Evelyn Thomas, Mid- Williams. Groomsmen were
Kevin. Dailey, brother of the
dleport.
Given in marriage by her .bride, Wheeler Thomas ,
parents and escorted to · the brother of the groom and
altar by her father, the bride Edward Young.
chose a princess style gown of
The groom wore a light
white peau de sole featuring a blue summer tuxedo and the
mandarin collar and front groomsmen wore white
panel of lace with lace jackets edged in navy blue
edging.
with , navy trousers. Their
The full bishop sleeves shirts matched the colors of
were enhanced by self- the bride 's attendants.
covered buttons. The back
At the close of the
panel of the gown ended in a . ceremony , th e couple placed
cour t train. Her veil of silk a rose on the altar of the
illusion was held by a head- Blessed Mother while the
piece of lace'and satin petals . organist played , " Mother
The gown was fashioned by Dear , Oh Pray for Me."
Mrs. Ella Shinn.
The m other of the bride
The bride 's bouquet of chose .a black and white print
shasta daisies was tied with jacket dress with black acblue sweetheart bows and ·cessories.
streamers . For "something
The groom's mother was in
old," the bride carried an a blue and white print dress
Irish lace handkerchief with white accessories and
belonging to her late Grand- both mothers wore white
mother
Howell.
Her carnation corsages.
" something blue " was a blue
The reception was held at
garter made by the late Kath- the Firemen's Lounge in
ryn Wise, and for " something Middleport. The bride's table
borrowed," she wore a rock was centered by a threecrystal pendant and earrings tiered wedding .cake en from her aunt.
Atte ndants we r e Mrs.
J uanita Williams. matron of
honor . attired in a gown of
mi'nt gr een crepe . The gown
featured an empire waist,
butterfl y sleeves and a deep

N~w At l~la·,::"

Miss Sandra Murray

Spec ia l sing ing . Eve ryo ne
welcome.
THE GOSPEL Messe ngers
will appear at 10:30 a .m. a t
Chri s t United Me thodi s t
Churc h. Lower Ri ver Road . A
potluck dinner will be served
at noon in the Fellowship
room. Everyone invited.
HEVIVAL services 7:30p.m .
a t Vic tory Baptis t Church
through Oct. 3. Evangelist
Grady Crowell of Louisville,
Mississ ippi will be gues t
s peaker . Pastor Kenneth
Sanders invites the public.
SONGFEST, 2 p .m. at the
Enterprise Baptis t Youth
Camp Tabernacle on White
Oak Road. Singers include
Peaceful Valley Quartet,
Christianaires. Herb and
Barb and the Young Gospels,
Liberty Gospel Singers, New
Start Singers, B. G. Revuee,
The Lavender Family and the
Joyful Echoes .

9 - The Sunday Times· Sentipel, Stinday, Sept. 28, 197~

'

�.. '

,
11 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sundav. SepL 28, 197~

''

Music month was observed
at the Tuesday night meeting
of the American Legion
Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post 39 with 'the Senior
Citizens Chorus under the
direction of Mrs. Ben Neutzling presenting the program .
The senior citizens were
guests of the auxiliary for a
dinner whi'ch preceded the
meeting. Mrs. Neutzling and
Mrs . Gerald Wildermuth ,
community service chairwoman , wer'e in charge of the
dinner. Other guests were
Mrs. Devon Tipple, past
Eighth District president ;
Mrs. Chester McClelland and
Mrs. Lowell Unton, LanMrs.
Arnold
caster;
Richards, Eighth District
president, Middleport ; Mrs.
Allen Hampton, Eighth
District Americanism
chairwoman ; Mrs. Raymond
Kloes, Middleport; Mrs .
Orvaf· Wiles, Pomeroy and
Lisa Fetty, Point Pleasant.
Accompanied by Mrs .
Hazel Thomson, pianist, the
chorus sang "America, the
Beautiful ," "This Is My
Co untry, " 'j He 's Got the
Whole World in His Hands,"
"Beautiful Ohio," "Kentucky
Babe ," "The West Virginia
Hills," "The Yellow Rose of
Texas," and concluded with
"Taps ."
A skit, "How Betsy Made
the Flag," was presented by
Mrs. Grace Pratt, portraying
Betsy Ross in colonial
customing and Mrs.
Wildermuth took the role of
George Washington and was
in appropriate costwning. At
the conclusion of the skit, the
sergeant at arms and the
color bearers advanced a flag
while everyone joined in
singing "You're A Grand Old

Kerns, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Voss, Mr. and Mrs. Dean
Blackwood, Mrs. E. R.
Robinson·, Mrs. Freda
·Welling , Mrs. Elizabeth
Slavin, Mrs. Jessie Houchins,
Mrs. Teresa Byers, Mrs.
Rose McDade, Mrs. Ethel
Hughes, Mrs. Rose Ginther,
Mrs . Neva Seyfried, Mrs.
Caryl Cook, Mrs . Ethel
Stewart, Mrs . Virginia
Gulley, Mrs. Clara Thomas
and Mrs . Garnet Erwin .
A memorial service was
held for Mrs . Mary Beard and
$5 will be sent in her memory
to the Marie Moore Memorial
Fund. Mrs. Pratt, Mrs. Edith
Sauer , chaplain, had charge
with Mrs . Ne_utzling at the
piano.
The reception honoring
Mrs . Arnold Richards, new
Eighth District president,
Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m. was
announced. A change in the
by-laws which requires all
chairpersons to submit report
to Department by May I was
noted .
The unit sent 30 poWlds of
candy to Chillicothe, purchased shirts for several boys
at the Xenia Home, con·
tributed $20 to the Meigs
Band, $10 of which carne from
the junior Wlit, and gave $10
to the Lonnie LeMaster Fund.
The Eighth District fall
convention Oct . 9 at JWJction
City
was
announced.
Reservations are to be made
by Oct. 2. Mrs. Pearl Knapp,
Mrs . Neutzling, Mrs. Veda
Davis, Mrs. Catherine Welsh,
Mrs. Mary Martin and Mrs.
Pratt will attend from Unit
39.
The scholarship fWld of
$100 paid to a student last
spring who was Wlable to
gain entrance into her
desired field at this time, was
Flag."
In the chorus were Alma awarded to Miss Sherri
Miller, Ira Wolfe, Ralph Reuter, who is enrolled at

...

.'

This is our biggest and best sale of the season -each store is jam-packed with spectacular values on the newest
fall fabrics and sewing notions. Don't miss out on the outstanding bargains you see below, plus many others.
Sale ends
October 4th

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wash a nd dry these favorites in the
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Pr•nv tlor•ls lor dri5M'!I aM

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258 GRAND CENTRAL MALL
PARKERSBURG. W. VA

11 -6th AVE.
HUNTINGTON, W.VA.

PUTNAM VILLAGE
SHOPPING CENTER
HURRICANE, W. VA.

dlainvnd

61onom .

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·by

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PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
· .a• S-Koncl Av enu•
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HOMECOMING TODAY
EAGLE
RIDGE
Homecoming today at Eagle
Ridge Community Church .
Sunday Sc)lool at 10 a.m. with
a basket dinner at noon.
Afternoon services at I: 30
p.m. featuring Dan Hayman
Hymntimers.
and
the
Everyone welcome.

Br•ld• ollt K Y•rtoW Gold
Mist IMir war to the
br l ll l•nCI ~nd Ina qv.~llty

::;:;:

From

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Infant rites
held Sunday
POMEROY Kristin
Eli~abeth
Shato, infant
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Shato, Gallipolis,
was
christened SWlday at the
Pomeroy Trinity Church. The
Rev. W. H. Perrin officiated.
Following the christening,
a dinner was held at the home
of
Kristin's
greatgrandparents, Mr . and Mrs.
Henry Reibel, Pomeroy .
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Donley Reibel, grandparents,
Fae Reibel, Pomeroy; Althea
Strong, Diane Strong and
Evelyn DeVall, Wilkesville;
Gary Manning, Dayton; Tom
Ferrell, Charleston, W. Va.
Family pictures were taken
during the day.

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MARIETTA. OHIO

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A NEW LISTENING EXPERIENCE BY BOSE
we invite you to

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SAVE. sao ON
SIZE SETS

.TOM'S STEREO CENTER

'"· 129911 NOW 121g10 ,;r m

2 Miles Out .Rt. 141. Watch For Signs
Mon. thru Fri. 1 p.m. to 8 p.m. Sat. 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
PH. 446-7886
GALliPOLIS, OHIO
I

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audition the BOSE 901 SERIES II and ·judge for
yourself whether or not this is the best speaker
system available, regardless of. size or price.

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PABRICS.
·. .

LETART, W. Va . - Miss
Dianna J . Kearns, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Kearns, Letart, W. Va .,
became the bride of David L.
Eades, son of Mrs. ·Shirley
Boston, Letart, and William
Thomas Eades. London,
Ohio. The Rev. John P.
Dunstan performed the
ceremony Aug. 9 in Pearisburg, Va.
The bride is a 197~ graduate
of Waharna High School and
her husband, a graduate of
London High School, is
employed at the Philip Sporn
Power Plant.
The couple was received
with a reception and shower
at the bride's home church ,
Fairview Bible Church . The
table was centered with a
three-tiered wedding cake
with a miniature bride and
groom and white doves
surroWlding · the ca ke . The
color scheme was peach and
white in a setting of a
miniature flower ga rden
consisting of a water foun tain, bird bath and an archway covered with pink roses
and white wedding bells. The
decorations were by Mrs.
Lyta Roush and Mrs. Stella
Morgan . Also helping were
Mellissa Justus , Jani ce

Leffle , Sharon Leffle, Becky
Mallory, Ruth Lewis and the
bride's sister, Lynn Kearns.
As the new Mr. and Mrs.
Eades opened their gifts,
guests observed were Mrs.
Okey Fowler, Sandra Fowler,
Mrs. Kay King, Mrs. Virginia
Wears, Freda Turley, Mrs.
Sheila Matheny , Mrs . Mona
Gibbs, Mrs. Francis Kearns,
Donna and Nancy, Esther
Fowler, Delmas Kearns,
Mrs . Marion Ohlinger,
Tammy and Roberta , Mrs.
Connie Gibbs and Rex, Mrs.
Charlene Lewis and Trent.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Roush, Mrs. Edith Edwards
and Davy , Mr . and Mrs . Jake
Gibbs, Mrs. Jennifer Miller
and Mike , Mrs . Brenda
Black. Tammy and Connie,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Lewis,
Mrs. Stella Morgan, Mrs.
Shirley Boston, Doug Eades,
Mrs . Becky Mallory, Mrs.
Emma Lee Kearns and
Cy nthia , Janice Leffle ,
Sharon Leffle , Mellissa
Justus, Lynn Kearns and Mr.
and Mrs . Roy Buck.

the plains outside Munich to
· celebrate his daughter's
marriage. Sirice then It has
become a yearly carnival of
International proportions In
that Bavarian city and
s!m!lar festivals have
become popular In many
areas where there Is a major
(:;erman population . The
Colwnbus Oktoberfest Is one
of the largest In North
America.
The gates open at. 5 p.m.
Oct. 2 and 3 and at 11 a.m. on
Oct. 4 and 5.

...•

ZANE PLAZA
CHILLICOTHE, OHIO

.

. , ' ..r

Nuptial vows read

COLUMBUS - One of the
major fall festivals will get
Wlderway at 5 p.m. Oct. 2
when the gates open on the
annual Oktoberfest at the
Ohio State Fairgrounds In
Columbus.
The four-day event will
feature one of the largest arta
and crafts shows ln central
Ohio, along with many of the
nation's top polka bands and
German dance groups .
Among
the
featured
musicians w!ll be "Polka
King" Frank Yankovlc ,
Edelweiss Orchestra, Jack
Hedges and The Music
Makers, Hank Haller and his
Bavarian Band, Franz Koch
and his Rhe!ngold Band, and
the Fat Dutchmen. Several
schuhplsttler dance groups
will perform. Slng-alongs and
audience dancing w!ll be
other higltlighta of the entertainment. A wide variety
of both German and
American. foods will be
available.
Oktoberfest dates back to
the year 1810 when King
Ludwig held a vast party on

•••

.
Store Hours: 10 'ti I 9 Monday thru Saturday- ! 'Til 6 Sund.ay
HEADQUARTERS FOR DRAPERIES, SliPCOVERS AND UPHOLSTERING 'MATER.IALS

.

•

Mr. and Mrs. David &amp;des

- ·* " .

SILVER BRIDGE SHOPPIN.G PLAZA;....._ROUTE 7, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
t

CEI.f.HR\TIOS

the door prior to Mrs.
Rombeek 's appearance. Ten
eventa are included In the flO
memberships. No Ucketa are
sold for individual Forwn
Series eventa.
Mrs.
Bombeck's
appearance was originally
scheduled for Old Main
Auditoriwn on the Marshall
University canipus,' but was
moved to the Kelth-Albee
Theater to accommodate an
anticipated larser audience.
The authoress Is best

colwnn "At Wlt ~s End" which
ap~s _
in approximately 400
newspapers with a total
circulation of more than 31
million .
She began her career as a·
copy girl' on the staff of the
Dayton Journal Herald after
graduation
from
the
University of Dayton.
Doubleday has published
three of her books includlns
"Just Wait Till You Have
Children Of Your Own,"
whic h won the Obianna
Award for hwnor in I972.

Oktoberfest slated

..f.:...... .

es also on sale at

.

r

89'h

HUNTINGTON - Fames
colwnnlst Erma Rombeek
laWJches the new season of
.the Forwn Series of the
Marshall Artist Series
Tuesday with her witty
commentary "At Wit's End."
The housewife turned
author will speak at 8 p.m. at
the Keith·Aibee Theater.
Admission is by Forwn
Series season membership or
valid Marshall University
Season
Activity Card.
memberships will be sold at

Nbw the .-61iiSE:9jjlBElliES ;
' DIRECT /REFLECTING* SPEAKER does everythin
it's predecessor did, and more!

OM of tilt most Hl*l.tr flbf'lct for utull wtar! In cl.u·
sic denim blut ptus .UICM'tH wilds and 1)09ul.tr patcll·

::;•:::;!';.!:"'"''"''CoHo•

Product ions

MIDDLEPORT- A family
gathering was held recently
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Norbert Neutzling, Sycamore
St., Middleport.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Lawson,
Minersville ; Mrs. Francis
Smtth and daughter Jo Anne,
Sandyville, W. Va.; Mr . and
Mrs. John D. Ult and children
SAVE 85 on order of '50 or more
Tresi, David, Johnny, Danny
. from Sears Wish Book. Your
and Brenda, Circleville; Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Neutzling
-copy of our 1975 Christmas Catalog
and
daughter Melissa,
· is available at most catalog order
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Pat
desks until October lst.
Neutzling and son Jay,
Early Christmas shopping pays doubl-1 at
Pomeroy.
Sears. You save time and trouble when you
Miss Dorothy Neutzling,
shop by catalog. Plus you get a $5 discount
Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs. Dale
on any order of $50 or more, if you order
Warner
and
Dorothy,
b.¢ fore October 13th. Shop Sears Christmas
Syracuse'; Mr. and Mrs. John
Cataloq
Warner and Matthew,
one of Sears credit plans
Athens ; Mr. and Mrs. James
$5 Discount Expires Oct. 13th, 1975 Warner, Pomeroy; Mrs. Ada
Call Sears catalog
Van Meter, Chester; Mrs.
Shopping tollay
Victor Bahr , Reedsville;
24 Hour Phone Service
Mrs. Donald Van Meter and
Phone 446-2770
A! vena, Chester; Mrs. John
Bentz
, Minersville; Mrs .
Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back
Caddie Wickham, Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Hawk
SHOP AT SEARS
and Mary , Minersville;
AMMHMHr
AND SAVE
Melvin and Michael Van
~EARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.
Meter of Middleport.

100% Cotton
Corduroy

d &gt;y, !.l-60'' ......

Quilted prints and fiDcks,

Sears

c. wa lt Disney

Family gathers

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ts &amp;
Prints

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Fall Fashion Knits

Beautiful group ot fancies and solids In
washable blonds, 4WO" wide. • •

Rt-t . U.49 10 H .ft yd.

QUILTED

· Reg. $2.99 to $3.99 yd.
y~ ~. . ~ $2.00 yd.

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'For ~ashable fall sportswear, skirts,
and even men's wear in 100o/0 Oa·
cron !l Polyester, 100% Acrylic and
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,~2uvel14d8

Reg . $1 .39 to $1.69 yd.

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rancles, m.c:fllne

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Coordinates

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Flannel Prints &amp; Solids

Reg. 52.99 yd .
You save $1.11 yd .

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Pretty fall welg~t At~hc . double knits in
an assor1men' ot· solids · ,a nd tancies tor
sportswear and djjueS. Machine wash,
tumble dry, 51-60'' wide.

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Many prints, and "naturil look" solids.
washable blends, 4S" wide . '
Reg . $U9 to 51.69 yd.

The popular solid colored double
knits everybody wanls tor blouses
and dresses. Machine wash , tumble
dry , 58·60" wide.

Reg . 52.99 to $3.49 yd.

Reg . $1.49 yd.

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Kimberly
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Metallic Jersey Prints

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Hocking Technical Institute,
Nelsonville. ·
lVIrs. Ruth Powers asked
for cookies and candies for
the boys at the Xenia home.
The annual birthday party for
the American Legion was
discussed ·along with the
Cancer Crusade, a national
emphasis of the American
Legion and the Auxiliary .
New· officers for the JWlior
American Legion Auxiliary
were installed by Pam
Powers , Eighth District
junior president. They are
Tracey Jeffers, sergeant at
arms; Charlotte Lehew,
historian; Rhonda Reuter,
chaplain;
Lori . Woo,d,
treasurer; Denise Marshall,
secretary; Peggy Girolarni,
vice president and Paula
Kloes, president. Assisting in
the installation were Mrs.
Harry Davis, jWlior activities
chairwoman, Robin Campbell, Jennifer Couch and
Anna Wiles.
On Oct. 4 the jWJiors will go
to the Arcadia Nursing Home
for a birthday party for the
veterans there. Mrs . Davis
also reported that trick and
treat bags are being made by
the jWJiors for the Xenia
orphans home.
Mrs. Richards annoWlced
that as of last Friday the
Eighth District was in fourth
place in membership in the
state. Mrs. Mar~e Reuter
reported 5~ dues paid .
Miss' Erma Smith noted that
the foreign relations program
will be on Hondoras. Cards
were sent to Ullian Pierce
and Frances Warner, Mrs .
Ellen Couch, chairwoman,
reported.
In the ritualistic opening
were Chery Lehew, sergeant
. at arms; Mrs. Mary Martin
and Mrs. Pearl Knapp , color
bearers. The chorus sang the
national anthem and Mrs.
Sauer had prayer. Mrs .
Welsh and Mrs. Gemma
Casci will be hostesses in
October.

known for her thrice-weekly

Erma Rombeek starts·
Marshall Artist Series

Music month observed

''-

•
uxur1ous
Fabrics

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,
11 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sundav. SepL 28, 197~

''

Music month was observed
at the Tuesday night meeting
of the American Legion
Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post 39 with 'the Senior
Citizens Chorus under the
direction of Mrs. Ben Neutzling presenting the program .
The senior citizens were
guests of the auxiliary for a
dinner whi'ch preceded the
meeting. Mrs. Neutzling and
Mrs . Gerald Wildermuth ,
community service chairwoman , wer'e in charge of the
dinner. Other guests were
Mrs. Devon Tipple, past
Eighth District president ;
Mrs. Chester McClelland and
Mrs. Lowell Unton, LanMrs.
Arnold
caster;
Richards, Eighth District
president, Middleport ; Mrs.
Allen Hampton, Eighth
District Americanism
chairwoman ; Mrs. Raymond
Kloes, Middleport; Mrs .
Orvaf· Wiles, Pomeroy and
Lisa Fetty, Point Pleasant.
Accompanied by Mrs .
Hazel Thomson, pianist, the
chorus sang "America, the
Beautiful ," "This Is My
Co untry, " 'j He 's Got the
Whole World in His Hands,"
"Beautiful Ohio," "Kentucky
Babe ," "The West Virginia
Hills," "The Yellow Rose of
Texas," and concluded with
"Taps ."
A skit, "How Betsy Made
the Flag," was presented by
Mrs. Grace Pratt, portraying
Betsy Ross in colonial
customing and Mrs.
Wildermuth took the role of
George Washington and was
in appropriate costwning. At
the conclusion of the skit, the
sergeant at arms and the
color bearers advanced a flag
while everyone joined in
singing "You're A Grand Old

Kerns, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Voss, Mr. and Mrs. Dean
Blackwood, Mrs. E. R.
Robinson·, Mrs. Freda
·Welling , Mrs. Elizabeth
Slavin, Mrs. Jessie Houchins,
Mrs. Teresa Byers, Mrs.
Rose McDade, Mrs. Ethel
Hughes, Mrs. Rose Ginther,
Mrs . Neva Seyfried, Mrs.
Caryl Cook, Mrs . Ethel
Stewart, Mrs . Virginia
Gulley, Mrs. Clara Thomas
and Mrs . Garnet Erwin .
A memorial service was
held for Mrs . Mary Beard and
$5 will be sent in her memory
to the Marie Moore Memorial
Fund. Mrs. Pratt, Mrs. Edith
Sauer , chaplain, had charge
with Mrs . Ne_utzling at the
piano.
The reception honoring
Mrs . Arnold Richards, new
Eighth District president,
Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m. was
announced. A change in the
by-laws which requires all
chairpersons to submit report
to Department by May I was
noted .
The unit sent 30 poWlds of
candy to Chillicothe, purchased shirts for several boys
at the Xenia Home, con·
tributed $20 to the Meigs
Band, $10 of which carne from
the junior Wlit, and gave $10
to the Lonnie LeMaster Fund.
The Eighth District fall
convention Oct . 9 at JWJction
City
was
announced.
Reservations are to be made
by Oct. 2. Mrs. Pearl Knapp,
Mrs . Neutzling, Mrs. Veda
Davis, Mrs. Catherine Welsh,
Mrs. Mary Martin and Mrs.
Pratt will attend from Unit
39.
The scholarship fWld of
$100 paid to a student last
spring who was Wlable to
gain entrance into her
desired field at this time, was
Flag."
In the chorus were Alma awarded to Miss Sherri
Miller, Ira Wolfe, Ralph Reuter, who is enrolled at

...

.'

This is our biggest and best sale of the season -each store is jam-packed with spectacular values on the newest
fall fabrics and sewing notions. Don't miss out on the outstanding bargains you see below, plus many others.
Sale ends
October 4th

100% POLYESTER

Jersey Knits/ Dress Prints

JZYARD8

100o/o Acetate jerseys &amp; 100% Poly&amp;ster
woven prints , 45" wide.
'
Reg. 51.99 yd.

Rog. $1.49 to 53.99 yd.

88

YARD

Choose from a beautiful selection tor
fall dresses and sportswear, and
wash a nd dry these favorites in the
machine. 58-60" wide .

Elegant Velours
In

Arnel ~

trlacetate and Acetate/Nylon,

41·54" Wide.
Rog. $2.29 yd.

•ts8
YARD

5

Cuddly Knits
Machine Wtlslt tlnd dr., Acet.hi/Nylon

SOLIDS

Multi ·CDiored tancl11 11111

An auortment !If tiM quality

coordiMtll'll C1rln1 ,,.,. :sol-

Reg. $1.29 yd.

1 YARD

.28 $JOO'
YARD

muiU-colond

kh . Machine walh 1nd dry ,

••"'

51-W' ........
A...

» .'" to u."

~net dry, 51.-W '

R~tt .

yd .

·

..

Reg . $1.69 to 52.29 yd.

'J88
YARD

Q

many
wtlstl ·
Poly 100%

T-Shirt
Knits
Perfect weight for the new full dresses
and tops. In a big assortment of PolY·
ester/CoHon prints and solids that can be
washed in your machine. 51-60"' wide.

backs .

UNQUIL TED

Reg . U .99 yd.

43--M" wide
44-tS" wide
Reg. $2.29 to $2.99 yd. Reg. , $1.49 yd.

'199

You save $1.00 yd.

'199

'I~: 'It~

YARD

YARD

Floral , men's wear, and juvenile prints,
plus pinwale , ribless, and 7-wate solids in
popular 100% Cotton . Machine wash,
tumble dry, 45 " wide.
Reg. S2.29 to S2.99 yd.
You save to S1.11 yd.

Pr•nv tlor•ls lor dri5M'!I aM

with unquiltect coonlintltes, in
able 100% Cotton, and
ester/Cotton; quilts have
Polyester fill, Acetate tricot

YARD

Doet. nat cOIIfM'm liD ctllltl,.ri's ..-,w•.tr st.tncl.tnt
DC J.7L SMukiMtiM wor• nnr IOUtU Df fir..

!Sears!

McCALL'S
4455

Denim&amp;
Denim Looks

R~. $1.~

'$""" Cotloo8i

I

to $2 .99
. yd. .
Y~ · save ~ $1.11 yd.

YARD

·

Iron-All*

Fin. qullity, flufly 100% P1!1¥fl1tt fill for 'toYJ, Utrow
plllt•~ . and ottwr tr.lll.tnd ctec:or.tllrlf pro/ttls . Compltlltly wasllab41f, in I lb. bag! .

.,

'

•

»

258 GRAND CENTRAL MALL
PARKERSBURG. W. VA

11 -6th AVE.
HUNTINGTON, W.VA.

PUTNAM VILLAGE
SHOPPING CENTER
HURRICANE, W. VA.

dlainvnd

61onom .

...

·by

Or61'19f

·

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
· .a• S-Koncl Av enu•
C.. Il l pol ls .

""''

tr==============;:=:=·=
: ;;;u;;;=·;;===&lt;p;:=
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brings to you

SHADES OF PEWTER
:;:;
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Exquisite metal -cast beauty ::;:
bring elegance &amp; :;:;

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SURPRISE! - Carson Casting;~:

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Into the oven
lull
tabletop line along
our 1776 mugs at

&amp; dish -=~:
washer . Stop In and see our ;:;:
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goes

:;:;

HOMECOMING TODAY
EAGLE
RIDGE
Homecoming today at Eagle
Ridge Community Church .
Sunday Sc)lool at 10 a.m. with
a basket dinner at noon.
Afternoon services at I: 30
p.m. featuring Dan Hayman
Hymntimers.
and
the
Everyone welcome.

Br•ld• ollt K Y•rtoW Gold
Mist IMir war to the
br l ll l•nCI ~nd Ina qv.~llty

::;:;:

From

: ~: : : State &amp; Th Ird:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::Ga IIi polis, Oh iO:::::J\\

Infant rites
held Sunday
POMEROY Kristin
Eli~abeth
Shato, infant
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Shato, Gallipolis,
was
christened SWlday at the
Pomeroy Trinity Church. The
Rev. W. H. Perrin officiated.
Following the christening,
a dinner was held at the home
of
Kristin's
greatgrandparents, Mr . and Mrs.
Henry Reibel, Pomeroy .
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Donley Reibel, grandparents,
Fae Reibel, Pomeroy; Althea
Strong, Diane Strong and
Evelyn DeVall, Wilkesville;
Gary Manning, Dayton; Tom
Ferrell, Charleston, W. Va.
Family pictures were taken
during the day.

SITS

0

PER
PIECE,

Decorator ticking on the outside.
Bemco's exclusive Unifused'"
Construction and Coil Guard•
inside for gentle, flexible support
where you need it most!

TWIN

SIZE

SS4~.

"(~

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-...

15 ACME STREET
MARIETTA SHOPPING CENTER
MARIETTA. OHIO

,-- ·
/
'
'
'

....

A NEW LISTENING EXPERIENCE BY BOSE
we invite you to

-

174811 ,,_

QUEEN
SAVE. sao ON
SIZE SETS

.TOM'S STEREO CENTER

'"· 129911 NOW 121g10 ,;r m

2 Miles Out .Rt. 141. Watch For Signs
Mon. thru Fri. 1 p.m. to 8 p.m. Sat. 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
PH. 446-7886
GALliPOLIS, OHIO
I

,.

SAVE
•so ONlWIN
.
SIZESm
lltl. $9!JII NOW

audition the BOSE 901 SERIES II and ·judge for
yourself whether or not this is the best speaker
system available, regardless of. size or price.

"

SAVE 1100 -~~~:~s
1111.141911 NOW 13111lhorm

v. r~

I

'.'
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:;;;

$1 50

-.

PABRICS.
·. .

LETART, W. Va . - Miss
Dianna J . Kearns, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Kearns, Letart, W. Va .,
became the bride of David L.
Eades, son of Mrs. ·Shirley
Boston, Letart, and William
Thomas Eades. London,
Ohio. The Rev. John P.
Dunstan performed the
ceremony Aug. 9 in Pearisburg, Va.
The bride is a 197~ graduate
of Waharna High School and
her husband, a graduate of
London High School, is
employed at the Philip Sporn
Power Plant.
The couple was received
with a reception and shower
at the bride's home church ,
Fairview Bible Church . The
table was centered with a
three-tiered wedding cake
with a miniature bride and
groom and white doves
surroWlding · the ca ke . The
color scheme was peach and
white in a setting of a
miniature flower ga rden
consisting of a water foun tain, bird bath and an archway covered with pink roses
and white wedding bells. The
decorations were by Mrs.
Lyta Roush and Mrs. Stella
Morgan . Also helping were
Mellissa Justus , Jani ce

Leffle , Sharon Leffle, Becky
Mallory, Ruth Lewis and the
bride's sister, Lynn Kearns.
As the new Mr. and Mrs.
Eades opened their gifts,
guests observed were Mrs.
Okey Fowler, Sandra Fowler,
Mrs. Kay King, Mrs. Virginia
Wears, Freda Turley, Mrs.
Sheila Matheny , Mrs . Mona
Gibbs, Mrs. Francis Kearns,
Donna and Nancy, Esther
Fowler, Delmas Kearns,
Mrs . Marion Ohlinger,
Tammy and Roberta , Mrs.
Connie Gibbs and Rex, Mrs.
Charlene Lewis and Trent.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Roush, Mrs. Edith Edwards
and Davy , Mr . and Mrs . Jake
Gibbs, Mrs. Jennifer Miller
and Mike , Mrs . Brenda
Black. Tammy and Connie,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Lewis,
Mrs. Stella Morgan, Mrs.
Shirley Boston, Doug Eades,
Mrs . Becky Mallory, Mrs.
Emma Lee Kearns and
Cy nthia , Janice Leffle ,
Sharon Leffle , Mellissa
Justus, Lynn Kearns and Mr.
and Mrs . Roy Buck.

the plains outside Munich to
· celebrate his daughter's
marriage. Sirice then It has
become a yearly carnival of
International proportions In
that Bavarian city and
s!m!lar festivals have
become popular In many
areas where there Is a major
(:;erman population . The
Colwnbus Oktoberfest Is one
of the largest In North
America.
The gates open at. 5 p.m.
Oct. 2 and 3 and at 11 a.m. on
Oct. 4 and 5.

...•

ZANE PLAZA
CHILLICOTHE, OHIO

.

. , ' ..r

Nuptial vows read

COLUMBUS - One of the
major fall festivals will get
Wlderway at 5 p.m. Oct. 2
when the gates open on the
annual Oktoberfest at the
Ohio State Fairgrounds In
Columbus.
The four-day event will
feature one of the largest arta
and crafts shows ln central
Ohio, along with many of the
nation's top polka bands and
German dance groups .
Among
the
featured
musicians w!ll be "Polka
King" Frank Yankovlc ,
Edelweiss Orchestra, Jack
Hedges and The Music
Makers, Hank Haller and his
Bavarian Band, Franz Koch
and his Rhe!ngold Band, and
the Fat Dutchmen. Several
schuhplsttler dance groups
will perform. Slng-alongs and
audience dancing w!ll be
other higltlighta of the entertainment. A wide variety
of both German and
American. foods will be
available.
Oktoberfest dates back to
the year 1810 when King
Ludwig held a vast party on

•••

.
Store Hours: 10 'ti I 9 Monday thru Saturday- ! 'Til 6 Sund.ay
HEADQUARTERS FOR DRAPERIES, SliPCOVERS AND UPHOLSTERING 'MATER.IALS

.

•

Mr. and Mrs. David &amp;des

- ·* " .

SILVER BRIDGE SHOPPIN.G PLAZA;....._ROUTE 7, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
t

CEI.f.HR\TIOS

the door prior to Mrs.
Rombeek 's appearance. Ten
eventa are included In the flO
memberships. No Ucketa are
sold for individual Forwn
Series eventa.
Mrs.
Bombeck's
appearance was originally
scheduled for Old Main
Auditoriwn on the Marshall
University canipus,' but was
moved to the Kelth-Albee
Theater to accommodate an
anticipated larser audience.
The authoress Is best

colwnn "At Wlt ~s End" which
ap~s _
in approximately 400
newspapers with a total
circulation of more than 31
million .
She began her career as a·
copy girl' on the staff of the
Dayton Journal Herald after
graduation
from
the
University of Dayton.
Doubleday has published
three of her books includlns
"Just Wait Till You Have
Children Of Your Own,"
whic h won the Obianna
Award for hwnor in I972.

Oktoberfest slated

..f.:...... .

es also on sale at

.

r

89'h

HUNTINGTON - Fames
colwnnlst Erma Rombeek
laWJches the new season of
.the Forwn Series of the
Marshall Artist Series
Tuesday with her witty
commentary "At Wit's End."
The housewife turned
author will speak at 8 p.m. at
the Keith·Aibee Theater.
Admission is by Forwn
Series season membership or
valid Marshall University
Season
Activity Card.
memberships will be sold at

Nbw the .-61iiSE:9jjlBElliES ;
' DIRECT /REFLECTING* SPEAKER does everythin
it's predecessor did, and more!

OM of tilt most Hl*l.tr flbf'lct for utull wtar! In cl.u·
sic denim blut ptus .UICM'tH wilds and 1)09ul.tr patcll·

::;•:::;!';.!:"'"''"''CoHo•

Product ions

MIDDLEPORT- A family
gathering was held recently
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Norbert Neutzling, Sycamore
St., Middleport.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Lawson,
Minersville ; Mrs. Francis
Smtth and daughter Jo Anne,
Sandyville, W. Va.; Mr . and
Mrs. John D. Ult and children
SAVE 85 on order of '50 or more
Tresi, David, Johnny, Danny
. from Sears Wish Book. Your
and Brenda, Circleville; Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Neutzling
-copy of our 1975 Christmas Catalog
and
daughter Melissa,
· is available at most catalog order
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Pat
desks until October lst.
Neutzling and son Jay,
Early Christmas shopping pays doubl-1 at
Pomeroy.
Sears. You save time and trouble when you
Miss Dorothy Neutzling,
shop by catalog. Plus you get a $5 discount
Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs. Dale
on any order of $50 or more, if you order
Warner
and
Dorothy,
b.¢ fore October 13th. Shop Sears Christmas
Syracuse'; Mr. and Mrs. John
Cataloq
Warner and Matthew,
one of Sears credit plans
Athens ; Mr. and Mrs. James
$5 Discount Expires Oct. 13th, 1975 Warner, Pomeroy; Mrs. Ada
Call Sears catalog
Van Meter, Chester; Mrs.
Shopping tollay
Victor Bahr , Reedsville;
24 Hour Phone Service
Mrs. Donald Van Meter and
Phone 446-2770
A! vena, Chester; Mrs. John
Bentz
, Minersville; Mrs .
Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back
Caddie Wickham, Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Hawk
SHOP AT SEARS
and Mary , Minersville;
AMMHMHr
AND SAVE
Melvin and Michael Van
~EARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.
Meter of Middleport.

100% Cotton
Corduroy

d &gt;y, !.l-60'' ......

Quilted prints and fiDcks,

Sears

c. wa lt Disney

Family gathers

00

sllirts . MKfiiM wash , tumlltl

ts &amp;
Prints

·~

Fall Fashion Knits

Beautiful group ot fancies and solids In
washable blonds, 4WO" wide. • •

Rt-t . U.49 10 H .ft yd.

QUILTED

· Reg. $2.99 to $3.99 yd.
y~ ~. . ~ $2.00 yd.

•

~

YARD

'For ~ashable fall sportswear, skirts,
and even men's wear in 100o/0 Oa·
cron !l Polyester, 100% Acrylic and
Wool blends, S4-6G" wide.
'

YARD

wiOe .

U .4t to U.ft yd.

Plaids
0
Acrylic Blended
'
.Double Knits &amp; Novelties
,~2uvel14d8

Reg . $1 .39 to $1.69 yd.

'248

'288
YARD

Rog . $3.~):v~.

rancles, m.c:fllne

••
•

wide .

Printed
. Knits

Luxurious
Fancies

Coordinates

...

1000/o Cotton prlnt5 and solids, .t2-t5"

'I~:

YARD

knits for tops and aduft"s sleepwtilr, in
assorted prir,b &amp; solidS;- 52-st" wlcle.
.

Flannel Prints &amp; Solids

Reg. 52.99 yd .
You save $1.11 yd .

,y~~··~ as

tzs8
YARD

Pretty fall welg~t At~hc . double knits in
an assor1men' ot· solids · ,a nd tancies tor
sportswear and djjueS. Machine wash,
tumble dry, 51-60'' wide.

I

Many prints, and "naturil look" solids.
washable blends, 4S" wide . '
Reg . $U9 to 51.69 yd.

The popular solid colored double
knits everybody wanls tor blouses
and dresses. Machine wash , tumble
dry , 58·60" wide.

Reg . 52.99 to $3.49 yd.

Reg . $1.49 yd.

..

Dress/Sportswear Printl~l

Kimberly
Crepe

Solids&amp; ·
Fancies

Beautiful prints In Acetate/Nylon, with
melillllc designs. 45" wide . •

2

DOUBLE KNITS
First quality, cut from full bolts

Metallic Jersey Prints

'

Super
Values

Hocking Technical Institute,
Nelsonville. ·
lVIrs. Ruth Powers asked
for cookies and candies for
the boys at the Xenia home.
The annual birthday party for
the American Legion was
discussed ·along with the
Cancer Crusade, a national
emphasis of the American
Legion and the Auxiliary .
New· officers for the JWlior
American Legion Auxiliary
were installed by Pam
Powers , Eighth District
junior president. They are
Tracey Jeffers, sergeant at
arms; Charlotte Lehew,
historian; Rhonda Reuter,
chaplain;
Lori . Woo,d,
treasurer; Denise Marshall,
secretary; Peggy Girolarni,
vice president and Paula
Kloes, president. Assisting in
the installation were Mrs.
Harry Davis, jWlior activities
chairwoman, Robin Campbell, Jennifer Couch and
Anna Wiles.
On Oct. 4 the jWJiors will go
to the Arcadia Nursing Home
for a birthday party for the
veterans there. Mrs . Davis
also reported that trick and
treat bags are being made by
the jWJiors for the Xenia
orphans home.
Mrs. Richards annoWlced
that as of last Friday the
Eighth District was in fourth
place in membership in the
state. Mrs. Mar~e Reuter
reported 5~ dues paid .
Miss' Erma Smith noted that
the foreign relations program
will be on Hondoras. Cards
were sent to Ullian Pierce
and Frances Warner, Mrs .
Ellen Couch, chairwoman,
reported.
In the ritualistic opening
were Chery Lehew, sergeant
. at arms; Mrs. Mary Martin
and Mrs. Pearl Knapp , color
bearers. The chorus sang the
national anthem and Mrs.
Sauer had prayer. Mrs .
Welsh and Mrs. Gemma
Casci will be hostesses in
October.

known for her thrice-weekly

Erma Rombeek starts·
Marshall Artist Series

Music month observed

''-

•
uxur1ous
Fabrics

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I •
12 -';- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 28, 1975

••

Series sponsors bluegrass group
Seve nteen -year~ ld Jimmy
Stack is lead singer and
g uitarist for the gr ou p .
Barbara Stack, 15-yea rs-&lt;Jld,
suppor ts the band on rhythm
guitar. Her back-up voca ls
com bine with those of brother
Alan. a 14-yea r-&lt;Jid awardwinning bluegrass fiddl er.
Eleven-year- o ld Cl i nt
Ri chards of Newark picks

McARTHUR - The Stack
family of Vinton County will
perform on its O':"n public
television speci~l . Tuesday,
Sept. 30 at 8 p.m. wh en
Hocking Valley Bl uegra ss
presents Frog Stack and the
Greenhorns on WOUB TV 20
and WOUC TV 44 .
The group was recorded in
concert
at
the
Oh io
University Forum Theater in
Athens last May. Master of
Ceremonies for the group is
" Frog·· Stack, a veteran
bulldozer operator who
organi zes , SUJH' r vises and
generally ramrods an exceptionally talented grcup of
yotmg bluegrass musicians.

b3n jo t o ent husi as tic ap-

pl&lt;mse ror hi s five -st ring
s olos.

B&lt;.~ ss

· play er

Br e t

Alman, also from Vinton
County, is 16.
This young g roup 's interest
in the so-called New Grass
music or recent years is
reflected in their choice of
material , which includes

" Fastest Grass Alive ," made
popular by the Osborne
Brothers, a nd the Country
Gentlemen ·hits " Fox on the
Run " an d ·' Rebe l Soldier."
The program also feH tur es
traditional bluegrass pieces
like "Cripple Cree k," Bill
Monroe's "Gold Rush "· and a
blue-ribbon rendition of the
classic fiddling contes t
favorite "Orange Blossom
Special."
Hocking Valley Bluegrass
is a production of WOUB
television, Athens and is
funded in part by a grant
from th e Central Educationa l
Network . Exec . Producer :
David ll . Liroff. ProducerDirector : John Harnack.

STORE HOURS
SUPER MARKETS

MON.-SAT.
"

8 AM-10 PM

_____...;!!1111........_________...~~:::=--~N:o:-~IOid

/

10 A.M.-10 P.M. SUNDAY
FRESHMEN PREPARE FOR WALK - Jan Elliott,
president of the junior class at Holzer Medical Center
School of Nursing, lights candle belonging to entering
freshman Cindy Ghearing. Fifty-four new s tudent nurses
walked around the hospital Thursday evening bound by
string and carrying lighted candles as port of hazing
activities sponsored by the juniors.

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, OHIO

to ciMiera.

BON

OPEN DAILY 9 TIL 9 -CLOSED SUNDAY
252 THIRD AVENUE-GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

• PRICES GOOD THRU ·
ocr. 4, 1975

SBE
U.l. OOVT. INSP.

AVENUE-PT. PlEASANT, W. VA.

BOIIILISS

CHUCK

29

fLAT

em

U.S. GOVT. INSP.

CUBE STEAKS

a.d Monday for
special End-OfMon' t h s·a I I

:

•

lb.

l

•Cut Green Beans
'i
'I
eShellie Beans
'
•Chili Hot Beans
•Kidney Beans
........
•Chopped Kraut
. . .. ~
eTumip Greens
•Kale Greens
•White or Golden Hominy
•Showboat Pork &amp; Beans
•Showboat Peas

'3

'6

W

ments·up·to 'lt&gt; feet long.· Power ratings from
500 UP,_to ~,QOO watts. Qlean, quiet.
. •,

•

•

-j ' •

•

It IS TIME TO DO YOUR

. ; Save '8.00
· ... -·. uu Wall-Mount
Electric Heaters

FALL PLANTING.

· B'~ilt-i·n rh~rmost$t ·
holds temperature setting. With fan .
·

.

'

SHOP AT SEARS E:::::ls
,
' Silver Bridge Plazp
AN~ SAVE . ~ '
PH.446·277Q .
. . .
·.,
'" ~
' ~ .
' . ..
'
.

.. · ~ . • ~~,aQUOC&amp;.AN~C9·

·

69c
GREENWOOD Sliced or Cut

COOL WHIP

BEETS

Cont.

49c

D CHUCK

•
•
•
•

• FROM SPE CiAL PACt&lt; AGES OF
• A.i'lM OU~ STAR HOT DOGS
O N PURCHA SE OF ANY

CHUCK s~.:?~g~R
~109

With llatunl
Juices
17 to 20-lb.

.•

• OIUQFOiffiW

U.S. GOVT. INSP.

•
•

U.S. GOVT, INSP.

WHOLE-BONELESS

-ILISSIWIIIITIAll
-ILISSIHOULDII IOASTS
IONIUSS fAMILT SHAIS
CUll STUIS

• GIOUMD CHUCI

•

GROUND
BEEF

3 lbs.

BIRDSEYE FROZEN VEGETABLES

or More

lb.

I!

Broccoli Spears, Cauliflower
Fordhook Lima Beans

"

.heroge

MADE WITH U.S. GOVT. INSP. BEEF

FRESH

GROUND BEEF lb.

~ $149

FAMILY PAK 5·1bs. or More

•

DIAMOND SHEllED

ARGO CHUNK LIGHT

WALNUTS

TUNA

$1
5

3 6.5~•·$1

JOAN OF ARC EI.BERTA

THOROFARE

ROYAL SCOT

PEACH HALVES

ICE CREAMFI.AAI.L

MARGARINE

l-Ib.
Cans

BABY BEEF
CHUCK ROAST

lb.

BABY BEEF
ROUND STEAK

09
$
lb. '

3·k· 1

$1
2

HUNT'S

REYMERS

5

•

Pkgs.

KETCHUP

3

2% MILK

99~

Gallon
Plastic

of evergreens, flowering and

FRESH HEAD

ornamental shrubs.

LEnUCE

Cans

LIMIT
3

l-Ib.
Pkg.

99cu':"
Z&gt;.

14·01.

Btls.

$1

l-Ib.
13-oz.
Cans

$1
2

,

.

,, ::: ~·

14-oz.
Cans

2

Y2-Gal.
Pkg.

J9c

LIMIT
2

JOAN OF ARC
CREAM STYLE orCOR
WHOLE KERNEL .

BLENND
Qt.

.

lndlldes
W. Ya.
lew. Tax

4

1-lb.$
l·oz.
· Cans

1

LIMIT

4

$1
3
l-Ib .
Pkgs.

,
DORA NT 1

1

r .'

,·• .,,

I.

'

'

3

STATE FARE SLICED

WHITE BREAD ·

3

l:!~:

$1,
---

Loaves
Limit 3

KEEBLfR ZEST A

SALTINES
1-lb. Pic g.

loaf

Limit OM Con Per Coupon
Valid Thru Sat .. Oct. •. lt75

Valid Thru Sot •• Oct. 4, 1975
Limit On. CoupOn Per Cust'amar

BREAD
20 oz.

Regular Retail Without Coupon- 67•

Rt~~ular Retail Without Coupon-12.09
Limit One Pkg. Per Coupon

Limit One Coupon Per Cu1tomer

VALUA

COUPO

.29~
..

~·

$

LIMIT

1kz. Aero Can

SMELUER GARDEN . CENTER
OPEN 9 TO 8 WEEKDAYS
SUNDAY 1 TO 6
4 MILES )VEST OF GALLIPOLIS ON U. S. 35

lb.

CANS

FLAVORITE

Shi.pping, Installation Extra'

,
• Sale Ends Nov. 26, 1975
SGti#taction Guarant..cl or Your Monty Back

'

I 0 FOI89c

~~:7,:~r GR
AT NO EXTRA CHAROf
YOUR CHOICE 01 THESE cun,

HOT
SLICED
DOGS
:aACON
•
12-oz. Pkg .
12-oz. Pkg •

BIRDSEYE FROZEN

9oz.

303
SIZE

I

.

we:stern BartleH PEARS

c·

bad weather begins.

Sea111 llaa a Credit Plan to Suit Most Every Need
'
p"r ices are Cat alo9 'Prices ..

'

MciNTOSH APPLES ••••

RIGHT GUA~D

.·

'

ARMDUA .4
U.S. GOVT. INSP.

;

Upvent and direct vent
model8 in singic and
dual BTUH capacities. · .

'

• ••••

FRESH LEAN GROUND BEEF

We have received a fresh supply

Save '25 to '40
on Gas-Burning
Wall Furnaces
.

'

! TO!(A YGRAPES • •

Rea Ripe Slicing TOMATOES

BORDEN'S

~

FROM SPECIAL PACKAGES
OF ARM OUR STAR BACON
ON PURCHASE OF AN'r'

I

ARMOURtrSTAR BEEF-U.S. GOVT.INSP.

OUR MEAT EXPERTS
WILL CUT TO TOUR ORDER

I~ COUPON: I~ COUPON

(

l Sears 1 Imp~ovement •

,SAVE20~1
. y

GRAPEFRUIT
5·1b. BAG

Stock Up &amp; Save!

Home

Drug Co.

WHITE

'

•

DUTTON

Head

CANNED GOODS SALE

!•

.

Boneless Shoulder Roasts 01ua. , •• •· 51 39
Boneless Stew Beef •.. , ••. . , •••. 51 39
Boneless Shank For Stew ....... •· 5 139
Boneless Chuc:k For Stew , , •. , .. ~. 5 149
• $tea ks a...IAnoltoR
Bo ne Iess Swtss
o.. 1nc1t n.1c11 •• n.. $149

BUSH TRUCI&lt;LOAD

:

-, · SALE!

$159

Family Pak
2-lbs. or More

•

.

Nt.

ARMOUR tr STAR BEEF

Picnic honors anniversary

•
••
•
••• Be sure to see our •••
•

.

lb.

II;· SARAH CARSEY

•

SAL

ARMOUR-trSTARIIIF ·

Hazing ·introduces
students to school
that requirement. Many of
GALLJPOL!S - Pacifiers, the ca ndles had to be relit.
funny hats and 54 student
When the walk was finally
nur&gt;es bound together by completed, the nurse s went
stnng in a ca ndlelight walk back to their dorm where a
aro und Holzer Medi ca l candle was passed around
Ce nter Thursday evening until it reached a junior who
culminated the hazing of read a serious poem. Affreshmen nurses by their terwards, the day and the
upper classmen.
hazing were finished, and the
The junior class of the freshmen nurses were ofHolzer Medical Center School ficially initiated .
of Nursing began its official
The hazing of freshmen
hazing of the entering fresh- nurses began about 1963,
men Monday when the new according to reports. No one
students . registered . On seems to know why it began
Monday evening, the students or really what it means exwere introduced to their "Big cept that it started at a time
Sisters" who were to take when hazing was popular on
care of them during the week . college campuses everyThe important day was where.
Thursday. Officially call ed
The older nurses at Holzer
F'OURTEEN-YEAR.OLD ALAN STACK PERFORMS the classic fiddle favorite
' ' Funny Hats Day, ' ' the Medical
Center
who
" Orange Blossom Special" when HOCKING VALLEY BLUEGRASS presents FROG
st ud e nts received "funn y graduated from the School of
STACK AND THE GREENHORNS Tuesday, Sept. 30 at 8p .m . on WOUB TV 20 and WO UC
hats" which they had to wear Nursing report that hazing
TV 44.
lhe entire day . They also has tamed down considerably
possessed pacifiers which in the past 10 years. During
Gloria, Coolville ; Mr . and they had to place in their the period when hazing was
Mrs. Wilbert Barber. Reeds- mouth each time they passed popular, it was a severe
ville; Mr . and Mrs. Oscar a junior class member .
experience . They were sent
REEDSVILLE - A picnic Delbert Barber on the ir 6ls t Miles, Larry Chike, Buckeye
Thursday evening was the on treasure hunts for items
was held at the Forked Run wedding anniversary.
Lake; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth climax to the day's activ ities. that were almost impossible
State Park las~ Sunday
Attending were Mr . and Barber
and
Tommie, The st udents were tied to find, were instructed to go
honoring Mr . and Mrs . Mrs. Jerry Barber and Hebron; Mr . and Mrs . together in a line with a in to the homes of people they
' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . George Buckley, Reedsville; flim sy string. They rece iv- did not know, wore bows in
Mr . a nd Mrs . Roger Hoff- ed
a
lighted
cand le their hair, and were forced
•
IN THE
• man, Christi and Michael, from their " bib sis- into other embarrassing
•
Chester;
Miss
Debbie ter," and were told to situations.
•
SILVER BRIDGE= Stephenson, Coolville; Terry start walking. But that wasn't Even though hazing is less
e
e Covert, Hebron; and Duane as easy as it sounds. They had rigid these days , it still serves
•
PLAZA
• Barber, Reedsville.
to walk around the hospital as a means of introducing
without breaking the string or new students to the School of
losing the flam e on their Nursin g and their classcandle. If the string broke, it mates .
URGED TO ATTEND
meant the class would fall
MIDDLEPORT Dr . apart before training was
Hanek,
director
of over, and if a student's candle
PRESCRIPTION
psychological services at lost its flame , it meant that
Ohio University will be gues t the nurse would never make AND SURGICAL
speaker Tuesday evening at it through school.
The result was an hour long Support Center
e
Q
a 7:30p.m. at the TOPS (Take
• • • • e • e e e e e e e e e • • • • • • • • • • -• •- Off Pounds Sensibly) meeting walk around the hospital
at the American Legion Hall building in small, cautious
•
in Middleport . All members steps. It see med that no
6: 30 to B 30 Daily
are urged to attend and take a matter how slow the students
11 00 to 4: 00 Sunday
guest. Anyone interested in walked, it was still too fast.
Wheel Chairs
losing weight is urged to As many of the hospital
Walkers
attend since Dr. Hanek will patients watched from their
Crutches and Canes
be speaking on weight con- windows,
the
juniors
Back Braces
trol.
repeatedly instructed
Bedside
Commodes
the freshmen , that they were
Support
Stockings
going to have to walk slower
Trusses
PLEASANT VALLEY
or the string would break.
Traction
Equipment
DISCHARGES - Chester
It was much easier to slow
Elastic Supports
R. Green, Point Pleas.ant; the walkers' pace, however ,
Dress1 .
Mrs. Gerald Barrett and son, · than keep their candles
• •
\
Vinton; Mrs. Henry H. lighted in Thursday evening's
Plantz, Gallipolis Ferry; cool, breezy air. It was
Paul ·Wayne Hart, Letart; almost impossible to meet
Mrs. Bobby Sturgell and
daughter, Gallipolis; Sara
Clark, Gallipolis; Mrs. John
"Your
Edwards, Mason; Bernie
Swisher , Point Pleasant;
Prescription
ASK TOWED
Mrs.
Vernon
Clifton,
Drug Store"
POMEROY - A marriage
Gallipolis ; Clarence Smith,
license was issued to Patrick
Save
to
on all'-Mount
Apple Grove; Emil Huffman,
992-3106
Alan Hill, 22, 'Middleport, and
Point
Pleasant
;
Ernest
El~ctric Baseboard Heaters
Grimm, Letart and Elmer Nancy Jean Thompson , 22,
Middleport, U.
Pomeroy. .
Henson,
Buffalo.
Pre-wired units available in 2 foot incre-

•

ARMOUR* STAR-U.S. GOvT.INSP.

We reMr¥• tM right
to limit quantltl .. on
aU ltenu In this a4.

•
·' .
. .I'

I '

..

�•
.

I

-' I

,.

I •
12 -';- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 28, 1975

••

Series sponsors bluegrass group
Seve nteen -year~ ld Jimmy
Stack is lead singer and
g uitarist for the gr ou p .
Barbara Stack, 15-yea rs-&lt;Jld,
suppor ts the band on rhythm
guitar. Her back-up voca ls
com bine with those of brother
Alan. a 14-yea r-&lt;Jid awardwinning bluegrass fiddl er.
Eleven-year- o ld Cl i nt
Ri chards of Newark picks

McARTHUR - The Stack
family of Vinton County will
perform on its O':"n public
television speci~l . Tuesday,
Sept. 30 at 8 p.m. wh en
Hocking Valley Bl uegra ss
presents Frog Stack and the
Greenhorns on WOUB TV 20
and WOUC TV 44 .
The group was recorded in
concert
at
the
Oh io
University Forum Theater in
Athens last May. Master of
Ceremonies for the group is
" Frog·· Stack, a veteran
bulldozer operator who
organi zes , SUJH' r vises and
generally ramrods an exceptionally talented grcup of
yotmg bluegrass musicians.

b3n jo t o ent husi as tic ap-

pl&lt;mse ror hi s five -st ring
s olos.

B&lt;.~ ss

· play er

Br e t

Alman, also from Vinton
County, is 16.
This young g roup 's interest
in the so-called New Grass
music or recent years is
reflected in their choice of
material , which includes

" Fastest Grass Alive ," made
popular by the Osborne
Brothers, a nd the Country
Gentlemen ·hits " Fox on the
Run " an d ·' Rebe l Soldier."
The program also feH tur es
traditional bluegrass pieces
like "Cripple Cree k," Bill
Monroe's "Gold Rush "· and a
blue-ribbon rendition of the
classic fiddling contes t
favorite "Orange Blossom
Special."
Hocking Valley Bluegrass
is a production of WOUB
television, Athens and is
funded in part by a grant
from th e Central Educationa l
Network . Exec . Producer :
David ll . Liroff. ProducerDirector : John Harnack.

STORE HOURS
SUPER MARKETS

MON.-SAT.
"

8 AM-10 PM

_____...;!!1111........_________...~~:::=--~N:o:-~IOid

/

10 A.M.-10 P.M. SUNDAY
FRESHMEN PREPARE FOR WALK - Jan Elliott,
president of the junior class at Holzer Medical Center
School of Nursing, lights candle belonging to entering
freshman Cindy Ghearing. Fifty-four new s tudent nurses
walked around the hospital Thursday evening bound by
string and carrying lighted candles as port of hazing
activities sponsored by the juniors.

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, OHIO

to ciMiera.

BON

OPEN DAILY 9 TIL 9 -CLOSED SUNDAY
252 THIRD AVENUE-GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

• PRICES GOOD THRU ·
ocr. 4, 1975

SBE
U.l. OOVT. INSP.

AVENUE-PT. PlEASANT, W. VA.

BOIIILISS

CHUCK

29

fLAT

em

U.S. GOVT. INSP.

CUBE STEAKS

a.d Monday for
special End-OfMon' t h s·a I I

:

•

lb.

l

•Cut Green Beans
'i
'I
eShellie Beans
'
•Chili Hot Beans
•Kidney Beans
........
•Chopped Kraut
. . .. ~
eTumip Greens
•Kale Greens
•White or Golden Hominy
•Showboat Pork &amp; Beans
•Showboat Peas

'3

'6

W

ments·up·to 'lt&gt; feet long.· Power ratings from
500 UP,_to ~,QOO watts. Qlean, quiet.
. •,

•

•

-j ' •

•

It IS TIME TO DO YOUR

. ; Save '8.00
· ... -·. uu Wall-Mount
Electric Heaters

FALL PLANTING.

· B'~ilt-i·n rh~rmost$t ·
holds temperature setting. With fan .
·

.

'

SHOP AT SEARS E:::::ls
,
' Silver Bridge Plazp
AN~ SAVE . ~ '
PH.446·277Q .
. . .
·.,
'" ~
' ~ .
' . ..
'
.

.. · ~ . • ~~,aQUOC&amp;.AN~C9·

·

69c
GREENWOOD Sliced or Cut

COOL WHIP

BEETS

Cont.

49c

D CHUCK

•
•
•
•

• FROM SPE CiAL PACt&lt; AGES OF
• A.i'lM OU~ STAR HOT DOGS
O N PURCHA SE OF ANY

CHUCK s~.:?~g~R
~109

With llatunl
Juices
17 to 20-lb.

.•

• OIUQFOiffiW

U.S. GOVT. INSP.

•
•

U.S. GOVT, INSP.

WHOLE-BONELESS

-ILISSIWIIIITIAll
-ILISSIHOULDII IOASTS
IONIUSS fAMILT SHAIS
CUll STUIS

• GIOUMD CHUCI

•

GROUND
BEEF

3 lbs.

BIRDSEYE FROZEN VEGETABLES

or More

lb.

I!

Broccoli Spears, Cauliflower
Fordhook Lima Beans

"

.heroge

MADE WITH U.S. GOVT. INSP. BEEF

FRESH

GROUND BEEF lb.

~ $149

FAMILY PAK 5·1bs. or More

•

DIAMOND SHEllED

ARGO CHUNK LIGHT

WALNUTS

TUNA

$1
5

3 6.5~•·$1

JOAN OF ARC EI.BERTA

THOROFARE

ROYAL SCOT

PEACH HALVES

ICE CREAMFI.AAI.L

MARGARINE

l-Ib.
Cans

BABY BEEF
CHUCK ROAST

lb.

BABY BEEF
ROUND STEAK

09
$
lb. '

3·k· 1

$1
2

HUNT'S

REYMERS

5

•

Pkgs.

KETCHUP

3

2% MILK

99~

Gallon
Plastic

of evergreens, flowering and

FRESH HEAD

ornamental shrubs.

LEnUCE

Cans

LIMIT
3

l-Ib.
Pkg.

99cu':"
Z&gt;.

14·01.

Btls.

$1

l-Ib.
13-oz.
Cans

$1
2

,

.

,, ::: ~·

14-oz.
Cans

2

Y2-Gal.
Pkg.

J9c

LIMIT
2

JOAN OF ARC
CREAM STYLE orCOR
WHOLE KERNEL .

BLENND
Qt.

.

lndlldes
W. Ya.
lew. Tax

4

1-lb.$
l·oz.
· Cans

1

LIMIT

4

$1
3
l-Ib .
Pkgs.

,
DORA NT 1

1

r .'

,·• .,,

I.

'

'

3

STATE FARE SLICED

WHITE BREAD ·

3

l:!~:

$1,
---

Loaves
Limit 3

KEEBLfR ZEST A

SALTINES
1-lb. Pic g.

loaf

Limit OM Con Per Coupon
Valid Thru Sat .. Oct. •. lt75

Valid Thru Sot •• Oct. 4, 1975
Limit On. CoupOn Per Cust'amar

BREAD
20 oz.

Regular Retail Without Coupon- 67•

Rt~~ular Retail Without Coupon-12.09
Limit One Pkg. Per Coupon

Limit One Coupon Per Cu1tomer

VALUA

COUPO

.29~
..

~·

$

LIMIT

1kz. Aero Can

SMELUER GARDEN . CENTER
OPEN 9 TO 8 WEEKDAYS
SUNDAY 1 TO 6
4 MILES )VEST OF GALLIPOLIS ON U. S. 35

lb.

CANS

FLAVORITE

Shi.pping, Installation Extra'

,
• Sale Ends Nov. 26, 1975
SGti#taction Guarant..cl or Your Monty Back

'

I 0 FOI89c

~~:7,:~r GR
AT NO EXTRA CHAROf
YOUR CHOICE 01 THESE cun,

HOT
SLICED
DOGS
:aACON
•
12-oz. Pkg .
12-oz. Pkg •

BIRDSEYE FROZEN

9oz.

303
SIZE

I

.

we:stern BartleH PEARS

c·

bad weather begins.

Sea111 llaa a Credit Plan to Suit Most Every Need
'
p"r ices are Cat alo9 'Prices ..

'

MciNTOSH APPLES ••••

RIGHT GUA~D

.·

'

ARMDUA .4
U.S. GOVT. INSP.

;

Upvent and direct vent
model8 in singic and
dual BTUH capacities. · .

'

• ••••

FRESH LEAN GROUND BEEF

We have received a fresh supply

Save '25 to '40
on Gas-Burning
Wall Furnaces
.

'

! TO!(A YGRAPES • •

Rea Ripe Slicing TOMATOES

BORDEN'S

~

FROM SPECIAL PACKAGES
OF ARM OUR STAR BACON
ON PURCHASE OF AN'r'

I

ARMOURtrSTAR BEEF-U.S. GOVT.INSP.

OUR MEAT EXPERTS
WILL CUT TO TOUR ORDER

I~ COUPON: I~ COUPON

(

l Sears 1 Imp~ovement •

,SAVE20~1
. y

GRAPEFRUIT
5·1b. BAG

Stock Up &amp; Save!

Home

Drug Co.

WHITE

'

•

DUTTON

Head

CANNED GOODS SALE

!•

.

Boneless Shoulder Roasts 01ua. , •• •· 51 39
Boneless Stew Beef •.. , ••. . , •••. 51 39
Boneless Shank For Stew ....... •· 5 139
Boneless Chuc:k For Stew , , •. , .. ~. 5 149
• $tea ks a...IAnoltoR
Bo ne Iess Swtss
o.. 1nc1t n.1c11 •• n.. $149

BUSH TRUCI&lt;LOAD

:

-, · SALE!

$159

Family Pak
2-lbs. or More

•

.

Nt.

ARMOUR tr STAR BEEF

Picnic honors anniversary

•
••
•
••• Be sure to see our •••
•

.

lb.

II;· SARAH CARSEY

•

SAL

ARMOUR-trSTARIIIF ·

Hazing ·introduces
students to school
that requirement. Many of
GALLJPOL!S - Pacifiers, the ca ndles had to be relit.
funny hats and 54 student
When the walk was finally
nur&gt;es bound together by completed, the nurse s went
stnng in a ca ndlelight walk back to their dorm where a
aro und Holzer Medi ca l candle was passed around
Ce nter Thursday evening until it reached a junior who
culminated the hazing of read a serious poem. Affreshmen nurses by their terwards, the day and the
upper classmen.
hazing were finished, and the
The junior class of the freshmen nurses were ofHolzer Medical Center School ficially initiated .
of Nursing began its official
The hazing of freshmen
hazing of the entering fresh- nurses began about 1963,
men Monday when the new according to reports. No one
students . registered . On seems to know why it began
Monday evening, the students or really what it means exwere introduced to their "Big cept that it started at a time
Sisters" who were to take when hazing was popular on
care of them during the week . college campuses everyThe important day was where.
Thursday. Officially call ed
The older nurses at Holzer
F'OURTEEN-YEAR.OLD ALAN STACK PERFORMS the classic fiddle favorite
' ' Funny Hats Day, ' ' the Medical
Center
who
" Orange Blossom Special" when HOCKING VALLEY BLUEGRASS presents FROG
st ud e nts received "funn y graduated from the School of
STACK AND THE GREENHORNS Tuesday, Sept. 30 at 8p .m . on WOUB TV 20 and WO UC
hats" which they had to wear Nursing report that hazing
TV 44.
lhe entire day . They also has tamed down considerably
possessed pacifiers which in the past 10 years. During
Gloria, Coolville ; Mr . and they had to place in their the period when hazing was
Mrs. Wilbert Barber. Reeds- mouth each time they passed popular, it was a severe
ville; Mr . and Mrs. Oscar a junior class member .
experience . They were sent
REEDSVILLE - A picnic Delbert Barber on the ir 6ls t Miles, Larry Chike, Buckeye
Thursday evening was the on treasure hunts for items
was held at the Forked Run wedding anniversary.
Lake; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth climax to the day's activ ities. that were almost impossible
State Park las~ Sunday
Attending were Mr . and Barber
and
Tommie, The st udents were tied to find, were instructed to go
honoring Mr . and Mrs . Mrs. Jerry Barber and Hebron; Mr . and Mrs . together in a line with a in to the homes of people they
' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . George Buckley, Reedsville; flim sy string. They rece iv- did not know, wore bows in
Mr . a nd Mrs . Roger Hoff- ed
a
lighted
cand le their hair, and were forced
•
IN THE
• man, Christi and Michael, from their " bib sis- into other embarrassing
•
Chester;
Miss
Debbie ter," and were told to situations.
•
SILVER BRIDGE= Stephenson, Coolville; Terry start walking. But that wasn't Even though hazing is less
e
e Covert, Hebron; and Duane as easy as it sounds. They had rigid these days , it still serves
•
PLAZA
• Barber, Reedsville.
to walk around the hospital as a means of introducing
without breaking the string or new students to the School of
losing the flam e on their Nursin g and their classcandle. If the string broke, it mates .
URGED TO ATTEND
meant the class would fall
MIDDLEPORT Dr . apart before training was
Hanek,
director
of over, and if a student's candle
PRESCRIPTION
psychological services at lost its flame , it meant that
Ohio University will be gues t the nurse would never make AND SURGICAL
speaker Tuesday evening at it through school.
The result was an hour long Support Center
e
Q
a 7:30p.m. at the TOPS (Take
• • • • e • e e e e e e e e e • • • • • • • • • • -• •- Off Pounds Sensibly) meeting walk around the hospital
at the American Legion Hall building in small, cautious
•
in Middleport . All members steps. It see med that no
6: 30 to B 30 Daily
are urged to attend and take a matter how slow the students
11 00 to 4: 00 Sunday
guest. Anyone interested in walked, it was still too fast.
Wheel Chairs
losing weight is urged to As many of the hospital
Walkers
attend since Dr. Hanek will patients watched from their
Crutches and Canes
be speaking on weight con- windows,
the
juniors
Back Braces
trol.
repeatedly instructed
Bedside
Commodes
the freshmen , that they were
Support
Stockings
going to have to walk slower
Trusses
PLEASANT VALLEY
or the string would break.
Traction
Equipment
DISCHARGES - Chester
It was much easier to slow
Elastic Supports
R. Green, Point Pleas.ant; the walkers' pace, however ,
Dress1 .
Mrs. Gerald Barrett and son, · than keep their candles
• •
\
Vinton; Mrs. Henry H. lighted in Thursday evening's
Plantz, Gallipolis Ferry; cool, breezy air. It was
Paul ·Wayne Hart, Letart; almost impossible to meet
Mrs. Bobby Sturgell and
daughter, Gallipolis; Sara
Clark, Gallipolis; Mrs. John
"Your
Edwards, Mason; Bernie
Swisher , Point Pleasant;
Prescription
ASK TOWED
Mrs.
Vernon
Clifton,
Drug Store"
POMEROY - A marriage
Gallipolis ; Clarence Smith,
license was issued to Patrick
Save
to
on all'-Mount
Apple Grove; Emil Huffman,
992-3106
Alan Hill, 22, 'Middleport, and
Point
Pleasant
;
Ernest
El~ctric Baseboard Heaters
Grimm, Letart and Elmer Nancy Jean Thompson , 22,
Middleport, U.
Pomeroy. .
Henson,
Buffalo.
Pre-wired units available in 2 foot incre-

•

ARMOUR* STAR-U.S. GOvT.INSP.

We reMr¥• tM right
to limit quantltl .. on
aU ltenu In this a4.

•
·' .
. .I'

I '

..

�..

•

I,

'.

14 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel. Sunday. Sept. 28, 1975

Dr. Levernier speaks at meeting
equipment for the Pediatri cs
Departme nt
at
Ho lzer
Medical Center .
On Oct. 10, II and 12, the
wives group will assist the
Jaycees m the sa le of

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
pediatr icla n ,
Dr .
Jim

Levernier, was gue~ speaker
at the September meeting of
the Gallipolis and Jaycee
Wives.
Topic of discussion was
Accident Awarene ss. Dr.
Levernier covered suc h items
as poisons, drowning:s, traffic
accide nts and everyday home
incidents . Education in the
preventi on of &lt;:~ccidents,
occuring to millions of
children each year, was
determmed lo be essen tial.
An example of steps which
could be taken is a periodical
check of medicines and
household cleaners. Ma king
certain they

~re

Bicen tennia l Ca lendars at the
Bob Evans Farm Festival.
Dates for region a nd state
meetings were a nnounced
with the next state convention
10-12.
in Ath ens Oct.

Preside nt Tabor an no un ced
the appointment of Mrs . Tim
Bickers as secreta ry for the
remainder of the year.
The cl ub 's next meeting
will be Oct. 21 a t J a ycee Hall.

" TJ. 1 ~ %,o" is
'Tom or- ro s Mr/J
u.&gt;

out of the

child's rea ch. Awareness is
the forerunner of prevention
and ~e veral method s of in forming the public were
discussed b) the club as
possible projects tcr the ye ar .

mcPting
followed Dr. J.e ve rnicr's tulk
and fi nal pl ans wert&gt;
discussed for the club's First
An nual Harves t Charity Fla il
Oct. 25 at the Elks Club .
Tickets for this event were
distributed to members for
public sale. A li mited number
of tickets are to be sold and
anyone interested may ca ll
Mrs. Jim Stutes at 446-2885 or
Mrs. AJ Harris, 446-9625 or
see any Jaycee wife .
A

bus iness

In other business, Mrs. AJ
Harris announced that the
club will sponsor a Halloween
party for the students of The
Guiding Ha nds School.
President Mrs. Mel Tabor
also announced that the Giant
Color ing Books will be sold
again in November . This is a
state Jaycee project and the
club 's profits from last year ·s
sales were used to purchase

REGISTRATION IS UN DE RWAY FOR ALL GIRLS INTE RESTED IN BECOMI NG
Girl Scout.c;. Deadline fo r reg istra ti on is Oc:t. I. For more information, contact G(l llia Counl y
Ser vice Unit Representative Irene Cla rk at 446-0025. Ca de ltc leaders in the Ga llipolis area
are Ma rta Dean and Jack ie Knight.
GO TO P' ARK
RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur l.ee Miller, Terr ie
Miller and son Tony, spen t
last Sunday a t Camden Park,
Huntington, There they sa w
Mr. and Mr s. Robert A.
Garner, for m er reside nt s.
Ga rner was a band direc tor
for Rutla nd Hi gh School at
one tim e. Visiti ng recently
wi th the Miller fami ly were
Mr. and Mrs. Oral Bowen of
Goshe n, Ind.

aud i ti o n s ,.
"~ "' ' " "c .

CA UTIOUS FRESHMEN - These fr eshmen student
nurses are taking car eful steps in order to keep their
ca ndles lighted a nd not break the string which bounds
them with the other 54 freshmen pa rticipa ting in hazing
activities Thursday evening at H olzer Medical Center .
Left to right are Erin Smales, Carla Morga n and Marylu
Mills. (Stor y a nd another picture on page 12)

th e total look
for fall . ..

'

Th is one h ds 11 OJII -ope rl

~ l yiHlg,

PILLO W

PUFF1comfort, s.t &lt;~cked heel Mc~d e
of softgen uu1o: lea t her'. Rew,1rJ lei:.
you go anywhert:, any t ime in total

Sunday reception plans
announced by auxiliary

comfort and up to th e rnorncnt st ylmg .

CAMEL
GREEN

..jl

RUST

Marguerite S Shoes
1

BEnY OHLINGER
102 E. MAIN

POMEROY

I'A RKERSBURG - The
weddin g of Miss Susan
Ter esa Acors, daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. John Paul
Acors, Rt. 2, Little Hoc king,
and Steven . Mar ion Reed,
so n of Mr . a nd Mrs.
Marv in Reed , Ree dsville,
was an event of Aug. 4 at 7
p .m. in the St . Margare t
Ma ry Catholi c Ch urc h,
Par kersburg, W. Va.
The double r in g ceremony
was perform ed by the Rev.
Fr . Joseph O'Reilly. Pastel
daisies and ca rn ations with
ca nde la br a a nd
pal ms
decora ted the chur ch. Mrs.
Wi lliam Ke leher was organis t
and accompanied the Folk
Choi r in wedding selections.
Give n in marri age by _her
father , the bride wore a gown
of polyester crepe tri mmed
around the wais t, sleeves and
down the fron t with alencon
lace. A Juliet cr own held the
bride's veil which was edged
with th e same lace. Her only
jewelry was a white gold
heart-shaped necklace with a
diamo nd center borrow ed
fr om the groom 's cousin ,
Te resa Smith , Re eds vill e.
She carried a cascade of
pas tel daisies and carnation s.
Serving as ma id of hon or
was Mi ss J ane 'Burdette,
cousin of the br ide, Pa rkersburg. Bridesmaids were Kim
He ll ei n , Be lpr e; Bridget
Mall oy,
Am y
Parr y,
Par ke rs burg and Te resa
Smith .
Craig Reed of Reedsville,
served as bes t man for his
brother . Ushers were John
Richard Acors, Belpre and
William Mich ae l Acor s ,
brothers of the bride. Juni or
ushers were James Reed,

'

broth er of the groom and
Mark Smith, cousin of the
groom . Acolytes were Tom
Higgs and James Taylor ,
Parkersburg .
A reception followed in St.
Margaret Mary Ch ur ch Hall .
Mar y Ann Hornbeck, Belpre,
sister of the bride, presided at
the guest registry .
Ta bles a t the reception
were cove red with pastel
cl oth s wit h whi te lace
ove rl ays an d lar ge s atin
bows . Pastel flow er s and
ca nde labra com ple ted the
motif. The large wedding
ca ke was placed above a
nowing blue fountain .
Aids were the Stepping
Stones of Ohio Valley Grange
assis ted by Mrs. William
Mic hael Acors, Mrs. John
Ri chard _Acors, sis ters-in law
of th e bri de and Mrs.
Ger aldin e Villers , Colwnbus,
a unt of th e bride.
F or a wedding trip to Sal t
Fork Lodge, Cambridg e, the
bride c hanged into a light
blue suit. She wore a pink
rose bud corsa ge. They now
r es ide a t Rt. 2, Li ttl e
Hockin g.
The bride is a 1975 graduate
of Parke rsburg Hi gh SChool,
atte nde d the Emergency
Medical Tec hnicia ns class at
Parke r s bur g Community
College, and, is a licensed
r eg is t e r e d ,; E .M.T. She
be longs to the Folk Choir at
St. Margaret Mary Church.
The bridegroom graduated
from Eastern High SChool in
1973, where he wa s ac tive in
football. He has belonged to
several rock groups, and is
currently employed at Union
Carbid e Ferroalloys Plant,
Ma rietta .

..'
'
....
'

RACIN E - A reception to
honor
Mrs.
Fl or ence
new
E ighth
Ri chard s,
Distri ct president, was a n·
noun ced for Sunday at the
Ame rican Leg ion hall in
Middlepor t
when
the
American Legion Auxiliary
of Ra cin e Post 602 met
Tuesday night.
The reception will be held
from 2 to 4 p .m. and several
members of the Racine unit
will assist. Also announced

was the fall dis tric t conference at Junction City Oct.
9 with Mrs. Lyle Roush,
speaker.
The unit made a donation to
the Meigs County Council on
Aging. A thank-you note was
r ead from Mrs. Jane
Ba lzhizer , De par t ment of
Ohio Auxiliary president, for
a gift presented to her at the
Milford reception . Mrs.
Myr tle Walker attended.
Mrs. Mary Roush has been

GALLIPOLIS - Ye Olde
Village Garden Club held its
open mee tin g Thurs da y
e vening with President J oyce
McKean calling the m eeting
to order .
Shar on
Kittr e ll
led
devoti ons and Gloria Young
read the following tips for the
month. Cuttings of Coleus,
ivy and other plants to be
gr ow n indoo r s s hould be
made and rooted while the
a re
growing
pl a nts
vigor ously. Foliage killed by
frost cannot be rooted.
It is not too Ia te to reseed
large bare spots in the lawn .
Prepare soil to a depth of at
leas t three inches and sow
high quality seed of the
varieties growing in the rest
of the lawn. Keep the area
moist until the grass is
growing well . A light mulch
of weed-free s traw will
conserve mois ture and
appointed county chairperson
for membership. It was noted
that the Racine unit reached
goal as of Sept. 2 with 86 paid
members . In Columbus
Saturday to attend a school of
instruc tion was Mrs. Walker,
the District 8 junior activities
chairperson . Another box of
ribbons ha s been sent to the
Dayton Veterans Hospital for
rugs.
Mrs . Frances Roberts
opened the m ee ting with
prayer. Mrs. Julia Norris,
president, had c harge, and
tentative plans were made
for an election day dinner
with soup , sandwiches and
pie to be served.
The traveling prize donated
by Mrs. Roberts was won by
Mrs. Norris. Potluck refreshments were served.

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Get t~~ full facts on this . important new
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.
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· Rt . 1, Minersville, o.
Ph: 985-3582

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Oct. 13 will be open houle
and the candidate~ .for bo8rd
of elec tion will be present to
a nswer questions and give
br ief talks.

• .oo
NO. 1

'.

'I

prevent crusting and packing
after hard rains.
Con tijlue removing spent
bl oom s of late-blooming
annuals and perennials .
Some species and varieties
will continue blooming until
killed by frost if spent blooms
are removed promptly and
the plants are watered during
droughts.
Most species and varieties
of lily bulbs can be planted
now . They grow best in welldrained soil in full sunshine .
All pesticides should be
kept tightly sealed .in their
original containers and
stored out of the r each of
children. Uquld pesticides
and fertilizers should be kept
in tightly capped original
containers and stored where
they will not freeze .
Susie \i 'O of Susie 's
Greenhouse
talked
on
macrame hangings . She
explained the different types
of jute and in the process of
making a macrame hanging
for a flower pot, she
demonstrated square , half,
twist, and Chinese knots.
Susie stressed the fact that
any container with live plants ·
to be hung from the ceiling
should be hunt at least two
feet below the ceiling or the
heat will kill the plants.
After
the
program,
members of Ye Olde Village
Garden Club and Mrs. Melvin
Smeltzer, Mrs. Harley
George, Mrs. Jake Moore,
Miss Marie Meal, Mrs. John
Reese, Mrs. Phillip Snyder of
the French City Garden Club,
and Mrs. Stanley Shaver and
Mrs. Marion Darnell of the
Wayside Garden Club enjoyed a social hour and
refreshments.

New disability income
plan has money I
back feature!

'

12 oz.
CANS

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a uction Nov. 22 at the Vinton
SChool.
A f!lembers hip drive is
underway . Cost is 50 ce n ts
per member unti l Nov. 10. •

CAMPBELL'S TOMATO SOUP,

"••' .

Gardening tips given
to Ye Olde Village

"Reward"
by

Reed-Acors married
in August ceremony

•

.

.

by the president, Mrs. Jo . Sandy Bur ris; treas ure r , troduced and he gave a brier discussed. DOris Coffee was
Ellen Brown. The 197&amp;-'16 Sharon Ma rcwn a nd Ways history of his life a nd then to obtain info r ma ti on on
officers were introduced . a nd Mea ns Chair person. · introduced the teachers .
selli ng T-shirts and ide nThey ~re vice president , Doris Coffee .
Ways to ra ise funds for tification tags . ·
AI Scarbe rry was in- classr oom supp lies was
Linda Smathers ; secretary,
The club decided to hold an

' t

CANS

�..

•

I,

'.

14 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel. Sunday. Sept. 28, 1975

Dr. Levernier speaks at meeting
equipment for the Pediatri cs
Departme nt
at
Ho lzer
Medical Center .
On Oct. 10, II and 12, the
wives group will assist the
Jaycees m the sa le of

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
pediatr icla n ,
Dr .
Jim

Levernier, was gue~ speaker
at the September meeting of
the Gallipolis and Jaycee
Wives.
Topic of discussion was
Accident Awarene ss. Dr.
Levernier covered suc h items
as poisons, drowning:s, traffic
accide nts and everyday home
incidents . Education in the
preventi on of &lt;:~ccidents,
occuring to millions of
children each year, was
determmed lo be essen tial.
An example of steps which
could be taken is a periodical
check of medicines and
household cleaners. Ma king
certain they

~re

Bicen tennia l Ca lendars at the
Bob Evans Farm Festival.
Dates for region a nd state
meetings were a nnounced
with the next state convention
10-12.
in Ath ens Oct.

Preside nt Tabor an no un ced
the appointment of Mrs . Tim
Bickers as secreta ry for the
remainder of the year.
The cl ub 's next meeting
will be Oct. 21 a t J a ycee Hall.

" TJ. 1 ~ %,o" is
'Tom or- ro s Mr/J
u.&gt;

out of the

child's rea ch. Awareness is
the forerunner of prevention
and ~e veral method s of in forming the public were
discussed b) the club as
possible projects tcr the ye ar .

mcPting
followed Dr. J.e ve rnicr's tulk
and fi nal pl ans wert&gt;
discussed for the club's First
An nual Harves t Charity Fla il
Oct. 25 at the Elks Club .
Tickets for this event were
distributed to members for
public sale. A li mited number
of tickets are to be sold and
anyone interested may ca ll
Mrs. Jim Stutes at 446-2885 or
Mrs. AJ Harris, 446-9625 or
see any Jaycee wife .
A

bus iness

In other business, Mrs. AJ
Harris announced that the
club will sponsor a Halloween
party for the students of The
Guiding Ha nds School.
President Mrs. Mel Tabor
also announced that the Giant
Color ing Books will be sold
again in November . This is a
state Jaycee project and the
club 's profits from last year ·s
sales were used to purchase

REGISTRATION IS UN DE RWAY FOR ALL GIRLS INTE RESTED IN BECOMI NG
Girl Scout.c;. Deadline fo r reg istra ti on is Oc:t. I. For more information, contact G(l llia Counl y
Ser vice Unit Representative Irene Cla rk at 446-0025. Ca de ltc leaders in the Ga llipolis area
are Ma rta Dean and Jack ie Knight.
GO TO P' ARK
RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur l.ee Miller, Terr ie
Miller and son Tony, spen t
last Sunday a t Camden Park,
Huntington, There they sa w
Mr. and Mr s. Robert A.
Garner, for m er reside nt s.
Ga rner was a band direc tor
for Rutla nd Hi gh School at
one tim e. Visiti ng recently
wi th the Miller fami ly were
Mr. and Mrs. Oral Bowen of
Goshe n, Ind.

aud i ti o n s ,.
"~ "' ' " "c .

CA UTIOUS FRESHMEN - These fr eshmen student
nurses are taking car eful steps in order to keep their
ca ndles lighted a nd not break the string which bounds
them with the other 54 freshmen pa rticipa ting in hazing
activities Thursday evening at H olzer Medical Center .
Left to right are Erin Smales, Carla Morga n and Marylu
Mills. (Stor y a nd another picture on page 12)

th e total look
for fall . ..

'

Th is one h ds 11 OJII -ope rl

~ l yiHlg,

PILLO W

PUFF1comfort, s.t &lt;~cked heel Mc~d e
of softgen uu1o: lea t her'. Rew,1rJ lei:.
you go anywhert:, any t ime in total

Sunday reception plans
announced by auxiliary

comfort and up to th e rnorncnt st ylmg .

CAMEL
GREEN

..jl

RUST

Marguerite S Shoes
1

BEnY OHLINGER
102 E. MAIN

POMEROY

I'A RKERSBURG - The
weddin g of Miss Susan
Ter esa Acors, daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. John Paul
Acors, Rt. 2, Little Hoc king,
and Steven . Mar ion Reed,
so n of Mr . a nd Mrs.
Marv in Reed , Ree dsville,
was an event of Aug. 4 at 7
p .m. in the St . Margare t
Ma ry Catholi c Ch urc h,
Par kersburg, W. Va.
The double r in g ceremony
was perform ed by the Rev.
Fr . Joseph O'Reilly. Pastel
daisies and ca rn ations with
ca nde la br a a nd
pal ms
decora ted the chur ch. Mrs.
Wi lliam Ke leher was organis t
and accompanied the Folk
Choi r in wedding selections.
Give n in marri age by _her
father , the bride wore a gown
of polyester crepe tri mmed
around the wais t, sleeves and
down the fron t with alencon
lace. A Juliet cr own held the
bride's veil which was edged
with th e same lace. Her only
jewelry was a white gold
heart-shaped necklace with a
diamo nd center borrow ed
fr om the groom 's cousin ,
Te resa Smith , Re eds vill e.
She carried a cascade of
pas tel daisies and carnation s.
Serving as ma id of hon or
was Mi ss J ane 'Burdette,
cousin of the br ide, Pa rkersburg. Bridesmaids were Kim
He ll ei n , Be lpr e; Bridget
Mall oy,
Am y
Parr y,
Par ke rs burg and Te resa
Smith .
Craig Reed of Reedsville,
served as bes t man for his
brother . Ushers were John
Richard Acors, Belpre and
William Mich ae l Acor s ,
brothers of the bride. Juni or
ushers were James Reed,

'

broth er of the groom and
Mark Smith, cousin of the
groom . Acolytes were Tom
Higgs and James Taylor ,
Parkersburg .
A reception followed in St.
Margaret Mary Ch ur ch Hall .
Mar y Ann Hornbeck, Belpre,
sister of the bride, presided at
the guest registry .
Ta bles a t the reception
were cove red with pastel
cl oth s wit h whi te lace
ove rl ays an d lar ge s atin
bows . Pastel flow er s and
ca nde labra com ple ted the
motif. The large wedding
ca ke was placed above a
nowing blue fountain .
Aids were the Stepping
Stones of Ohio Valley Grange
assis ted by Mrs. William
Mic hael Acors, Mrs. John
Ri chard _Acors, sis ters-in law
of th e bri de and Mrs.
Ger aldin e Villers , Colwnbus,
a unt of th e bride.
F or a wedding trip to Sal t
Fork Lodge, Cambridg e, the
bride c hanged into a light
blue suit. She wore a pink
rose bud corsa ge. They now
r es ide a t Rt. 2, Li ttl e
Hockin g.
The bride is a 1975 graduate
of Parke rsburg Hi gh SChool,
atte nde d the Emergency
Medical Tec hnicia ns class at
Parke r s bur g Community
College, and, is a licensed
r eg is t e r e d ,; E .M.T. She
be longs to the Folk Choir at
St. Margaret Mary Church.
The bridegroom graduated
from Eastern High SChool in
1973, where he wa s ac tive in
football. He has belonged to
several rock groups, and is
currently employed at Union
Carbid e Ferroalloys Plant,
Ma rietta .

..'
'
....
'

RACIN E - A reception to
honor
Mrs.
Fl or ence
new
E ighth
Ri chard s,
Distri ct president, was a n·
noun ced for Sunday at the
Ame rican Leg ion hall in
Middlepor t
when
the
American Legion Auxiliary
of Ra cin e Post 602 met
Tuesday night.
The reception will be held
from 2 to 4 p .m. and several
members of the Racine unit
will assist. Also announced

was the fall dis tric t conference at Junction City Oct.
9 with Mrs. Lyle Roush,
speaker.
The unit made a donation to
the Meigs County Council on
Aging. A thank-you note was
r ead from Mrs. Jane
Ba lzhizer , De par t ment of
Ohio Auxiliary president, for
a gift presented to her at the
Milford reception . Mrs.
Myr tle Walker attended.
Mrs. Mary Roush has been

GALLIPOLIS - Ye Olde
Village Garden Club held its
open mee tin g Thurs da y
e vening with President J oyce
McKean calling the m eeting
to order .
Shar on
Kittr e ll
led
devoti ons and Gloria Young
read the following tips for the
month. Cuttings of Coleus,
ivy and other plants to be
gr ow n indoo r s s hould be
made and rooted while the
a re
growing
pl a nts
vigor ously. Foliage killed by
frost cannot be rooted.
It is not too Ia te to reseed
large bare spots in the lawn .
Prepare soil to a depth of at
leas t three inches and sow
high quality seed of the
varieties growing in the rest
of the lawn. Keep the area
moist until the grass is
growing well . A light mulch
of weed-free s traw will
conserve mois ture and
appointed county chairperson
for membership. It was noted
that the Racine unit reached
goal as of Sept. 2 with 86 paid
members . In Columbus
Saturday to attend a school of
instruc tion was Mrs. Walker,
the District 8 junior activities
chairperson . Another box of
ribbons ha s been sent to the
Dayton Veterans Hospital for
rugs.
Mrs . Frances Roberts
opened the m ee ting with
prayer. Mrs. Julia Norris,
president, had c harge, and
tentative plans were made
for an election day dinner
with soup , sandwiches and
pie to be served.
The traveling prize donated
by Mrs. Roberts was won by
Mrs. Norris. Potluck refreshments were served.

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Get t~~ full facts on this . important new
protectiOn by calling me today ..

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Ph: 985-3582

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Oct. 13 will be open houle
and the candidate~ .for bo8rd
of elec tion will be present to
a nswer questions and give
br ief talks.

• .oo
NO. 1

'.

'I

prevent crusting and packing
after hard rains.
Con tijlue removing spent
bl oom s of late-blooming
annuals and perennials .
Some species and varieties
will continue blooming until
killed by frost if spent blooms
are removed promptly and
the plants are watered during
droughts.
Most species and varieties
of lily bulbs can be planted
now . They grow best in welldrained soil in full sunshine .
All pesticides should be
kept tightly sealed .in their
original containers and
stored out of the r each of
children. Uquld pesticides
and fertilizers should be kept
in tightly capped original
containers and stored where
they will not freeze .
Susie \i 'O of Susie 's
Greenhouse
talked
on
macrame hangings . She
explained the different types
of jute and in the process of
making a macrame hanging
for a flower pot, she
demonstrated square , half,
twist, and Chinese knots.
Susie stressed the fact that
any container with live plants ·
to be hung from the ceiling
should be hunt at least two
feet below the ceiling or the
heat will kill the plants.
After
the
program,
members of Ye Olde Village
Garden Club and Mrs. Melvin
Smeltzer, Mrs. Harley
George, Mrs. Jake Moore,
Miss Marie Meal, Mrs. John
Reese, Mrs. Phillip Snyder of
the French City Garden Club,
and Mrs. Stanley Shaver and
Mrs. Marion Darnell of the
Wayside Garden Club enjoyed a social hour and
refreshments.

New disability income
plan has money I
back feature!

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a uction Nov. 22 at the Vinton
SChool.
A f!lembers hip drive is
underway . Cost is 50 ce n ts
per member unti l Nov. 10. •

CAMPBELL'S TOMATO SOUP,

"••' .

Gardening tips given
to Ye Olde Village

"Reward"
by

Reed-Acors married
in August ceremony

•

.

.

by the president, Mrs. Jo . Sandy Bur ris; treas ure r , troduced and he gave a brier discussed. DOris Coffee was
Ellen Brown. The 197&amp;-'16 Sharon Ma rcwn a nd Ways history of his life a nd then to obtain info r ma ti on on
officers were introduced . a nd Mea ns Chair person. · introduced the teachers .
selli ng T-shirts and ide nThey ~re vice president , Doris Coffee .
Ways to ra ise funds for tification tags . ·
AI Scarbe rry was in- classr oom supp lies was
Linda Smathers ; secretary,
The club decided to hold an

' t

CANS

�,.

I

'

..,
'

J

16~ The Sunday Times- Sentinel. Sundav. Seot. 28, 1975

..

I.-------------------------~
.

l Dateline
I

!

•

,I . ,..,..._

Gallza

1

Viet veteran's gut
feeling saved Ford

I

By Hobart Wilson ·Jr.

DAILY
10 TO 9'
PLENTY FREE PARKING - PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY SEPTEMBER

c•••••a•••u•
SLIIPIIIG BAG

22 PIICI

SOCKET SE'I

---

o o , ·-

Heck's Reg. 114.88

'

NOW that most of the committee chairmen assignments
have been filled, Atty. Tom Moulton, co-chairman of Gallia's
1976 Bicentennial Celebration can start making definite plans
for next year's big event.

+++

TWENTY-TWO persons attended Thursday night 's initial
planning session. Not a bad turnout CO'l_Sidering it took, several
meetings 10 years ago to get that many Individuals out to
prepare for the Old French City's !75th anniversary.

.

+++

A LOT of good things can happen in the community if
everybody joins together to support the project during the next
12 months. It's going to require a lot of hard work by a lot of
individuals, but the community is well-known for similar
projects in tbe recent past, thus the 1976 celebration committee
has a solid foundation to begin with right off the bat.

+++

Heck's Reg. 115.99

· · Heck's Reg. 136.99

SI'OIITS DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.
Heck's Reg. $7.99

----•"'•zoo-

SPORTS DEPT.

C2425

MUIISIY
Delun fwtalurn include:

10Y2"•1~'12 "•4:Y•" cooking
area; dear-¥iaw gla11 ~:

thrH rock positions; dnp troy;
rnor-free and heat fret ~~ and
handles; chrorM finith in5ide
and out; tllel'fnOitol element
control up to 500"; heott. from

$239

JEWELRY

MODULAR and
SECTIONAL HOMES

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SPAR'IUS

WALL
CLOCK

Hack's Reg.
$32.96

Cord included.

New finn plans its open house

110

LIMON &amp; OUHGIS. A refreshing

DEPT.

combination of colorful lemon ond
orange 1lices cheerfu lly occ~t
eoty-lo-reod dock dial. An ideol
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the kitchen

Of

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speaker. Wake-fo..music
control. large,
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,··· tr~ &lt;&amp;~.

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4 FOR

PRI-

69c

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$8.99

$100

Heck's Reg. 39' Each

. Hack's R.g. $1 .09
AUTO DEPT.

32

Heck's Reg. 11.41

H-.:lc's Reg. 49c
AUTO DEPT.

Q-TI
COnONBALLS

oz.

3 FOR

HECK'S RIG.
991

$ 00

OUTDOOR
THERMOMETER
CHOOSE FROM
TW01nUS

8,000 march, chant

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Heck's Reg.
59c fach

lAC-II
.ICK'S

HECK'S REG.

ASSORTED COMBS

TO $1.79

HAIIDWAIIE DEPT.

Heck's Reg. To 58'

Cosmetic Dept.

,. M~BILE ~OMES INC~,.
. . See Jim Staats or Joe Giles

Phone 446-9340.

. Gallil!olis. O!lio

~·

•

•

'

I '

EDISON HOBSTETIER
POMEROY - Edison Hobstetter
completed 47 years of service at the
Pomeroy National Bank Saturday.
Hobstetter began his duties as a bookkeeper at the bank o...-Sept. 27, 1928.
On Jan. I, 1932 he was named cashier
and a member of the bank's board of
directors. On May 26, 1941, he was
named president, the position In
which he now serves. Hobstetler has
the bank's record In being the
president who has served the longest
period of time, 34 years last May 26.

~imts • ientintl-.
SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 28, 1975

Three held
in kidnap,
murder

PAGE 17

Psychological tests given Miss Hearst
SAN FRANCISCO ( UPI) - Patty Hearst underwent "tough"
psychological testing Saturday while her defense team, now augmented by
noted criminal attorney F . Lee Bailey, prepared for a new hearing in which
they hope to get her out of jail.
Dr. Margaret Singer, a University of California psychologist , administered tests to the 21-year-old heiress at the San Mateo County Jail. Miss
Hearst was also visited by some of ber lawyers, including J .A. Johnson, an
aide to Bailey.
"The tests are tough on her," said Vincent Hallinan, who has led the
defense of Miss Hearst since her capture !Odays ago. He said be was present
during the examination by Dr. Singer, one of four court-appointed
psychiatric experts who are to help Judge Oliver J . Carter determine
whether Patty's is mentally capable of undergoing trial.
Hallinan said he would hold a news conference Monday in an effort to
dispel "rumors and allegations" that Misa Hearst is being forced by the
attorneys to take the psychiatric defense.
Miss Hearst is due in court again Tuesday for a bearing on whether she
can undergo the rigors of cross-examination about her affidavit In which she
said she- was an unwUiing captive of the Symbionese Uberation Army
throughout the 19-month period when she was sought by the FBI.

. ... ;:;:;:;:

tt~~~~~~~~:~~~:~:~~~~\~~;~:~~:::::::~~:::::::::~::::::::::::~~:~:::~:~:::::::;:::~:::::::::~::::~:~~::;:~::~~:~:~:::~:~:~J~~~~~~~~~;~i~~;;~~~?}:?::~;~~?:~~::t~::;:~~~~r:~~;;:;~~~:;~:::~;~:~;~:~~~~~t:~:~:~:~:~=~=:=

Patty's lawyers will
dispel defense rumors
to federal court for a bail
hearing .
"I am going to hold my
first, and I hope my last, fullblown press conference to
discuss the state of the case
and to reply to rumors and
allegations," Hallinan told
UPI.
He said Bailey, "the
leading trial lawyer in
America ," had visited Miss
Hearst with him and she
approved having him work
with Hallinan and other
Hearst lawyers in their efforts to get her released from
jail. Hallinan said there
would be "more additions to

Eyes .tur11 toward
congressmen too .

130'5

HECK'S
DETERGENT

Oil nations jack up

price by 10 per cent

$109

JEWELRY DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HOUSEWAIE DEPT.

Also: A Full. Line of Quality Mobile
Homes.

1.2 PLOL

••oz.

Regular and Lemon.

Most

..'

Heck's Reg .
. $15.88

den. 8Yt"

'

I

clock fo~.

JEWELRY
DEPT.

KITCHIN FOIL
12"

DIO

6

Compact styling. Solid-state

diameter.

PRISTONI
INOINI
STARTING

R

In San Francis~o, White House aides
srud, Secret Service agent Ron Portsus
and ~ennerl~. diSCUssed" w~t was
descnbed as an Instinct which the
Secret SerY'ce had that the St. FranCis
crowd shoUld be avmded. Kennerly told
the agent he agreed the President
better not meet that crowd .
The
. agents had been mformed that
ant1-Ford demonstrators .had dropped
the.l r stgns and mmgied w1th the crowd
which ~ed less . fnendly than .normal. Portlus used h1s portable radio to
call agent Jack Merchant w1th the
Pr ·d
· 'd th hot 1
eSI ent ms1 e . e
e.
He told Mer~hant that Kennerly had
the sam_e feeling they d1d . Merchant,
&amp;des sa1d, thought a moment and then
advised the_ President that both the
Secret Service and Kennerly had an
lained · 1· ct that h should
une~p
ms tn
e
.
avo1d the crowd .
Ford agreed.
Three nunutes later, on the sidewalk
outs1de the hotel, Ford paus~d wh1le
agents opened the door to the limousme
parked at the curb . He looked at the
crowd and waved .
The bullet cracked from the crowd. It
struck the pavement.

By SHARON SEXfN
HARRISBURG, Pa. ( UPI)
- The Susquehanna River,
gorged by rains from
Hurricane Eloise, rose over
its banks Saturday and
flooded homes and rich
farmland along a 150-mile
Saturday
in
Class
A
in
the
Huntington
Band
Festival
was
MEIGS HIGH BAND , ABOVE , COMPETING
stretch in Pennsylvania's
awarded second . Picture by Brent Mattox.
heartland.
President Gerald Ford declared 30 counties in the
state's central corridor a ::::::::
major disaster area, a move
designed to free federal aid
for an estimated 20,000
persons forced to flee their
homes.
Five persons died in flood.
. E. LERNER Congress is to blame for America's J.obs - until Con- has refused to take any step related accidents, including
By RICHARD
WASHINGTON (UP!) _ failing to spur U.S. oil in- gress faces up to the energy to .reduce our vulnerability to an 83-year-old York County
problem and makes the hard such whims of the OPEC woman who was trapped by
President Ford said Saturday dependence.
worsened inflation and
"We will continue to be decisions for Americans to !Organization of Petroleum water that swamped her car
greater unemployment will VUlnerable to arbitrary price regain their energy in- Exporting Nations) oil when she tried to flee her
home.
cartel," Ford said.
By RICHARD M. HARNEff
result from a 10 per cent oil .ln creases - which will take dependence," Ford said .
State officials had no im·
"The American people
"So long as Congress
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) price mcrease
announced by away billions of American
dollars and thousands of should realize that Congress refuses to enact a program mediate damage estimate. Patty Hearst's attorney said
exporting nations: He said
which will allow America to However, most of the state 's
Saturday he hopes to dispel
produce its own energy with corn and potato crops were
the 1 'rwnors and allegations''
ruined
and
damag
e
to
that the heiress' highits own workers and to set its
alone
was powered team of lawyers,
own prices, we will find farmland
ourselves increasingly estimated at $85 million.
now bolstered by F. Lee
The areas hardest hit were:
vulnerable to OPEC."
Bailey, is forcing on her a
- Harrisburg, the state defense argwnent she doesn't
Ford's blast at Congress
capital,
which faced flooding want to make.
came in a statement released
Terence Hallinan, who has
after he conferred with Saturday in its downtown
Federal
Energy
Ad- area. National Guardsmen carried
the
lead
in
helped evacuate hundreds of representing Miss Hearst
ministrator Frank Zarb.
By FERRY WIMMER
Earlier, Ford discussed the residents in the town and since she was captured 10
accord on energy and raw figure proposed by Kuwait
communities. days ago, called a news
VIENNA, Austria (UP!) materials.
and the United Arab world energy problem with neighboring
The world's major oil exFrench Foreign Minister The river was scheduled to conference for Monday
In the OPEC meeting, Iran Emirates.
crest here early Sunday at 10 morning, one day before Miss
porters decided unanimously pressed for an increase of 15
"This is the best I was able Jean Sauvagnargues.
Saturday to raise oil prices 10 to 16 per cent, but Saudi to get, obut I am not as happy
Hearst is scheduled to return
Zarb told reporters OPEC 's feet above flood level.
- The towns of Milton,
per cent starting next week, Arabia, the world's biggest as I was when I arrived," he action would raise the price
with the possibility of another oil
of a gallon of gasoline a penny Muncy, Lewisburg and
exporter,
fought told reporters.
increase
in
mid -1976. throughout to limit the size of
Yamani said he was or a penny and a half. " Am I Selinsgrove- which are about
60 miles north of the capital.
President Ford's top energy the increase.
unhappy with the decision to mad ? Yeah , I am," he said,
Thousands
of residents fled
adviser termed the move
Sheikh
Ahmed
Zaki review prices again next calling the increase "outbefore
the
river
crested early
''outrageous. ''
Yamani, the Saudi Arabian June. He said he wanted a rageous. "
Saturday.
Experts estimated the in- oil minister, said repeatedly freeze "at least until the end
- Plymouth, Shickshinny
crease wiD raise the world oil that he wanted a continuation of 1976."
By LEONARD CURRY
and West Nanticoke- three
bill by $10 billion a year and of the nine:month prize freeze
Proponents of a price inUP! Business Writer
towns
on
the
north
branch
the
· boost the cost of American oil that expires next Tuesday. crease said it was needed to
WASHINGTON (UPI)
river near Wilkes-Barre .
imports by $2.5 billion.
But in private negotiations offset the erosion of earnings
Wilkes-Barre itself appeared Phillips Petrolum Company's
After four days of hard he came around to the caused by Western inflation.
to escape serious damage disclosure of illegal cambargaining, oil ministers of compromise 10 per cent
because the river was ex- paign donations shifts the
the 13-nation Organization of
::::::::::::;:;~;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :; :;::::: :::::::: ;:;:;:;:;:::; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:::;: ;:::;:;:;:;:::::::::;::::::::::: ;:;:::::::; : ;:;:::::
onus of major campaign
pected to crest at 36 feetPetroleum Exporting
one foot below the dikes that funding scandals, for the first
Countries said the new price
time from the presidency to
line the city.
of $11.51 a barrel would be in
;
Congress.
Volunteers stacked 100,000
effect from Oct. 1 until next
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) Until now the corporate
sandbags along the taU dikes
June 30.
Three men were being held in in Wilkes-Barre to provide disclosures ~hich largely reWUISVILLE,
Ky.
(UPI)
An
estimated
8,000
The current price, frozen
county jail here Saturday, insurance against a repeat of suited from the Watergate
chanting protestors, led by a White-haired woman In a
since January l, has been
charged in the kidnapping- the $1 billion damage investigations focused almost
wheelchair, marched through downtown Louisville
$10.46. These are prices for
murder of local businessman wrought in the city by entirely ori· illegal conSaturday in an antibusing parade that followed a night of
typical Saudi Arabian light
Lester Emoff, 67, whose Tropical Storm Agnes in 1972. tributions to the presidential
violent disorders.
cru\le.
bullet-riddled body was found
"I'm proud of tbe way you people conducted your•
campaigns of Richard M.
~ Dauphin, CUmberland,
., In Washington, Federal
in
a wooded area near here Perry, Adams, York and Nixon and, to a lesser extent,
selves," Mrs. Sue Connor, president of Concerned
Energy Administrator Frank
Friday morning. He had been Franklin county in central other candidates for the
Parents, Inc., told the demonstrators at a rally following
Zarb informed of the OPEC
missing since Tuesday night. Pennsylvania and Tioga presidency.
the march. "·Thts shows everyone that the great majority
deci~ion,
said,
"it's
Charged, and facing a County in the far north of tbe
of people against forced busing are not violent, not racist,
Friday, Phillips filed. a
outrageous."
possible death sentence, were state. These communities report with government
not militant."
· In a blast at Congress,
Albert Lee Scott Jr ., 41;
Friday night, 150 policemen used tear gas to disperse
suffered serious
flood agencies saying the company
which he has blamed for
Willis Leroy, 44; and Herman damage Friday when hun- . had contributed thousands of
400 protesters who pelted them with rocks, bottles and
(ililing to pass Ford 's
Lee Moore, 45, all from dreds of ~!reams overflowed. dollars illegally to , the
eggs at a shopping center across from Southern High
program for making America
School.
Dayton . The three were
State officials said property campaigns of 54 members of
independent of foreign oil,
charged with aggravated damage in the area was Congress in 1970 and 1972 and
About 15 persons were arrested and some injuries
Zarb added, ·"I'm not sure
murder , kidnapping and expected to total in the many up to $400,000, most of it
were reported in the melee that erup~d after police tried
whether it iS an OPEC or
extortion and were being held millions of dollars.
to break up a mob that had gathered around a bonfire in a
undesignated, since 1966.
·congressional price.''
parking lo,t .
in lieu of $500,000 bond each .
It said the recipients inEvacuees in some areas
The increa.se was called
It was the first major outbreak of viollmce in the area
The FBI turned over tl)e began· to returrl to their eluded then-Rep. Gerald R.
moderate in Paris and
res ponsibility for prosecutirlg homes Saturday when creeks Ford, who got $1,000 from
since the first weekend after court-&lt;~rdered racial busing
.French government sources
the case to county officials began to return to normal Phillips in his 1970 and ,1972
, began in the 165-school Jefferson County system ~pt. 4.
" aid it · would enhance
levels.
Congressional
campaigns,
prospects of a worldwide

Ford blames ·congress for new
dangers after oil price hike

IT600

BROILER OVEN

NO. 35

Valley
wrecked
by flood

99

SPORTS D.liEPT_.

'

.

VOL 10

$159

bclh sides when on "worm ."

.

iunba:tt
~

95

Heck's Reg.
$139.88

rievlls, 29-7. .

'

Sports Dept.

HECK'S REG. 1179.95

trom

High, Olillicothe, and Ravenswond.

SAW

99

YEARS AGO, fl'om the files of the Daily
Tribune and weekly Gallia Times ... Joe Miller firm low bidder
on Centenal-y waterline bids ... Barbara Weiher crowned 1955
Jamboree Queen ... Gallia's Grandma Emma Gatewood, 67,
becomes first woman to conquer 2,050-mile Appalachian Trail
Georgia to Maine ... Bob Rannells promoted by Colwnbus
and Southern .Ohio Electric Co. John Allen, Oak Hill, named
new manager of local C&amp;SOE office ... Burglar gets $21,000 at
Evans Grocery ... Pt. Pleasant Big Blacks swamp GAHS Blue

in the division were J Eckson, Ripley, W.Va.; Huntington

HOMECRAFT
MOTORIZED

Twin action slide bars help
give the Winchester Madel
1200 o self-starting action
designed to help move itself
back in a quick, effortless
motion. Assorted gauges.

$

GAHS BAND, ABOVE, COMPETING Saturday in the
Huntington Band Festival, won first place in Class A
division. Picture by Brent Mattox. Other bands competing

9"

SHOTGUN

TWENTY

SEE OUR BIG DISPLAY OF

su

SPORTS DEPT.

614

-

#64

+++

GALLIPOLIS Alan Kathryn (2) , will move to
Taylor announced Saturday Gallipolis this fall.
the opening of the Gallipolis
office of Taylor, Kosanchick
and Associates, Inc., ArSHORT BLAMED
chitects, Engineers, SurGALLIPOLIS
An
vey~rs and Planners.
electrical short was blamed
The firm's offices will be for a $75 fire at 9:32 p.m.
located in the Business and Friday in a 1969 Buick owned
Professional Building at 414 by Ted Stoney of 610 Sun
Second Ave. On Monday, Oct. Valley Dr. Twelve volunteer
6,,there will be an ilpen house firemen responded to the
from noon to 3 p.m.
!20th alarm of the year.
Mel Kosanchick will
manage the Gallipolis office.
He is a graduate of Ohio
ARREST MADE
University and Ohio State
GALLIPOLIS -The Gallia
University. He is a member County sheriff's department
of OSU's president's club and Saturday arrested Barbara
OU's !ruatees' academy. Mel Stroud, 35, Rt. I , Gallipolis,
and his wife Linda, son on charges of shoplifting at
Melvin ill (5), and daughter Kroger's Store .

Heck's Reg. Price

WINCHESTER
MODEL 1200

INDIVIDUAI.S who want to work on various committees
:ilould contact Atty. Moulton at his home or office, or Mrs.
Thelma Elliott, executive secretary of the Gallipolis Area
Ownber of Commerce. The committee's next planning
session is scheduled Thursday, Oct. 9, beginning at 7:30p.m. at
st. Peter's Episcopal Olurch.

•

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ATTY. Tom Moulton, 1976 Gallia County Bicentennial
Celebration eo&lt;hairman, conducts a question-answer
session during Thursday's initial planning meeting at St.
Peter's Episcopal Church.

HIA'IIR

This Colemon sleeping bag i1 r~ for )'&lt;K.I to 11Hp
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ALL

COLlMAN

By RICHARD H. GROWALD
wASHINGTON (UP!) _ A " gut
feeling or hunch" by Secret Service
bodyguards and others influenced
President Ford to pass up a handshaking expedition into the San
Francisco crowd moments before a
shot was fired last Monday, While
House m·d es sat·d Saturday .
Although a decision had been made
earlier to forego handshaking on the
San Francisco trip, Ford is said to have
expressed a desire to make the perfrom
son ai con ta c ts across the str eel
St F nels Hotel
&amp;;'~orne three· minutes before Ford
stepped from the hotel, White House
photographer David Hwne Kennerly
walked to u, 0 sidewalk and looked
u · t eet to the crowd
across " s r
·
"I got that gut feeling or hunch," he
said . ''I had it before - in Vietnam and
in the other wars I covered as a
photographer. Like the time 1 was
driving up the Vietnamese road and (Ot
a feeling that uhuh , 1 better not go
further. 1 turned the car around and
then sure enough, aU bell broke loose
on the road up ahead where I had been
going."

and much of the Democratic
and .Republican leadership.
Federal election laws
p~ohibit campaign contr1but1ons of corporate funds,
although
1nd1v1dual
executives and other corporate employes may legally
donate thetr own money.
Phillips said none of the
congressmen was aware that
the contributions were
illegal. But the report . also
said none of the recipients
ever
questsoned
the
payments, which were made
in cash, by Car~tens Slack,
Phillips . Washmgton-based
V1ce President.
The report, filed at the U$.
District Court and Secun~es
and Exchange Comrrussson ,
srud:
.
"It was Slack's practice to
make such contributions as
early as poss1bie, and Sla~k
believes that m . every .mstance tbey were ~ade pr1or
to theprtmary election rather
than afte~ a candidate had
been nommated so that the
contribut~on would not h~ve
been su~Ject to the reportmg
~Contmued on page I 8)

the .team before the trial."
Meanwhile federal and
local police agencies in
several California cities were
sorting out possible linksuncovered by the capture of
Miss Hearst and Emily and
Bill Harris at two San
Francisco residences- to a
number of unsolved crimes.
Guns and ammunition
found at the hideouts were
being checked for similarity
to weapon s u sed in the
slaying of a Los Angeles
policeman shortly before the
Symbionese liberation Army
shootout in 1974, tbe slaying
of "Popeye" Jackson, a San
Francisco exconvict active in
radical circles and the dea th
of a woman in a bank holdup
at Sacramento last April.
A bomb, linked to persons
suspected of helping Miss
Hearst hide, resembled
bombs used in attacks on
police in San Francisco and
Emeryville, Calif., leading to
speculation that the SLA was
closely tied with the radical
New World liberation Front,
which surfaced after Miss
Hearst disappeared and has
claimed responsibility for
numerous bombings during
the past two years .
Last
Tuesday
Miss
Hearst's defense submitted to
Judge Oliver J. Carter an
affidavit signed by the
heiress in which she said she
was held prisoner and forced
at gunpoint to participate in a
bank holdup by the SLA.
Later , the government
released tape recordings of a
visit between Miss Hearst
and a friend at the jail in
which Patty said, " my
politics are real different
· from ...way back when." She
also said she did not "want to
have the bail ·thing where I
am a prisoner in my parents'

}¥!me."
Hallinan said the defense
strategy at th,e Tuesday
hearing will again be to have
( Continu~ on page 18)

�,.

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16~ The Sunday Times- Sentinel. Sundav. Seot. 28, 1975

..

I.-------------------------~
.

l Dateline
I

!

•

,I . ,..,..._

Gallza

1

Viet veteran's gut
feeling saved Ford

I

By Hobart Wilson ·Jr.

DAILY
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'

NOW that most of the committee chairmen assignments
have been filled, Atty. Tom Moulton, co-chairman of Gallia's
1976 Bicentennial Celebration can start making definite plans
for next year's big event.

+++

TWENTY-TWO persons attended Thursday night 's initial
planning session. Not a bad turnout CO'l_Sidering it took, several
meetings 10 years ago to get that many Individuals out to
prepare for the Old French City's !75th anniversary.

.

+++

A LOT of good things can happen in the community if
everybody joins together to support the project during the next
12 months. It's going to require a lot of hard work by a lot of
individuals, but the community is well-known for similar
projects in tbe recent past, thus the 1976 celebration committee
has a solid foundation to begin with right off the bat.

+++

Heck's Reg. 115.99

· · Heck's Reg. 136.99

SI'OIITS DEPT.

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EDISON HOBSTETIER
POMEROY - Edison Hobstetter
completed 47 years of service at the
Pomeroy National Bank Saturday.
Hobstetter began his duties as a bookkeeper at the bank o...-Sept. 27, 1928.
On Jan. I, 1932 he was named cashier
and a member of the bank's board of
directors. On May 26, 1941, he was
named president, the position In
which he now serves. Hobstetler has
the bank's record In being the
president who has served the longest
period of time, 34 years last May 26.

~imts • ientintl-.
SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 28, 1975

Three held
in kidnap,
murder

PAGE 17

Psychological tests given Miss Hearst
SAN FRANCISCO ( UPI) - Patty Hearst underwent "tough"
psychological testing Saturday while her defense team, now augmented by
noted criminal attorney F . Lee Bailey, prepared for a new hearing in which
they hope to get her out of jail.
Dr. Margaret Singer, a University of California psychologist , administered tests to the 21-year-old heiress at the San Mateo County Jail. Miss
Hearst was also visited by some of ber lawyers, including J .A. Johnson, an
aide to Bailey.
"The tests are tough on her," said Vincent Hallinan, who has led the
defense of Miss Hearst since her capture !Odays ago. He said be was present
during the examination by Dr. Singer, one of four court-appointed
psychiatric experts who are to help Judge Oliver J . Carter determine
whether Patty's is mentally capable of undergoing trial.
Hallinan said he would hold a news conference Monday in an effort to
dispel "rumors and allegations" that Misa Hearst is being forced by the
attorneys to take the psychiatric defense.
Miss Hearst is due in court again Tuesday for a bearing on whether she
can undergo the rigors of cross-examination about her affidavit In which she
said she- was an unwUiing captive of the Symbionese Uberation Army
throughout the 19-month period when she was sought by the FBI.

. ... ;:;:;:;:

tt~~~~~~~~:~~~:~:~~~~\~~;~:~~:::::::~~:::::::::~::::::::::::~~:~:::~:~:::::::;:::~:::::::::~::::~:~~::;:~::~~:~:~:::~:~:~J~~~~~~~~~;~i~~;;~~~?}:?::~;~~?:~~::t~::;:~~~~r:~~;;:;~~~:;~:::~;~:~;~:~~~~~t:~:~:~:~:~=~=:=

Patty's lawyers will
dispel defense rumors
to federal court for a bail
hearing .
"I am going to hold my
first, and I hope my last, fullblown press conference to
discuss the state of the case
and to reply to rumors and
allegations," Hallinan told
UPI.
He said Bailey, "the
leading trial lawyer in
America ," had visited Miss
Hearst with him and she
approved having him work
with Hallinan and other
Hearst lawyers in their efforts to get her released from
jail. Hallinan said there
would be "more additions to

Eyes .tur11 toward
congressmen too .

130'5

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PRISTONI
INOINI
STARTING

R

In San Francis~o, White House aides
srud, Secret Service agent Ron Portsus
and ~ennerl~. diSCUssed" w~t was
descnbed as an Instinct which the
Secret SerY'ce had that the St. FranCis
crowd shoUld be avmded. Kennerly told
the agent he agreed the President
better not meet that crowd .
The
. agents had been mformed that
ant1-Ford demonstrators .had dropped
the.l r stgns and mmgied w1th the crowd
which ~ed less . fnendly than .normal. Portlus used h1s portable radio to
call agent Jack Merchant w1th the
Pr ·d
· 'd th hot 1
eSI ent ms1 e . e
e.
He told Mer~hant that Kennerly had
the sam_e feeling they d1d . Merchant,
&amp;des sa1d, thought a moment and then
advised the_ President that both the
Secret Service and Kennerly had an
lained · 1· ct that h should
une~p
ms tn
e
.
avo1d the crowd .
Ford agreed.
Three nunutes later, on the sidewalk
outs1de the hotel, Ford paus~d wh1le
agents opened the door to the limousme
parked at the curb . He looked at the
crowd and waved .
The bullet cracked from the crowd. It
struck the pavement.

By SHARON SEXfN
HARRISBURG, Pa. ( UPI)
- The Susquehanna River,
gorged by rains from
Hurricane Eloise, rose over
its banks Saturday and
flooded homes and rich
farmland along a 150-mile
Saturday
in
Class
A
in
the
Huntington
Band
Festival
was
MEIGS HIGH BAND , ABOVE , COMPETING
stretch in Pennsylvania's
awarded second . Picture by Brent Mattox.
heartland.
President Gerald Ford declared 30 counties in the
state's central corridor a ::::::::
major disaster area, a move
designed to free federal aid
for an estimated 20,000
persons forced to flee their
homes.
Five persons died in flood.
. E. LERNER Congress is to blame for America's J.obs - until Con- has refused to take any step related accidents, including
By RICHARD
WASHINGTON (UP!) _ failing to spur U.S. oil in- gress faces up to the energy to .reduce our vulnerability to an 83-year-old York County
problem and makes the hard such whims of the OPEC woman who was trapped by
President Ford said Saturday dependence.
worsened inflation and
"We will continue to be decisions for Americans to !Organization of Petroleum water that swamped her car
greater unemployment will VUlnerable to arbitrary price regain their energy in- Exporting Nations) oil when she tried to flee her
home.
cartel," Ford said.
By RICHARD M. HARNEff
result from a 10 per cent oil .ln creases - which will take dependence," Ford said .
State officials had no im·
"The American people
"So long as Congress
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) price mcrease
announced by away billions of American
dollars and thousands of should realize that Congress refuses to enact a program mediate damage estimate. Patty Hearst's attorney said
exporting nations: He said
which will allow America to However, most of the state 's
Saturday he hopes to dispel
produce its own energy with corn and potato crops were
the 1 'rwnors and allegations''
ruined
and
damag
e
to
that the heiress' highits own workers and to set its
alone
was powered team of lawyers,
own prices, we will find farmland
ourselves increasingly estimated at $85 million.
now bolstered by F. Lee
The areas hardest hit were:
vulnerable to OPEC."
Bailey, is forcing on her a
- Harrisburg, the state defense argwnent she doesn't
Ford's blast at Congress
capital,
which faced flooding want to make.
came in a statement released
Terence Hallinan, who has
after he conferred with Saturday in its downtown
Federal
Energy
Ad- area. National Guardsmen carried
the
lead
in
helped evacuate hundreds of representing Miss Hearst
ministrator Frank Zarb.
By FERRY WIMMER
Earlier, Ford discussed the residents in the town and since she was captured 10
accord on energy and raw figure proposed by Kuwait
communities. days ago, called a news
VIENNA, Austria (UP!) materials.
and the United Arab world energy problem with neighboring
The world's major oil exFrench Foreign Minister The river was scheduled to conference for Monday
In the OPEC meeting, Iran Emirates.
crest here early Sunday at 10 morning, one day before Miss
porters decided unanimously pressed for an increase of 15
"This is the best I was able Jean Sauvagnargues.
Saturday to raise oil prices 10 to 16 per cent, but Saudi to get, obut I am not as happy
Hearst is scheduled to return
Zarb told reporters OPEC 's feet above flood level.
- The towns of Milton,
per cent starting next week, Arabia, the world's biggest as I was when I arrived," he action would raise the price
with the possibility of another oil
of a gallon of gasoline a penny Muncy, Lewisburg and
exporter,
fought told reporters.
increase
in
mid -1976. throughout to limit the size of
Yamani said he was or a penny and a half. " Am I Selinsgrove- which are about
60 miles north of the capital.
President Ford's top energy the increase.
unhappy with the decision to mad ? Yeah , I am," he said,
Thousands
of residents fled
adviser termed the move
Sheikh
Ahmed
Zaki review prices again next calling the increase "outbefore
the
river
crested early
''outrageous. ''
Yamani, the Saudi Arabian June. He said he wanted a rageous. "
Saturday.
Experts estimated the in- oil minister, said repeatedly freeze "at least until the end
- Plymouth, Shickshinny
crease wiD raise the world oil that he wanted a continuation of 1976."
By LEONARD CURRY
and West Nanticoke- three
bill by $10 billion a year and of the nine:month prize freeze
Proponents of a price inUP! Business Writer
towns
on
the
north
branch
the
· boost the cost of American oil that expires next Tuesday. crease said it was needed to
WASHINGTON (UPI)
river near Wilkes-Barre .
imports by $2.5 billion.
But in private negotiations offset the erosion of earnings
Wilkes-Barre itself appeared Phillips Petrolum Company's
After four days of hard he came around to the caused by Western inflation.
to escape serious damage disclosure of illegal cambargaining, oil ministers of compromise 10 per cent
because the river was ex- paign donations shifts the
the 13-nation Organization of
::::::::::::;:;~;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :; :;::::: :::::::: ;:;:;:;:;:::; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:::;: ;:::;:;:;:;:::::::::;::::::::::: ;:;:::::::; : ;:;:::::
onus of major campaign
pected to crest at 36 feetPetroleum Exporting
one foot below the dikes that funding scandals, for the first
Countries said the new price
time from the presidency to
line the city.
of $11.51 a barrel would be in
;
Congress.
Volunteers stacked 100,000
effect from Oct. 1 until next
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) Until now the corporate
sandbags along the taU dikes
June 30.
Three men were being held in in Wilkes-Barre to provide disclosures ~hich largely reWUISVILLE,
Ky.
(UPI)
An
estimated
8,000
The current price, frozen
county jail here Saturday, insurance against a repeat of suited from the Watergate
chanting protestors, led by a White-haired woman In a
since January l, has been
charged in the kidnapping- the $1 billion damage investigations focused almost
wheelchair, marched through downtown Louisville
$10.46. These are prices for
murder of local businessman wrought in the city by entirely ori· illegal conSaturday in an antibusing parade that followed a night of
typical Saudi Arabian light
Lester Emoff, 67, whose Tropical Storm Agnes in 1972. tributions to the presidential
violent disorders.
cru\le.
bullet-riddled body was found
"I'm proud of tbe way you people conducted your•
campaigns of Richard M.
~ Dauphin, CUmberland,
., In Washington, Federal
in
a wooded area near here Perry, Adams, York and Nixon and, to a lesser extent,
selves," Mrs. Sue Connor, president of Concerned
Energy Administrator Frank
Friday morning. He had been Franklin county in central other candidates for the
Parents, Inc., told the demonstrators at a rally following
Zarb informed of the OPEC
missing since Tuesday night. Pennsylvania and Tioga presidency.
the march. "·Thts shows everyone that the great majority
deci~ion,
said,
"it's
Charged, and facing a County in the far north of tbe
of people against forced busing are not violent, not racist,
Friday, Phillips filed. a
outrageous."
possible death sentence, were state. These communities report with government
not militant."
· In a blast at Congress,
Albert Lee Scott Jr ., 41;
Friday night, 150 policemen used tear gas to disperse
suffered serious
flood agencies saying the company
which he has blamed for
Willis Leroy, 44; and Herman damage Friday when hun- . had contributed thousands of
400 protesters who pelted them with rocks, bottles and
(ililing to pass Ford 's
Lee Moore, 45, all from dreds of ~!reams overflowed. dollars illegally to , the
eggs at a shopping center across from Southern High
program for making America
School.
Dayton . The three were
State officials said property campaigns of 54 members of
independent of foreign oil,
charged with aggravated damage in the area was Congress in 1970 and 1972 and
About 15 persons were arrested and some injuries
Zarb added, ·"I'm not sure
murder , kidnapping and expected to total in the many up to $400,000, most of it
were reported in the melee that erup~d after police tried
whether it iS an OPEC or
extortion and were being held millions of dollars.
to break up a mob that had gathered around a bonfire in a
undesignated, since 1966.
·congressional price.''
parking lo,t .
in lieu of $500,000 bond each .
It said the recipients inEvacuees in some areas
The increa.se was called
It was the first major outbreak of viollmce in the area
The FBI turned over tl)e began· to returrl to their eluded then-Rep. Gerald R.
moderate in Paris and
res ponsibility for prosecutirlg homes Saturday when creeks Ford, who got $1,000 from
since the first weekend after court-&lt;~rdered racial busing
.French government sources
the case to county officials began to return to normal Phillips in his 1970 and ,1972
, began in the 165-school Jefferson County system ~pt. 4.
" aid it · would enhance
levels.
Congressional
campaigns,
prospects of a worldwide

Ford blames ·congress for new
dangers after oil price hike

IT600

BROILER OVEN

NO. 35

Valley
wrecked
by flood

99

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VOL 10

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iunba:tt
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$139.88

rievlls, 29-7. .

'

Sports Dept.

HECK'S REG. 1179.95

trom

High, Olillicothe, and Ravenswond.

SAW

99

YEARS AGO, fl'om the files of the Daily
Tribune and weekly Gallia Times ... Joe Miller firm low bidder
on Centenal-y waterline bids ... Barbara Weiher crowned 1955
Jamboree Queen ... Gallia's Grandma Emma Gatewood, 67,
becomes first woman to conquer 2,050-mile Appalachian Trail
Georgia to Maine ... Bob Rannells promoted by Colwnbus
and Southern .Ohio Electric Co. John Allen, Oak Hill, named
new manager of local C&amp;SOE office ... Burglar gets $21,000 at
Evans Grocery ... Pt. Pleasant Big Blacks swamp GAHS Blue

in the division were J Eckson, Ripley, W.Va.; Huntington

HOMECRAFT
MOTORIZED

Twin action slide bars help
give the Winchester Madel
1200 o self-starting action
designed to help move itself
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$

GAHS BAND, ABOVE, COMPETING Saturday in the
Huntington Band Festival, won first place in Class A
division. Picture by Brent Mattox. Other bands competing

9"

SHOTGUN

TWENTY

SEE OUR BIG DISPLAY OF

su

SPORTS DEPT.

614

-

#64

+++

GALLIPOLIS Alan Kathryn (2) , will move to
Taylor announced Saturday Gallipolis this fall.
the opening of the Gallipolis
office of Taylor, Kosanchick
and Associates, Inc., ArSHORT BLAMED
chitects, Engineers, SurGALLIPOLIS
An
vey~rs and Planners.
electrical short was blamed
The firm's offices will be for a $75 fire at 9:32 p.m.
located in the Business and Friday in a 1969 Buick owned
Professional Building at 414 by Ted Stoney of 610 Sun
Second Ave. On Monday, Oct. Valley Dr. Twelve volunteer
6,,there will be an ilpen house firemen responded to the
from noon to 3 p.m.
!20th alarm of the year.
Mel Kosanchick will
manage the Gallipolis office.
He is a graduate of Ohio
ARREST MADE
University and Ohio State
GALLIPOLIS -The Gallia
University. He is a member County sheriff's department
of OSU's president's club and Saturday arrested Barbara
OU's !ruatees' academy. Mel Stroud, 35, Rt. I , Gallipolis,
and his wife Linda, son on charges of shoplifting at
Melvin ill (5), and daughter Kroger's Store .

Heck's Reg. Price

WINCHESTER
MODEL 1200

INDIVIDUAI.S who want to work on various committees
:ilould contact Atty. Moulton at his home or office, or Mrs.
Thelma Elliott, executive secretary of the Gallipolis Area
Ownber of Commerce. The committee's next planning
session is scheduled Thursday, Oct. 9, beginning at 7:30p.m. at
st. Peter's Episcopal Olurch.

•

33'-h% OFF

.$2888

.

FISHING TACKLE

New Coleman Su~r " Cot". This modttm and etfi~iltflt
ho1 oil the f.alllres of ils big brother, the O.lun, m a
5000 BTU heal ro11ge

$1199

1 I II I I

HARDWARE, DEPT.

ATTY. Tom Moulton, 1976 Gallia County Bicentennial
Celebration eo&lt;hairman, conducts a question-answer
session during Thursday's initial planning meeting at St.
Peter's Episcopal Church.

HIA'IIR

This Colemon sleeping bag i1 r~ for )'&lt;K.I to 11Hp
~ cCMnfortably o")IW'he~ . It is filled wilh acry61 fib.r,
ond the linin10 " 100% cotton flonnel.

.....

$J99

ALL

COLlMAN

By RICHARD H. GROWALD
wASHINGTON (UP!) _ A " gut
feeling or hunch" by Secret Service
bodyguards and others influenced
President Ford to pass up a handshaking expedition into the San
Francisco crowd moments before a
shot was fired last Monday, While
House m·d es sat·d Saturday .
Although a decision had been made
earlier to forego handshaking on the
San Francisco trip, Ford is said to have
expressed a desire to make the perfrom
son ai con ta c ts across the str eel
St F nels Hotel
&amp;;'~orne three· minutes before Ford
stepped from the hotel, White House
photographer David Hwne Kennerly
walked to u, 0 sidewalk and looked
u · t eet to the crowd
across " s r
·
"I got that gut feeling or hunch," he
said . ''I had it before - in Vietnam and
in the other wars I covered as a
photographer. Like the time 1 was
driving up the Vietnamese road and (Ot
a feeling that uhuh , 1 better not go
further. 1 turned the car around and
then sure enough, aU bell broke loose
on the road up ahead where I had been
going."

and much of the Democratic
and .Republican leadership.
Federal election laws
p~ohibit campaign contr1but1ons of corporate funds,
although
1nd1v1dual
executives and other corporate employes may legally
donate thetr own money.
Phillips said none of the
congressmen was aware that
the contributions were
illegal. But the report . also
said none of the recipients
ever
questsoned
the
payments, which were made
in cash, by Car~tens Slack,
Phillips . Washmgton-based
V1ce President.
The report, filed at the U$.
District Court and Secun~es
and Exchange Comrrussson ,
srud:
.
"It was Slack's practice to
make such contributions as
early as poss1bie, and Sla~k
believes that m . every .mstance tbey were ~ade pr1or
to theprtmary election rather
than afte~ a candidate had
been nommated so that the
contribut~on would not h~ve
been su~Ject to the reportmg
~Contmued on page I 8)

the .team before the trial."
Meanwhile federal and
local police agencies in
several California cities were
sorting out possible linksuncovered by the capture of
Miss Hearst and Emily and
Bill Harris at two San
Francisco residences- to a
number of unsolved crimes.
Guns and ammunition
found at the hideouts were
being checked for similarity
to weapon s u sed in the
slaying of a Los Angeles
policeman shortly before the
Symbionese liberation Army
shootout in 1974, tbe slaying
of "Popeye" Jackson, a San
Francisco exconvict active in
radical circles and the dea th
of a woman in a bank holdup
at Sacramento last April.
A bomb, linked to persons
suspected of helping Miss
Hearst hide, resembled
bombs used in attacks on
police in San Francisco and
Emeryville, Calif., leading to
speculation that the SLA was
closely tied with the radical
New World liberation Front,
which surfaced after Miss
Hearst disappeared and has
claimed responsibility for
numerous bombings during
the past two years .
Last
Tuesday
Miss
Hearst's defense submitted to
Judge Oliver J. Carter an
affidavit signed by the
heiress in which she said she
was held prisoner and forced
at gunpoint to participate in a
bank holdup by the SLA.
Later , the government
released tape recordings of a
visit between Miss Hearst
and a friend at the jail in
which Patty said, " my
politics are real different
· from ...way back when." She
also said she did not "want to
have the bail ·thing where I
am a prisoner in my parents'

}¥!me."
Hallinan said the defense
strategy at th,e Tuesday
hearing will again be to have
( Continu~ on page 18)

�, I

:
•

19 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 28, 1975

18 - The Sunday Times - Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 28. 1975
,---~---- -------- -----------

Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be
less than 300 words long tor be subject I&lt;&gt; reduction by
the edtror) and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may he wilhheld upon publieallon.
However, oo request, names wiD be disclosed. Letters
sbould be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Is it any wonder our young men . ..
Dear Sir :
As a faithful member of the Kyger Creek Athletic Boos ters
Club, I have become appalled at the overall lack of interest
displayed by the many parents of our young athletes .
Our fine young men who put forth a lot of effort, and quite
successfully I might add , and whic h we all_e njoy as mere
spectators, are gravely neglected by their own parents in their
athletic endeavors .
This neglect isqu1 te evident in the slothful attitude of these
parents. The failure of parents to enga ge·in the Boosters activities, the failure to attend meetings for our schools athletic
betterment and finally. t he failure of these parents to give of
their time all attribute to this. Is it any wonder why , in our
present day society, that our young people many times fold
under this burden of neglect on the part of their parents? Can
we, as so called "I've been there" mature adults, expect our
own local society to flourish and improve with our present
slothful attitude ? We are all great planners and are quick to
offer what we think as intelligent criticism of those individuals
that try, but on the other hand, as doers, we literally stink!
It's high time that we call a "time-&lt;&gt;ut" and " stop the
clock" momentarily, analyze the situation recognizing our
poten.tials, call a ggod play with sound judgment, sound a
rousing "charge" to bolster our enthusiasm and hit the line as
hard as we know that we can !
Let 's show our young men love by action, instead of
procrastination and support them whole-heartedly, for we
know that we won't have them for long . We have the opportunity to give them the backing that they will long
remember and be grateful to us as parents. Isn't that a worth
while reward? Let's go on with it! Join in now and give of
yourself! It's a gift, you know!
-Signed : Member Kyger Creek Athletic Boosters (name
withheld on request) .

Points about a pointer
Dear Sir:
It was with some interest I read the article in the Sept. 21
edition of the Sunday Times-Sentinel dealing with a pointer
(Your Wayne National Forest, by T. Allan Wolter).
While I agree that you put your point across as a pointer
that was loved - maybe - and did a job of hunting, I camot
agree with your knowledge of a good pointer especially on
grouse .
I have raised arid trained and bred bird dogs for the past 30
years, so feel! am a very poor authority on the subject, for I
have met many men who know a lot more than I do about
pointers. However here are a couple of my views:
I have never trained a pointer that I would let range over
30 yards at the very most from me. When a dog points a grouse
at 50 to 7~ yards away he might just as well be 'home, for the
odds are all against you ever getting within shooting range,
and anyone wbo says they shoot grouse at that range, just ain't
never hunted ruffled grouse in Pemsylvania.
Tell me, have you ever tried to follow, then lead a grouse
that has taken off through the hemlocks or pines at 25 yards, let
alone 50 or more yards? They just don't stay in a straight line
that far, but put a tree between you and them right sudden like.
I have always trained all of my dogs but one (of which I
will write more later) on a rope of 25 yards in length and held
them there when they went on point. In a surprisingly short
time they will learn they are not supposed to range wide.
I am now speaking of hunting dogs; If you are training
dogs for field trials, then you want to have them range wide
and fast and cover all the grmmd they can.
I have trained. owned and hunted two female
weimaraners that would hold a point and honor a point until
they became so tense they would shake all over but would not
break the point until I sent them in; and never over 20 or 25
yards from me.
In regard to the one dog I never trained using a rope, I
owned a little blonde Cocker Spaniel (female) that I took with
me when I had my Weimaraners out to train, and with no
assistance, she learned to point and to retrieve by watching the
other dogs. She was a good pointer on grouse and pheasant, but
never had a nose for woodcock.
I have owned and trained 17 Weimaraners at one time and
really enjoyed it.
Just wish I was younger I would like to raise and train
Seeing Eye Dogs, I have never tried it, but think it would be
fun.
At present, I have an English Pointer, Bo Jingle Bob.
This dog was owned by Leonard Nedirltter who is a noted
owner and trainer and handler of field trial dogs. This was a
good dog, who won a number of firsts and places in field trials;
but Leonard ruined him for field trials by taking him hunting a
couple of times and Bob learned too fast. He would not range
fast and wide any more, preferring to work slow and close, so
Leonard ..Old him.
· He is a wonderful pet and good hunter but I never kill any
birds or any wild game at all any more. But I love to take him
out and watch him work and point.
Incidentally, I have never beat any of my dogs. The worst I
ever did was use a folded paper to smack one across the rear
end, And I have never used a choke collar; never found it
necessary.
I had one Weimaraner that would quit hWJting if you did
not shoot and kill or at least cripple a bird after she pointed
several. She would come back and walk alongside of me the
rest of the day.
I always read the Gallipolis paper with a great deal of
interest and enjoyment, although I don't know too many of the.
names I see any more.
We have a nice hWJting camp in Warren County, about four
miles from Tidioute, and four miles from the Allegheny River.
There is good hunting there, squirrels, snow shoe hare,
rabbits, grouse, woodcock, pheasant, turkey, deer and a few
bear. I like to go down and spend a few days there and usually
take a gun or two alo"Ji but haven't killed any game for years,
.although I think this fall I will try and get a Wild turkey.
We live right on the bank of Lake Erie about 15 miles east
of Conneaut, Ohio and 15 miles west of Erie, Pa.
The Coho and Chinook Salmon are running and my
lrother-in..Jaw and I are out in my boat almost every day.
, ~Ink I will go down to my camp tomorrow and saw and
split up some wood for the fireplace so we can keep warm
during deer sea.son.
Hope to be down in Gallia Couinty next month (October)
some tlrne and will stqp at the Tribune office.
· · · Just an old Gallia'County boy that has been transplanted to
Pe11118ylvania for 46·years.- Sincerei:y, Eldie Dickey, RD I,
Lake Ciiy, .Pa. 16423.

A real step backward
Dear Sir:
,
We understand the Bookmobile is having financial
troubles and Js •in danget: of being discontinued.
.
To the people In the rural sections of Meigs P.unty, and
'

I

Ohio's union brass
By J .R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS I UP!) - The
leadership of the one millionmember AFUIO in Ohio
Friday refused to endorse
three of Gov . James A.
Rhod es' four ' 'economic
recovery '' constitutional
amendments which come
before the voters Nov. 4.
First, the nine-member Exe c utiv e Committee

unanimously rejected the
transportation, ir\dustrial tax
abatement and capital improvements proposals but
gave approval to the homeconstruction measure.
Then, the 29-member
Executive Board followed
suit .
Warren
Smith,
secretary-treasurer of the
labor federation said there
was only one dissenting vote.

oppos~

from a representative of the
lluilding trades' unions, on
the rejection of three of tilt!
proposals.
Rhodes ealled the action of
the
Executive
bodies
"shameful."
"A handful of Ohio AFLCIO labor leaders have
betrayed rank-and-file
members by their blatantly
partisan action," said

3 Rhodes' issues

Rhodes, but added the
decision did not surprise him.
'!'be governor urged rankand-file union members to·
ignore the recommendations.
Smith and Ohio AF!.,.CJO
President Milan Marsh said
no plans had been formulated
I&lt;&gt; oppose the measures, but
that the executive board had
a " moral obligation to bring
all the facts before the people

we represent and appraise
them of the indebtedness
these issues would mean to
the state."
Smith and Marsh said the
state 's housing industry
needed the boost the $100
million bond issue Rhodes'
proposal would mean.
"Our housing industry is in
a depressed state and this
would c reate 75,000 new

Evidence experts test-fire Sirhan's pistoJ
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - A is anything to the "second
criminal evidence expert gun 11 theory, that someone in
from Virginia , his ears addition to Sirhan fired a gun
covered by blast mufflers, in the Ambassador Hotel
leaned over a six-foot-deep kitchen when Robert F
steel water barrel in the Kennedy was assassinated in
county courthouse and fired 1968.
four shots from a .22-&lt;:aliber
The bullets fired by Patrick
revolver .
Garland splashed into the
Six years after it was filed tank, slowed as their velocity
away in a manila envelope, was braked by the water, and
Sirhan Sirhan's pistol was sank into a net on the bottom.
heard again.
Courtland Cunningham, chief
The test firing Friday was firearms examiner at the FBI
part of an effort to determine laboratory in Washington,
once and for all whether there

Television Log
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21,1975
6:oo-This Is the Life 10.
6 : J~Publlc Affairs ~~ Viewpoint 8; Public Polley
Forum 10; Newsmaker '75 13.

6:4s--Tele-Bible Time 4.
7:oo-Church by Side of the Road ~~ Rev. Calvin
Evans 8; Spring Street U.S.A. 13.
7:3~ This is the Life 3; Cadte Chapel 4; Revival Fires
6 ; Jerry Falwell 8; Camera Three 10; Lower'
Lighthouse 13.
8:oo-Mormon Choir 3; Day of Discovery ~~ Gospel
Caravan 6; Church Service 10; Mamre Church 13.
8 : 3~ral Roberts J; Yours for the Asking~~ Kathryn
Kuhlman 6; Day of Discovery 8; James Robison
Presents 10; Rex Humbard t3; See the U.S.A. 15.
9:oo-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Hour of Power 4; Rex
Humbard 6; Rev. Leonard Repass 8; Oral Roberts
10.
9:J~What Does the Bible Plainly Say 8; It Is Written
10; Christ Is the Answer 1_3; Insight 15.
10 :011-Big Blue Marble 3; Church Service 4; Leroy
Jenkins 6; Christian Center 8; Movie "Take Her.
· She's Mine" 10; Jimmy Swaggart 13; Faith lor
Today 15.
10:3&lt;f-Go.USA J; Garner Ted Armstrong 41 Rex
Humbard 8; Jmmy Swagger! 6; Testimony Time
13; This Is the Life 15.
n :oo11 :oo-TV Chapel 3; Focus on Columbus ~~ Point of
View 6; Rex Humbard 15; Rev . Henry Mahan 13.

11 : 3~Human Dimension 3; OSU Football Highlights
4; CBPA Bowling 6; Face the Nation 8; Rev. Calvin
!; vans 13.
12:0G-Meet the Press 3,15; Thinking In the Bleck 8;
Columbus Town Meeting 10; These are the Days 13.
t2:3~At Issue 3; Meet the Press 4; Grandstand 15;
NFL Pre-Game Show e; Make a Wish 13.
12:5s--Five Minutes to Kick-Off 10.
1:oo-NFL Game ofthe Week 3; Ebony Bell Highlights
4; NFL Football 15; Directions 6; NFL F~tl8;
NFL Football 10; Medlx 13; Family Theatre 33.
I :J&lt;f-Gr.andstand 3,4; Issues &amp; Answer~ 6,13.
2:oo-NFL Football 3,4; Communique 6; CQIIFootball1975, t3; Men Who Made the Movies 33.
2: 3D-Aware 6.

3:oo-Homer Fomby 6; Friends of Man 13; Rich at tfte
top 33.
3:3~That Good ,Ole Nashville Music 6; World of
Survival 13.
4:0G-NFL Football 15; Friends ol Man 6; To Be Announced e; American Music Scene 13; Movie
"Casanova's Big Night" 10; Know Your Antiques
33.
4:3&lt;f-NF.L Football 3.4; Mission: Impossible 6; Play
Chess 33.
S:oo-To Be Announced e; Movie "The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders" 13; Erica 33.
5:1s--Theonle 33.
5:3~FBI6; All-Frazier Preview 8; Preserving Food
33.
6:00-CBS News Special 8,10; Villa Alegre 33.
6:3~News 6; Witness to Yesterday 33.
7:oo-World 'of Disney 3,4,15; Swiss Family Robinson
6.13; WCHS-TV Reports; World Press 20,33; Three
for the Road 10.
_
7 : 3~High School Bowl 8; Evening at Pops 20,33.
7:oo-Morris Cerullo Helpline 5.
8:oo-Famlly Holvak 3,4,15; Six Million Dollar Man
6,13; Cher 8,10
8 : 3~Naturallsts 20,33.
,
9:00-McMIIIan &amp; Wife 3,4,15; Movie "For
Pete's Sake" 6,13; Kolek 8,10; Masterpiece Theatre.
20.33.
.
lO :oo-Bronk 8,10; Ascent of Man 20,33.
11 :oo-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15; Big Valley 6; Monty
Python's Flying Circus 20; Kup's Show 33.
n : 1s-&lt;:BS News e, 10; PMA Pulse 15.
11 : 3~Salnt 3; Bonanza 4; Notre Dame Highlights 8;
Fee the Nation 10; 700 Club 13; Don Kirshner's
Rock Concert 15; Austin City Limits 20.
- - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - especially those who have no way to get to a library, the Bookmobile is a Godsend.
There is no greater way for people to become educated and
informed than by reading.
To take this opportunity away from them would be a step
backward in educating our cit.iuns. -Herbert L. Sayre, RD 2,
Racine, Ohio, 45771.

Contradicts report
Dear Sir :
After reading Friday's article, titled, "School Tax Rate
Reduced in Gallia," I could not believe it was describing the
same meeting I attended.
The proposed Gallia County School budget was NOT approved in full as indicated. The budget was in fact cut at le1111t
$468,000. The budget called for $3,550,000 in property tax
revenue. The current voter approved tax rate would easily
raise that amoWJt. The County Budget Conunlsslon was
"persuaded" to collect a lower rate that.will provide no more
than $3,082,000 and probably a lot less. When you get down to
the bare facts, the County School System will have $468,000 less
than it budgeted for 1976.
The people of Gallia County have a right to know that,
based on projected evaluations for the next year, this action
will save the average taxpayer aboui "·the Gavin Plant about
$270,000, the Kyger Plal)t about $145,000.
It will COST the children of Gallia County $468,000 which
could have eliminated parents ~ying for workbooks, allowed
busing grade and high scbool students separately, replaced
worn out school buses, cleaned up bull&lt;L,gs and playgroiD!da,
or any number of badly needed Improvements.
The children of Gallia· County ·were d911e a disservice. Jim Blevins

pulled up the net and the
slugs were passed out to the
"second gun jury" -a panel
of seven of the most
distinguishtd ballistics and
criminal evidence experts the
Superior Court could find.
The bullets were "nicely
marked" by the pistol's
barrel, panelist Lowell
Bradford, former head of the
Santa Clara (Calif.) County
crime laboratory 1 observed
approvingly . . ~ ·
Garland, a
firhrms
examiner for the Virginia
Bureau of Forensic Sciences
formerly of the Army
criminal investigation
laboratory, was elected by

the other paneusts to coordinate the investigation .
The panelists wiU compare
the fresh slugs with those
removed from Kennedy and
five wounded bystanders, and
with test bullets fired earlier
by the police department
criminalist who testified that
the bullets that killed Kennedy came from Sirhan 's
gun .
One of the major questions

is whether any reliable
conclusion can be drawn
from the seven-year-&lt;&gt;ld
exhibits, due to the passage of
time and alleged slipshod
handling in the county clerk's
office.
The panelists, brought in
from around the nation, said
they would work through the
weekend . But no conclusions
were expected until some
time next week.

Mental health program
explained to Rotary

MIDDLEPORT - Malcolm cooperation with the 648
Orebaugh, administrator of Board which plans and funds
the Community Mental the tri~ounty mental health
(Continued from Page 17)
Health Center, Inc., Friday program . Special attention is
after concluding no federal
evening asked members of being given to obtaining a
statutes had been violated.
the Middleport-Pomeroy children's mental health
FBI agents,. however, said
Rotary Club individually and center, he said .
they would continue to inas a group to support the .2
The three~oWJty program
vestigate the possibility that
mill levy renewal on the is funded presently at $300,000
"a substantial amount" of the
ballot this November which of which $8,500 provided by
$400,000 ransom paid by
provide
Meigs the .2 mill levy (renewal, for
would
Emoff's family Wednesday
County's share of local three years ), is all that Meigs
was transported across stale
support for the Gallia-Meigs- contributes.
lines .
Jackson mental health
"Meigs share is needed to
The Montgomery CoiL" 'Y program.
continue
the three-county
coroner said Emoff had been
Orebaugh was speaker service , Orebaugh said.
shot once in the head and six
following dinner at Heath The levy passed almost 2-1
times in the body, probably
United Methodist Church three years ago.
early Thursday morning.
served by la(jies of the
Only Friday ground was
· Emoff was abducted as he
church. He was presented by broken for the $1,145,000
left one of hls three furniture
program chairman Judge mental health center near
stores here Tuesday night.
Robert Buck.
Holzer Medical Center serHis family met the ransom
Orebaugh, a professional ving
Gallia-Meigs
and
demand Wednesday.
counselor,
works
in Jackson Counties for this
project, 90 pet. was federal, 5
pet. stale, and 5 pet. Gallia
12 :0G-ABC News 6; Movie "Contrack"' Janak! 33.
12 :1s--Notre Dame Highlights 6.
County funding .
12 :30-Bonanza ~; Sammy &amp; Company 8.
Guests introduced were
1:oo-ABC News 13.
John Huston of Lynhurst,
1: 30-Peyton Place 4.
Ohio, near Cleveland, accompanying Orebaugh; Bill
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29,1975
Knight, Point Pleasant, and
6:00-Columbus Today 4; Sunrise Semester 10.
Tom Boyd, HWltington, W.
6: Is--Folk Literature 3.
Va.
6:2s--Farm Report 13.
6:3~New Zoo Revue •; News 6; Bible Answers 8;
Farmtlme 10; Good News 13.
6:40--Mornlnq Reoor1 3.
6:5s-&lt;:huck White Reports 10; News 13.
7:QO-Today 3,4,15; A.M. America 6,13; CBS News 8;
Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends tO.
7:30-Schoolles tO.
e :oo-Lucy Show 6; Cap!. Kangaroo e,10; Sesame Sf.
33.
(Continued on page 17 )
e:3~Big Valley 6.
Patricia moved from the jail
9:0G-/&gt;:.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
to a hospital for further
Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
psychiatric examination.
9:30-Nof For Women Only 3; One Life to Live 66;
The four court-appointed
Musical Chairs 8; New Zoo Revue 13.
10:00-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,.,15; Dinah 6; Give-N·
doctors who are examining
Take 8,10; Mike Douglas 13.
her "all seem to agree that to
10:30-Wheel of Fortune 3, •• 15; Price Is Right e.10.
do an adequate diagnosis wil!
11 :oo-Hlgh Rollers 3, 15; I Dream of Jeannie 4;
take quite a bit longer,"
Gambit e,10; Elec. Co. 20.
Hallinan
said. "We want to
11:»--Hottywciod Squares 3,15; Happy Days 13;
get her moved to a hospital
Midday 4; Love of Life8,t0; Sesame St. 20.33.
11:55--Take Kerr 8; Dan !mel's World 10.
setting which will be more
12:0G-Magntftcent Marble Machine 3,15; Showoffs 13;
conducive to conducting an
Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; News 6,8,10.
examination.
12:»--3 for the Money 3,!5; All My Chttdren 6,13;
"We want this woman to
Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
recover
her sanity. We don't
12:-15--Eiec. Co. 33.
want
her
on the street, but we
12:55--NBC News 3.1 :0G-News 3; ~yan's Hope 6,13;
Phil Donahue 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For
don't want her to be locked up
·
Women Only 15.
and forgotten," the attorney
1:30-DaysofOur Llves3,4,15; Let's Make • Deal6,13;
said.
As the World Turns 8, 10.
Besides con! erring with
2:oo---.1o.ooo Pyramid 6,13; Guiding Light 8,10.
Hallinan Saturday, Miss
2:30-Docfors 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; Edge of
Hearst was interviewed by
Nighf.B, 10. .
3:0G-Anotfter World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13;
Dr . Margaret Singer, a
Match Game e110; Woman 20.
University of California
3:30-Dne Life to 'l..lve 13; Bewitched 6; Tattletales
psychologist on a court8, 10; Consumer Survival Kif 20.
appointed
panel. Patty has
. 4:oo-Mr. Cartoon 3; Mt!rv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
already
seen
Dr. Donald T.
Mickey Mouse Club 6,8; Mister Rogers :!0.33; Movie
"Commrade X" 10; Dinah 13.
Lunqe, of Stanford Univer4:30-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
sity.
Sesame St. 20,33; Get Smart 15.
Bailey is the criminal
S:OG-Bonanza 3; Family · Affair 8; Sfa&lt; Trek 15.
lawyer
who won Dr. Samuel
5:30-Adam-12 4; News· 6; Beverly Hillbillies e; Elec.
Sheppard his freedom in 1966
Co. 20,33; Adem-12 13.
in one of the most celebrated
' 6:0G-News 3,4,8,10, 13,15; ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20; . Special Education 33.
cases in U.S. history.
6:»--NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
Sheppard was acquitted of
CBS News 8,10; Making It Counnf 20.
a charge of killing his wife
7:0G-Trutft or Cons. 3; To Tell the Trutft 4; Bow11n9
after Bailey won a landmark
for Dollars 6; Buck Owens e; News 10; Candid
U.S. Supreme Court decision
Camera 13; Family Affair 15; One Million Strong
·which .ordered a new trial.
20; Cluslc Theatre Preview 33; Football
Doubleheader - Mt!lgs vs waverly followed by Pt.
Since then, he has proven
Pl. vs Huntington 5.
victorious in many seemingly
7:30-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Don Adams
hopeless cases.
- Screen Test4; Match Game PM 6; Price Is Right e;
Bailey convinced MassaE venlng with Martin A~ronsky 20; Hlgh Road to
chusetts officials to try Albert
Adventure 10; To Tell the Truth 13;" \Jntamed
DeSalvo, the self .ronfessed
World 15; Marco Spor111te: Football 33.
8:0G-Bobby Vinton 3; Barbary Coast 6,13; Invisible
Bostori strangler, on nonMan 4,15; Gunsmoke 8; Oufsfory ' "The Peach
capital charges. He also
Gang" 20,33; Rhoda 10.
successfully headed off in8:30-We Think You Should Know 3; Phyllis 10.
dictments against four men
9:00--Movle "Cops &amp; Robbers" 3,4, 15; NFL Football
suspected of pulling a $1.5
6,13; Allin The Family e, 10; Best In the Midwest 20;
million mail robbery in
Tennis 33.
Plymouth, Mass.
9:30-'Maude 8;10.
10:00-Medlcal Center 8, 10; News 20.
ll:QO-News 3,4,8,10,15; ABC News 33.
11: 3&lt;f-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie "Linda" 8; Movie
NOW YOU KNOW
· "The Philadelphia Story" 10; Janakl 33.
. The common garden snails
12:oo-News 6, 13.
12:30-FBI 6; Untouchables 13.
has .a life expectancy of two
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4.
years and produces a bout 300
1:30-News 13.
eggs in its lifetim,e .

Three held

Patty

.

'

'

I

I

homes," said Smith . "This
proposal will pay for itself."
But the other measures,
said Smith, would burden
Ohio with a long-term bonded
indebtedness with most of the
new revenues "spent at a
time when employment Is on
the upswing."
"The only true solution to
the problem rests at the
national level where the
Republican administration's
policy has been one of obstruction rather than support
for programs aimed at
economic recovery,'' said the
executive policy statement
issued Friday .
The AFUIO said Rhodes'
proposals to reduce taxes for
industrial expansion would
give new industry in the state
a "free ride" in Ohio and
would mean higher taxes for
wage earners.
Rhodes' proposal to boost
the state gasoline tax 13 per
cent to raise $1.75 billion was
an example, in the AFUIO's
opinion,
of
"twisted
priorities" in that most of the
money - 91 per cent- would
be used for highways with the
remainder devoted to IIUISS
transit construction or funding.
" More money should be
s pent developing mass
transit systems-both intercity and intracity," said the
policy statement.
,
" If we've learned anythipg
from the urban renewal fad of
the 1960's, it was that bulldiltg
new offices and high rise
apartments doesn't solve ihe
problems of the cities, it just
moves them out into the
suburbs and other parts of the
same city," continued the
policy statement in opposing
Rhodes' $2.75 billion capital
construction bond issue
proposal.
The money could better be
used in education or law
enforcement, said the AFLCIO leaders, adding it was
"questionable" whether the
proposal would indeed
prompt the creation of 300,000
new jobs as predicted by the
governor.
"Gov. Rhodes' proposals
make
Ohio
will
not
'depression proof.' There is
no master plan that can 'insulate Ohio from fluctuations
in the national and world
econo!aie.l," said the policy
statement.
An alternative to the three
· Rhodes proposals would be
adoption of an idea expressed
by
the
Constitutional
Revision Commission · to
commit six per cent of the
state's total tax revenlies,
said the labor federation.
"A public policy would thus
be established in Ohio to nse
capital
improvement
programs to bolster employment during the downturn of the economic cycle.
We believe Ohio should

continue a

Dooley is duly impressed by Pete and Archie

Dave HiJJ hangs on
~: 1':

~
'i ::::
I I!!

to hold onto lead
in Sahara golf play f

.!..''.:

LAS VEGAS, Nev . (UP!) - Steady Dave Hill had his first

bogey in 54 holes Saturday but still managed to shoot a four'" under-par 67 to remain tied for the lead after three rounds of
c.' the $35,000 Sahara Invitational Golf Tournament.
"- Hill, who has struggled all season without a win deadlocked
' ·with veteran B9bby Mitchell and Rik Massengle, ~ho also shot
·'" third-round 67s, at 201, 12 under par over the Sahara-Nevada
' "Country Club Course.
'"
Australian Bruce Crampton fired his se&lt;.'Ond straight 65
,'" and was only one shot back at 202 in a tie with Bob Wynn, who
·· · had a 68 Saturday .
.
" A 67 or 68 should win it," said Hill, who has made $53,533
.. this year, which is subiJar for him.
•··
" I've had my problems ali year and I'm still working on
.,. my golf swing. It's nothing physical. It's my head ."
' ·
Hill, of Denver, winner of llrour events, missed a l~oot
""putt on the 14th hole, a par three, 236-yarder, for his first bogey
.. of the tournament.
•.
"This is a good driving golf course and I've just been
trying to steer the b!J,ll," he said.
Hili sank a three-foot putt for an eagle on the par-five, 535'' ·
"' yard fourth hole and woWJd up the day with birdies on his last
' ' two holes.
••·. Wally Armstrong and Miller Barber, who started the day in
tie for first with Massengle, Wynn and Hill, shot themselves
-·· 'Out of contention with a pair of 75s.
All alone in seventh place at 203, 10 under par was David
·· Graham, who had a 66. Three shots behind the trio of leaders
0
were Charles Coody, 65; Joe Inman, 67, and Chuck Gortney, 68.
Lyn Lott turned in the best round of the day with a 64 and
~ was deadlocked with defending Sahara champion AI Geiberger
"' at 205.

lly JOHN r. KADY
- big taclde playing fullback ."
The 1).(1, 246-pound Johnson
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) NOJth Carolina coach Bill also gained 143 yards in 26
Dooley says Pete Johnson , carries for the second;anked
who scored a school record Buckeyes Saturday and now
five touchdowns to lead Ohio ha s tallied nine of the 10
State to a 32-7 win ovr r the touchdowns the Bucks have
Tar Heels , "r eminds me of a scored in ro llin ~ up three

open the protective rubber fuel bladder inside the ga s lank ,
causing raw gasoline to. spill out and ignite.
The car then careened into a retaining wall and burst into
flames . Rescue worke rs bat tled the flames for an estimated
two minutes.

wins wilhou t a loss.

for touchdowns on runs · of

·'He is very quick," said
Doole y. " Not so fast but very
quick and very strong. He
reminds me of a big tacld e
playing fullba ck ."
: ohnson pounded t hrough
the No rth Ca rolina defe nse

one, five, one, two and three
yards .
Ohio State coach Woody
Hay es a lso lauded Johnson's
running.
"Th at gives a team a lot of
proble m s," said Ha yes.
" When your fullba c k is
running well. it makes vour
tailback tha t much more of a
threat."
And when your tailback is
Heisman Trophy winn e r
Arc hie Griffin, the threa t Is
compounded. Griffin ga ined

::·:::::::;.·:::::::::::·:::.::::::::::::::.:!:=:·:=:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:

AT CONFERENCE
COLUMB US - Inc reased
usc of pocket cal culators and
computers, complications in
th e tea ching of mathem a tics
skills to high school student s,
and tea c hin g th e me tric
system we re amon g topics
examined by more than 200
hi g h &lt;e ho n1 and college
ma th e m a lll'S ins truc tor s
fr om throughout Ohio at a
specia l conference held in
Columbus on September 19
and 20. Participants included
Ca rla Shuler, math instructor
at Southern High School.

Joe Morgan and Johnny Bench slammed homers and
drove in 3 runs a piece Saturday to power pla yoff-bound
Cincinnati to its 107th triumph - the most in the National
League since th e 1906 Chicago Cubs won 116 games - with a 1-&lt;;
victory over the Atlanta Braves.
Don Gullett, who will open the NL playoffs against the
Pirates next Saturday, gave up one unearled run in five
minutes to notch his 15th victory against four losses.
Pete Rose ripped his 47th double - lops in the league and Morgan's three RBis gave him 94, a new club record for
second basemen.
In other NL action, Pittsburgh defeated St. L&lt;&gt;uis, 4-2,
Montreal beat Chicago 5-J and Los Angeles downed Houston 5I.

::a

157 yard s on 22 carries in his
24th consec utive oeguiarS.oson gam e ove r 100 rushing
yards .
"Tha t 's a noth er thing that
makes Ohio State so tough to
defense," said Dooley. " You
know they have Arc hi e
Griffin . Then there 's No. 33,
Johnson, with hi s tremendous
strengtb arid quickness and
th e n t he r e is Corn elius
Greene .
" They don't have just one
threat in their backfield, they
ha ve three of them ,'' said ...
Dooley.
Greene completed seven of
eight passes for 137 yards
Saturday.
Dooley also was impressed
with the Buckeyes defensive

·WOOSTER WINS
WOOSTE R. Ohio i UPl l -·
Woos ter end Jim Gerard
caught a Jim Bress i pass with
only 9: 00 left in the game to
put his team on top for a 9-7
victory ov er Ke nyon in the
winner 's home opener here
Saturday.

Wli l.

" I don 't think there is an y
doubt Ohi o State is a strong ,
disciplined tea m ," said
Dooley. "l was very impressed with their defense,
their quickness .
" I thought our players gave

LAST WEEK TO SAVE
SALE DATES SEPT. 29-30-0CT. 1-2-3-4

NEW YORK (UPI)- !Wy White and Thurman Munson
each ripped twO-f'Wl singles to highlight a four-run seventh
~ ..Saturday that helped tbe New York Yankees complete a
"' doubleheader sweep with a 7-3 triumph over the Baltimore
~ · Orioles, clinching the American League East title for the
·":Boston Red Sox.

DODGERS TRIUMPH
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Steve Yeager belted a grandslam homer Saturday to
spark the Los Angeles
Dod gers to a 5-1 victory over
the Houston Astros and give
Andy Messersmith his 19th
triumph.

PANELING
BIG

BUY NOW

J.:

a heckuva effort but we just
couldn't match them at all,"
said Dooley . " They have a
very physical football teall)."
Hayes agreed, stating, "We
are bigger and stronger than
they are.
" Our offensive line was
blocking pretly well," said
Hayes, "and once Cornelius
got settled down, he was
hitting pretty well .
" We had 403 ya rds rushing
t.o 109," said Hayes. "That's
almost four.to-&lt;&gt;ne and that's
the way we like to do it ."

DAYS

~

AND
SAVE!

J ..

·- Catfish Hunter and Doc Medich pitched complete game
c. :victories for New York and the double death loss placed the
• Jrioles five games behind Boston with six games remaining.
o·
In the opener, Hunter recorded his 23rd victory of the
:~ ·season as the Yankees won 3-2 on a bases -loaded walk to Rick
'' Dempsey with none out in the loth inning.

"'

LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Quarterback Vince Evans took
., :the ball in his own hand and ran over two touchdowns Saturday
·:. to lead the University of Southern California to a 1~ victory
. ' over Purdue after the Boilermakers had held the Trojans
·· .. scoreless through the first half.
"' · The Trojans came off determined ro make up for their first
... ·half inability to score. They drove 72 yards in 13 plays at the
•• ·•start of the second half. Ricky Bell had gains of 13 and 15 yards
,. .on the drive and Evans rolled out for 13 yards to the one, from
where he scored.
··'
The kick returns of safety Danny Reece highlighted
o· Trojans scoring in the final period. His 47-yard run back put
" the Trojans on the Purdue 12 and Evans on a quarterback draw
. "•ran through the middle for the second Trojans score.
""'
On the next kickoff, Reece returned the ball68 yards to the
in three. A penalty sent the Trojans back to the eight, but Mosi
, .• :rapupu made seven and Bell plunged over from the one for his
seventh touchdown of the season.
)-·
~J
LONG BEACH - Dick Workman, 41, San Francisco, was
•:· seriously hurt in a violent, fiery crash against a retaining wall
.,. 'On a road leading to the race course during qualifying Satur" ' day for the Long Beach Grand Prix.
·• ..
Workman was pulled from his Formula 5000 Lola after
o41ames leaped from the car for an estimated two minutes. He
was taken by helicopter to nearby St. Mary's Hospital.
Workman's reportedly suffered second degree burns,
oc.·broken rips and possible internal injuries.
•" · Observers said the crash occurred when Workman,
-~-driving at a high rate of speed on a road from the paddock area
_.,,.(()the race course, struck a street curb and was rocketed into a
,;retaining wall.
.,,.
One official speculated that the impact with the curb burst

COME IN AND REGISTER FOR FREE DOOR PRIZES

1st PRIZE

111-PS. PANELING

2ND PRIZE

lAWN CROQUET SET

'84.90
'23.79
- ~moo~~=:~:
· ~g~~~~r---------------~--~;;~~~::VALUE

SiiLRSO~~

. -~

BX-H~FAHS

REG. 114.95 ~

$
Prefinished
• (;yaran l eed One Co«l
• G!Jn&lt;an l eao N on 'I'('IIO"' ' " q
• !J Y&lt;:!ar DurAbr lr l ~

• Re$ r515 f.lhsle" " ll druJ Pm&gt;hny
• M IIOf' "' Dcliallt "

• A•a•laol~·n30 colors

REG. I27.88
BUNDLE
SALE

hl•~•lz•• ~l"•lr'

IIEG. '3.99 SHEET

REGULAR

SALE SPECIALS
-

99

~LING

8

$

-

SALE

GAlLON

Sl0.40 Gallon

LY

SALE

11

$TARTING"

REG. 118.65

s

ESCRIPTION 4Ft . '8 Ft . R

CARTON

CARTON

AT

ALL SALE ITEMS MUST BE
PICKED UP FROM OUR YARD NO
LATER THAN ONE WEEK AFTER
SALE ENDS.

A

v
E

'pay~as~you-go'

program/' UJ.e report concluded.

Eyes turn
(Continued on page 17)
requirements under the
federal statues then in
force."
The Phillips' report is one
of several that will be filed by
corporations with the SEC
before the end of 1975.
Others wiD come from Gulf
Oil Corp., which spent $5
million on political campaigns, and Minnesota
Mining and Manufacturilig,
which had a slush fund of
$400,000.
American Airlines and
Braniff International Airways spent a combined $1.3
million on political ca!Dpaigns.
And Cities Service announced only a few days ago
that it maintained a $600,000
slush fund.
WASHINGTON (UP!) 'Here is the list of 54 present
and former members ;of
Congress who received illegal
campaign contributions frQm
Phillipa Petroleum Co. in 1~70
and 1972.
Phillips' report to the U.S.
District Court and the Securities and Exchange ComissiOn
Friday said the candidates
did not' know the cash contributions were froll\ ci)rporate funds and were,
therefore, illegal.
:
The exact amounts of the
contributions accompany the
names where the InformatiOn
is available.
.,

r. .Hocking Tech bulging
with enrollments
NELSONVILLE
Preliminary registration
.figures indicate that 1975-76
enrollment at Hocking
Technical College will be
about 1,750 students, an in•"
crease of nearly 38 per cent
, ' over last year's enrollment.
Hocking Tech President
• · John J. Light said Wednesday
.'.'.:rtaytime enrollment stood at
~"nearly 1,300, with another 450
, _students anticipated in the
;:,;evening division. The full.' time equivalent enrollment is
"~xpected to be 1,550, he ad"'l, ,ded.
;
Last year there were 980
" ' day students and less than
, 1,200 full-time equivalent
~: students.

the growth appeared to be in
technologies which could
absorb it comfortably. He
said the college limited
enrollment in areas which
are full and had increased
staffing in anticipation of the
growth.
Although the jump in
enrollment will " put a strain
on facilities, " Light said, the
college will be able to handle
the current enrollment in its
new building which Hocking
Tech moved into last
February .
Groundbreaking for
three new buildings is expected to take place this fall
for the college's Phase II
$3.38
million
building
program which will add ~
classroom and laboratory
building adjacent to the
present building, a student
center and a natural
resources building.
The Phase II buildings will
bring
Hocking
Tech's
facilities up to an ideal
capacity of 1,300 daytime
students, Light said, a figure
which is expected to · be exceeded.
when
final
registration figures are
available in about two weeks.
Hocking Tech opened in
1968 with a student body of
225.

,. ·; The Ohio Board of Regents
":.a year ago projected the 197576 FTE enrollment at 1,350
_., 1'"d based this year's budget
on that figure which now
:·:·appears to be more than 200
Ui.''short, Light said. However,
Hocking Tech officials have
been anticipating the new
-- record number since the
;" beginning of last year
1" because the number of ap' r·
:;:plications had increased 30 to
-··so per cent over
prevtous
~~ ~.
'
years' applicattons.
Light said that in past
' years the regents ha,ve been
_, 'a ble to make up" the dif'"terence between budgets for
0
"projected enrollments and
" the ·funding needs of higher
·:registrations, but that this
'~ year extra funding is not
A thought for the day:
expected to be available.
President Franklin D. Roose"" Nevertheless, Light termed
velt said: c.~There is no in"'\ he enrollment increase
dispensable
man ."
"'healtliy and pointed out that

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•

19 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 28, 1975

18 - The Sunday Times - Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 28. 1975
,---~---- -------- -----------

Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be
less than 300 words long tor be subject I&lt;&gt; reduction by
the edtror) and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may he wilhheld upon publieallon.
However, oo request, names wiD be disclosed. Letters
sbould be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Is it any wonder our young men . ..
Dear Sir :
As a faithful member of the Kyger Creek Athletic Boos ters
Club, I have become appalled at the overall lack of interest
displayed by the many parents of our young athletes .
Our fine young men who put forth a lot of effort, and quite
successfully I might add , and whic h we all_e njoy as mere
spectators, are gravely neglected by their own parents in their
athletic endeavors .
This neglect isqu1 te evident in the slothful attitude of these
parents. The failure of parents to enga ge·in the Boosters activities, the failure to attend meetings for our schools athletic
betterment and finally. t he failure of these parents to give of
their time all attribute to this. Is it any wonder why , in our
present day society, that our young people many times fold
under this burden of neglect on the part of their parents? Can
we, as so called "I've been there" mature adults, expect our
own local society to flourish and improve with our present
slothful attitude ? We are all great planners and are quick to
offer what we think as intelligent criticism of those individuals
that try, but on the other hand, as doers, we literally stink!
It's high time that we call a "time-&lt;&gt;ut" and " stop the
clock" momentarily, analyze the situation recognizing our
poten.tials, call a ggod play with sound judgment, sound a
rousing "charge" to bolster our enthusiasm and hit the line as
hard as we know that we can !
Let 's show our young men love by action, instead of
procrastination and support them whole-heartedly, for we
know that we won't have them for long . We have the opportunity to give them the backing that they will long
remember and be grateful to us as parents. Isn't that a worth
while reward? Let's go on with it! Join in now and give of
yourself! It's a gift, you know!
-Signed : Member Kyger Creek Athletic Boosters (name
withheld on request) .

Points about a pointer
Dear Sir:
It was with some interest I read the article in the Sept. 21
edition of the Sunday Times-Sentinel dealing with a pointer
(Your Wayne National Forest, by T. Allan Wolter).
While I agree that you put your point across as a pointer
that was loved - maybe - and did a job of hunting, I camot
agree with your knowledge of a good pointer especially on
grouse .
I have raised arid trained and bred bird dogs for the past 30
years, so feel! am a very poor authority on the subject, for I
have met many men who know a lot more than I do about
pointers. However here are a couple of my views:
I have never trained a pointer that I would let range over
30 yards at the very most from me. When a dog points a grouse
at 50 to 7~ yards away he might just as well be 'home, for the
odds are all against you ever getting within shooting range,
and anyone wbo says they shoot grouse at that range, just ain't
never hunted ruffled grouse in Pemsylvania.
Tell me, have you ever tried to follow, then lead a grouse
that has taken off through the hemlocks or pines at 25 yards, let
alone 50 or more yards? They just don't stay in a straight line
that far, but put a tree between you and them right sudden like.
I have always trained all of my dogs but one (of which I
will write more later) on a rope of 25 yards in length and held
them there when they went on point. In a surprisingly short
time they will learn they are not supposed to range wide.
I am now speaking of hunting dogs; If you are training
dogs for field trials, then you want to have them range wide
and fast and cover all the grmmd they can.
I have trained. owned and hunted two female
weimaraners that would hold a point and honor a point until
they became so tense they would shake all over but would not
break the point until I sent them in; and never over 20 or 25
yards from me.
In regard to the one dog I never trained using a rope, I
owned a little blonde Cocker Spaniel (female) that I took with
me when I had my Weimaraners out to train, and with no
assistance, she learned to point and to retrieve by watching the
other dogs. She was a good pointer on grouse and pheasant, but
never had a nose for woodcock.
I have owned and trained 17 Weimaraners at one time and
really enjoyed it.
Just wish I was younger I would like to raise and train
Seeing Eye Dogs, I have never tried it, but think it would be
fun.
At present, I have an English Pointer, Bo Jingle Bob.
This dog was owned by Leonard Nedirltter who is a noted
owner and trainer and handler of field trial dogs. This was a
good dog, who won a number of firsts and places in field trials;
but Leonard ruined him for field trials by taking him hunting a
couple of times and Bob learned too fast. He would not range
fast and wide any more, preferring to work slow and close, so
Leonard ..Old him.
· He is a wonderful pet and good hunter but I never kill any
birds or any wild game at all any more. But I love to take him
out and watch him work and point.
Incidentally, I have never beat any of my dogs. The worst I
ever did was use a folded paper to smack one across the rear
end, And I have never used a choke collar; never found it
necessary.
I had one Weimaraner that would quit hWJting if you did
not shoot and kill or at least cripple a bird after she pointed
several. She would come back and walk alongside of me the
rest of the day.
I always read the Gallipolis paper with a great deal of
interest and enjoyment, although I don't know too many of the.
names I see any more.
We have a nice hWJting camp in Warren County, about four
miles from Tidioute, and four miles from the Allegheny River.
There is good hunting there, squirrels, snow shoe hare,
rabbits, grouse, woodcock, pheasant, turkey, deer and a few
bear. I like to go down and spend a few days there and usually
take a gun or two alo"Ji but haven't killed any game for years,
.although I think this fall I will try and get a Wild turkey.
We live right on the bank of Lake Erie about 15 miles east
of Conneaut, Ohio and 15 miles west of Erie, Pa.
The Coho and Chinook Salmon are running and my
lrother-in..Jaw and I are out in my boat almost every day.
, ~Ink I will go down to my camp tomorrow and saw and
split up some wood for the fireplace so we can keep warm
during deer sea.son.
Hope to be down in Gallia Couinty next month (October)
some tlrne and will stqp at the Tribune office.
· · · Just an old Gallia'County boy that has been transplanted to
Pe11118ylvania for 46·years.- Sincerei:y, Eldie Dickey, RD I,
Lake Ciiy, .Pa. 16423.

A real step backward
Dear Sir:
,
We understand the Bookmobile is having financial
troubles and Js •in danget: of being discontinued.
.
To the people In the rural sections of Meigs P.unty, and
'

I

Ohio's union brass
By J .R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS I UP!) - The
leadership of the one millionmember AFUIO in Ohio
Friday refused to endorse
three of Gov . James A.
Rhod es' four ' 'economic
recovery '' constitutional
amendments which come
before the voters Nov. 4.
First, the nine-member Exe c utiv e Committee

unanimously rejected the
transportation, ir\dustrial tax
abatement and capital improvements proposals but
gave approval to the homeconstruction measure.
Then, the 29-member
Executive Board followed
suit .
Warren
Smith,
secretary-treasurer of the
labor federation said there
was only one dissenting vote.

oppos~

from a representative of the
lluilding trades' unions, on
the rejection of three of tilt!
proposals.
Rhodes ealled the action of
the
Executive
bodies
"shameful."
"A handful of Ohio AFLCIO labor leaders have
betrayed rank-and-file
members by their blatantly
partisan action," said

3 Rhodes' issues

Rhodes, but added the
decision did not surprise him.
'!'be governor urged rankand-file union members to·
ignore the recommendations.
Smith and Ohio AF!.,.CJO
President Milan Marsh said
no plans had been formulated
I&lt;&gt; oppose the measures, but
that the executive board had
a " moral obligation to bring
all the facts before the people

we represent and appraise
them of the indebtedness
these issues would mean to
the state."
Smith and Marsh said the
state 's housing industry
needed the boost the $100
million bond issue Rhodes'
proposal would mean.
"Our housing industry is in
a depressed state and this
would c reate 75,000 new

Evidence experts test-fire Sirhan's pistoJ
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - A is anything to the "second
criminal evidence expert gun 11 theory, that someone in
from Virginia , his ears addition to Sirhan fired a gun
covered by blast mufflers, in the Ambassador Hotel
leaned over a six-foot-deep kitchen when Robert F
steel water barrel in the Kennedy was assassinated in
county courthouse and fired 1968.
four shots from a .22-&lt;:aliber
The bullets fired by Patrick
revolver .
Garland splashed into the
Six years after it was filed tank, slowed as their velocity
away in a manila envelope, was braked by the water, and
Sirhan Sirhan's pistol was sank into a net on the bottom.
heard again.
Courtland Cunningham, chief
The test firing Friday was firearms examiner at the FBI
part of an effort to determine laboratory in Washington,
once and for all whether there

Television Log
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21,1975
6:oo-This Is the Life 10.
6 : J~Publlc Affairs ~~ Viewpoint 8; Public Polley
Forum 10; Newsmaker '75 13.

6:4s--Tele-Bible Time 4.
7:oo-Church by Side of the Road ~~ Rev. Calvin
Evans 8; Spring Street U.S.A. 13.
7:3~ This is the Life 3; Cadte Chapel 4; Revival Fires
6 ; Jerry Falwell 8; Camera Three 10; Lower'
Lighthouse 13.
8:oo-Mormon Choir 3; Day of Discovery ~~ Gospel
Caravan 6; Church Service 10; Mamre Church 13.
8 : 3~ral Roberts J; Yours for the Asking~~ Kathryn
Kuhlman 6; Day of Discovery 8; James Robison
Presents 10; Rex Humbard t3; See the U.S.A. 15.
9:oo-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Hour of Power 4; Rex
Humbard 6; Rev. Leonard Repass 8; Oral Roberts
10.
9:J~What Does the Bible Plainly Say 8; It Is Written
10; Christ Is the Answer 1_3; Insight 15.
10 :011-Big Blue Marble 3; Church Service 4; Leroy
Jenkins 6; Christian Center 8; Movie "Take Her.
· She's Mine" 10; Jimmy Swaggart 13; Faith lor
Today 15.
10:3&lt;f-Go.USA J; Garner Ted Armstrong 41 Rex
Humbard 8; Jmmy Swagger! 6; Testimony Time
13; This Is the Life 15.
n :oo11 :oo-TV Chapel 3; Focus on Columbus ~~ Point of
View 6; Rex Humbard 15; Rev . Henry Mahan 13.

11 : 3~Human Dimension 3; OSU Football Highlights
4; CBPA Bowling 6; Face the Nation 8; Rev. Calvin
!; vans 13.
12:0G-Meet the Press 3,15; Thinking In the Bleck 8;
Columbus Town Meeting 10; These are the Days 13.
t2:3~At Issue 3; Meet the Press 4; Grandstand 15;
NFL Pre-Game Show e; Make a Wish 13.
12:5s--Five Minutes to Kick-Off 10.
1:oo-NFL Game ofthe Week 3; Ebony Bell Highlights
4; NFL Football 15; Directions 6; NFL F~tl8;
NFL Football 10; Medlx 13; Family Theatre 33.
I :J&lt;f-Gr.andstand 3,4; Issues &amp; Answer~ 6,13.
2:oo-NFL Football 3,4; Communique 6; CQIIFootball1975, t3; Men Who Made the Movies 33.
2: 3D-Aware 6.

3:oo-Homer Fomby 6; Friends of Man 13; Rich at tfte
top 33.
3:3~That Good ,Ole Nashville Music 6; World of
Survival 13.
4:0G-NFL Football 15; Friends ol Man 6; To Be Announced e; American Music Scene 13; Movie
"Casanova's Big Night" 10; Know Your Antiques
33.
4:3&lt;f-NF.L Football 3.4; Mission: Impossible 6; Play
Chess 33.
S:oo-To Be Announced e; Movie "The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders" 13; Erica 33.
5:1s--Theonle 33.
5:3~FBI6; All-Frazier Preview 8; Preserving Food
33.
6:00-CBS News Special 8,10; Villa Alegre 33.
6:3~News 6; Witness to Yesterday 33.
7:oo-World 'of Disney 3,4,15; Swiss Family Robinson
6.13; WCHS-TV Reports; World Press 20,33; Three
for the Road 10.
_
7 : 3~High School Bowl 8; Evening at Pops 20,33.
7:oo-Morris Cerullo Helpline 5.
8:oo-Famlly Holvak 3,4,15; Six Million Dollar Man
6,13; Cher 8,10
8 : 3~Naturallsts 20,33.
,
9:00-McMIIIan &amp; Wife 3,4,15; Movie "For
Pete's Sake" 6,13; Kolek 8,10; Masterpiece Theatre.
20.33.
.
lO :oo-Bronk 8,10; Ascent of Man 20,33.
11 :oo-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15; Big Valley 6; Monty
Python's Flying Circus 20; Kup's Show 33.
n : 1s-&lt;:BS News e, 10; PMA Pulse 15.
11 : 3~Salnt 3; Bonanza 4; Notre Dame Highlights 8;
Fee the Nation 10; 700 Club 13; Don Kirshner's
Rock Concert 15; Austin City Limits 20.
- - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - especially those who have no way to get to a library, the Bookmobile is a Godsend.
There is no greater way for people to become educated and
informed than by reading.
To take this opportunity away from them would be a step
backward in educating our cit.iuns. -Herbert L. Sayre, RD 2,
Racine, Ohio, 45771.

Contradicts report
Dear Sir :
After reading Friday's article, titled, "School Tax Rate
Reduced in Gallia," I could not believe it was describing the
same meeting I attended.
The proposed Gallia County School budget was NOT approved in full as indicated. The budget was in fact cut at le1111t
$468,000. The budget called for $3,550,000 in property tax
revenue. The current voter approved tax rate would easily
raise that amoWJt. The County Budget Conunlsslon was
"persuaded" to collect a lower rate that.will provide no more
than $3,082,000 and probably a lot less. When you get down to
the bare facts, the County School System will have $468,000 less
than it budgeted for 1976.
The people of Gallia County have a right to know that,
based on projected evaluations for the next year, this action
will save the average taxpayer aboui "·the Gavin Plant about
$270,000, the Kyger Plal)t about $145,000.
It will COST the children of Gallia County $468,000 which
could have eliminated parents ~ying for workbooks, allowed
busing grade and high scbool students separately, replaced
worn out school buses, cleaned up bull&lt;L,gs and playgroiD!da,
or any number of badly needed Improvements.
The children of Gallia· County ·were d911e a disservice. Jim Blevins

pulled up the net and the
slugs were passed out to the
"second gun jury" -a panel
of seven of the most
distinguishtd ballistics and
criminal evidence experts the
Superior Court could find.
The bullets were "nicely
marked" by the pistol's
barrel, panelist Lowell
Bradford, former head of the
Santa Clara (Calif.) County
crime laboratory 1 observed
approvingly . . ~ ·
Garland, a
firhrms
examiner for the Virginia
Bureau of Forensic Sciences
formerly of the Army
criminal investigation
laboratory, was elected by

the other paneusts to coordinate the investigation .
The panelists wiU compare
the fresh slugs with those
removed from Kennedy and
five wounded bystanders, and
with test bullets fired earlier
by the police department
criminalist who testified that
the bullets that killed Kennedy came from Sirhan 's
gun .
One of the major questions

is whether any reliable
conclusion can be drawn
from the seven-year-&lt;&gt;ld
exhibits, due to the passage of
time and alleged slipshod
handling in the county clerk's
office.
The panelists, brought in
from around the nation, said
they would work through the
weekend . But no conclusions
were expected until some
time next week.

Mental health program
explained to Rotary

MIDDLEPORT - Malcolm cooperation with the 648
Orebaugh, administrator of Board which plans and funds
the Community Mental the tri~ounty mental health
(Continued from Page 17)
Health Center, Inc., Friday program . Special attention is
after concluding no federal
evening asked members of being given to obtaining a
statutes had been violated.
the Middleport-Pomeroy children's mental health
FBI agents,. however, said
Rotary Club individually and center, he said .
they would continue to inas a group to support the .2
The three~oWJty program
vestigate the possibility that
mill levy renewal on the is funded presently at $300,000
"a substantial amount" of the
ballot this November which of which $8,500 provided by
$400,000 ransom paid by
provide
Meigs the .2 mill levy (renewal, for
would
Emoff's family Wednesday
County's share of local three years ), is all that Meigs
was transported across stale
support for the Gallia-Meigs- contributes.
lines .
Jackson mental health
"Meigs share is needed to
The Montgomery CoiL" 'Y program.
continue
the three-county
coroner said Emoff had been
Orebaugh was speaker service , Orebaugh said.
shot once in the head and six
following dinner at Heath The levy passed almost 2-1
times in the body, probably
United Methodist Church three years ago.
early Thursday morning.
served by la(jies of the
Only Friday ground was
· Emoff was abducted as he
church. He was presented by broken for the $1,145,000
left one of hls three furniture
program chairman Judge mental health center near
stores here Tuesday night.
Robert Buck.
Holzer Medical Center serHis family met the ransom
Orebaugh, a professional ving
Gallia-Meigs
and
demand Wednesday.
counselor,
works
in Jackson Counties for this
project, 90 pet. was federal, 5
pet. stale, and 5 pet. Gallia
12 :0G-ABC News 6; Movie "Contrack"' Janak! 33.
12 :1s--Notre Dame Highlights 6.
County funding .
12 :30-Bonanza ~; Sammy &amp; Company 8.
Guests introduced were
1:oo-ABC News 13.
John Huston of Lynhurst,
1: 30-Peyton Place 4.
Ohio, near Cleveland, accompanying Orebaugh; Bill
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29,1975
Knight, Point Pleasant, and
6:00-Columbus Today 4; Sunrise Semester 10.
Tom Boyd, HWltington, W.
6: Is--Folk Literature 3.
Va.
6:2s--Farm Report 13.
6:3~New Zoo Revue •; News 6; Bible Answers 8;
Farmtlme 10; Good News 13.
6:40--Mornlnq Reoor1 3.
6:5s-&lt;:huck White Reports 10; News 13.
7:QO-Today 3,4,15; A.M. America 6,13; CBS News 8;
Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends tO.
7:30-Schoolles tO.
e :oo-Lucy Show 6; Cap!. Kangaroo e,10; Sesame Sf.
33.
(Continued on page 17 )
e:3~Big Valley 6.
Patricia moved from the jail
9:0G-/&gt;:.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
to a hospital for further
Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
psychiatric examination.
9:30-Nof For Women Only 3; One Life to Live 66;
The four court-appointed
Musical Chairs 8; New Zoo Revue 13.
10:00-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,.,15; Dinah 6; Give-N·
doctors who are examining
Take 8,10; Mike Douglas 13.
her "all seem to agree that to
10:30-Wheel of Fortune 3, •• 15; Price Is Right e.10.
do an adequate diagnosis wil!
11 :oo-Hlgh Rollers 3, 15; I Dream of Jeannie 4;
take quite a bit longer,"
Gambit e,10; Elec. Co. 20.
Hallinan
said. "We want to
11:»--Hottywciod Squares 3,15; Happy Days 13;
get her moved to a hospital
Midday 4; Love of Life8,t0; Sesame St. 20.33.
11:55--Take Kerr 8; Dan !mel's World 10.
setting which will be more
12:0G-Magntftcent Marble Machine 3,15; Showoffs 13;
conducive to conducting an
Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; News 6,8,10.
examination.
12:»--3 for the Money 3,!5; All My Chttdren 6,13;
"We want this woman to
Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
recover
her sanity. We don't
12:-15--Eiec. Co. 33.
want
her
on the street, but we
12:55--NBC News 3.1 :0G-News 3; ~yan's Hope 6,13;
Phil Donahue 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For
don't want her to be locked up
·
Women Only 15.
and forgotten," the attorney
1:30-DaysofOur Llves3,4,15; Let's Make • Deal6,13;
said.
As the World Turns 8, 10.
Besides con! erring with
2:oo---.1o.ooo Pyramid 6,13; Guiding Light 8,10.
Hallinan Saturday, Miss
2:30-Docfors 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; Edge of
Hearst was interviewed by
Nighf.B, 10. .
3:0G-Anotfter World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13;
Dr . Margaret Singer, a
Match Game e110; Woman 20.
University of California
3:30-Dne Life to 'l..lve 13; Bewitched 6; Tattletales
psychologist on a court8, 10; Consumer Survival Kif 20.
appointed
panel. Patty has
. 4:oo-Mr. Cartoon 3; Mt!rv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
already
seen
Dr. Donald T.
Mickey Mouse Club 6,8; Mister Rogers :!0.33; Movie
"Commrade X" 10; Dinah 13.
Lunqe, of Stanford Univer4:30-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
sity.
Sesame St. 20,33; Get Smart 15.
Bailey is the criminal
S:OG-Bonanza 3; Family · Affair 8; Sfa&lt; Trek 15.
lawyer
who won Dr. Samuel
5:30-Adam-12 4; News· 6; Beverly Hillbillies e; Elec.
Sheppard his freedom in 1966
Co. 20,33; Adem-12 13.
in one of the most celebrated
' 6:0G-News 3,4,8,10, 13,15; ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20; . Special Education 33.
cases in U.S. history.
6:»--NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
Sheppard was acquitted of
CBS News 8,10; Making It Counnf 20.
a charge of killing his wife
7:0G-Trutft or Cons. 3; To Tell the Trutft 4; Bow11n9
after Bailey won a landmark
for Dollars 6; Buck Owens e; News 10; Candid
U.S. Supreme Court decision
Camera 13; Family Affair 15; One Million Strong
·which .ordered a new trial.
20; Cluslc Theatre Preview 33; Football
Doubleheader - Mt!lgs vs waverly followed by Pt.
Since then, he has proven
Pl. vs Huntington 5.
victorious in many seemingly
7:30-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Don Adams
hopeless cases.
- Screen Test4; Match Game PM 6; Price Is Right e;
Bailey convinced MassaE venlng with Martin A~ronsky 20; Hlgh Road to
chusetts officials to try Albert
Adventure 10; To Tell the Truth 13;" \Jntamed
DeSalvo, the self .ronfessed
World 15; Marco Spor111te: Football 33.
8:0G-Bobby Vinton 3; Barbary Coast 6,13; Invisible
Bostori strangler, on nonMan 4,15; Gunsmoke 8; Oufsfory ' "The Peach
capital charges. He also
Gang" 20,33; Rhoda 10.
successfully headed off in8:30-We Think You Should Know 3; Phyllis 10.
dictments against four men
9:00--Movle "Cops &amp; Robbers" 3,4, 15; NFL Football
suspected of pulling a $1.5
6,13; Allin The Family e, 10; Best In the Midwest 20;
million mail robbery in
Tennis 33.
Plymouth, Mass.
9:30-'Maude 8;10.
10:00-Medlcal Center 8, 10; News 20.
ll:QO-News 3,4,8,10,15; ABC News 33.
11: 3&lt;f-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie "Linda" 8; Movie
NOW YOU KNOW
· "The Philadelphia Story" 10; Janakl 33.
. The common garden snails
12:oo-News 6, 13.
12:30-FBI 6; Untouchables 13.
has .a life expectancy of two
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4.
years and produces a bout 300
1:30-News 13.
eggs in its lifetim,e .

Three held

Patty

.

'

'

I

I

homes," said Smith . "This
proposal will pay for itself."
But the other measures,
said Smith, would burden
Ohio with a long-term bonded
indebtedness with most of the
new revenues "spent at a
time when employment Is on
the upswing."
"The only true solution to
the problem rests at the
national level where the
Republican administration's
policy has been one of obstruction rather than support
for programs aimed at
economic recovery,'' said the
executive policy statement
issued Friday .
The AFUIO said Rhodes'
proposals to reduce taxes for
industrial expansion would
give new industry in the state
a "free ride" in Ohio and
would mean higher taxes for
wage earners.
Rhodes' proposal to boost
the state gasoline tax 13 per
cent to raise $1.75 billion was
an example, in the AFUIO's
opinion,
of
"twisted
priorities" in that most of the
money - 91 per cent- would
be used for highways with the
remainder devoted to IIUISS
transit construction or funding.
" More money should be
s pent developing mass
transit systems-both intercity and intracity," said the
policy statement.
,
" If we've learned anythipg
from the urban renewal fad of
the 1960's, it was that bulldiltg
new offices and high rise
apartments doesn't solve ihe
problems of the cities, it just
moves them out into the
suburbs and other parts of the
same city," continued the
policy statement in opposing
Rhodes' $2.75 billion capital
construction bond issue
proposal.
The money could better be
used in education or law
enforcement, said the AFLCIO leaders, adding it was
"questionable" whether the
proposal would indeed
prompt the creation of 300,000
new jobs as predicted by the
governor.
"Gov. Rhodes' proposals
make
Ohio
will
not
'depression proof.' There is
no master plan that can 'insulate Ohio from fluctuations
in the national and world
econo!aie.l," said the policy
statement.
An alternative to the three
· Rhodes proposals would be
adoption of an idea expressed
by
the
Constitutional
Revision Commission · to
commit six per cent of the
state's total tax revenlies,
said the labor federation.
"A public policy would thus
be established in Ohio to nse
capital
improvement
programs to bolster employment during the downturn of the economic cycle.
We believe Ohio should

continue a

Dooley is duly impressed by Pete and Archie

Dave HiJJ hangs on
~: 1':

~
'i ::::
I I!!

to hold onto lead
in Sahara golf play f

.!..''.:

LAS VEGAS, Nev . (UP!) - Steady Dave Hill had his first

bogey in 54 holes Saturday but still managed to shoot a four'" under-par 67 to remain tied for the lead after three rounds of
c.' the $35,000 Sahara Invitational Golf Tournament.
"- Hill, who has struggled all season without a win deadlocked
' ·with veteran B9bby Mitchell and Rik Massengle, ~ho also shot
·'" third-round 67s, at 201, 12 under par over the Sahara-Nevada
' "Country Club Course.
'"
Australian Bruce Crampton fired his se&lt;.'Ond straight 65
,'" and was only one shot back at 202 in a tie with Bob Wynn, who
·· · had a 68 Saturday .
.
" A 67 or 68 should win it," said Hill, who has made $53,533
.. this year, which is subiJar for him.
•··
" I've had my problems ali year and I'm still working on
.,. my golf swing. It's nothing physical. It's my head ."
' ·
Hill, of Denver, winner of llrour events, missed a l~oot
""putt on the 14th hole, a par three, 236-yarder, for his first bogey
.. of the tournament.
•.
"This is a good driving golf course and I've just been
trying to steer the b!J,ll," he said.
Hili sank a three-foot putt for an eagle on the par-five, 535'' ·
"' yard fourth hole and woWJd up the day with birdies on his last
' ' two holes.
••·. Wally Armstrong and Miller Barber, who started the day in
tie for first with Massengle, Wynn and Hill, shot themselves
-·· 'Out of contention with a pair of 75s.
All alone in seventh place at 203, 10 under par was David
·· Graham, who had a 66. Three shots behind the trio of leaders
0
were Charles Coody, 65; Joe Inman, 67, and Chuck Gortney, 68.
Lyn Lott turned in the best round of the day with a 64 and
~ was deadlocked with defending Sahara champion AI Geiberger
"' at 205.

lly JOHN r. KADY
- big taclde playing fullback ."
The 1).(1, 246-pound Johnson
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) NOJth Carolina coach Bill also gained 143 yards in 26
Dooley says Pete Johnson , carries for the second;anked
who scored a school record Buckeyes Saturday and now
five touchdowns to lead Ohio ha s tallied nine of the 10
State to a 32-7 win ovr r the touchdowns the Bucks have
Tar Heels , "r eminds me of a scored in ro llin ~ up three

open the protective rubber fuel bladder inside the ga s lank ,
causing raw gasoline to. spill out and ignite.
The car then careened into a retaining wall and burst into
flames . Rescue worke rs bat tled the flames for an estimated
two minutes.

wins wilhou t a loss.

for touchdowns on runs · of

·'He is very quick," said
Doole y. " Not so fast but very
quick and very strong. He
reminds me of a big tacld e
playing fullba ck ."
: ohnson pounded t hrough
the No rth Ca rolina defe nse

one, five, one, two and three
yards .
Ohio State coach Woody
Hay es a lso lauded Johnson's
running.
"Th at gives a team a lot of
proble m s," said Ha yes.
" When your fullba c k is
running well. it makes vour
tailback tha t much more of a
threat."
And when your tailback is
Heisman Trophy winn e r
Arc hie Griffin, the threa t Is
compounded. Griffin ga ined

::·:::::::;.·:::::::::::·:::.::::::::::::::.:!:=:·:=:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:

AT CONFERENCE
COLUMB US - Inc reased
usc of pocket cal culators and
computers, complications in
th e tea ching of mathem a tics
skills to high school student s,
and tea c hin g th e me tric
system we re amon g topics
examined by more than 200
hi g h &lt;e ho n1 and college
ma th e m a lll'S ins truc tor s
fr om throughout Ohio at a
specia l conference held in
Columbus on September 19
and 20. Participants included
Ca rla Shuler, math instructor
at Southern High School.

Joe Morgan and Johnny Bench slammed homers and
drove in 3 runs a piece Saturday to power pla yoff-bound
Cincinnati to its 107th triumph - the most in the National
League since th e 1906 Chicago Cubs won 116 games - with a 1-&lt;;
victory over the Atlanta Braves.
Don Gullett, who will open the NL playoffs against the
Pirates next Saturday, gave up one unearled run in five
minutes to notch his 15th victory against four losses.
Pete Rose ripped his 47th double - lops in the league and Morgan's three RBis gave him 94, a new club record for
second basemen.
In other NL action, Pittsburgh defeated St. L&lt;&gt;uis, 4-2,
Montreal beat Chicago 5-J and Los Angeles downed Houston 5I.

::a

157 yard s on 22 carries in his
24th consec utive oeguiarS.oson gam e ove r 100 rushing
yards .
"Tha t 's a noth er thing that
makes Ohio State so tough to
defense," said Dooley. " You
know they have Arc hi e
Griffin . Then there 's No. 33,
Johnson, with hi s tremendous
strengtb arid quickness and
th e n t he r e is Corn elius
Greene .
" They don't have just one
threat in their backfield, they
ha ve three of them ,'' said ...
Dooley.
Greene completed seven of
eight passes for 137 yards
Saturday.
Dooley also was impressed
with the Buckeyes defensive

·WOOSTER WINS
WOOSTE R. Ohio i UPl l -·
Woos ter end Jim Gerard
caught a Jim Bress i pass with
only 9: 00 left in the game to
put his team on top for a 9-7
victory ov er Ke nyon in the
winner 's home opener here
Saturday.

Wli l.

" I don 't think there is an y
doubt Ohi o State is a strong ,
disciplined tea m ," said
Dooley. "l was very impressed with their defense,
their quickness .
" I thought our players gave

LAST WEEK TO SAVE
SALE DATES SEPT. 29-30-0CT. 1-2-3-4

NEW YORK (UPI)- !Wy White and Thurman Munson
each ripped twO-f'Wl singles to highlight a four-run seventh
~ ..Saturday that helped tbe New York Yankees complete a
"' doubleheader sweep with a 7-3 triumph over the Baltimore
~ · Orioles, clinching the American League East title for the
·":Boston Red Sox.

DODGERS TRIUMPH
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Steve Yeager belted a grandslam homer Saturday to
spark the Los Angeles
Dod gers to a 5-1 victory over
the Houston Astros and give
Andy Messersmith his 19th
triumph.

PANELING
BIG

BUY NOW

J.:

a heckuva effort but we just
couldn't match them at all,"
said Dooley . " They have a
very physical football teall)."
Hayes agreed, stating, "We
are bigger and stronger than
they are.
" Our offensive line was
blocking pretly well," said
Hayes, "and once Cornelius
got settled down, he was
hitting pretty well .
" We had 403 ya rds rushing
t.o 109," said Hayes. "That's
almost four.to-&lt;&gt;ne and that's
the way we like to do it ."

DAYS

~

AND
SAVE!

J ..

·- Catfish Hunter and Doc Medich pitched complete game
c. :victories for New York and the double death loss placed the
• Jrioles five games behind Boston with six games remaining.
o·
In the opener, Hunter recorded his 23rd victory of the
:~ ·season as the Yankees won 3-2 on a bases -loaded walk to Rick
'' Dempsey with none out in the loth inning.

"'

LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Quarterback Vince Evans took
., :the ball in his own hand and ran over two touchdowns Saturday
·:. to lead the University of Southern California to a 1~ victory
. ' over Purdue after the Boilermakers had held the Trojans
·· .. scoreless through the first half.
"' · The Trojans came off determined ro make up for their first
... ·half inability to score. They drove 72 yards in 13 plays at the
•• ·•start of the second half. Ricky Bell had gains of 13 and 15 yards
,. .on the drive and Evans rolled out for 13 yards to the one, from
where he scored.
··'
The kick returns of safety Danny Reece highlighted
o· Trojans scoring in the final period. His 47-yard run back put
" the Trojans on the Purdue 12 and Evans on a quarterback draw
. "•ran through the middle for the second Trojans score.
""'
On the next kickoff, Reece returned the ball68 yards to the
in three. A penalty sent the Trojans back to the eight, but Mosi
, .• :rapupu made seven and Bell plunged over from the one for his
seventh touchdown of the season.
)-·
~J
LONG BEACH - Dick Workman, 41, San Francisco, was
•:· seriously hurt in a violent, fiery crash against a retaining wall
.,. 'On a road leading to the race course during qualifying Satur" ' day for the Long Beach Grand Prix.
·• ..
Workman was pulled from his Formula 5000 Lola after
o41ames leaped from the car for an estimated two minutes. He
was taken by helicopter to nearby St. Mary's Hospital.
Workman's reportedly suffered second degree burns,
oc.·broken rips and possible internal injuries.
•" · Observers said the crash occurred when Workman,
-~-driving at a high rate of speed on a road from the paddock area
_.,,.(()the race course, struck a street curb and was rocketed into a
,;retaining wall.
.,,.
One official speculated that the impact with the curb burst

COME IN AND REGISTER FOR FREE DOOR PRIZES

1st PRIZE

111-PS. PANELING

2ND PRIZE

lAWN CROQUET SET

'84.90
'23.79
- ~moo~~=:~:
· ~g~~~~r---------------~--~;;~~~::VALUE

SiiLRSO~~

. -~

BX-H~FAHS

REG. 114.95 ~

$
Prefinished
• (;yaran l eed One Co«l
• G!Jn&lt;an l eao N on 'I'('IIO"' ' " q
• !J Y&lt;:!ar DurAbr lr l ~

• Re$ r515 f.lhsle" " ll druJ Pm&gt;hny
• M IIOf' "' Dcliallt "

• A•a•laol~·n30 colors

REG. I27.88
BUNDLE
SALE

hl•~•lz•• ~l"•lr'

IIEG. '3.99 SHEET

REGULAR

SALE SPECIALS
-

99

~LING

8

$

-

SALE

GAlLON

Sl0.40 Gallon

LY

SALE

11

$TARTING"

REG. 118.65

s

ESCRIPTION 4Ft . '8 Ft . R

CARTON

CARTON

AT

ALL SALE ITEMS MUST BE
PICKED UP FROM OUR YARD NO
LATER THAN ONE WEEK AFTER
SALE ENDS.

A

v
E

'pay~as~you-go'

program/' UJ.e report concluded.

Eyes turn
(Continued on page 17)
requirements under the
federal statues then in
force."
The Phillips' report is one
of several that will be filed by
corporations with the SEC
before the end of 1975.
Others wiD come from Gulf
Oil Corp., which spent $5
million on political campaigns, and Minnesota
Mining and Manufacturilig,
which had a slush fund of
$400,000.
American Airlines and
Braniff International Airways spent a combined $1.3
million on political ca!Dpaigns.
And Cities Service announced only a few days ago
that it maintained a $600,000
slush fund.
WASHINGTON (UP!) 'Here is the list of 54 present
and former members ;of
Congress who received illegal
campaign contributions frQm
Phillipa Petroleum Co. in 1~70
and 1972.
Phillips' report to the U.S.
District Court and the Securities and Exchange ComissiOn
Friday said the candidates
did not' know the cash contributions were froll\ ci)rporate funds and were,
therefore, illegal.
:
The exact amounts of the
contributions accompany the
names where the InformatiOn
is available.
.,

r. .Hocking Tech bulging
with enrollments
NELSONVILLE
Preliminary registration
.figures indicate that 1975-76
enrollment at Hocking
Technical College will be
about 1,750 students, an in•"
crease of nearly 38 per cent
, ' over last year's enrollment.
Hocking Tech President
• · John J. Light said Wednesday
.'.'.:rtaytime enrollment stood at
~"nearly 1,300, with another 450
, _students anticipated in the
;:,;evening division. The full.' time equivalent enrollment is
"~xpected to be 1,550, he ad"'l, ,ded.
;
Last year there were 980
" ' day students and less than
, 1,200 full-time equivalent
~: students.

the growth appeared to be in
technologies which could
absorb it comfortably. He
said the college limited
enrollment in areas which
are full and had increased
staffing in anticipation of the
growth.
Although the jump in
enrollment will " put a strain
on facilities, " Light said, the
college will be able to handle
the current enrollment in its
new building which Hocking
Tech moved into last
February .
Groundbreaking for
three new buildings is expected to take place this fall
for the college's Phase II
$3.38
million
building
program which will add ~
classroom and laboratory
building adjacent to the
present building, a student
center and a natural
resources building.
The Phase II buildings will
bring
Hocking
Tech's
facilities up to an ideal
capacity of 1,300 daytime
students, Light said, a figure
which is expected to · be exceeded.
when
final
registration figures are
available in about two weeks.
Hocking Tech opened in
1968 with a student body of
225.

,. ·; The Ohio Board of Regents
":.a year ago projected the 197576 FTE enrollment at 1,350
_., 1'"d based this year's budget
on that figure which now
:·:·appears to be more than 200
Ui.''short, Light said. However,
Hocking Tech officials have
been anticipating the new
-- record number since the
;" beginning of last year
1" because the number of ap' r·
:;:plications had increased 30 to
-··so per cent over
prevtous
~~ ~.
'
years' applicattons.
Light said that in past
' years the regents ha,ve been
_, 'a ble to make up" the dif'"terence between budgets for
0
"projected enrollments and
" the ·funding needs of higher
·:registrations, but that this
'~ year extra funding is not
A thought for the day:
expected to be available.
President Franklin D. Roose"" Nevertheless, Light termed
velt said: c.~There is no in"'\ he enrollment increase
dispensable
man ."
"'healtliy and pointed out that

20% OFF ANY HAND TOOL IN STOCK

No1 Power
Tools

5/8 • 4 FT. X 8 FT.

RANGE HOOD'
REG,

ALL COLORS

PARTICLE
BOARD

MElLWOOD

REG. S3 .9S

DISAPPEARING

SHEET

•35.95

STAIRWAY
Rt-arder At Sale Prices

SALE

Reg .

ra::~ ~~~~' A coil of tl" tubing weo,,hsf

$43 . 19

oounds No spectal

l litt&lt;eg&gt; reqUired No waste tust
length requ1red

BLO OR Wllll£ .
BY FULL .COIL-ONLY

24~
FT.

EXTERIOR VINYL

1/4" Natural Slone

On All Sale Items!
CEILING
HEIGHT
7' 10" to
8'9"

SALE

11 4" · White Stone

- SAL·E-

OUT

EVANS

114" Red Brick

PANEL GLUE

1I 411 I While Brick

REG. 99'

sALE

20%

CLOSE OUT

69~

VINYL COVERED

3/16" Etoile

VINYL COVE

3/16" Village

Off

ALL FINISHED TRIM

118" Gold Lace

PANEL NAILS

118:' Blue 1..ace
1

STORE .HOURS

•

Mon .-Fn . 1: 30a .m . IOSP "
Salurdi'IY 7: 30 il .m . to 4 p .m .

PHONE 446-4464

CASH

\

..

'9.75

'9.99
'8.69

&amp;CARRY ,

GREEN
BROWN

'9.75
'8.99

'8.69
'7.99

�•

.I

1.

1-

I

...

~1 - the Sunday Times , Sentinel. Sunrtay, Sept. 28, 1975 ·

20 - The SIUlday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 28, 1975

Of

Bucks romp, 32-7

. r ~end

POMEROY - Mr . and Mrs. Bill Reichman of Chattanooga, Tenn., were in Pomeroy a nd Middleport a day
recently visi ling r ela lives and friends ,
Many will remember Bill as a graduate of Middleport High
School in the early 1940s. Bill has done well in the building
materials business for a number of years. So well, in fact , that
he's thinking of retiring in the near future. He 's only 53.
Accompanying llill and his wife to the Big Bend area for
the short visit were his mother, Edna Reichman, and his
sister, Donna Jean French. They are also residing in Chat·
tanooga.

NEW NURSING DIREC!'OR - Inez Howes, R.N.
(right) was recently appointed nursing director at
Pleasant Valley Hospital, leaving a position at the Holzer
Medical Center School of Nursing. To her right is the
secretary of the Nursing Office, Carol Horn .

Mrs. Howes appointed
PVH nursing director
POINT PLEASANT - The Charleston
Memorial
appoinbnent of Mrs. Inez HospitaL
In 1969, she was appointed
Howes, R.N. to the position of
Director of Nursing at Director of Nursing Service
Pleasant Valley Hospital was at the Guthrie Mental Health
announced
Saturday by Center in Charleston. Later
EX:ecutive Director James L. she directed a pilot project
for the Department of Mental
FOfley .
!'rlrs. Howes has a Bachelor Health in the establishment
of · Science Degree from of a Chronic Alcohol and
Alderson-Broaddus College. Drug
Abuse
Therapy
'. graduating from Program at Lakin State
Upon
AlUerson-Broaddus,
she HospitaL
served in posi lions at
Mrs. Howes' most recent
C~arleston
Memorial position was with the Holzer
Medical Center School of
H~pital as Medical-Surgical
St.)ff Nurse, Charge Nurse in Nursing where she was a
th~ Intensive Care Unit, and
faculty member teaching
later as Head Nurse in the Medical-Surgical
Nursing .
Erhergency De par bnen t.
Married to Mr . Robert
Cn addition to her nursing Howes, Personnel Director at
experience, Mrs. Howes has Lakin State Hospital, Mrs .
Howes, her husband and their
al~o served as Clinical Insl!;uctor at the School of four children, Greg, Melanie,
N*sing at St. Thomas Kimberly, and Dewey, reside
Hospital in Nashville and in Mason County on Route 35
NUrsing Instructor at the between Henderson and
Alderson-Broaddus College of Southside.
Nursing
located
at

''
'

Jri"N~~IE:.'ii~T~"l
'

THE LONGBOW SEASON FOR ANY AGE or sex deer will
be open in Ohio from Oct. 10 through Jan . 24. Longbow hiUlting
will not he permitted during the gun seasons.
Deer gun season in Zone 4, which includes Southeastern
Ohio, is open from Dec . I through Dec. 6 for buck deer only.
The limit is one deer per season per hunter regardless of the
method of taking.
Incidentally, Meigs and Gallia Counties are included in the
list of counties in which a limited number of special antlerless
deer hunting permits will be issued. To apply for an anterless
deer permit, a hunter must complete the application form
found in the 1975 deer hiUlting digest which is provided hunters
purchasing a regular deer permit. The application must be
returned to Anterless Deer Permit, Division of Wildlife ,
FoiUltain Square, Columbus, Ohio, 43224 between Oct. I and
Oct. 27.
A drawing from among the applicants will be held in
Columbus on Nov. 5. Successful applicants will receive their
permits by mail as soon as possible after the drawing.
In Meigs and Gallia Counties also,landowners can obl&lt;iin a
permit to hiUlt antlerless deer on their own land . A landowner
must obtain a family anterless permit which will allow him
and his children residing with him to l&lt;ike one anterless deer on
the land he owns. Landowners must own at least 10 acres of
land to take part and only one deer may be taken by the family
during the season.
Applications may be secured. from any deer checking
station and must be filled ou\ and mailed between Oct. I and
Oct. 'l:l. Applications are to be mailed to Wildlife District Four,
360 East State St., Athens, Ohio, 45701 .
ESKEY HILL, ROUTE 3, POMEROY , noting that The
Sentinel Wednesday carried a story that Pomeroy is unique
from a standpoint of its buildings, adds to that uniqueness that
Pomeroy is almost completely "ON" the Ohio River and at
times has been almost completely " IN" the Ohio River.
JUST WHAT IS TO HAPPEN to Meigs County's bookmobile - which also serves Jackson and Vinton Counties still remains vague. However, the feeling among some is that
it is going to be phased out of existence or else services in
Meigs CoiUlty drastically reduced.
The Meig.v County hookmobile is the first of 10 such units in
the state that " has been put on the block", so to speak. We ' ve
had the opportunity to view the schedules of a couple of other
units and their services apparently will not compare to the
services provided by the Meigs unit. The other schedules indicate that the units wrap up their day by about 4 p .m. This is
quite a contrast to the Meigs County unit, the staff of which is
on highways and by-ways many, many nights to provide books
for residents.
The bookmobile circulates over 62,000 books a year in
Meigs County and with the work in Jackson and Vinton
Counties, circulation exceeds 100,000 volumes. That's a lot of
books in an area where reading is so desperately needed and
especially in an area where a teacher corps program is underway to teach and encourage reading.
Someone really ought to lay it on the line. I mean, just
what is to happen to the service in Meigs County? Is it just
another loss of another facility? And hasn't the county lost
many - too many - in the past?
H you're interested in the bookmobile and its future,
suggest you write Cong. Clarence Miller in Washington, D. c.
He .was familiar with the unit's starting here and perhaps, can
enlighten us on what the future of the unit is.
·

; GALUPOUS - Knowing the truth is the most important
sipgle factor in the freedom of democracy. The truth enables
"'l• th_e average citizen, to keep the wheels of government
churmng. It allows for us to reasonably criticize and approve
COELLE ALKIRE CAMPBELL, DELAWARE, preparing to
t!jepolicies, decisions, and methods that decide the direction of
move
to California, recently sold an old sewing machine at a
otlr mature home.
; And on knowing the truth, we must use the ballot for public sale. However, she found a card in the machine, quite
~owing our pleasure or displeasure of the actions politicians old. The card advertised White Sewing Machines from a sales
ta,ke. With the ballot, we as a body, have the power to choose .spot called " HUlbert House" on Pomeroy's Front St., now
w!'ich man or woman will represent us and our country. The Main. Anyone known where "HUlbert House" was. Thomas
ballot is the means for change in America · It possesses all the Wheatley was the sole agent and Andrew A. Reid was the
general agent, according to the card.
' a democracy.
I
'
1J&lt;1Wer
ne eded m
' Olange of government by force and violence can never
le~d to any mpre than the same circumstance that brought
al)out the change. And as any citizen of this COIUltry, the recent
a~empts of violence upon our President surely disturbs me.
: Realizing the importance of the vote and getting people out
to• vote is certainly the proper way of voicing disagreement
w!th politicians, not the gun. Knowing this, a certain cir~mstance in our capital city definitely confuses me.
, Recently (Sept. 17, 1975) Les Brown, Program Director of
POMEROY - Eighty-two Mrs. Jim Soulsby , son,
Jimmer.
W',V.K.O. in Columbus. was fired . Brown, a black disc jockey,
parents, relatives or friends
Mr . and Mrs . Pete Granda I,
~s dedicated his life for the last
six years to t.he
were introduced Friday son, Dan; Mr. and Mrs. Earl
p*dominantly black audience of the station. He has urged
evening
at
Marauder Davenport, son, Mlck ; Mrs.
Bll'cks to educate themselves and to strive to leave the plots of Stadium in a· ' 'Parents' Kenneth C. Wyan1 , Sr., son,
Kenny ; Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
~ity's rat infested ghettos. He, many times alone, fought
Night" ceremony preceding Weber, son, Duane; Mr. and
w~hm the system on questionable police action. But most
the Waverly-Meigs football Mrs. John James. Jr .• sons,
Timothy and Ronald Coats;
unportantly, Les has educated blacks on the science of the game .
ballot.
·
.
They were Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs . William
Richard Rosenbaum, son Wilford, son, Ray; Mrs. Mary
;But recently Less was dismissed from W.V.K.O. for
Jim; Gllsple Howard. son, E. Qualls and Lenola Qualls,
delrot~g too m~ch time on voters registration. How can any
Jim; · Mrs. Ruth Buffington son and brother-in -law, Terry
and
Sharon Buffington, son Qual is; Mr . and Mrs. George
Arjler1can be fll'ed for spending too much time on such an
and brother, Danny i Mr. and Carper, son. George ; Mrs.
important and crucial issue?
Raymond Cotterill, son, Jane A. Rupe, son, Pau l ;
: On receiving the news of Brown's dismissal the e~tire Mrs.
Wayne; Edle Sisson, good George Miller, son, Dave;
di~c-jockey force of W.V.K.O. joined their leader o~ the picket friend, Bruce Reed ; Joseph Mr. and Mrs. RichardS . Cole,
Richard ; Mr. and Mrs.
line. And now, many, many blacks no longer t\Ule their dial to Magnotta, son , Mike ; Mr. son,
Fred George, sons. Randy
and
Mrs.
Kenneth
thht familiar station, choosing America's second most ef- Mclaughlin, son, Kevin ; Mr . and Rick; Mike Cremeans,
fective weapon, the boycott!
and Mrs. Bob Dugan, son, tor brother, Jerry Cremeans;
Renee Stone, son, Bill
I But this certainly points to a very contradictory situation. Buddy; Mr. and Mrs. David Mrs.
Stone;
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
E. Wolfe, son, Dennis; Gwen
P&lt;!ople like to sit on the hill and tell blacks to pull themselves
Folmer, brother, Don; Mr . Anderson, son, Jim ; Mr . and
u~ by their bootstraps, but then those same people remove ihe
and Mrs. Paul Chapman, son, Mrs. James Quails , son ,
oopts! (Parallel that to the general manager who fired Les
Mitchell; Mr. and Mrs. Larry Blaine; Paul Scott, Grand.
Pickens, son, Steve; Mr. and son, Tim Scites, Mgr.; Mr .
Briown).
Mrs. Charles Marshall, son, and ·Mrs . James H. Owens,
In the upcoming election, Columbus will have a Black
Charles; Mr. and Mrs. Roger son, Mike, Mgr.
rupn~ for mayorship, Dr. John Rosemond. Just maybe, this
Winebrenner. son, Kelly; Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Wil liamson,
Y"'"" It woUld not he profitable to the almighty power structure
son , Bob; Mr . and Mrs. John
to~ve a huge Black turnout. Well, the confusion is gone. I can
Blake, son, John; Mr. and
LAFF- A- DAY
It all very clearly now!
Mrs. Gene Mitch, sOn, Mark;
Mr . and Mrs. Kenneth
~~~~ -~
Stewart, son, Allen ;' Mr. and ..
- 7:;-: .:..:; ~
\
Mrs. Harry E·. Johnson, son,
···
Rick .
Mrs. Evelyn B. Thomas,
son, Wheeler Joe ; Mr. and
Mrs . Herbert Seth , son,
Brinley ; Mr . and Mrs. Stacie

82 introduced
at Parents' night

thr

''

.'

I .I '

I

l

the Tar Heels running chores

'-

·· !

~~~(.~0_(~,.

Arnold, son, Brent; Mr. and

"d

.,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) .JIUllor fullback Pete Johnson
· powered for 148 yards and a
school record five touchdowns ·and Heisman trophy
winner Archie Griffin added
155 yards to lead secondranked Ohio State to a 32-7
victory over North Carolina
Saturday.
Johnson, a 6-n, 246-pounder,

. RETRACING ROUTE OF EARLY Explorers- The
nverboat Sergeant F1oyd, turned into a floating museum ,

diplomas to graduates

equipment has become
available, her work role
diminished. She was on the
verge of decommissioning
when Congress authorized
her conversion for a final,
historic task - a floating
Bicentennial exhibit for the
U. S . Army Corps of
Engineers.
Spruced up in Bicentennial
red, white and blue, the
Sergeant Floyd will he towing
an activities barge which
may be used for entertainment programs by
local communities at her
vwious stops.
From Portsmouth, the
Sergeant Floyd will go on to
Warsaw, Ky., where its activities will be scheduled by
the Corps' Louisville, Ky.,
District.

·.

r.;,

Pi ttsburgh

Phil a .

New York

81 79

.506 l Qlh

St. Louis

81 80

.503 11 1!2

Montreal

75 86

.466 17112

Chicago

74 87

.459 181/:-

West

w. I. pel. g.b.

Cincinnati 107 54
Los Angeles 87 73

San Fran.

.667
"-t
.544 19112

78 81 .491 28

Oakland
Kan . City

Atlanta

Texas
71 89 .444 JSlf2 Chicago
67 93 .418 39112 Calif.

Houston

63 96

San Diego

(Seibert

0-2

California ( Pactwa 1-0) at

Oak land (Bahnsen 10· 131.
4:30p.m.
Kansas City (Bird 9·61 at
Texas (Hargan 9 ~ 10), 3:05

or

Saws. Fast start•ng. easy
-~

handlif'lglast culling

Homelite Ct\ar~lo:-,.~:;;

..t'l.lft

Saws. From .,....

S129.9Swith
FREE Carry

Case.

,~
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~'
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' 1(1.-l. ~· · ·

ISO .r.Q, SEZAO

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
Olesler, Ohio

Chicago (Jefferson 5·111 at

Minnesota

( Hughes

16-14),

2: 15 p.m .
Detroit (Lolich 12 ~ 181 at
Milwaukee (Colborn lJ . lJ) ,
2:30p.m.
Baltimore (Palmer 22-11
and Alexander 8-8} at New

York (May 14· 11 and Gura 6·
81. 1 p.m.

15·

San Francisco (Barr 13-14}
at San Diego (Jones 20-11), 4
p.m .

....

...
-...".
;J,tj

...,.
....-

OLIVE GREEN

-..
MEN'S WATERPROOF LACE
UP PACS. GREAT FOR THE
OUTDOORSMAN. NET LINING

Men's 8" Work Boots

~

-

$

90

6 !?.,

6~,

Pa~ablf Quar!~rly

• M1n1mum S1 000 OD

'

•

QUALITY LEATHER UPPERS
WITH WELT
CONSTRUCTION

"

NEOPRENE NYLON
CORD SOLES

w

.Men's 6" Work Boots
'17.97

STEEL CAP TOE
BLACK

• P ay a~le Ouarl erly • Mini mum S1 .000.00

•\nrt ,,. .1d (!rt ron •o a11 Hils
rnonthl y or
partl on one lwo. three .
t;, Lr or ~~ x vr·a· cerr~·. ca le s lniercsl pay ·

(lla ·: c ' l/ll ll ~"ll~

J :JI~ I"IGfl llll~ •t ycu rJes11e o~
:1 1"1 I J~e a ~ 01.111 r! r S ~ 000 ~0

certd•ca te s

or rnore

I rceral RP~u al •ons ieau,re J ~ubs 1a~11al
lv [l''~ ..ldh .'" Nilnr!·~w ~ ! of c~llr l r·

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• M1n1mum Sl 000 00

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1LfV!S

you'll find it at

OhioValley Bank
I

rw

ht:.~t 0

on n·asonabl e n otice of withdrawal.

\·o u

Thi s is exactly what Ohio Valley

want a fa ir !'Plum . lht• hi ghest lt·-

Bank wants and promises their de-

gally possibll'. \\ith a gunra nl&lt;'t: of

pos it ors. No wonder savi ngs de-

\\"h t: n it c1 mw ~

$13!'!

7~~.%

' f'~·,ahle O u~rtr. r l y
L•

• Pavao le Ouaner lv • Mrnu11um $11101Jiln

I&lt; &gt; \I I lii' ~m· in gs .

LEATHER
UPPERS

CWE

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a ll-tim e high.

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posits cont inue to be at an

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,

Ohio Valley Bank

...~

GallipOli S Oh 10

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v~

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\Vh v sl'l t lu for ~c-~.~ 1 han

STEEL TOE

3·YEAR CERTIFICATE

• Payable Ouarle rlv • M1n11num ~ 1 . 0 0 0 . 00

cessibilit y to these fund s

~

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The leading savings plans are at the leading savings bank:
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4·YEAR CERTIFICAT E

SOLES

REG. 119.97

• f' ayable Quar1erly • Minimum $1,000.00

2· YEAR CERTIFICATE

.I

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D,t il 1· '

1·YEAR CERTIFI CATE

STEEL SHANK ARCH
SUPPORT
GRIPPING
ACTION

STEEL TOE .

~

By Federa-l Regulation , a substantial penalty is invoked on all certificate accounts
wit hdra wn prior to the date of matur:ity .

:..·-

s~.f.urn~IQundtll

•

~

Paid on 4 year certificates of deposit
$1.000.00 Minimum
Interest paid quarterly

--·..

2
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SIZES TO 12

~

3-MONTH CERTIFICATE

GOLDE N PASSBOOK

PASSBOOK SAV IN GS

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SALE PRICES GOOD
THRU SAT:, OCT. 4TH

and wound up their scoring ''"
the next time they jtad the
ball, mqvlng 62 yarda in just
seven plays, climned by
,Johnson's three-yard scOring
run.

no matter what you're looking
for in savings or investment
certificates...

..

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"
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bl~sting over from the two

...

:3

....••••
.."'::1

capping a 71-yard, seven:play
drive when he went over from
the one .
The Buckeyes added their
fourth touchdown early in the
final period, going 81 yards in
12 plays with Johnson

11dllpay you the

~

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possible return, w1th guaranteed security of insurance up
to $40,000 by the Federal Savings &amp; Loan Insurance
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Rldwd I. JOMt. A'WN:t• ·

MARSHALL SIGNS
CHICAGO (UP!) - Jim
Marshall, who took over as
manager of the Chicago Cubs
last year, was signed to his
second full contract Saturday
on the eve of his team's final
game of the season.

BOSTON I UP! ) - Boog
Powell hit a solo home r and
r\Ul-scoring double Saturday
and the Cleveland Indians
prevented Boston from
clinching the American
League East title with a 5-2
victory over the Red Sox.
Despite the loss, Boston
clinched at leas t a tie for the
flag as Baltimore lost the
first game of a doubleheader
to New York 3-2 earlier in the
day.
Rookie Rick Watts, 6·2,
yielded just five hits in
defeating Boston for th e
second time this month .
Cleveland ope ned the
scoring in the second when
Oscar Gamble singled, went
to third on Wise's error
and scored on Buddy Bell 's
single.
Powell doubled in Rick
Manning to give Cleveland a
2.{) lead in the third inning but
Deron Johnson hit his fir s t
homer for the Red Sox and
18th of the season in the
bottom of the fourth inning
with Fred Lynn on base to tie
the game.
The Indians went ahead in
the seventh on singles by
Frank Duffy and John
· Lowenstein and Duane
Kupier 's ground-out.
Cleveland added two more
in lhe eighth on Powell 's 27th
homer off loser Rick Wise
(19-12) and Charlie Spikes'
lith homer which greeted
reliever Bill Lee.

9 EYELET HUNJ. PAC

"'!

fHI AJHINS COUNn'
SAVINGS a lOAN CQ.

MISSOURI WINS
COLUMBIA, Mo . - Henry
Marshall caught scoring
passes of 66 yards from
quarterback
Steve
Pisarkiewicz and 11 yards
from
tailback
Tony
Galbreath Saturday to rally
fifth-ranked Missouri past
Wisconsin, 27-21.

p.m .

10) , 2:15 p.m.
buy one of the se lected
Home lite , lightweight Ct1ain

AGG!ESROMP
COLLEGE STATION , Tex .
(UP!) - Halfback Bubba
Bean and quarterback David
Shipman struck for long
touchdowns Saturday and a
tough Texas A&amp;M defense
shut off Dlinois' offense to
hand the No . 7.ranked Aggies
a 43-13 intersectional victory.

BISHOPS TRIUMPH
GROVE CITY, Pa . ( UP!)
- Roger Criblez kicked a 1919
yard field goal with 1:03 left
19
22
in the game Saturday to help
23112 Ohio Wesleyan to a 1(}.7
victory over Grove City.

Cleveland (Bibby 7· 151 at
Boston !Money 14·31. 2 p.m .

New York (Seaver 21 -9) at

Yoo get a rugged Carry Case
absolutely FREE when you

.484

77 83

and 13 yards in the scoring
drive a nd Paschall connected
on passes or 17 yards to split
end Ray Stanford a nd 19
yards to Smith .
Ohio SL&lt;r te. :J.o. struck back
quickl y. however. Johnson

gain tie
for title

37 1h

Kansas City at Texas, night
Today's games:

Philadelphia (Christensen 11 ~
5). 1 ' 35 p .m.
Atlanta (Morton 17· 16) at
( Billingham

16'12

If "

.I

Bosox

29

twilight

York 3~31 at Los Angeles
(Rhoden 3·3), 4: 15p.m.
Pittsburgh ( Candaleria 8·51
at St. Louis (Reed 12·13) or
Denny 10~ 7), 2: 15p.m .

Cincinnati

4'h

13

ChicaQo 1 Minnesota 0
Cleveland 5 Boston 2
New York 3 Baltimore 2
Milwaukee 5 Detroit 2
California
at
Oakland ,

night
Today's games :
Montreal (Carrithers 5 ~ 3)
at Chicago (Reuschel J0. 17),
2:15 p.m .
Houston

76 82

.481
74 86 .459
72 87 .453
Sa1urday's results :

.396 43

g.b.

quarterback Art Yaroch
ca me back just minutes later
with a 2f&gt;.yard touchdown
pass to Andress and the
cardinals trailed 35-21 after
three quarters.
Early in the final period,
Ball State tailback George
Jenkins rambled 24 yards for
another touchdown.
Though Ball State go ~ the
ball three more times in good
field position, it was unable to
score what would have been
the tying touchdown.
Miami is Z.l overall and HI
in the MAC . Ball State, 1-2 in
the league, evened its overall
mark at 2-2.

West
w. I. pet. o.b.
96 64 .600
91 69 .569 5

Minnesota

Houston at Los Angeles,
twinight
New York at Philadelphia,
night
San Francisco at San Diego,

TOUGHER FORM
WASHl"lGTON (UP!)

Mrs . Fred Stanley, son.
Brent; Mr. and Mrs. George
'.f,
, 1\
~ • : "-fl .taxes next year , the Internal
Gum, son, George ; Mr. and
0
1
:'\ ·'i . '} Revenue Serv1ce ' says. Tax
Mrs. Bill Williamson, son,
David; Mr ..and Mrs. Marvin --r/r
r::!!O ~
return forms next April will
Randolph, son, Stephen; Mr. ·'f."'. ·
.
··'
he longer and "a little more
. and Mrs. Jack Clark, son.
J im ; 'Mr. Stanley Starcher, "My dreams are loaded wilh difficult," IRS Commissioner
•
Donald Alexander sa id
son, Stan ; Mrs . Richard l'ommer c ials ~..
Rawlings, son, Tim ; Mr. and
Frid!'Y·

w. I. pet. g.b.
92 68 .575
85 75 .531 6'h

Montreal 5 Ch icago 3

BUT ...

71~
· 2~0

East

American League
Standings
East
w. L pet.
95 64 .598
Boston
89 67 .571
Baltimore
81 76 .516
New York
78 80 . 493
Cleveland
Mllwaukee 67 94 .416
57 10 1 .363
Detroit

Pittsburgh 4 St. Lou is 2
Cincinnati 7 Atlanta 6

WILL GROW THIS BIG

BAILEY JOINS UP
SAN FRANCISCO ( UPilF. Lee Bailey, a criminal
lawyer who won Dr . Samuel
Sheppard his freedom in 1966
in one of the most celebrated
cases in U. S. history, has
joined newspaper heiress
Patricia Hearst 's legal
defense team.

Standings
United Press International

Saturday's results:

YOUR DOLLARS

PRESIDENT NAMED
NEW YORK ( UP!)
Edward W. Estlow, general
business manager of ScrippsHoward Newspaper, has been
elected president of the
parent E. W. Scripps Co. , it
was announced Saturday.

and Carpenter for another 178
as the Redskins piled up 450
yards on the ground.
Trailing 2IHl late in the
second quarter, Ball State
began its comeback when
halfback Earl Taylor ran for
a one-yard tuouchdown and
threw an OO.yard pass to Mike
Andress on the first play of
the second half to trim the
margin to 2lH4.
Although Carpenter's
fourth touchdown gave
Miami a 35-14lead later in the
third quarter , Ball State

National League

••

WE'RE NOT SAYING

..,(~~~1:\ ~~
· ~
..~=wrnM""'"
~:Z,:'\_: ~~ ~. · ~
':;:· · ·\ w,.
more paperwork to pay less

.J

OXFORD, Ohio (UP!) Miami (Ohio) jumped off to a
~ lead but then had to
struggle to escape with a 3:;.
28 victory over fired-up Ball
State in a free-wheeling Mid·
American Conference game
Saturday.
Tailback Rob Carpenter
scored four of Miami's five
touchdowns on runs of one
three, six and four yards:
Quarterback Sherman Smith
scored t he other Miami
touchdown on a six·yard run .
Smith rushed for 193 ya rds

Sergeant Floyd, ·
•
•
m retirement,
relives History

Career Center gives 34

lead .
Ohio State scored again
less than 3:00 later after
taking possession on t he
North Carolina 45-yard line .
Greene lost eight yards
trying to pass , then hit tigh t
end Larry Kain for 21- and 27yard completions to the North
Carolina five, where Johnson
took the ball into the end zone
with :31 seconds to go in the
first half.
North Carolina went 80
yards in 10 plays after taking
the second-half kickoff to
make the score 12·7.
Tailback Jim Betterson.
forced to handle the bulk of

'Skins nip Cards

will stop in Point Pleasant on October 18. The boat is on an
18-month tour helping to celebrate the 200th birthday of
th e U. S. Army Corps of Engineers.

POINT PLEASANT - A
riverboat
loaded
with
Bicentennial exhibits will
travel the Ohio Rive r this fall ,
retraci~g the route of early
explorers and settlers of the
Ohio Valley .
The towboat Sergeant
Floyd, on an 18-month tour
helping to celebrate the 200th
birthday of the U. S. Army
CLARENCE THOMPSON, Superintendent of the
Corps
of Engineers, will
Gallia.Jackson-Vinton Joint Vocational School District
spend a week in October in
presented diplomas to 34 graduates of the Practical
the Corps' Huntington district
Nursing School of the Buckeye Hills Career Center during
stopping
at cities along the
ceremonies at Grace United Methodist Olurch Friday
way to give residents a
evening. (Photo by Donald Wright, Jr.)
sample of history through
tours of the river vessel.
Ports of call while the boat
is in the Huntington District
will be New Martinsville, W.
Va ., Oct. 16; Marietta, Ohio,
Oct. 17 ; Pt. Pleasant, W. Va .,
Oct. 18 ; HIUltington, W. Va.,
Oct. 19; and Portsmouth,
Ohio, Oct 20.
GALLIPOLIS - Thirty- Hulda Brown, Gallipolis;
The river boa !-turned
J.
Caudill, floating
four young women graduated Pamela
museum
was
from the Practical Nursing Gallipolis; Vicki L. Conley, refurbished in Kansas City,
School of the Buckeye Hills Jackson ; Virginia Cooper, Mo., and sailed June 16, date
Career Center in ceremonies Kettering; Imogene Crab- of the Corps' 200th birthday,
Friday evening at Grace tree, Jackson ; Catherine for its Bicentennial voyage.
United Me thodist Church Darst, Reynoldsburg ; Eva D. '
The hoat has a long and
DeLawder , Ironton ; distinguished history since
here .
Richard Simpson, M.D., Terrence Gandee, New being launched in 1932 at the
chairman of the Advisory Haven, W. Va.; Kandy Howard Shipyards in JefGallipolis ; fersonville, Ind .
Committee, presiding over Gindlesberger,
the program , introduced Jacqueline Halley, Crown
It was named in memorial
State Rep. Ron James, who City; Marcella Harrison, to Sgt. Charles Floyd, who
Gallipolis; Carrie Horton , died near the present town of
gave the main address.
James told the new LPNs Oak Hill: Genevieve Jasis, Sioux City, Iowa, on Aug . 20,
" life is a campaign." He said Gallipolis; Barbara Jordan , 1804. An engineer soldier, his
they should be interested and Pomeroy; Janet Kearns , death was the only fatality of
involved in government in Jackson; Marceline Kerns , the famous Lewis and Clark
addition to their hospital Gallipolis, Judith Love , expedi lion to explore the
work. James also wished the Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.; Pacific Northwest.
graduates luck in their future Susan Morgan, Wellston;
Operated by the Kansas
Paulette Nibert, Gallipolis; City District, Missouri River
work.
Clarence
Thompson, Nancy Ohlinger, Gallipolis Division, Corps of Engineers,
superintendent of the Gallia. Ferry, W. Va.; Vicki Poetker, the Sergeant Floyd was a
Jackson-Vinton
Joint Jackson ; Charlotte Queen, primary workhorse in the
Vocational School District, Pedro; Autumn Reasor, construction of the Missouri
awarded the diplomas after Hamden; Cathie Roseberry, River Navigation Project.
the class was presented by Jackson; Rita Scarberry, Used to move men, equipHelen M. Shields, R. N. Jackson: Judith See, Pt . ment and supplies and as the
Coordinator.
Instructors Pleasant; Tami Snider, primary Corps towboat, she
Joyce Knight, R.N . and Diane Wellston ; Brenda Whitley, became a familiar sight
Oiler, R.N., made the pin Middleport; Delores J . along the Missouri. As the
presentations
to
the Wilcoxon, Gallipolis ; Rachel navigation project nears
Willis, South Point.
graduates.
completion and as newer
The class response was
given by Gail Blaine of
Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.
Rev . Timothy Heaton,
pastor at Grace United
Methodist Church gave the
invocation and benediction.
Mrs . Merlyn Ross was
organist. Usherettes were
Marie Janko and Maura
Shields.
Graduates are Kathryn
Baker, Jackson; Luella G.
Blaine , Gallipolis Ferry,
W. Va .; Betty Boggs ,
Gallipolis; Ina M. Bradley,
Pt.
Pleasant;

blasted over on touchdown Tarn Heels defense held Ohio
runs of one, five, one, two and State's explosive offense
three yards . He now has nine scoreless until late in the
of OSU's 10 touchdowns this second quarter , when ·the
season.
Buckeyes, led by the riUlning
North Carolina. 1-2. -got its of Griffin and Johnson and a
only touchdown early in the · key 20·y.ard pass from
third quarter on a seven-yard quarterback
Cornelius
pass from Bill Paschall to Greene to wingback Brian
fullback Brian Smith.
Baschnagel, marched 80
The surprisingly stubborn yards in 14 plays for a 6-n

in the absence of alte~nat£
tailback Mike Voight , left at
home
for
di sci (Jii nar y
reasons,r ushed for 102 yards
in 28 carries.
Belter son had run s or 10 .

'I

.._I

I '

�•

.I

1.

1-

I

...

~1 - the Sunday Times , Sentinel. Sunrtay, Sept. 28, 1975 ·

20 - The SIUlday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 28, 1975

Of

Bucks romp, 32-7

. r ~end

POMEROY - Mr . and Mrs. Bill Reichman of Chattanooga, Tenn., were in Pomeroy a nd Middleport a day
recently visi ling r ela lives and friends ,
Many will remember Bill as a graduate of Middleport High
School in the early 1940s. Bill has done well in the building
materials business for a number of years. So well, in fact , that
he's thinking of retiring in the near future. He 's only 53.
Accompanying llill and his wife to the Big Bend area for
the short visit were his mother, Edna Reichman, and his
sister, Donna Jean French. They are also residing in Chat·
tanooga.

NEW NURSING DIREC!'OR - Inez Howes, R.N.
(right) was recently appointed nursing director at
Pleasant Valley Hospital, leaving a position at the Holzer
Medical Center School of Nursing. To her right is the
secretary of the Nursing Office, Carol Horn .

Mrs. Howes appointed
PVH nursing director
POINT PLEASANT - The Charleston
Memorial
appoinbnent of Mrs. Inez HospitaL
In 1969, she was appointed
Howes, R.N. to the position of
Director of Nursing at Director of Nursing Service
Pleasant Valley Hospital was at the Guthrie Mental Health
announced
Saturday by Center in Charleston. Later
EX:ecutive Director James L. she directed a pilot project
for the Department of Mental
FOfley .
!'rlrs. Howes has a Bachelor Health in the establishment
of · Science Degree from of a Chronic Alcohol and
Alderson-Broaddus College. Drug
Abuse
Therapy
'. graduating from Program at Lakin State
Upon
AlUerson-Broaddus,
she HospitaL
served in posi lions at
Mrs. Howes' most recent
C~arleston
Memorial position was with the Holzer
Medical Center School of
H~pital as Medical-Surgical
St.)ff Nurse, Charge Nurse in Nursing where she was a
th~ Intensive Care Unit, and
faculty member teaching
later as Head Nurse in the Medical-Surgical
Nursing .
Erhergency De par bnen t.
Married to Mr . Robert
Cn addition to her nursing Howes, Personnel Director at
experience, Mrs. Howes has Lakin State Hospital, Mrs .
Howes, her husband and their
al~o served as Clinical Insl!;uctor at the School of four children, Greg, Melanie,
N*sing at St. Thomas Kimberly, and Dewey, reside
Hospital in Nashville and in Mason County on Route 35
NUrsing Instructor at the between Henderson and
Alderson-Broaddus College of Southside.
Nursing
located
at

''
'

Jri"N~~IE:.'ii~T~"l
'

THE LONGBOW SEASON FOR ANY AGE or sex deer will
be open in Ohio from Oct. 10 through Jan . 24. Longbow hiUlting
will not he permitted during the gun seasons.
Deer gun season in Zone 4, which includes Southeastern
Ohio, is open from Dec . I through Dec. 6 for buck deer only.
The limit is one deer per season per hunter regardless of the
method of taking.
Incidentally, Meigs and Gallia Counties are included in the
list of counties in which a limited number of special antlerless
deer hunting permits will be issued. To apply for an anterless
deer permit, a hunter must complete the application form
found in the 1975 deer hiUlting digest which is provided hunters
purchasing a regular deer permit. The application must be
returned to Anterless Deer Permit, Division of Wildlife ,
FoiUltain Square, Columbus, Ohio, 43224 between Oct. I and
Oct. 27.
A drawing from among the applicants will be held in
Columbus on Nov. 5. Successful applicants will receive their
permits by mail as soon as possible after the drawing.
In Meigs and Gallia Counties also,landowners can obl&lt;iin a
permit to hiUlt antlerless deer on their own land . A landowner
must obtain a family anterless permit which will allow him
and his children residing with him to l&lt;ike one anterless deer on
the land he owns. Landowners must own at least 10 acres of
land to take part and only one deer may be taken by the family
during the season.
Applications may be secured. from any deer checking
station and must be filled ou\ and mailed between Oct. I and
Oct. 'l:l. Applications are to be mailed to Wildlife District Four,
360 East State St., Athens, Ohio, 45701 .
ESKEY HILL, ROUTE 3, POMEROY , noting that The
Sentinel Wednesday carried a story that Pomeroy is unique
from a standpoint of its buildings, adds to that uniqueness that
Pomeroy is almost completely "ON" the Ohio River and at
times has been almost completely " IN" the Ohio River.
JUST WHAT IS TO HAPPEN to Meigs County's bookmobile - which also serves Jackson and Vinton Counties still remains vague. However, the feeling among some is that
it is going to be phased out of existence or else services in
Meigs CoiUlty drastically reduced.
The Meig.v County hookmobile is the first of 10 such units in
the state that " has been put on the block", so to speak. We ' ve
had the opportunity to view the schedules of a couple of other
units and their services apparently will not compare to the
services provided by the Meigs unit. The other schedules indicate that the units wrap up their day by about 4 p .m. This is
quite a contrast to the Meigs County unit, the staff of which is
on highways and by-ways many, many nights to provide books
for residents.
The bookmobile circulates over 62,000 books a year in
Meigs County and with the work in Jackson and Vinton
Counties, circulation exceeds 100,000 volumes. That's a lot of
books in an area where reading is so desperately needed and
especially in an area where a teacher corps program is underway to teach and encourage reading.
Someone really ought to lay it on the line. I mean, just
what is to happen to the service in Meigs County? Is it just
another loss of another facility? And hasn't the county lost
many - too many - in the past?
H you're interested in the bookmobile and its future,
suggest you write Cong. Clarence Miller in Washington, D. c.
He .was familiar with the unit's starting here and perhaps, can
enlighten us on what the future of the unit is.
·

; GALUPOUS - Knowing the truth is the most important
sipgle factor in the freedom of democracy. The truth enables
"'l• th_e average citizen, to keep the wheels of government
churmng. It allows for us to reasonably criticize and approve
COELLE ALKIRE CAMPBELL, DELAWARE, preparing to
t!jepolicies, decisions, and methods that decide the direction of
move
to California, recently sold an old sewing machine at a
otlr mature home.
; And on knowing the truth, we must use the ballot for public sale. However, she found a card in the machine, quite
~owing our pleasure or displeasure of the actions politicians old. The card advertised White Sewing Machines from a sales
ta,ke. With the ballot, we as a body, have the power to choose .spot called " HUlbert House" on Pomeroy's Front St., now
w!'ich man or woman will represent us and our country. The Main. Anyone known where "HUlbert House" was. Thomas
ballot is the means for change in America · It possesses all the Wheatley was the sole agent and Andrew A. Reid was the
general agent, according to the card.
' a democracy.
I
'
1J&lt;1Wer
ne eded m
' Olange of government by force and violence can never
le~d to any mpre than the same circumstance that brought
al)out the change. And as any citizen of this COIUltry, the recent
a~empts of violence upon our President surely disturbs me.
: Realizing the importance of the vote and getting people out
to• vote is certainly the proper way of voicing disagreement
w!th politicians, not the gun. Knowing this, a certain cir~mstance in our capital city definitely confuses me.
, Recently (Sept. 17, 1975) Les Brown, Program Director of
POMEROY - Eighty-two Mrs. Jim Soulsby , son,
Jimmer.
W',V.K.O. in Columbus. was fired . Brown, a black disc jockey,
parents, relatives or friends
Mr . and Mrs . Pete Granda I,
~s dedicated his life for the last
six years to t.he
were introduced Friday son, Dan; Mr. and Mrs. Earl
p*dominantly black audience of the station. He has urged
evening
at
Marauder Davenport, son, Mlck ; Mrs.
Bll'cks to educate themselves and to strive to leave the plots of Stadium in a· ' 'Parents' Kenneth C. Wyan1 , Sr., son,
Kenny ; Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
~ity's rat infested ghettos. He, many times alone, fought
Night" ceremony preceding Weber, son, Duane; Mr. and
w~hm the system on questionable police action. But most
the Waverly-Meigs football Mrs. John James. Jr .• sons,
Timothy and Ronald Coats;
unportantly, Les has educated blacks on the science of the game .
ballot.
·
.
They were Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs . William
Richard Rosenbaum, son Wilford, son, Ray; Mrs. Mary
;But recently Less was dismissed from W.V.K.O. for
Jim; Gllsple Howard. son, E. Qualls and Lenola Qualls,
delrot~g too m~ch time on voters registration. How can any
Jim; · Mrs. Ruth Buffington son and brother-in -law, Terry
and
Sharon Buffington, son Qual is; Mr . and Mrs. George
Arjler1can be fll'ed for spending too much time on such an
and brother, Danny i Mr. and Carper, son. George ; Mrs.
important and crucial issue?
Raymond Cotterill, son, Jane A. Rupe, son, Pau l ;
: On receiving the news of Brown's dismissal the e~tire Mrs.
Wayne; Edle Sisson, good George Miller, son, Dave;
di~c-jockey force of W.V.K.O. joined their leader o~ the picket friend, Bruce Reed ; Joseph Mr. and Mrs. RichardS . Cole,
Richard ; Mr. and Mrs.
line. And now, many, many blacks no longer t\Ule their dial to Magnotta, son , Mike ; Mr. son,
Fred George, sons. Randy
and
Mrs.
Kenneth
thht familiar station, choosing America's second most ef- Mclaughlin, son, Kevin ; Mr . and Rick; Mike Cremeans,
fective weapon, the boycott!
and Mrs. Bob Dugan, son, tor brother, Jerry Cremeans;
Renee Stone, son, Bill
I But this certainly points to a very contradictory situation. Buddy; Mr. and Mrs. David Mrs.
Stone;
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
E. Wolfe, son, Dennis; Gwen
P&lt;!ople like to sit on the hill and tell blacks to pull themselves
Folmer, brother, Don; Mr . Anderson, son, Jim ; Mr . and
u~ by their bootstraps, but then those same people remove ihe
and Mrs. Paul Chapman, son, Mrs. James Quails , son ,
oopts! (Parallel that to the general manager who fired Les
Mitchell; Mr. and Mrs. Larry Blaine; Paul Scott, Grand.
Pickens, son, Steve; Mr. and son, Tim Scites, Mgr.; Mr .
Briown).
Mrs. Charles Marshall, son, and ·Mrs . James H. Owens,
In the upcoming election, Columbus will have a Black
Charles; Mr. and Mrs. Roger son, Mike, Mgr.
rupn~ for mayorship, Dr. John Rosemond. Just maybe, this
Winebrenner. son, Kelly; Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Wil liamson,
Y"'"" It woUld not he profitable to the almighty power structure
son , Bob; Mr . and Mrs. John
to~ve a huge Black turnout. Well, the confusion is gone. I can
Blake, son, John; Mr. and
LAFF- A- DAY
It all very clearly now!
Mrs. Gene Mitch, sOn, Mark;
Mr . and Mrs. Kenneth
~~~~ -~
Stewart, son, Allen ;' Mr. and ..
- 7:;-: .:..:; ~
\
Mrs. Harry E·. Johnson, son,
···
Rick .
Mrs. Evelyn B. Thomas,
son, Wheeler Joe ; Mr. and
Mrs . Herbert Seth , son,
Brinley ; Mr . and Mrs. Stacie

82 introduced
at Parents' night

thr

''

.'

I .I '

I

l

the Tar Heels running chores

'-

·· !

~~~(.~0_(~,.

Arnold, son, Brent; Mr. and

"d

.,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) .JIUllor fullback Pete Johnson
· powered for 148 yards and a
school record five touchdowns ·and Heisman trophy
winner Archie Griffin added
155 yards to lead secondranked Ohio State to a 32-7
victory over North Carolina
Saturday.
Johnson, a 6-n, 246-pounder,

. RETRACING ROUTE OF EARLY Explorers- The
nverboat Sergeant F1oyd, turned into a floating museum ,

diplomas to graduates

equipment has become
available, her work role
diminished. She was on the
verge of decommissioning
when Congress authorized
her conversion for a final,
historic task - a floating
Bicentennial exhibit for the
U. S . Army Corps of
Engineers.
Spruced up in Bicentennial
red, white and blue, the
Sergeant Floyd will he towing
an activities barge which
may be used for entertainment programs by
local communities at her
vwious stops.
From Portsmouth, the
Sergeant Floyd will go on to
Warsaw, Ky., where its activities will be scheduled by
the Corps' Louisville, Ky.,
District.

·.

r.;,

Pi ttsburgh

Phil a .

New York

81 79

.506 l Qlh

St. Louis

81 80

.503 11 1!2

Montreal

75 86

.466 17112

Chicago

74 87

.459 181/:-

West

w. I. pel. g.b.

Cincinnati 107 54
Los Angeles 87 73

San Fran.

.667
"-t
.544 19112

78 81 .491 28

Oakland
Kan . City

Atlanta

Texas
71 89 .444 JSlf2 Chicago
67 93 .418 39112 Calif.

Houston

63 96

San Diego

(Seibert

0-2

California ( Pactwa 1-0) at

Oak land (Bahnsen 10· 131.
4:30p.m.
Kansas City (Bird 9·61 at
Texas (Hargan 9 ~ 10), 3:05

or

Saws. Fast start•ng. easy
-~

handlif'lglast culling

Homelite Ct\ar~lo:-,.~:;;

..t'l.lft

Saws. From .,....

S129.9Swith
FREE Carry

Case.

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OHorCloco-~~
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ISO .r.Q, SEZAO

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
Olesler, Ohio

Chicago (Jefferson 5·111 at

Minnesota

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Detroit (Lolich 12 ~ 181 at
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2:30p.m.
Baltimore (Palmer 22-11
and Alexander 8-8} at New

York (May 14· 11 and Gura 6·
81. 1 p.m.

15·

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at San Diego (Jones 20-11), 4
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and wound up their scoring ''"
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MARSHALL SIGNS
CHICAGO (UP!) - Jim
Marshall, who took over as
manager of the Chicago Cubs
last year, was signed to his
second full contract Saturday
on the eve of his team's final
game of the season.

BOSTON I UP! ) - Boog
Powell hit a solo home r and
r\Ul-scoring double Saturday
and the Cleveland Indians
prevented Boston from
clinching the American
League East title with a 5-2
victory over the Red Sox.
Despite the loss, Boston
clinched at leas t a tie for the
flag as Baltimore lost the
first game of a doubleheader
to New York 3-2 earlier in the
day.
Rookie Rick Watts, 6·2,
yielded just five hits in
defeating Boston for th e
second time this month .
Cleveland ope ned the
scoring in the second when
Oscar Gamble singled, went
to third on Wise's error
and scored on Buddy Bell 's
single.
Powell doubled in Rick
Manning to give Cleveland a
2.{) lead in the third inning but
Deron Johnson hit his fir s t
homer for the Red Sox and
18th of the season in the
bottom of the fourth inning
with Fred Lynn on base to tie
the game.
The Indians went ahead in
the seventh on singles by
Frank Duffy and John
· Lowenstein and Duane
Kupier 's ground-out.
Cleveland added two more
in lhe eighth on Powell 's 27th
homer off loser Rick Wise
(19-12) and Charlie Spikes'
lith homer which greeted
reliever Bill Lee.

9 EYELET HUNJ. PAC

"'!

fHI AJHINS COUNn'
SAVINGS a lOAN CQ.

MISSOURI WINS
COLUMBIA, Mo . - Henry
Marshall caught scoring
passes of 66 yards from
quarterback
Steve
Pisarkiewicz and 11 yards
from
tailback
Tony
Galbreath Saturday to rally
fifth-ranked Missouri past
Wisconsin, 27-21.

p.m .

10) , 2:15 p.m.
buy one of the se lected
Home lite , lightweight Ct1ain

AGG!ESROMP
COLLEGE STATION , Tex .
(UP!) - Halfback Bubba
Bean and quarterback David
Shipman struck for long
touchdowns Saturday and a
tough Texas A&amp;M defense
shut off Dlinois' offense to
hand the No . 7.ranked Aggies
a 43-13 intersectional victory.

BISHOPS TRIUMPH
GROVE CITY, Pa . ( UP!)
- Roger Criblez kicked a 1919
yard field goal with 1:03 left
19
22
in the game Saturday to help
23112 Ohio Wesleyan to a 1(}.7
victory over Grove City.

Cleveland (Bibby 7· 151 at
Boston !Money 14·31. 2 p.m .

New York (Seaver 21 -9) at

Yoo get a rugged Carry Case
absolutely FREE when you

.484

77 83

and 13 yards in the scoring
drive a nd Paschall connected
on passes or 17 yards to split
end Ray Stanford a nd 19
yards to Smith .
Ohio SL&lt;r te. :J.o. struck back
quickl y. however. Johnson

gain tie
for title

37 1h

Kansas City at Texas, night
Today's games:

Philadelphia (Christensen 11 ~
5). 1 ' 35 p .m.
Atlanta (Morton 17· 16) at
( Billingham

16'12

If "

.I

Bosox

29

twilight

York 3~31 at Los Angeles
(Rhoden 3·3), 4: 15p.m.
Pittsburgh ( Candaleria 8·51
at St. Louis (Reed 12·13) or
Denny 10~ 7), 2: 15p.m .

Cincinnati

4'h

13

ChicaQo 1 Minnesota 0
Cleveland 5 Boston 2
New York 3 Baltimore 2
Milwaukee 5 Detroit 2
California
at
Oakland ,

night
Today's games :
Montreal (Carrithers 5 ~ 3)
at Chicago (Reuschel J0. 17),
2:15 p.m .
Houston

76 82

.481
74 86 .459
72 87 .453
Sa1urday's results :

.396 43

g.b.

quarterback Art Yaroch
ca me back just minutes later
with a 2f&gt;.yard touchdown
pass to Andress and the
cardinals trailed 35-21 after
three quarters.
Early in the final period,
Ball State tailback George
Jenkins rambled 24 yards for
another touchdown.
Though Ball State go ~ the
ball three more times in good
field position, it was unable to
score what would have been
the tying touchdown.
Miami is Z.l overall and HI
in the MAC . Ball State, 1-2 in
the league, evened its overall
mark at 2-2.

West
w. I. pet. o.b.
96 64 .600
91 69 .569 5

Minnesota

Houston at Los Angeles,
twinight
New York at Philadelphia,
night
San Francisco at San Diego,

TOUGHER FORM
WASHl"lGTON (UP!)

Mrs . Fred Stanley, son.
Brent; Mr. and Mrs. George
'.f,
, 1\
~ • : "-fl .taxes next year , the Internal
Gum, son, George ; Mr. and
0
1
:'\ ·'i . '} Revenue Serv1ce ' says. Tax
Mrs. Bill Williamson, son,
David; Mr ..and Mrs. Marvin --r/r
r::!!O ~
return forms next April will
Randolph, son, Stephen; Mr. ·'f."'. ·
.
··'
he longer and "a little more
. and Mrs. Jack Clark, son.
J im ; 'Mr. Stanley Starcher, "My dreams are loaded wilh difficult," IRS Commissioner
•
Donald Alexander sa id
son, Stan ; Mrs . Richard l'ommer c ials ~..
Rawlings, son, Tim ; Mr. and
Frid!'Y·

w. I. pet. g.b.
92 68 .575
85 75 .531 6'h

Montreal 5 Ch icago 3

BUT ...

71~
· 2~0

East

American League
Standings
East
w. L pet.
95 64 .598
Boston
89 67 .571
Baltimore
81 76 .516
New York
78 80 . 493
Cleveland
Mllwaukee 67 94 .416
57 10 1 .363
Detroit

Pittsburgh 4 St. Lou is 2
Cincinnati 7 Atlanta 6

WILL GROW THIS BIG

BAILEY JOINS UP
SAN FRANCISCO ( UPilF. Lee Bailey, a criminal
lawyer who won Dr . Samuel
Sheppard his freedom in 1966
in one of the most celebrated
cases in U. S. history, has
joined newspaper heiress
Patricia Hearst 's legal
defense team.

Standings
United Press International

Saturday's results:

YOUR DOLLARS

PRESIDENT NAMED
NEW YORK ( UP!)
Edward W. Estlow, general
business manager of ScrippsHoward Newspaper, has been
elected president of the
parent E. W. Scripps Co. , it
was announced Saturday.

and Carpenter for another 178
as the Redskins piled up 450
yards on the ground.
Trailing 2IHl late in the
second quarter, Ball State
began its comeback when
halfback Earl Taylor ran for
a one-yard tuouchdown and
threw an OO.yard pass to Mike
Andress on the first play of
the second half to trim the
margin to 2lH4.
Although Carpenter's
fourth touchdown gave
Miami a 35-14lead later in the
third quarter , Ball State

National League

••

WE'RE NOT SAYING

..,(~~~1:\ ~~
· ~
..~=wrnM""'"
~:Z,:'\_: ~~ ~. · ~
':;:· · ·\ w,.
more paperwork to pay less

.J

OXFORD, Ohio (UP!) Miami (Ohio) jumped off to a
~ lead but then had to
struggle to escape with a 3:;.
28 victory over fired-up Ball
State in a free-wheeling Mid·
American Conference game
Saturday.
Tailback Rob Carpenter
scored four of Miami's five
touchdowns on runs of one
three, six and four yards:
Quarterback Sherman Smith
scored t he other Miami
touchdown on a six·yard run .
Smith rushed for 193 ya rds

Sergeant Floyd, ·
•
•
m retirement,
relives History

Career Center gives 34

lead .
Ohio State scored again
less than 3:00 later after
taking possession on t he
North Carolina 45-yard line .
Greene lost eight yards
trying to pass , then hit tigh t
end Larry Kain for 21- and 27yard completions to the North
Carolina five, where Johnson
took the ball into the end zone
with :31 seconds to go in the
first half.
North Carolina went 80
yards in 10 plays after taking
the second-half kickoff to
make the score 12·7.
Tailback Jim Betterson.
forced to handle the bulk of

'Skins nip Cards

will stop in Point Pleasant on October 18. The boat is on an
18-month tour helping to celebrate the 200th birthday of
th e U. S. Army Corps of Engineers.

POINT PLEASANT - A
riverboat
loaded
with
Bicentennial exhibits will
travel the Ohio Rive r this fall ,
retraci~g the route of early
explorers and settlers of the
Ohio Valley .
The towboat Sergeant
Floyd, on an 18-month tour
helping to celebrate the 200th
birthday of the U. S. Army
CLARENCE THOMPSON, Superintendent of the
Corps
of Engineers, will
Gallia.Jackson-Vinton Joint Vocational School District
spend a week in October in
presented diplomas to 34 graduates of the Practical
the Corps' Huntington district
Nursing School of the Buckeye Hills Career Center during
stopping
at cities along the
ceremonies at Grace United Methodist Olurch Friday
way to give residents a
evening. (Photo by Donald Wright, Jr.)
sample of history through
tours of the river vessel.
Ports of call while the boat
is in the Huntington District
will be New Martinsville, W.
Va ., Oct. 16; Marietta, Ohio,
Oct. 17 ; Pt. Pleasant, W. Va .,
Oct. 18 ; HIUltington, W. Va.,
Oct. 19; and Portsmouth,
Ohio, Oct 20.
GALLIPOLIS - Thirty- Hulda Brown, Gallipolis;
The river boa !-turned
J.
Caudill, floating
four young women graduated Pamela
museum
was
from the Practical Nursing Gallipolis; Vicki L. Conley, refurbished in Kansas City,
School of the Buckeye Hills Jackson ; Virginia Cooper, Mo., and sailed June 16, date
Career Center in ceremonies Kettering; Imogene Crab- of the Corps' 200th birthday,
Friday evening at Grace tree, Jackson ; Catherine for its Bicentennial voyage.
United Me thodist Church Darst, Reynoldsburg ; Eva D. '
The hoat has a long and
DeLawder , Ironton ; distinguished history since
here .
Richard Simpson, M.D., Terrence Gandee, New being launched in 1932 at the
chairman of the Advisory Haven, W. Va.; Kandy Howard Shipyards in JefGallipolis ; fersonville, Ind .
Committee, presiding over Gindlesberger,
the program , introduced Jacqueline Halley, Crown
It was named in memorial
State Rep. Ron James, who City; Marcella Harrison, to Sgt. Charles Floyd, who
Gallipolis; Carrie Horton , died near the present town of
gave the main address.
James told the new LPNs Oak Hill: Genevieve Jasis, Sioux City, Iowa, on Aug . 20,
" life is a campaign." He said Gallipolis; Barbara Jordan , 1804. An engineer soldier, his
they should be interested and Pomeroy; Janet Kearns , death was the only fatality of
involved in government in Jackson; Marceline Kerns , the famous Lewis and Clark
addition to their hospital Gallipolis, Judith Love , expedi lion to explore the
work. James also wished the Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.; Pacific Northwest.
graduates luck in their future Susan Morgan, Wellston;
Operated by the Kansas
Paulette Nibert, Gallipolis; City District, Missouri River
work.
Clarence
Thompson, Nancy Ohlinger, Gallipolis Division, Corps of Engineers,
superintendent of the Gallia. Ferry, W. Va.; Vicki Poetker, the Sergeant Floyd was a
Jackson-Vinton
Joint Jackson ; Charlotte Queen, primary workhorse in the
Vocational School District, Pedro; Autumn Reasor, construction of the Missouri
awarded the diplomas after Hamden; Cathie Roseberry, River Navigation Project.
the class was presented by Jackson; Rita Scarberry, Used to move men, equipHelen M. Shields, R. N. Jackson: Judith See, Pt . ment and supplies and as the
Coordinator.
Instructors Pleasant; Tami Snider, primary Corps towboat, she
Joyce Knight, R.N . and Diane Wellston ; Brenda Whitley, became a familiar sight
Oiler, R.N., made the pin Middleport; Delores J . along the Missouri. As the
presentations
to
the Wilcoxon, Gallipolis ; Rachel navigation project nears
Willis, South Point.
graduates.
completion and as newer
The class response was
given by Gail Blaine of
Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.
Rev . Timothy Heaton,
pastor at Grace United
Methodist Church gave the
invocation and benediction.
Mrs . Merlyn Ross was
organist. Usherettes were
Marie Janko and Maura
Shields.
Graduates are Kathryn
Baker, Jackson; Luella G.
Blaine , Gallipolis Ferry,
W. Va .; Betty Boggs ,
Gallipolis; Ina M. Bradley,
Pt.
Pleasant;

blasted over on touchdown Tarn Heels defense held Ohio
runs of one, five, one, two and State's explosive offense
three yards . He now has nine scoreless until late in the
of OSU's 10 touchdowns this second quarter , when ·the
season.
Buckeyes, led by the riUlning
North Carolina. 1-2. -got its of Griffin and Johnson and a
only touchdown early in the · key 20·y.ard pass from
third quarter on a seven-yard quarterback
Cornelius
pass from Bill Paschall to Greene to wingback Brian
fullback Brian Smith.
Baschnagel, marched 80
The surprisingly stubborn yards in 14 plays for a 6-n

in the absence of alte~nat£
tailback Mike Voight , left at
home
for
di sci (Jii nar y
reasons,r ushed for 102 yards
in 28 carries.
Belter son had run s or 10 .

'I

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23 ~ The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 28, 1975

Bobcats blank SW; stay ·unbeaten

Pirates rip
Vikings 38-0
WILLOW WOOD - North
Gallia's Pirates used a
combination r unnin g and
passing. game here Friday
night to blast the Symmes
Valley Vikings, 38-0 in an
SV AC contest. North Gallia
rushed for 398 yards and
added another 100 yards via

the air .

PLENTY OF BLOCKERS ~ South ern's J ohn West has plenty of
blockers In front of him as he carnes the pigs km up fteld 11gainst Wahama

six-foot one inch 170 pOWld

junior , split the uprights with
6:50 left in the fir st half
Friday night to give Coach
Mar cus
Ril'e
~:~ n d
his
Wahama White Falcons their
second win in as many weeks
when'·lhey shut out the host
S!&gt;uthern Tornados 3-0.
• Roush was joined in the
limelight by Marty Holbrook
apd the entire White Falcon
defense unit as they ran their
slring of scoreless quarters to
13. The last team to score on
tbe White F alcons was the
Wayne Pioneers back on
Sept . 5.
Holbrook led the Wahama
offense to its most productive
offensive showing of the year
as he ripped through Southern for 151 yar ds in 28 carries.
: Scott Kehler a nd Brei
Rolbrook (Mar ly 's younger
~other) led the charges from
~eir linebacker positions for
~e fam ed defensive unit ,
jpniting the Tornados to just
f11 total offensive yards.
!k&gt;uthern managed to enter
lil'ahama territory only twice
ifuring the course of the
!fame, once as a result of a
!tal con fumble.
:: The opening kickoff was
!;~ke n by the White Falcons
It'd they wasted li ttle time in
mounting a drive which took
11\em to mid-fielp where a
l;nnble turned the ball over to
l:outhern .
: It was then the Tornados
:tllrn to move the pigskin and
l:Iat they did behind Greg
~ning and Steve Boso. But
! n the third play from
'!JCrimmage Dunning, Southe rn 's premiere running back
:OUstained a leg injury and
~d to be carried off the field
l:lh a stretcher. It was later
l!!arned that the star· athlete
Dad a fractured leg . After the
:l)tterruption,
South er n's
G.-ive bogged down and the
:~;&lt;bite Falcon defense stifTened to take over ·on downs
·at the Wahama 29 yard line.
~- \yahama
co uldn 'I get
;"»ty!hing going and were
;forced to punt from their 45
!! yard line. Southern moved
t he ball into Wahama
territory before. being forced
.,!o punt as the first quarter
:came to a close.
.., , After the exchange of punts
: Wahama began to move from
~ir own 22 behind Holbrook.
·
ree penalties aided the
·--White Falcons in their drive
~ they moved down inside
.., ,the Southern five yard line.
• lfhree cracks at the goal line
:failed and Scott Roush was
:Ccalled upon to attempt a 15
Zrard field goal, Terry Tucker
:: teceived the s nap from
:~enter and held the ball for
· :~oush as he kicked it through
; ~he goal for the score.
• ' Wah am a then dominated
the remainder of the game
with its explosive offense.
- WHS drove down inside the
::C'iuthern 15 yard line no less
iii lllan four ~imes throughout
course 9f ihe game but
~~~~,u·~c o~l~l)'l push a score
:1
The game ended
ahama
on top by a ~
W

-

!
:t

••

j

i

1

'

I!

mentioning are Rick Dye,
Brian Russel and DeWayne

Friday night. To the right of WesNs Brady Huffman•( 20). Other Tornados
shown are Mike Huddleston (36), Steve Hendricks (70), Ken Rose 171)
and Chris Forbes (52 1.

fiv e times for 45 yards. They
fumbled three times losing
two and had one pass inte rception. The most in-

White wh ofn we~e close
run ner ups in the individual
tackle department.

Wahama can continue

winning ways but a tough foe
in the Milton Greyhounds
lurks ahead. The game will
be played at Bachtel Field on
Friday.
Depart.
W
S
First downs
16
4
Yds. rush .
209
80
Yds. pass
13
0

teresting statistic was in the

Team statistics were also
very in1pressive for the red

offensive plays department
where Wa hama reeled off 7l
plays as compared to
Sout hern's 44 .
Hopefully
this
week

and white as they piled up 222
total yards with 16 first
downs . They were penalized

its

Total yds
222
80
Penal ties
5-45
4-50
Passing
1-11-13
~
Fiunbles lost
3-2
1-1
Intercept.
1
1
Pun to
2-65-325 5-146-28.2
Plays
71
44
Score by Quarters:
0 3 0 0--8
Wahama
Southern
0 0 0 ~0

Notre Dame wallops Wildcats
Saturday in a 31-7 come-from- under new coach Dan Devine .
behind triumph over North- It was the first loss for Northwestern .
western in three games.
It was the lOth straight
Montana took over when
vi ctory for eighth -r a nked Irish starting quarterback
Notre Dame over North- · Rick Slager was knocked
western and the third win dizzy when tackled with five
without defeat this season minutes left in the firs t period

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UP!)
- Sophomore quarterback
Joe Montana came off the
bench to wake up a sputtering
Notre Dame offe nse a nd
sophomore Willi e Fry spark a
determined defensive unit

Yankees jolt Orioles, 3-2
NEW YORK ( UP! ) ~
Pinch-hitter Rick Dempsey
walked with the bases-loaded
and none out in the lOth inning Saturday to give New
York 's Catfish Hunter his
23rd tri umph and pus h
Baltimore to the brink of

against the Oa kland A's next
weekend.
Chambli ss ope ned the
inning with a single and loser
Mike Torrez ( 21&gt;-9 ) walked
Graig Nettles to bring on
reliever Grant Jac kson.
Terry Whitfield, attemptin g
to sacrifice, beat out a hit to
load the bases and then
Dempsey drew a 3-2 walk off
reliever Dyar Miller to end
the game.
Hun ter, who became the
United Press lnternationa I
first Ma jor Leaguer since
Kansas 20 Ore_9on St . 0
Colgate 24 Cornell 22
Mi c higan 14 Bayl or 14
Bob Feller to hurl 30 comOhio Wesl eya n 10 Grove City
Miami (Ohio ) 35 Ball St. 28 ple te games in a season,
7
M ich igan St. 37 No. Carolina
Oh io U. 23 Kent 21
scattered six hits, walked two
St. 15
Lafayette 10 Columbia 7
M issouri 27 Wi scon si n 21
and struck out a season-high
Pittsburgh 47 Wm . &amp; Mary 0 Minnesota 10 Oregon 7
12.
.Bethany 13 Case Reserve 0
Notre Dam e 31 Northwestern
The Orioles struck quickly
Plattsburgh 16 Oswego 7
7
Villanova 10 Army 0
No. Illi noi s 20 W. M ic higan 0 off starter Catfish Hun ter in
West Virginia 35 Boston Call .
Wooster 9 Kenyon 7
the first inning on a double by
18
Te xas A&amp;M 43 Illinois 13
Bobby Grich and Lee May's
Tennessee 21 Auburn 17
Duke 26 Virginia 11
single . Bobby Bonds slug ged
HUSKERS ROMP
Virginia Tech 21 Ric hmond 9
his Jis t homer leadin g off the
VMI 55 Davidson 0
LINCOLN, Neb. (UP!)
bottom of the inning to tie the
Frank. &amp; Mars h . 35 Ursinus
For the second week in a row,
21
scor e at 1-1.
Terry Luck directed fourthHarva rd 10 Holy Cross 7
The Yankees scored a run
·Kin!ils Point 34 Gettysburg 11
ranked Nebraska to an
in the second on Chambliss'
Lehigh 34 Penn 29
avalanche of points in less
Northeastern 20 Boston U . 17
double and three walks by
than three quarters, hitting
. P r inceton 10 Rutgers 7
Torrez but Brooks Robinson's
Yale 35 Connecticut 14
on three touchdown passes in
sixth
homer tied the game in
Allegheny 32 Hiram 0
the Cornh uskers' 56-14
Ohio St. 32 No. Carolina 7
the seventh .
Wittenberg 20 Musklngum 16 pas ting of Texas Christian
Saturday.
Amn . Int. 31 Norwi c h 24
Brown 41 Rhode Island 20
Cheyney 21 Paters on St. 7
Clarion 16 Cent. Conn. 10
BEULAH
PRICE A HOLDOUT
C. W. Post 17 Wagner 14
GRC'VE
CITY
, Ohio (UP!)
KENOSHA,
Wis
.
(UP!)
Delaware 16 New Hampshire
7
Veteran guard Jimmy Price ~ Star Bidder, Go Say Go and
Itha ca 21 Cortland State 6
officially became a holdout Blue Devil Deck combined
Lebanon Valley 19 Dickinson
Saturday when he failed to for a 9-2-7 lOth..-ace trifecta
0
Lehigh 34 Penn 23
show as the Milwaukee Bucks worth $4,346 at Beulah Park
Ma ssachusetts 7 Dartmouth 3 officially opened training
here Friday.
Nichol s 15 Maine Maritim e 0
Three tickets were sold on
Pi ltsburg h 47 Wm . &amp; Mar y 0 camp at the University of
the
winning quarter horse
Wi scohs in -Pa rk side fi e ldShepherd 20 Concord 14
Springfield 23 Amherst 12
combination .
bouse here .
St. Lawrence 56 Roc hester
Dad Burnit defeated Chicks
Tec h o·
B-WROMPS
Chance by a nose in the
Susquehanna 3 Upsa la 7
feat ured
Beulah
Park
Wash . &amp; Jeff. 25 Thiel 0
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Wesleyan 13 Middlebury o
Futurity
Consolalion
at
400
Ken Presern threw three
West Liberty 20 W. Va .
touchdown passes, two to ya rds. Bid's Devil was third.
Wesleyan 14
The winner, timed at :20.85,
Robert
Robbins, to spark
Williams 3 Trinity 3
Washington &amp; Lee 9 Centre 9
Baldwin-Wallace to a 41-14 paid $14.20, $5.60 and $3.20.
Indiana 31 Utah 7
The 10-7 daily double
win
over John Carroll
Kalamazoo 14 Ohio Northern
pairing of Top Air and Quick
Saturday.
10
Watt was worth 14.20.
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
with Major Hoople
elimination in the American
League East with a 3-2
decision over the Orioles.
The loss clinched at least a
tie for Boston in the East and
any Red Sox victory or
Balti more loss thr usts
Boston into the AL Playoffs

Saturday's scores

NOit\IN&amp;

HE.

lt1E ATT~ND!'.NT
IS!'.YE IT BACI'. To
THE Mfi-.JO!l.
INHEI'-.D OF
BUSTER:

~!~~-~~~good from the Falcons
of view. Holbrook led all
1shers with 151 rushing
in 28 carries. He was
lll01~ed by Mike Goldsberry
3S yards in II attempts
Dale Lewis willi.21 yards
six carries.
honors in auto Kebler and Holbrook
led the team in in- •
ividual tackl~s would have
go to Joe Sheppard and
·Tucker both of whom
their normal ou t.
!""fling 'games. ·Also worth

walking six batters in addition to striking out six.
The Reds took a two-run
lead in the first inning when
Pete Rose ripped his 47th
double ~ tops in the league ~
and moved to third on a wild
pitch before Morgan singled
him home . The Reds added a
seco nd run on Bench 's
sacrifice fly.
Bench's
28th
homer,
coming with Tony Perez on
base, gave the Reds two runs
in the third before they a dded
four. Ruhle , 11-12, took the a run in the fourth and two
more in the sixth on Morgan's
loss.
The Brewers scored in the 17th homer.
Morgan's three RBls gave
fourth on Sheldon 's single and
Porter 's double and in the him 94, a new club record for
fifth Tom Bianco sing led and second basemen , toppin g the
gcored on Curt Bevacqua's, old mark set by Tony Cuccinello in 1931.
single.
Earl Williams' · three-run
Bianco, singled , went to
second on a wild pitch and homer highlighted a five-run
scored on Beavcqua's single Atlanta uprising in the ninth
for the final run in the eighth. but reliever Pat Darsy picked
Detroit scored in the first up his first save of the season
on Willi e Horton's sacrifice when he shut off the Braves
fly and in the fifth on Ron after coming on with two
LeFlore's run-scoring s ingle. rwmers on and one out.
over the Atlanta Braves .
Don Gullett, who will open
the NL Playoffs aga inst the
Pirates next Saturday, gave
up one Wlearned nm in five
innings lo notch his lath
victory against four losses.
However , the 24-year-old
lefty was unusuall y wild,

Brewers slip by Tigers
MILWAUKEE ( UP! ) ~
Seconrl baseman J e rry
Manuel's error in the sixth
Bobby
inning
a ll owed
Sheldon to score the go-ahead
run Sat urd ay a nd the
Milwaukee Brewers went on
to a S-2 victory over the
Detroit Tigers .
The score was tied 2-2 when
Sheldon led off the inning
with a sing le and Robin Yount
followed with a walk. George
Scott then grounded to Chuck
Scrivener at t hi rd, but
Manuel let Scrivener 's force
throw get by him for an error
and Sheldon scored.
Vern Ruhle then walked
Darrell Porter intentionally
to load the bases and Bob
Darwin singled home Yount
for th e Brewers' fourth run.
Jerry Augustine allowed
just seven hits and one walk
for his second victory without
a defeat, while striking out

&lt;;:"Y'

®EiTEl&lt;
61YE HIM
IHE PRIZE
MONE.Y.
MAJOR=
-27

INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) ~
The Amateur Athletic Union
Saturday announced a il&gt;man team to represent the
United States in the world
powerlifting championships
at Birmingham, E ngland, in
November.
Th e list includes Pan
Americ11n
Games
weightlifters Marv . Phillips
and Enrique Hernandez, both
of Los Angeles. Phillips will
participate at 220 pounds
Hernandez at 132.
"' Othe- members included
Lamar Gant, Flint, Mic~ .• 123
pounds;
Jack
Welch
Aliquippa, Pa. 148; Waite~

ana

$16.00
••
••
••
••
•

Values

At
IJow

•

•

Hardman
Prices!

SEPTEMBER 28th &amp; 29th

MEN'S

WELLINGTON BOOT
,_•leather Upper

thomas ,Oklahom~ City, 165;
Dennis Wright , Baxter
Springs, Kan. , 181 ; Ed
Ra ':'enscroft, Long Beach,
Calif. 198; Larry Pacifico,
Sidney, Ohio, 220;. Doug
Young, Brownswood, Tex.,
242, and Don Reinhoudt,
Fredonia, N. Y., super
heavyweight.
AAU 'welghUifting chairman Boil Crist of Hampton,
Va., will accompany the team
and · Clay Patterson of
Arlington., Tex. will be the
team leacter.
The championships are set
for Nov . 22-23.

•Black

•Com position Sole

Cl eveland

Detroit
DOD DOD DOD-O 6 D
Milwaukee
001 000 :Zh-3 11 D
Bare. Pentz (8) and Hum phrey , Wockenfuss ;. Broberg
(1.4-\6) and Porter . LP -Bare 18.
lll. HRs .scott 2 (35th . 36th l.

Oakland
too 200 Oh-" s 2.
Fi gueroa ( 16-13) an d Etc h ·
cbarren . Ha mpton (7) ; Bos .
man , Abbott (6), F ingers (8)
and Tena ce, Fosse (Si. WP ·
Bosman I 11 . 41. HR - Harper

National L eague
( 12 innings)
Montreal 000 000 OlD 001 - 3 7 3
Chicago
ooo :zoo OOD ooo-- :z 7 1
wart hen , Fryman (7). Fry .
man (12 ) and Ca rt er ; Ston e,
Know les ClOJ, Crosby (12) and
Mitterwald . Hosl ey (9 ) WP .
Murray ( 15-8) . LP -Knowles (6 ·
9J. HR -Jorgensen (16th J.
Pittsburgh
000 000 000-0 3 0
St. Louis
100 000 OOJI- 1 7 0
Rooker. Giusti {1), Herna ndez
(8 ) and Sangu ill en; Forsch (15 .
10 ) and Simm on s. LP -Rooker
( 11 -13 ).
(1st game)
( 1l innings)
New York 010 002 000 OOD--J 11 2
Phildlph 120 000 000 001-4 l2 0
Matlack, Lockwood ( 7),
Apodaca (9) and Grote, Stearn s
( 12); Underwood. Sch u eler ( 6) ,
McGraw ( 8), Sim pson ( 10 1,
Garber ( 12) and Boone. WP ·
Garber (10-12l. L P -Apodaca (3 ·
4) . HR -K ingman (36th ).
( :Znd game)
112 innings)
New York 000 010 DOD D02-3 8 2
Philadlph ODD 000 OlD DOl - 2 6 3
Koosman, Sander s I 12) and
Hodges. Grote (11) ; Ruthven ,
Lerch
(6 ),
Hilgendorf
(9 ),
McGraw ( 11 ) and Boone. WP Koosman (1.4 -13 ) : LP -McGraw

19-61.
Atlanta
130 001 OOG- 5 11 4
Cincinnati
030 310 23x-12 13 0
N iekro, Leon (4) , Hou se (5 ).
Sosa ( 7) and Correll , Pocoroba;
Nolan , Borbon (7) and Bench ,
Plummer. WP -Nolan {15-9) . LP ·
N iekro
(15 -15).
HR -Goodson
( 1stl . .
Houston
000 000 oo:z-:z 5 o
Los Angel es
ooo ooo 012- 3 :z 0
Richard (12 -101 and May ;
Hooton (18·9) and Yeager . MR s Johnson (19th), Garvey (19 th ).
San Francisc 000 200 OJG--5 12 1
san Diego
ooo ooo ooo-o s :z
Montefusco {15 -9) and Sa dek ;
Stro m , Frisella (8), M etzger ( 9)
and Dav is, KendalL LP -Strom

mvrr
.. rtrr
,~FOOfMM

1

·CENTER

flf.Dn. &amp; Fri . 10til9
S~nday 1 Til 5

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

Rt, fBypass 1
Point Pleasant, w. Va.

Major Leagu• Leaders
By United Press International
L•adlng Batters
&lt; based on 415 at bats)
National Lngue
g. ab r. h. pet .
Madlck, Ch 128 505 76 181 .358
Simmons . SI.L
155 513 80 190 .332
Sangulln , PI 132 477 60 157 .329
Morgan, Cin 14.4 492 10.4 160 .325
Watson. Ho 132 .485 67 157 .324
Garvey , LA 158 6.53 8.4 209 .320
Card en!. Ch 152 565 83 179 .3 17
Joshua , SF 127 501 7.4 159 .317
Rose , Ci n
160 655 109 206 .31.5
Parker. Pit 1.46 551 75 17 0 .309
Brock . St. L 135 527 78 163 .3 09
American League
g . ab r. h . pet.
Ca r ew. Min 141 529 89 190 .359
Lynn , Bos
14.4 524 102 174 .332
Mun son , NY 153 582 82 188 .323

Washington . Oak
147 585
Rice, Bos
Brett, KC
McRae , KC
Or ra , Ch i
Chambliss ,

14.4
158
126
1.40

564
629
.480
542

'

83
92
8.4
58
64

181
17.4
194
1.47
165

.309
.309
.308
.306
.304

Chi 3.4 .
American League : Rivers .
Ca l 70 ; Washington , Oak .40 ;
Otis , KC 39 ; Ca r ew, Minn 35 ;
Remy, Cal 34 .
Pitching
(Based on most vic1ories)
National League : Seaver , NY
21-9; Jones , so 20 -11 ; Hooton,
LA 18-9 ; Messersm ith , LA 18
14; Reuss , Pitt 17 -ll ; Morton ,
A 11 . 17-16.
American League : Palmer ,
Ba lt 22 -11 ; H un te r , NY 22 -14;
Blue. Oak 21 -11 ; Torrez . Balf
20-8; Kaa r, Chi 20 -14.

p zr.ates
• _

!".

hand in three scores, one his
own twa:yard run in Ute
second quarter aild two
scoting passes to Ste ve
Green.
Kokal directed Kent to a 217 lead with a ~yard drive in
II plays in the second
quarter.
Ohio pulled to within a
touchdown , however, just
before halftime after a 72yard drive engineered by four
Lilienthal-Green passes,
including Lilienthal 's first
touchdown pass, 22-yards to
Green .
A second Lilienthai-Green
touchdown pass, of ll yards,
tied the score after Ohio
recovered a Kent fumble in
the third quarter.
On the next series, the Kent
punter had to chase the snap
into his own end zone, where
Miller tackled him for the
winning margin.
Kent is now 1&gt;-l in the
league and 2-l overall. Ohio is
2-0-1 in MAC play and in all
games.

hits and all five of the Braves'
runs during his six inings.
Pedro Borbon follow ed
Nola n to the mound and
blanked the Braves the last
three innings to gain his fifth
save of the season.
The Reds who collecled 13
hits, were aided by four

Brave errors.
Atlanta scored one run in
the first inning and added
three in the top of the second.
The Reds came back with
three in the bottom of the
second and then took a 6-4
lea d in the fourth on Perez'
bases-loaded double.
The Reds added a seventh
run in the fifth inning, picked
up two more in the seventh
and scored their final three In
the eighth.
Two of toose three runs in
the eighth came on a double
by rookie Doug Flynn, a lateinning replacement for Pete
Rose at third.

McGlothen, 15-13, Reuss
doubled into the gap in left
cente r to score Taveras.
Rennie Stennett then drove in
Reuss with a single to right.
Al Oliver put the Pirates
ahead in the first when he
s lugged his 18th homer to
ce nterfield. Oliver 's blast
scored Stennett, who had led
off the game with a double.
St. Louis reached Reuss for
iIs two runs in the bottom of
the first. Luis Melendez
singled and scored on Hector
Cruz' double to left. Cruz took
third on a play at the plate
and scored on Ted Sinunons'
ground-out . It was Simmons'
JOOth RBI.

Geiger. ·The march covered
67 yards in II plays. A big
play during the drive was an
1B-yard pass from Lucas to
Jim Ward .
Following a Todd Taylor
interception, Kyger Cree k
pushed across Its final tollhdown on a 30 yard romp by
win gback Smith. Lucas
kicked the extra point.
The Bobcats were knocking
at the door with just seconds
left in the game, but a fumble
recovery by Southwestern
stopped the drive.
Kyger Creek is 4-0 while
Southwestern dropped to 0-4.
The
Highlanders
host ·
Symmes Valley Friday night.
STATISTICS
KC SW
DEPARTMENT
First Downs
17 3
Yards Rushing
315 53
Yards Passing
62 18
Total Yardage
377 71
Passes Attempted
7 6
Passes Completed
4 2
Fumbles
3 2
Fumbles Lost
2 2
Interceptions
2 0
11&gt;-100 7-51
Penalties
By Quarters : ,
Kyger Creek
0 14 U4--34
Southwestern 0 0 0 ~ 0

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out with 8 :10 to play Saturday, rescuing lOth rated
Michigan from another near
ups e t and gtvtng the
Wolverines .a 14-14 tie with
Baylor.

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Route 33

Phone 446-3362 _

CAROLINA LUMBER
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Gallipolis, Ohio

Store Hrs.: flf.Dn .- Fri. 8: 00-5: 00
Saturday 8: 00-12: 00

Mason, W. Va .

AND AT THE AUTHORIZED SERVICE
DISPLAYING THE

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killed the drive. Chris Lewis,
Donn ie Bush and Jack
Walker picked up yardage
duri ng the drive which was
aided by a 15 yar~ penalty .
Preston
broke
the
Highlander defense with a 51
yard gall op over left tackle
with 7:22 left in the third
stanza . A run for the conversion was stopped. Neither
team threatened to score
during the rest of the third
period.
The first of two Kyger
Creek fourth period scores
came on a six-yard run by M.

top Cards

ST . LOUIS
Lefthander Jerry Reuss beat St.
Louis for the fourth time this
season and keyed the winning
rall y with a run-scorin g
double in the fifth inning
Saturday afternoon as the
Pittsburgh Pirates defeated
the Cardinals 4-2.
Reuss, a former Cardinal,
stopped St. Louis on only four
hits before being relieved by
Bruce Kison in the seventh.
Reuss raised his record to a
club-high 18-11 as he struck
out three and walked two.
The Pirates broke a 2-2 tie
in the fifth . After Frank
Taveras worked a walk from
Cards
sta rter
Lynn

NY

1.46 5.48 6.5 166 .303
Hargrov, T x 1.43 5 12 80 155 .303
Braun, Min 133 449 69 136 .303
Home Runs
Nat ional League : Schm idt,
Ph il 38 ; Ki ngman, N Y 36 ;
Luzi nski, Phil 34 ; Bench , Cin
27; Cey , LA and Parker . Pitt
25.
American League: Scott, Mil
36; Jackson , Oak 3.4; Mayberr y,
KC
33;
BohdS,
NY
30;
Burroughs. Tex 29 .
Runs Batted In
Nat iona l League: Luz inski.
Ph il 120; P er ez, Cin 109 ; Bench,
Cin 107; Sta ub, NY 103 ; Cey,
LA, Parker , Pitt and Montan ez.
SF 101.
American League : Scott, M il
107 ; L ynn, Bos and Mayberry.
KC 105 ; Rice, Bas 102 ; Ja ckson.
Oak 101.
Stolen Bases
Nat ional Leag ue : Lopes, LA
76; Morgan, Cin 65: Brock, SI .L
56; Ced eno, Hou 49 ; Card en al,

Qlptain's Lounge

...._

OBERLIN LOSES
OBERLIN, Ohio ( UP! l
Carnegie-Mellon scored three
times in the secohd quarter to
break open Oberlin's home
opener here Saturday and go
on to win 35-13.

Leaders

• Snack
Bar and
.

HARDMAN'S
·HOME

tackled Kent punter Joe
Poslpanka in his own end
zone for two points, breaking
a 21-21 tie late in the period.
Kent State quarterback
Greg Kokal tossed touchdown
passes of five, '1:1 and nine
yards, two of them to end
John Keeve.
Ohio University qua rterback Rick Lilienthal had a

ATHENS, Ohio (UPI ) ~
Ohio University blocked two
Kent State punts and intercepted three passes to
Kansas City 040 :ZOO 002- 8 8 1 enable the Bobcats to come
T eJi as
DD3 DOl 001 - 6 10 2
Leona rd, McDan iel (6), Min · back in the second half with a
gar~ 17), Pattin (7) and Healy ,
23-21 Mid-American ConMartincr ( 8) ; Jenkins , Hargan
ference
win Saturday.
(2 }. Kekich (4 ). Foucault (8 ),
Wrig ht (9) , Thomas (91 and
Senior Ohio defensive end
Sundberg . Fah ~ v
(9 J. WP Steve
Miller recovered a
Leonard (l5-7l . LP -.Ien kins (17 .
18) . HR -Harrah {20t h t .
third-quarter KSU fumble
California
000 200 000-2 6 o that led to a score, then

e 24 New AMF Lanes
"'*~

3 Brave lead in the fourth
inning and routed starter Phil
Neikro, who suffered his 15th
loss against 15 victories.
Tony's double was one of
his three hits for the night and
boosted his average to .286 as
he helped Gary Nolan pick up
his 15th victory against nine
losses.
Nolan, woo is scheduled to
start the third game against
Pittsburgh in the cham pionEhip series, yielded nine

OU drops Kent State

"For That Personal
&amp; Professional Touch"
FEATURING

Sizes
D- E &amp; Extra Wide

Reds to a 12-5 victory over the
Atlanta Braves.
Perez' bases-loaded double
was his 15th game-winning
blow of the seasor.. And his
three RB!'s boosted his
season's total to 109, two
more than Johnny Bench,
who returned to the line-up
last night for the first time
s ince pulling a groin muscle
in Atlanta a week ago last
Thursday.
Perez' double wiped out a 4-

ooo 000 ooo-o 50

Bos ton
000 lOO lOx-4 9 0
Hood , Buskey 17) and Ashby ;
Cleveland (13 -9) and Mont gomery . LP -Hood (6 -101 . HR Evans ( 13th ).

PRO-SHOP

Regular 124.00

a

the Bobcat ki ckoff. Two
penalties put Kyger in a hole ,
but a clutch fourth down, 19yard reception from Lucas to
wingback Rick Smith gave
the Bobcats a first down at
the Highlander six-yard line.
Preston zoomed in with just
23 seconds left in the period
for a 1~ lead . Lucas' kick
pushed the count to 14~ at the
half.
Southwestern took the
second half kickoff and began
its best drive of the night
marching from Its 3S to the
Bobcat 37 where a fumble

Perez paces 12-5 Reds win

SKYLII'IE LANES and

On~

season,

CINCINNATI ( UPI) ~ The
Cincinnati Reds, seeking a
Chicago
000 100 000 - 1 8 o topflight third baseman,
Minnesota
000 101 OOx - 2 7 0
Kaat (20-U J and Down ing : dangled Tony Perez as tradeBane , Campbell (1 J and Roof
bait last winter. Today, Perez
WP -Bane (3 - lJ . HR · Terrell (ll
is glad no one succumbed to
Baltimore at New York , 2,
the lure.
ppd, r ain .
Eve n more thankful are the
( 1st game)
Reds.
Clevelt~nd
ooo ooo ooo-o 4 1
Because Friday night ,
Boston
200 100 01•- 4 9 0
Eckersley, LaRoche 181 and Perez took over the club 's
E ll is, Cer one (8 }; Ti ant 118-14 )
and F.isk . LP -Eckersley ( IJ -7l . lead in game-winning hits
HR -Cooper ( 14th) .
and RBI's as he slanuned a
three-run double to pace the
(2nd Gamel

Cubs lose, drop

ANOTHER TIE
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!)
- Senior tailback Gordon
Bell dove over from a yard

this

homecoming match against
the Eastern Eagles. Coach
Spike Berkheimer's Eagles
defeated Federal Hocking,
22-6 Friday night. Both KC
and Eastern a re unbeaten
against league competition.
Following a torrential
downpour and scoreless first
quarter, Kyger Creek took a
second period punt and
marched 88 yards in a timeconsuming drive for its first

America n League

team 70 yards , plunging
across from the one-yard line
for the winning score with :40
to play.

CHICAGO (UP!) ~ Larry
Biittner tripled home two
runs with one out in the top of
the lith inning Saturday to
propel Montreal to a 5-3
victory over the Chicago
Cubs, the Expos lOth win in
their last ll games.
BUttner's triple , off loser
Bill Bonham ( 13-15 ), followed
a single by Jerry White and a
walk to Pete Mac Kanin .
Woody Fryman pitched l 2-3
innings to gain his ninth
triU'nph .
Chicago's Andy Thornton
had tied the game at 3-3 in the
eighth with his 17th homer
after Gary Carter's runscoring single gave the Expos
the lead in the top of the inning.
Montreal took a H lead in
the fourth on Mike Jorgen·
sen's 17th homer but· Thornton's two - run double gave
Cubs a 2-llead in their half of
the inning before White 's runscoring single in the sixth tied
the score .

games

score of the night. Slicking to
the ground, U1e Bobcats used
a combination of running
' plays
with
Preston,
sophomore Marcus Geiger
and junior fullback Ralph
Baylor, lugging the pigskin to
the end zone .
Preston went over from the
one-yard lin e with 3:52 left in
the first half. Tim Luca&lt;,
se nior quarterbac k and
Bobcat placekicker, booted
the extra point .
o
The Highlanders fumbled
the ball back to Kyger Creek
on their second play following

Friday's Baseball Results
Pren International

(5t h) .

into basement

Jim Sprag ue 's
Bobcats must now prepare
for one of their tougher

HAWKEYE

:

•

Fantastic

••
••
••
..

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•

SPRINGFIELD, Ohio
(UPI) - Wittenberg's Tigers
notched their third staight
win of the year without a loss
with a come-from-behind 21&gt;16 victory over Muskingum
here Saturday.
The Muskies led the Tigers
1~ at halftime on a 31-yard
touchdown
pass
from
quarterback Gary Martin to
Terry Kelley and a threeyard scoring run by Kevin
Snyder.
Freshman David Merritt
scored twice within. 4:00 in
the third quarter on runs of 39
and six yards to lift Wittenberg· to a 14-13 lea&lt;j.
Muskingum's La.-ry
Wallick kicked a 19-yard field
goal to give the New Concord
team a 16-14 edge with 4:00
left in the game.
Tigers quarterback Brian
Aschenbrenner drove his

Coac ~

By United

trip Muskies

A beautiful blend
of
65
pet .
Shetl and
woo l
and
35
pet.
polyester are th e
main ingred ients
of
this
fine
machinewashable
sweater . Great
ta iloring in a
must sweater for
each and every
wardrobe . A fine
sweater for the
yo ung
and
young :at-heart .

NORTHFIELD
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
( UP! ) ~ Missouri Time
rolled to a 21h length victory
over Norman's Dream at
Northfield Park Friday night
to capture the $7,500 third of
four legs in the Summit
Series for mares.
The four-year-old, owned
by John and Florence Vitullo
of Youngstown and reined by
Dominic staffrey, cruised to
a 2:02 victory to return $5, $4
and $2.20.
Norman 's Dream was
second and Galion Pam
finished third.
The mares will returned
next Frida y for a $12,500
finale in the stake series.
A crowd of 3,5ll wagered
$315,685.

Friday's
lines cores

Tigers rally,

Royal Clan
Pocketed
Cardigan

team for November games ·

C!'.RD 1 AT lt'IE
Lfl-.$1 :?T!'.IION

$1"~;~~~ldual statistics looked

Cincy cops 107th wm

·,

USED A CRED IT

1

•

A4 U names 1O-man lifting

IT,

LIE.UiENI'INi ~

a nd the Irish trailing 7~.
Montana directed the Irish
on a 77-yard touchdown
march which culminated in
AI Hunl&lt;lr 's four-yard run .
When Montana left the
game with three minutes
gone in the final period, the
Irish had their 31-7 a~­
vantag e.
In the span that Montana
was in action, he carried
eight times for 28 yards,
picking up first downs three
times, completed six of II
passes for 80 yards, with four
of hi s completions going for
firs t downs, ran for six yards
himself for one touchdown
and passed to Mark McLane
for 14 yards and another
touchdown.
But Fry wouldn't let the
defense be outdone . He
blocked a punt by Northwestern quarterback Randy
Dean and, after teammate
Tom Lopienski recovered on
the Wildcat 26, it took only
four plays for Jim Browner to
run 10 yards for · the other
Irish touchdown .
Fry, one of five players
returning to the Irish squad
this year after one year
s uspensions for violatin g
dormitory rule s, twi ce
tackled Dean for losses on
attempted passes for 15
yards, and once nabbed
Wildcat running star Greg
Boykin for four-yard loss
which stopped Northwestern
deep in its own territory.
Montana and Fry were not
the only Notre Dame stars.
Devine let nearly everybody
on · his roster into the game
and a freshman speedster,
Jerome Heavens, wound up
gaining 106 ya rds in 15
carries for the best single
yardage performance in the
game.
Hunter carried 70 yards in
14 attempts.
Devine also got four
quarterbacks Into the game,
using bOth sophomore Gary
Forstek and senior Frank
Allocco into action in the final
period .
Northwestern's only points
were set up when Mark
Harlow intercepted Slager's
pass and returned to the Irish
25. Boykin went four yards
for the touchdown on the
fourth running play of the
series.

IT'S MINE ~ Dan Brown, Southern Tornado s tandout is about to haul in an aerial here
over the outstretched arms of a Wahama defender.

CINC INNA Tl ( UP! ) ~ Joe
Morgan and Johnny Bench
slammed home runs and
drove in three runs apiece
Saturday to power playoffbound Cincinnati to its 107th
triumph ~ the most in the
National League since the
1906 Chicago Cubs won 116
games ~ with a 7&lt;&gt; victory

Vikings held to just four first
downs and 83 yards on the
grounds, were unable to get
beyond the Pirates' 30 yard
line.
Offensively, North GaUia's
CaSey had 140 yards in 15
attempts; Logan got 88 yards
in six tries; Calvin Minnis, 26
yards in four tries and Theiss
21 yards in three carries. In
the passing department ,
Spencer grabbed six passes
for 79 yards.
North Gallia coac hes
agreed it was the team's best
overall effort and best
executed game this year.
Pirate defensive standouts
were Bruce Runyon, senior
linebacker, with 14 assists
and three so lo tackles;
Tackett with seven assists
and one solo tackle and a
blocked punt and Bill Baker ,
defensive end , with 10 assists
and two solo tackles . Spencer
sac ked the Vi kin g quarterback twice.
North Gallla, 3-l, will host
Souithern Friday night in an
important SVAC co nt est.
Symmes Valley, l-3, goes to
Southwestern Friday.
STATISTICS
DEPARTMENT
NG SV
First Downs
11
4
398 83
Yards Rushing
Yards Passing
100
4

The assault was led by
sophomore halfba c k Mike
Casey. Casey scored two
touchdowns and rushed for
140 yards in 15 attempts. He
broke the game wide open
with an electrifying 80 yard
run off-tackle on the first play
from scrinunage, after NG
obtained possession of the
ball.
A pass from junior quarterback Mark Theiss to
senior end Don Spencer was
good for an 8-0 lead.
With 5:08 left in the first
quarter, Theiss went over on
a five yard rollout . Another
pass from Theiss to Brett
Tackett was good for a 16-0
lead.
North Gallia wrapped it up
with a 14 point second period .
Fred Logan, junior tailback,
made the first TD on a 51&gt;yard romp . A run for the
extra points failed.
Casey zoomed over from
the four-yard line for his
second six-pointer midway
through the second period. A Total Yardage
498 87
pass from Theiss to Spencer Passes Attempted
13
5
was good for a 31&gt;-0 halftime Passes Completed
8
0
lead.
I
0
Fumbles
The Pirates got their final Fumbles Lost
I
0
TD in the third quarter on a Interceptions
2
0
l--5
one-yard plunge by l &lt;&gt;gan. Penalties
9-95
Randy Patterson comple:ed · By Quarters :
the scoring with his con- North Gallia
.16 14 8 ~38
version rWl .
· symmesVal.
0 00~0
Coach
Greg
Bailie's

Falcons blank Tornados 3-0
By GARY CLARK
RACINE ~ Scott Roush,

PATR IOT - Led by senior
tailback Chri s Preston,
Kyger Creek's 1974 Southern
Athletic Conference defending champion Bobcats rolled
to !heir fourth victory here
Friday night , 34~ over Southwestern .
· Preston, an Ali-SV AC back
last fall, scored three touchdowns while rushing for 170
yards on a wet and muddy
turf.

�..

'

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23 ~ The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 28, 1975

Bobcats blank SW; stay ·unbeaten

Pirates rip
Vikings 38-0
WILLOW WOOD - North
Gallia's Pirates used a
combination r unnin g and
passing. game here Friday
night to blast the Symmes
Valley Vikings, 38-0 in an
SV AC contest. North Gallia
rushed for 398 yards and
added another 100 yards via

the air .

PLENTY OF BLOCKERS ~ South ern's J ohn West has plenty of
blockers In front of him as he carnes the pigs km up fteld 11gainst Wahama

six-foot one inch 170 pOWld

junior , split the uprights with
6:50 left in the fir st half
Friday night to give Coach
Mar cus
Ril'e
~:~ n d
his
Wahama White Falcons their
second win in as many weeks
when'·lhey shut out the host
S!&gt;uthern Tornados 3-0.
• Roush was joined in the
limelight by Marty Holbrook
apd the entire White Falcon
defense unit as they ran their
slring of scoreless quarters to
13. The last team to score on
tbe White F alcons was the
Wayne Pioneers back on
Sept . 5.
Holbrook led the Wahama
offense to its most productive
offensive showing of the year
as he ripped through Southern for 151 yar ds in 28 carries.
: Scott Kehler a nd Brei
Rolbrook (Mar ly 's younger
~other) led the charges from
~eir linebacker positions for
~e fam ed defensive unit ,
jpniting the Tornados to just
f11 total offensive yards.
!k&gt;uthern managed to enter
lil'ahama territory only twice
ifuring the course of the
!fame, once as a result of a
!tal con fumble.
:: The opening kickoff was
!;~ke n by the White Falcons
It'd they wasted li ttle time in
mounting a drive which took
11\em to mid-fielp where a
l;nnble turned the ball over to
l:outhern .
: It was then the Tornados
:tllrn to move the pigskin and
l:Iat they did behind Greg
~ning and Steve Boso. But
! n the third play from
'!JCrimmage Dunning, Southe rn 's premiere running back
:OUstained a leg injury and
~d to be carried off the field
l:lh a stretcher. It was later
l!!arned that the star· athlete
Dad a fractured leg . After the
:l)tterruption,
South er n's
G.-ive bogged down and the
:~;&lt;bite Falcon defense stifTened to take over ·on downs
·at the Wahama 29 yard line.
~- \yahama
co uldn 'I get
;"»ty!hing going and were
;forced to punt from their 45
!! yard line. Southern moved
t he ball into Wahama
territory before. being forced
.,!o punt as the first quarter
:came to a close.
.., , After the exchange of punts
: Wahama began to move from
~ir own 22 behind Holbrook.
·
ree penalties aided the
·--White Falcons in their drive
~ they moved down inside
.., ,the Southern five yard line.
• lfhree cracks at the goal line
:failed and Scott Roush was
:Ccalled upon to attempt a 15
Zrard field goal, Terry Tucker
:: teceived the s nap from
:~enter and held the ball for
· :~oush as he kicked it through
; ~he goal for the score.
• ' Wah am a then dominated
the remainder of the game
with its explosive offense.
- WHS drove down inside the
::C'iuthern 15 yard line no less
iii lllan four ~imes throughout
course 9f ihe game but
~~~~,u·~c o~l~l)'l push a score
:1
The game ended
ahama
on top by a ~
W

-

!
:t

••

j

i

1

'

I!

mentioning are Rick Dye,
Brian Russel and DeWayne

Friday night. To the right of WesNs Brady Huffman•( 20). Other Tornados
shown are Mike Huddleston (36), Steve Hendricks (70), Ken Rose 171)
and Chris Forbes (52 1.

fiv e times for 45 yards. They
fumbled three times losing
two and had one pass inte rception. The most in-

White wh ofn we~e close
run ner ups in the individual
tackle department.

Wahama can continue

winning ways but a tough foe
in the Milton Greyhounds
lurks ahead. The game will
be played at Bachtel Field on
Friday.
Depart.
W
S
First downs
16
4
Yds. rush .
209
80
Yds. pass
13
0

teresting statistic was in the

Team statistics were also
very in1pressive for the red

offensive plays department
where Wa hama reeled off 7l
plays as compared to
Sout hern's 44 .
Hopefully
this
week

and white as they piled up 222
total yards with 16 first
downs . They were penalized

its

Total yds
222
80
Penal ties
5-45
4-50
Passing
1-11-13
~
Fiunbles lost
3-2
1-1
Intercept.
1
1
Pun to
2-65-325 5-146-28.2
Plays
71
44
Score by Quarters:
0 3 0 0--8
Wahama
Southern
0 0 0 ~0

Notre Dame wallops Wildcats
Saturday in a 31-7 come-from- under new coach Dan Devine .
behind triumph over North- It was the first loss for Northwestern .
western in three games.
It was the lOth straight
Montana took over when
vi ctory for eighth -r a nked Irish starting quarterback
Notre Dame over North- · Rick Slager was knocked
western and the third win dizzy when tackled with five
without defeat this season minutes left in the firs t period

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UP!)
- Sophomore quarterback
Joe Montana came off the
bench to wake up a sputtering
Notre Dame offe nse a nd
sophomore Willi e Fry spark a
determined defensive unit

Yankees jolt Orioles, 3-2
NEW YORK ( UP! ) ~
Pinch-hitter Rick Dempsey
walked with the bases-loaded
and none out in the lOth inning Saturday to give New
York 's Catfish Hunter his
23rd tri umph and pus h
Baltimore to the brink of

against the Oa kland A's next
weekend.
Chambli ss ope ned the
inning with a single and loser
Mike Torrez ( 21&gt;-9 ) walked
Graig Nettles to bring on
reliever Grant Jac kson.
Terry Whitfield, attemptin g
to sacrifice, beat out a hit to
load the bases and then
Dempsey drew a 3-2 walk off
reliever Dyar Miller to end
the game.
Hun ter, who became the
United Press lnternationa I
first Ma jor Leaguer since
Kansas 20 Ore_9on St . 0
Colgate 24 Cornell 22
Mi c higan 14 Bayl or 14
Bob Feller to hurl 30 comOhio Wesl eya n 10 Grove City
Miami (Ohio ) 35 Ball St. 28 ple te games in a season,
7
M ich igan St. 37 No. Carolina
Oh io U. 23 Kent 21
scattered six hits, walked two
St. 15
Lafayette 10 Columbia 7
M issouri 27 Wi scon si n 21
and struck out a season-high
Pittsburgh 47 Wm . &amp; Mary 0 Minnesota 10 Oregon 7
12.
.Bethany 13 Case Reserve 0
Notre Dam e 31 Northwestern
The Orioles struck quickly
Plattsburgh 16 Oswego 7
7
Villanova 10 Army 0
No. Illi noi s 20 W. M ic higan 0 off starter Catfish Hun ter in
West Virginia 35 Boston Call .
Wooster 9 Kenyon 7
the first inning on a double by
18
Te xas A&amp;M 43 Illinois 13
Bobby Grich and Lee May's
Tennessee 21 Auburn 17
Duke 26 Virginia 11
single . Bobby Bonds slug ged
HUSKERS ROMP
Virginia Tech 21 Ric hmond 9
his Jis t homer leadin g off the
VMI 55 Davidson 0
LINCOLN, Neb. (UP!)
bottom of the inning to tie the
Frank. &amp; Mars h . 35 Ursinus
For the second week in a row,
21
scor e at 1-1.
Terry Luck directed fourthHarva rd 10 Holy Cross 7
The Yankees scored a run
·Kin!ils Point 34 Gettysburg 11
ranked Nebraska to an
in the second on Chambliss'
Lehigh 34 Penn 29
avalanche of points in less
Northeastern 20 Boston U . 17
double and three walks by
than three quarters, hitting
. P r inceton 10 Rutgers 7
Torrez but Brooks Robinson's
Yale 35 Connecticut 14
on three touchdown passes in
sixth
homer tied the game in
Allegheny 32 Hiram 0
the Cornh uskers' 56-14
Ohio St. 32 No. Carolina 7
the seventh .
Wittenberg 20 Musklngum 16 pas ting of Texas Christian
Saturday.
Amn . Int. 31 Norwi c h 24
Brown 41 Rhode Island 20
Cheyney 21 Paters on St. 7
Clarion 16 Cent. Conn. 10
BEULAH
PRICE A HOLDOUT
C. W. Post 17 Wagner 14
GRC'VE
CITY
, Ohio (UP!)
KENOSHA,
Wis
.
(UP!)
Delaware 16 New Hampshire
7
Veteran guard Jimmy Price ~ Star Bidder, Go Say Go and
Itha ca 21 Cortland State 6
officially became a holdout Blue Devil Deck combined
Lebanon Valley 19 Dickinson
Saturday when he failed to for a 9-2-7 lOth..-ace trifecta
0
Lehigh 34 Penn 23
show as the Milwaukee Bucks worth $4,346 at Beulah Park
Ma ssachusetts 7 Dartmouth 3 officially opened training
here Friday.
Nichol s 15 Maine Maritim e 0
Three tickets were sold on
Pi ltsburg h 47 Wm . &amp; Mar y 0 camp at the University of
the
winning quarter horse
Wi scohs in -Pa rk side fi e ldShepherd 20 Concord 14
Springfield 23 Amherst 12
combination .
bouse here .
St. Lawrence 56 Roc hester
Dad Burnit defeated Chicks
Tec h o·
B-WROMPS
Chance by a nose in the
Susquehanna 3 Upsa la 7
feat ured
Beulah
Park
Wash . &amp; Jeff. 25 Thiel 0
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Wesleyan 13 Middlebury o
Futurity
Consolalion
at
400
Ken Presern threw three
West Liberty 20 W. Va .
touchdown passes, two to ya rds. Bid's Devil was third.
Wesleyan 14
The winner, timed at :20.85,
Robert
Robbins, to spark
Williams 3 Trinity 3
Washington &amp; Lee 9 Centre 9
Baldwin-Wallace to a 41-14 paid $14.20, $5.60 and $3.20.
Indiana 31 Utah 7
The 10-7 daily double
win
over John Carroll
Kalamazoo 14 Ohio Northern
pairing of Top Air and Quick
Saturday.
10
Watt was worth 14.20.
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
with Major Hoople
elimination in the American
League East with a 3-2
decision over the Orioles.
The loss clinched at least a
tie for Boston in the East and
any Red Sox victory or
Balti more loss thr usts
Boston into the AL Playoffs

Saturday's scores

NOit\IN&amp;

HE.

lt1E ATT~ND!'.NT
IS!'.YE IT BACI'. To
THE Mfi-.JO!l.
INHEI'-.D OF
BUSTER:

~!~~-~~~good from the Falcons
of view. Holbrook led all
1shers with 151 rushing
in 28 carries. He was
lll01~ed by Mike Goldsberry
3S yards in II attempts
Dale Lewis willi.21 yards
six carries.
honors in auto Kebler and Holbrook
led the team in in- •
ividual tackl~s would have
go to Joe Sheppard and
·Tucker both of whom
their normal ou t.
!""fling 'games. ·Also worth

walking six batters in addition to striking out six.
The Reds took a two-run
lead in the first inning when
Pete Rose ripped his 47th
double ~ tops in the league ~
and moved to third on a wild
pitch before Morgan singled
him home . The Reds added a
seco nd run on Bench 's
sacrifice fly.
Bench's
28th
homer,
coming with Tony Perez on
base, gave the Reds two runs
in the third before they a dded
four. Ruhle , 11-12, took the a run in the fourth and two
more in the sixth on Morgan's
loss.
The Brewers scored in the 17th homer.
Morgan's three RBls gave
fourth on Sheldon 's single and
Porter 's double and in the him 94, a new club record for
fifth Tom Bianco sing led and second basemen , toppin g the
gcored on Curt Bevacqua's, old mark set by Tony Cuccinello in 1931.
single.
Earl Williams' · three-run
Bianco, singled , went to
second on a wild pitch and homer highlighted a five-run
scored on Beavcqua's single Atlanta uprising in the ninth
for the final run in the eighth. but reliever Pat Darsy picked
Detroit scored in the first up his first save of the season
on Willi e Horton's sacrifice when he shut off the Braves
fly and in the fifth on Ron after coming on with two
LeFlore's run-scoring s ingle. rwmers on and one out.
over the Atlanta Braves .
Don Gullett, who will open
the NL Playoffs aga inst the
Pirates next Saturday, gave
up one Wlearned nm in five
innings lo notch his lath
victory against four losses.
However , the 24-year-old
lefty was unusuall y wild,

Brewers slip by Tigers
MILWAUKEE ( UP! ) ~
Seconrl baseman J e rry
Manuel's error in the sixth
Bobby
inning
a ll owed
Sheldon to score the go-ahead
run Sat urd ay a nd the
Milwaukee Brewers went on
to a S-2 victory over the
Detroit Tigers .
The score was tied 2-2 when
Sheldon led off the inning
with a sing le and Robin Yount
followed with a walk. George
Scott then grounded to Chuck
Scrivener at t hi rd, but
Manuel let Scrivener 's force
throw get by him for an error
and Sheldon scored.
Vern Ruhle then walked
Darrell Porter intentionally
to load the bases and Bob
Darwin singled home Yount
for th e Brewers' fourth run.
Jerry Augustine allowed
just seven hits and one walk
for his second victory without
a defeat, while striking out

&lt;;:"Y'

®EiTEl&lt;
61YE HIM
IHE PRIZE
MONE.Y.
MAJOR=
-27

INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) ~
The Amateur Athletic Union
Saturday announced a il&gt;man team to represent the
United States in the world
powerlifting championships
at Birmingham, E ngland, in
November.
Th e list includes Pan
Americ11n
Games
weightlifters Marv . Phillips
and Enrique Hernandez, both
of Los Angeles. Phillips will
participate at 220 pounds
Hernandez at 132.
"' Othe- members included
Lamar Gant, Flint, Mic~ .• 123
pounds;
Jack
Welch
Aliquippa, Pa. 148; Waite~

ana

$16.00
••
••
••
••
•

Values

At
IJow

•

•

Hardman
Prices!

SEPTEMBER 28th &amp; 29th

MEN'S

WELLINGTON BOOT
,_•leather Upper

thomas ,Oklahom~ City, 165;
Dennis Wright , Baxter
Springs, Kan. , 181 ; Ed
Ra ':'enscroft, Long Beach,
Calif. 198; Larry Pacifico,
Sidney, Ohio, 220;. Doug
Young, Brownswood, Tex.,
242, and Don Reinhoudt,
Fredonia, N. Y., super
heavyweight.
AAU 'welghUifting chairman Boil Crist of Hampton,
Va., will accompany the team
and · Clay Patterson of
Arlington., Tex. will be the
team leacter.
The championships are set
for Nov . 22-23.

•Black

•Com position Sole

Cl eveland

Detroit
DOD DOD DOD-O 6 D
Milwaukee
001 000 :Zh-3 11 D
Bare. Pentz (8) and Hum phrey , Wockenfuss ;. Broberg
(1.4-\6) and Porter . LP -Bare 18.
lll. HRs .scott 2 (35th . 36th l.

Oakland
too 200 Oh-" s 2.
Fi gueroa ( 16-13) an d Etc h ·
cbarren . Ha mpton (7) ; Bos .
man , Abbott (6), F ingers (8)
and Tena ce, Fosse (Si. WP ·
Bosman I 11 . 41. HR - Harper

National L eague
( 12 innings)
Montreal 000 000 OlD 001 - 3 7 3
Chicago
ooo :zoo OOD ooo-- :z 7 1
wart hen , Fryman (7). Fry .
man (12 ) and Ca rt er ; Ston e,
Know les ClOJ, Crosby (12) and
Mitterwald . Hosl ey (9 ) WP .
Murray ( 15-8) . LP -Knowles (6 ·
9J. HR -Jorgensen (16th J.
Pittsburgh
000 000 000-0 3 0
St. Louis
100 000 OOJI- 1 7 0
Rooker. Giusti {1), Herna ndez
(8 ) and Sangu ill en; Forsch (15 .
10 ) and Simm on s. LP -Rooker
( 11 -13 ).
(1st game)
( 1l innings)
New York 010 002 000 OOD--J 11 2
Phildlph 120 000 000 001-4 l2 0
Matlack, Lockwood ( 7),
Apodaca (9) and Grote, Stearn s
( 12); Underwood. Sch u eler ( 6) ,
McGraw ( 8), Sim pson ( 10 1,
Garber ( 12) and Boone. WP ·
Garber (10-12l. L P -Apodaca (3 ·
4) . HR -K ingman (36th ).
( :Znd game)
112 innings)
New York 000 010 DOD D02-3 8 2
Philadlph ODD 000 OlD DOl - 2 6 3
Koosman, Sander s I 12) and
Hodges. Grote (11) ; Ruthven ,
Lerch
(6 ),
Hilgendorf
(9 ),
McGraw ( 11 ) and Boone. WP Koosman (1.4 -13 ) : LP -McGraw

19-61.
Atlanta
130 001 OOG- 5 11 4
Cincinnati
030 310 23x-12 13 0
N iekro, Leon (4) , Hou se (5 ).
Sosa ( 7) and Correll , Pocoroba;
Nolan , Borbon (7) and Bench ,
Plummer. WP -Nolan {15-9) . LP ·
N iekro
(15 -15).
HR -Goodson
( 1stl . .
Houston
000 000 oo:z-:z 5 o
Los Angel es
ooo ooo 012- 3 :z 0
Richard (12 -101 and May ;
Hooton (18·9) and Yeager . MR s Johnson (19th), Garvey (19 th ).
San Francisc 000 200 OJG--5 12 1
san Diego
ooo ooo ooo-o s :z
Montefusco {15 -9) and Sa dek ;
Stro m , Frisella (8), M etzger ( 9)
and Dav is, KendalL LP -Strom

mvrr
.. rtrr
,~FOOfMM

1

·CENTER

flf.Dn. &amp; Fri . 10til9
S~nday 1 Til 5

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

Rt, fBypass 1
Point Pleasant, w. Va.

Major Leagu• Leaders
By United Press International
L•adlng Batters
&lt; based on 415 at bats)
National Lngue
g. ab r. h. pet .
Madlck, Ch 128 505 76 181 .358
Simmons . SI.L
155 513 80 190 .332
Sangulln , PI 132 477 60 157 .329
Morgan, Cin 14.4 492 10.4 160 .325
Watson. Ho 132 .485 67 157 .324
Garvey , LA 158 6.53 8.4 209 .320
Card en!. Ch 152 565 83 179 .3 17
Joshua , SF 127 501 7.4 159 .317
Rose , Ci n
160 655 109 206 .31.5
Parker. Pit 1.46 551 75 17 0 .309
Brock . St. L 135 527 78 163 .3 09
American League
g . ab r. h . pet.
Ca r ew. Min 141 529 89 190 .359
Lynn , Bos
14.4 524 102 174 .332
Mun son , NY 153 582 82 188 .323

Washington . Oak
147 585
Rice, Bos
Brett, KC
McRae , KC
Or ra , Ch i
Chambliss ,

14.4
158
126
1.40

564
629
.480
542

'

83
92
8.4
58
64

181
17.4
194
1.47
165

.309
.309
.308
.306
.304

Chi 3.4 .
American League : Rivers .
Ca l 70 ; Washington , Oak .40 ;
Otis , KC 39 ; Ca r ew, Minn 35 ;
Remy, Cal 34 .
Pitching
(Based on most vic1ories)
National League : Seaver , NY
21-9; Jones , so 20 -11 ; Hooton,
LA 18-9 ; Messersm ith , LA 18
14; Reuss , Pitt 17 -ll ; Morton ,
A 11 . 17-16.
American League : Palmer ,
Ba lt 22 -11 ; H un te r , NY 22 -14;
Blue. Oak 21 -11 ; Torrez . Balf
20-8; Kaa r, Chi 20 -14.

p zr.ates
• _

!".

hand in three scores, one his
own twa:yard run in Ute
second quarter aild two
scoting passes to Ste ve
Green.
Kokal directed Kent to a 217 lead with a ~yard drive in
II plays in the second
quarter.
Ohio pulled to within a
touchdown , however, just
before halftime after a 72yard drive engineered by four
Lilienthal-Green passes,
including Lilienthal 's first
touchdown pass, 22-yards to
Green .
A second Lilienthai-Green
touchdown pass, of ll yards,
tied the score after Ohio
recovered a Kent fumble in
the third quarter.
On the next series, the Kent
punter had to chase the snap
into his own end zone, where
Miller tackled him for the
winning margin.
Kent is now 1&gt;-l in the
league and 2-l overall. Ohio is
2-0-1 in MAC play and in all
games.

hits and all five of the Braves'
runs during his six inings.
Pedro Borbon follow ed
Nola n to the mound and
blanked the Braves the last
three innings to gain his fifth
save of the season.
The Reds who collecled 13
hits, were aided by four

Brave errors.
Atlanta scored one run in
the first inning and added
three in the top of the second.
The Reds came back with
three in the bottom of the
second and then took a 6-4
lea d in the fourth on Perez'
bases-loaded double.
The Reds added a seventh
run in the fifth inning, picked
up two more in the seventh
and scored their final three In
the eighth.
Two of toose three runs in
the eighth came on a double
by rookie Doug Flynn, a lateinning replacement for Pete
Rose at third.

McGlothen, 15-13, Reuss
doubled into the gap in left
cente r to score Taveras.
Rennie Stennett then drove in
Reuss with a single to right.
Al Oliver put the Pirates
ahead in the first when he
s lugged his 18th homer to
ce nterfield. Oliver 's blast
scored Stennett, who had led
off the game with a double.
St. Louis reached Reuss for
iIs two runs in the bottom of
the first. Luis Melendez
singled and scored on Hector
Cruz' double to left. Cruz took
third on a play at the plate
and scored on Ted Sinunons'
ground-out . It was Simmons'
JOOth RBI.

Geiger. ·The march covered
67 yards in II plays. A big
play during the drive was an
1B-yard pass from Lucas to
Jim Ward .
Following a Todd Taylor
interception, Kyger Cree k
pushed across Its final tollhdown on a 30 yard romp by
win gback Smith. Lucas
kicked the extra point.
The Bobcats were knocking
at the door with just seconds
left in the game, but a fumble
recovery by Southwestern
stopped the drive.
Kyger Creek is 4-0 while
Southwestern dropped to 0-4.
The
Highlanders
host ·
Symmes Valley Friday night.
STATISTICS
KC SW
DEPARTMENT
First Downs
17 3
Yards Rushing
315 53
Yards Passing
62 18
Total Yardage
377 71
Passes Attempted
7 6
Passes Completed
4 2
Fumbles
3 2
Fumbles Lost
2 2
Interceptions
2 0
11&gt;-100 7-51
Penalties
By Quarters : ,
Kyger Creek
0 14 U4--34
Southwestern 0 0 0 ~ 0

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killed the drive. Chris Lewis,
Donn ie Bush and Jack
Walker picked up yardage
duri ng the drive which was
aided by a 15 yar~ penalty .
Preston
broke
the
Highlander defense with a 51
yard gall op over left tackle
with 7:22 left in the third
stanza . A run for the conversion was stopped. Neither
team threatened to score
during the rest of the third
period.
The first of two Kyger
Creek fourth period scores
came on a six-yard run by M.

top Cards

ST . LOUIS
Lefthander Jerry Reuss beat St.
Louis for the fourth time this
season and keyed the winning
rall y with a run-scorin g
double in the fifth inning
Saturday afternoon as the
Pittsburgh Pirates defeated
the Cardinals 4-2.
Reuss, a former Cardinal,
stopped St. Louis on only four
hits before being relieved by
Bruce Kison in the seventh.
Reuss raised his record to a
club-high 18-11 as he struck
out three and walked two.
The Pirates broke a 2-2 tie
in the fifth . After Frank
Taveras worked a walk from
Cards
sta rter
Lynn

NY

1.46 5.48 6.5 166 .303
Hargrov, T x 1.43 5 12 80 155 .303
Braun, Min 133 449 69 136 .303
Home Runs
Nat ional League : Schm idt,
Ph il 38 ; Ki ngman, N Y 36 ;
Luzi nski, Phil 34 ; Bench , Cin
27; Cey , LA and Parker . Pitt
25.
American League: Scott, Mil
36; Jackson , Oak 3.4; Mayberr y,
KC
33;
BohdS,
NY
30;
Burroughs. Tex 29 .
Runs Batted In
Nat iona l League: Luz inski.
Ph il 120; P er ez, Cin 109 ; Bench,
Cin 107; Sta ub, NY 103 ; Cey,
LA, Parker , Pitt and Montan ez.
SF 101.
American League : Scott, M il
107 ; L ynn, Bos and Mayberry.
KC 105 ; Rice, Bas 102 ; Ja ckson.
Oak 101.
Stolen Bases
Nat ional Leag ue : Lopes, LA
76; Morgan, Cin 65: Brock, SI .L
56; Ced eno, Hou 49 ; Card en al,

Qlptain's Lounge

...._

OBERLIN LOSES
OBERLIN, Ohio ( UP! l
Carnegie-Mellon scored three
times in the secohd quarter to
break open Oberlin's home
opener here Saturday and go
on to win 35-13.

Leaders

• Snack
Bar and
.

HARDMAN'S
·HOME

tackled Kent punter Joe
Poslpanka in his own end
zone for two points, breaking
a 21-21 tie late in the period.
Kent State quarterback
Greg Kokal tossed touchdown
passes of five, '1:1 and nine
yards, two of them to end
John Keeve.
Ohio University qua rterback Rick Lilienthal had a

ATHENS, Ohio (UPI ) ~
Ohio University blocked two
Kent State punts and intercepted three passes to
Kansas City 040 :ZOO 002- 8 8 1 enable the Bobcats to come
T eJi as
DD3 DOl 001 - 6 10 2
Leona rd, McDan iel (6), Min · back in the second half with a
gar~ 17), Pattin (7) and Healy ,
23-21 Mid-American ConMartincr ( 8) ; Jenkins , Hargan
ference
win Saturday.
(2 }. Kekich (4 ). Foucault (8 ),
Wrig ht (9) , Thomas (91 and
Senior Ohio defensive end
Sundberg . Fah ~ v
(9 J. WP Steve
Miller recovered a
Leonard (l5-7l . LP -.Ien kins (17 .
18) . HR -Harrah {20t h t .
third-quarter KSU fumble
California
000 200 000-2 6 o that led to a score, then

e 24 New AMF Lanes
"'*~

3 Brave lead in the fourth
inning and routed starter Phil
Neikro, who suffered his 15th
loss against 15 victories.
Tony's double was one of
his three hits for the night and
boosted his average to .286 as
he helped Gary Nolan pick up
his 15th victory against nine
losses.
Nolan, woo is scheduled to
start the third game against
Pittsburgh in the cham pionEhip series, yielded nine

OU drops Kent State

"For That Personal
&amp; Professional Touch"
FEATURING

Sizes
D- E &amp; Extra Wide

Reds to a 12-5 victory over the
Atlanta Braves.
Perez' bases-loaded double
was his 15th game-winning
blow of the seasor.. And his
three RB!'s boosted his
season's total to 109, two
more than Johnny Bench,
who returned to the line-up
last night for the first time
s ince pulling a groin muscle
in Atlanta a week ago last
Thursday.
Perez' double wiped out a 4-

ooo 000 ooo-o 50

Bos ton
000 lOO lOx-4 9 0
Hood , Buskey 17) and Ashby ;
Cleveland (13 -9) and Mont gomery . LP -Hood (6 -101 . HR Evans ( 13th ).

PRO-SHOP

Regular 124.00

a

the Bobcat ki ckoff. Two
penalties put Kyger in a hole ,
but a clutch fourth down, 19yard reception from Lucas to
wingback Rick Smith gave
the Bobcats a first down at
the Highlander six-yard line.
Preston zoomed in with just
23 seconds left in the period
for a 1~ lead . Lucas' kick
pushed the count to 14~ at the
half.
Southwestern took the
second half kickoff and began
its best drive of the night
marching from Its 3S to the
Bobcat 37 where a fumble

Perez paces 12-5 Reds win

SKYLII'IE LANES and

On~

season,

CINCINNATI ( UPI) ~ The
Cincinnati Reds, seeking a
Chicago
000 100 000 - 1 8 o topflight third baseman,
Minnesota
000 101 OOx - 2 7 0
Kaat (20-U J and Down ing : dangled Tony Perez as tradeBane , Campbell (1 J and Roof
bait last winter. Today, Perez
WP -Bane (3 - lJ . HR · Terrell (ll
is glad no one succumbed to
Baltimore at New York , 2,
the lure.
ppd, r ain .
Eve n more thankful are the
( 1st game)
Reds.
Clevelt~nd
ooo ooo ooo-o 4 1
Because Friday night ,
Boston
200 100 01•- 4 9 0
Eckersley, LaRoche 181 and Perez took over the club 's
E ll is, Cer one (8 }; Ti ant 118-14 )
and F.isk . LP -Eckersley ( IJ -7l . lead in game-winning hits
HR -Cooper ( 14th) .
and RBI's as he slanuned a
three-run double to pace the
(2nd Gamel

Cubs lose, drop

ANOTHER TIE
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!)
- Senior tailback Gordon
Bell dove over from a yard

this

homecoming match against
the Eastern Eagles. Coach
Spike Berkheimer's Eagles
defeated Federal Hocking,
22-6 Friday night. Both KC
and Eastern a re unbeaten
against league competition.
Following a torrential
downpour and scoreless first
quarter, Kyger Creek took a
second period punt and
marched 88 yards in a timeconsuming drive for its first

America n League

team 70 yards , plunging
across from the one-yard line
for the winning score with :40
to play.

CHICAGO (UP!) ~ Larry
Biittner tripled home two
runs with one out in the top of
the lith inning Saturday to
propel Montreal to a 5-3
victory over the Chicago
Cubs, the Expos lOth win in
their last ll games.
BUttner's triple , off loser
Bill Bonham ( 13-15 ), followed
a single by Jerry White and a
walk to Pete Mac Kanin .
Woody Fryman pitched l 2-3
innings to gain his ninth
triU'nph .
Chicago's Andy Thornton
had tied the game at 3-3 in the
eighth with his 17th homer
after Gary Carter's runscoring single gave the Expos
the lead in the top of the inning.
Montreal took a H lead in
the fourth on Mike Jorgen·
sen's 17th homer but· Thornton's two - run double gave
Cubs a 2-llead in their half of
the inning before White 's runscoring single in the sixth tied
the score .

games

score of the night. Slicking to
the ground, U1e Bobcats used
a combination of running
' plays
with
Preston,
sophomore Marcus Geiger
and junior fullback Ralph
Baylor, lugging the pigskin to
the end zone .
Preston went over from the
one-yard lin e with 3:52 left in
the first half. Tim Luca&lt;,
se nior quarterbac k and
Bobcat placekicker, booted
the extra point .
o
The Highlanders fumbled
the ball back to Kyger Creek
on their second play following

Friday's Baseball Results
Pren International

(5t h) .

into basement

Jim Sprag ue 's
Bobcats must now prepare
for one of their tougher

HAWKEYE

:

•

Fantastic

••
••
••
..

'

•

SPRINGFIELD, Ohio
(UPI) - Wittenberg's Tigers
notched their third staight
win of the year without a loss
with a come-from-behind 21&gt;16 victory over Muskingum
here Saturday.
The Muskies led the Tigers
1~ at halftime on a 31-yard
touchdown
pass
from
quarterback Gary Martin to
Terry Kelley and a threeyard scoring run by Kevin
Snyder.
Freshman David Merritt
scored twice within. 4:00 in
the third quarter on runs of 39
and six yards to lift Wittenberg· to a 14-13 lea&lt;j.
Muskingum's La.-ry
Wallick kicked a 19-yard field
goal to give the New Concord
team a 16-14 edge with 4:00
left in the game.
Tigers quarterback Brian
Aschenbrenner drove his

Coac ~

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Shetl and
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each and every
wardrobe . A fine
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yo ung
and
young :at-heart .

NORTHFIELD
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
( UP! ) ~ Missouri Time
rolled to a 21h length victory
over Norman's Dream at
Northfield Park Friday night
to capture the $7,500 third of
four legs in the Summit
Series for mares.
The four-year-old, owned
by John and Florence Vitullo
of Youngstown and reined by
Dominic staffrey, cruised to
a 2:02 victory to return $5, $4
and $2.20.
Norman 's Dream was
second and Galion Pam
finished third.
The mares will returned
next Frida y for a $12,500
finale in the stake series.
A crowd of 3,5ll wagered
$315,685.

Friday's
lines cores

Tigers rally,

Royal Clan
Pocketed
Cardigan

team for November games ·

C!'.RD 1 AT lt'IE
Lfl-.$1 :?T!'.IION

$1"~;~~~ldual statistics looked

Cincy cops 107th wm

·,

USED A CRED IT

1

•

A4 U names 1O-man lifting

IT,

LIE.UiENI'INi ~

a nd the Irish trailing 7~.
Montana directed the Irish
on a 77-yard touchdown
march which culminated in
AI Hunl&lt;lr 's four-yard run .
When Montana left the
game with three minutes
gone in the final period, the
Irish had their 31-7 a~­
vantag e.
In the span that Montana
was in action, he carried
eight times for 28 yards,
picking up first downs three
times, completed six of II
passes for 80 yards, with four
of hi s completions going for
firs t downs, ran for six yards
himself for one touchdown
and passed to Mark McLane
for 14 yards and another
touchdown.
But Fry wouldn't let the
defense be outdone . He
blocked a punt by Northwestern quarterback Randy
Dean and, after teammate
Tom Lopienski recovered on
the Wildcat 26, it took only
four plays for Jim Browner to
run 10 yards for · the other
Irish touchdown .
Fry, one of five players
returning to the Irish squad
this year after one year
s uspensions for violatin g
dormitory rule s, twi ce
tackled Dean for losses on
attempted passes for 15
yards, and once nabbed
Wildcat running star Greg
Boykin for four-yard loss
which stopped Northwestern
deep in its own territory.
Montana and Fry were not
the only Notre Dame stars.
Devine let nearly everybody
on · his roster into the game
and a freshman speedster,
Jerome Heavens, wound up
gaining 106 ya rds in 15
carries for the best single
yardage performance in the
game.
Hunter carried 70 yards in
14 attempts.
Devine also got four
quarterbacks Into the game,
using bOth sophomore Gary
Forstek and senior Frank
Allocco into action in the final
period .
Northwestern's only points
were set up when Mark
Harlow intercepted Slager's
pass and returned to the Irish
25. Boykin went four yards
for the touchdown on the
fourth running play of the
series.

IT'S MINE ~ Dan Brown, Southern Tornado s tandout is about to haul in an aerial here
over the outstretched arms of a Wahama defender.

CINC INNA Tl ( UP! ) ~ Joe
Morgan and Johnny Bench
slammed home runs and
drove in three runs apiece
Saturday to power playoffbound Cincinnati to its 107th
triumph ~ the most in the
National League since the
1906 Chicago Cubs won 116
games ~ with a 7&lt;&gt; victory

Vikings held to just four first
downs and 83 yards on the
grounds, were unable to get
beyond the Pirates' 30 yard
line.
Offensively, North GaUia's
CaSey had 140 yards in 15
attempts; Logan got 88 yards
in six tries; Calvin Minnis, 26
yards in four tries and Theiss
21 yards in three carries. In
the passing department ,
Spencer grabbed six passes
for 79 yards.
North Gallia coac hes
agreed it was the team's best
overall effort and best
executed game this year.
Pirate defensive standouts
were Bruce Runyon, senior
linebacker, with 14 assists
and three so lo tackles;
Tackett with seven assists
and one solo tackle and a
blocked punt and Bill Baker ,
defensive end , with 10 assists
and two solo tackles . Spencer
sac ked the Vi kin g quarterback twice.
North Gallla, 3-l, will host
Souithern Friday night in an
important SVAC co nt est.
Symmes Valley, l-3, goes to
Southwestern Friday.
STATISTICS
DEPARTMENT
NG SV
First Downs
11
4
398 83
Yards Rushing
Yards Passing
100
4

The assault was led by
sophomore halfba c k Mike
Casey. Casey scored two
touchdowns and rushed for
140 yards in 15 attempts. He
broke the game wide open
with an electrifying 80 yard
run off-tackle on the first play
from scrinunage, after NG
obtained possession of the
ball.
A pass from junior quarterback Mark Theiss to
senior end Don Spencer was
good for an 8-0 lead.
With 5:08 left in the first
quarter, Theiss went over on
a five yard rollout . Another
pass from Theiss to Brett
Tackett was good for a 16-0
lead.
North Gallia wrapped it up
with a 14 point second period .
Fred Logan, junior tailback,
made the first TD on a 51&gt;yard romp . A run for the
extra points failed.
Casey zoomed over from
the four-yard line for his
second six-pointer midway
through the second period. A Total Yardage
498 87
pass from Theiss to Spencer Passes Attempted
13
5
was good for a 31&gt;-0 halftime Passes Completed
8
0
lead.
I
0
Fumbles
The Pirates got their final Fumbles Lost
I
0
TD in the third quarter on a Interceptions
2
0
l--5
one-yard plunge by l &lt;&gt;gan. Penalties
9-95
Randy Patterson comple:ed · By Quarters :
the scoring with his con- North Gallia
.16 14 8 ~38
version rWl .
· symmesVal.
0 00~0
Coach
Greg
Bailie's

Falcons blank Tornados 3-0
By GARY CLARK
RACINE ~ Scott Roush,

PATR IOT - Led by senior
tailback Chri s Preston,
Kyger Creek's 1974 Southern
Athletic Conference defending champion Bobcats rolled
to !heir fourth victory here
Friday night , 34~ over Southwestern .
· Preston, an Ali-SV AC back
last fall, scored three touchdowns while rushing for 170
yards on a wet and muddy
turf.

�.. ,

,

I

~

.I

I

.·
••

'

.25 - The_Sunda}l-Tinies -Sentinel, Sunday, Sept . 28, 1975

24 - The Sunday Tinies - Sentinel , Sunday, Sept. 28, 1975

B~lld~gs do
it again, 20-14

.
RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
L YNE CENTER GYM AND POOL SCHEDULE
DATE - GYMNASIUM
POOL

Se pt 28- 1-Ap m . Ope n Rec .
· 7-9p .m . 'co ll ege Rec.

THE PLAINS - Ath ens
Ta king over on their own
maintained its home fi eld· 28, the Blue Devils mar c hed
jinx over visit.ing Gallipolis 55 yards in 16 plays to the
he re Friday night with a Bulldog 17. An off -sid e
surprising 20-14 Southeastern pena lty on fir st down stalled
Ohio Lea gue victor y over the drive . Fr ank Simpkins
1Budd y) the n sm eared Brent Johnson
Coac h Willard
for a fi ve yard loss to make it
Moore 's Blue Devils.
The Gallians , seekin g their second and 20 on the AHS 27.
first win ever on the Bulldogs' J ohnson then rifled a pass to
new field at The Pla ins a ft er Bren t Saunder s who was all
losing 7-0 and 21-20 heart- alone on the six, but Sa lHlders
breakers on Rutter F ield in slipped an d fell on the wet
1971 and 1973, ha ven't beate n grass . Th e ball fell hara Bulldo g s qu ad in the mless ly to th e gr ound. That
University City since Karl was proba bl y the game's
Ju stus' la ds turned lhe tri ck twn ing point . Johnso n was
8-0 bac k in 1963 .
racked up on the ensuing play
Friday's triumph
by after a fi ve yard ga in to th e
Athens not only wrecked Ath ens 22. Sa unders was
CHONKO UNSTOPPABLE - Athens Quarterback
Guilla Academy's two-year, stopped on the Buildog 18 on
Arnie Chonko , 6-5 •;., senior who tips the scales at 203
nine- game winning streak but four th down after a four -yard
pounds, was unstoppabl e again st Gallipolis Friday night
it gave the Athenians of gain .
as he picked up 130 yards in 15 trips 18.6 ya rds per carry)
Coach Les Walker a big plus
Chonko, on a keeper , ra ced
mark in the Slst annual for nine to th e 27. Neil Her... ,, ....
Southeastern Ohio League beri ck. fullback, picked up a
title chase.
firs t down on the Bulldog 28.
The vi ctory left Athens with
Chonko. on a sneak, broke
a 2-2 season mark . Ga llipolis four or five ta ckles just
beyond the line of scrimdropped to 3-1 on the year .
Gallipolis drew fir st blood . mage, cut to his right along
Bre tt Wilson field ed a short the GA HS sidelines and II was
Bill Greer punt on the Athens curtains for th e Blue Devils.
42 and zipped in to the endzone · The spec tacular 76 yard run
with 4:36 remaining in the .tame a fter Berberkk had
fir s t pe riod . Bra d Smith recovered a Bulldog fumble
s topped Dennis Salisbury on for a four-yard loss back to
the run for extra points.
the Ath ens 24. With 6:49
Athens wasted little lime in remaining, Lavery split the
s triking back. Following AI uprights and Athens enjoyed
Walton 's 13-yard kickoff a c omfortable 20-6 adreturn to the Bulldog 30, Ed vantage.
"Pennell took a handoff from
Brian Mink returned
QB Arnie Chonko, cut to his Lavery 's kickoff 13 yards to
left along the Athen s the GARS 37.
With GAHS signal caller
sidelines, and was 70 yards
long gone . Steve Lavery 's Johnson limping noticeably,
placekick from eight yards the Blue Devils finally put a
out ( AHS was penal- scoring drive together .
ized fiv e yards for delay
Johns on hit Brett Wilson
of game) with 4:0Ileft in the with a nine-yard pass gain .
period was perfect. The Mink picked up a first down.
Bulldogs were never headed . John son again connected
Athens got good field with Wilson for an 18-yard
position following a short gain . John son limped for five
Blue Devil punt (GAHS 39) more to the Bulldog 33.
late in the first stanza.
Following an incomplete
It took the Bulldogs only pass, Salisbury was dropped
nine plays lo punch lt over. for a two-yard loss before
Chonko sneaked It In from the Johnson hit Saunders with a
two wlth 9:00 left in the 24-yard strike and a first
second period to give Athens down on the Athens six.
a I~ advantage. Jim Simms
Salisbury got one, Mink two
and Kent Shawver blocked and Mink carried it in from
.,
Lavery's try for the extra the three with 2:39left in the
' '
point. Big gainer In that short game. Johnson passed to
TD drive was a 15-yarder by Wilson for th e two-point
JOHNSON STOPPED - The Smith boys, Brad, 18,
wingback ScoU Lawrence. conversion to reduce Athens
and Dave, 44, stopped GAHS QB Brent Johnson on this
Remainder of the first half lead to 20-14.
play during Friday night 's SEOAL grid game at The
wa s played on even terms
Walton returned Steve
Plains. In rear is Blue Devil Tri-Captain Steve Wallis (61)
with each team punting Wallis final kickoff six yards
center.
twice.
to the Bulldog 37. Chonko ran
Gallfpolis stopped a third seven straight times. Time
period Athens drive on the expired with Athens In ] .
Blue Devil 38, but was unable possession on Its own 46.
to get things moving until the ·Gallipolis is at Ironton
final three minutes of that Friday . Athens will host
quarter .
Meigs.
LOGAN - Jackson out- and J . Smith's kick cut
scored Logan 41-26 in a high- Jackson's lead to 22-20 early
scoring SEOAL game here in the third. Morrow's 4Friday.
yarder made it 28-20.
Steve Morrow gave JHS a
Specht's TD with 9:08 left
IHl
first
period
lead
.
David
P.
cut
Jackson's lead to 28-26. D.
INDIVIDUAL NET
Mik e Cliffo r d , Ken B arc us,
YARDS RUSHING
Davis scored in the second P . Davis ran 15 ya.rds and D.
Paul Fi nnicum .
(Gallipolis)
GUARDS
K e nt
with Tom Osborne converting A. Davis kicked the extra
Ptaver-Pos. Tcb. Yg. Avg.
Shawver , M i ke Wood , Lewis
B . Saunders, WB
6 34 5.6
the extras . Logan 's Hal points with 4:45 left to give
Schm i dt.
B. Mink, F B
15 48 3.2
CENTERS - Sf eve Wallis
Peppers cut it to 14-6 with a· Jackson a 35-26 lead . D. P .
D. Salisbury, TB 17 47 2.7 ( ee l; J im Sim m s .
B . Johnson , QB
5 10 2.0
nine-yarder
in the second. Davis' 3-yard run completed
BACKs Brent Johnson,
TOTALS
.
43 139 3.2
Denn i s
Salisbury , Brent
Conroy's 4-yard keeper made the game's scoring.
(Athens)
Saunders (ee l; Brian Mink ,
Player-Pas.
Tcb Yg . Avg
it
22-6. Greg Smith 's 6-yard
Bru c e
Sc arberry,
Keith
By quarters:
E . Pennell , TB
11 103 9.3
J ackson , David Wiseman.
pass
to
Scott
Hubbard
and
Jackson
6 16 6 13- 41
A . Chonko , QB
15 130 8.6
Je ff Wh"aley , Gary Dabney ,
S. Lawrence , WB
j
15 5.0 Sam Armstrong
Jeff Smith's kick made it 22- Logan
0 13 7 6- 26
N . Berberick, F B 15 30 2.0
(Athens)
13
at
halftime
.
TOTALS
44 278 6.3
ENOS - Andy Ping , Ji m
PASSING
John Specht's 2-yard TD
H e ady , Jeff Griffin , AJ
.·

&lt;Gallipolis)
C-A I YG TO
John son
4 -7 0 69
0
TOTALS
4-7 0 69
0
{ Athens)
,

Pla v.er

C-A I YG TO

Chonko

. 1·5 0

15

0

1-5

15

0

TOTALS

0

Recovered enemv fumbles:

None .

Kickoff returns : G AH S -

Min k . 3-50-0 ; Salis b ur y, 1-0 -0 .
Athen s - Walfon , 2-25-0.
Pas s interc e ption •run ba c k s: None .
· Punt return s: GA H S Wil son. 2 -45- 1. At h e n s Wa l ton . 2-10-0.
Punts : GAH S - Scarber r y ,
4-109 (27 .2). A t hens - Greer ,

5-156 (31.2 ).

.

Pass receptions : GAH S Wilson , 3-3-45 -0. Saunders , 14- 24 -0. Athens - Griffin . O-l -0 0 ; Laver-y , 0 -1-0-0 ; La.wrence ,
0- 2-0-0 ; Berberick. 1-1- 15 -0 .'
ScOring : GAHS Brett
Wilson . 42-yard punt return ,
4 : 36, first , run fail . Bri~Jl
Mink, J-yard run • .2 : 39 , four'lh
&lt;Johnson to Wilson) . Athens
Ed Pennell , 70 -yard run ,
4 : 01 first (Steve Lavery,
kick) ; Arnie Chonko , 2 - yar~
·run, . 9 : 00, second
(kick
blocked) ; . Arnj e Chonko, 76 yar.d sneak ~ 6 : 49. fourth
(S teve Lavery , kick) .

..

W a lton . Bob w est.
TACKLES
Ma tt
F aul k n e r , Bill Gr ee r , Jeff
Cour an t.
GUARDS F r an k Si m .
pk in s, Dwi ghf W esf, Tom
Se if e rth, Vi nso n Ya t es .
CENTERS
Gr eg
Co c hran .
BACKS Arnie Chonko ,
Ed Pennell , Scott L awrence ,
N ei l B e rberi c k , Don Gagle ,
Ro b Si mpk in s , Steve Lavery ,
Brad Sm i lh , T e rry Cun
n in g ha m , J im Caesa r , Mic k
Ha rt , Dav e Sm i th .
OFFICIALS Ge or ge
Hamer ick , Bo b Overly , Bo b
Chr is t i an and Jo hn Roan ,
Chill ico th e ch apter .
Score by quarters :
Gallipoli s
6 0 0 8- 14
A t hen s
7 6 o 7- 20

ALL GAMES
Team
W L T
P . OP
M e ig s
3 1.. · o ns 29
Ironto n
3 1 0 33 32
Wells ton
3 I 0 87 20
Gall i polis
3 1 o 110 26
Ro c kHill
2 1 0 46 40
Athens
2 2 o 39 52
J ackson
2 2 o 111 84
Logan
2 2 0 66 41
Wa verly
1 3 0 33 90
Coat Grov e
0 3 1 20 96
South Point
0 4 0
7 84
Non- league results:
Wayne 26 Soufh Po int 0
Ceredo -Kenova 31 Coal Grove

New_mark ·set Frichy

MARTINSVILLE, Va. record of 85.980 m .p.h.
(UP!) - Cale Yarborough · Darrell
Waltrip
of
couldn't wait for Sunday's Franklin, Tenn. , quali(ied
$75,000 Old Dominion 500 third in a Chevrolet while
TEAM STATISTICS
NASCAR
Grand National "David Pearson of Spar·Department
G
A
First downs
9
10
event to start breaking la.n burg, S.C., was fourth in a ·
Vardsrushing
147 296
records· .in his Chevrolet.
Mercury.
•. ~~~r~~~~~~g '
Fifth spot went to 2()-yearThe Timmonsville, S.C. ,
·Passes, attempted
7 , 5
Richie. Panch of Daytona
·
o
ld
driver
set
an
Old
Dominion
Passes completed
4
1·
Intercepted by
o
0 500 qualifying record Friday,
Beach, Fla ., while Richard
Yards passing
69
15
hitting
89.199
miles
per
hour
Petty,
who has won 14 tinies
Total yards
208 293
Return yardage
95
45
on the .525 mile Martinsville at Martinsville, qualified
Plays
50
:4.9
sixth.
. Fumbles .
0
4 Speedway" to lake the pale
LOst fumbles
o o.- position and $1;000.
Rounding out the top ten
Penaltle$ ·
4-30 7-75
Bobby Allison of Hueytown·, we re Dave Marcis of
Punts
·
·
4-109 5-156
L.INEUP5
Ala., in a .Malador, earned Wausau, Wis.; Lennie Pond
ENDS Ke.v Jackson .
the' outside pole with a speed of Petersburg, Va .; Benny '
eren Wilson fccl; Mil&lt;.e
Wiggres_,.orth "J K' eith ..Sur - o( 85.855 m .p.h. Yarborough 's
Parsons of Ellerbee, N.C.,
itiiHe .
J
.
of
speed broke AII\SOn 's · 1972 and Buddy ·Bake r
TACK
5, Jeff Bene,
'
Charlol!e.• N.C.
D i ~k Burdette 1 Sam corfi,as,
I

The Goodwin Printing Co.
has been purchased by
Vernon Weber, owner of
the Quality Print Shop in
Middleport, 0. Mr. Weber
will soon open a branch in
Pomeroy at the fonner I.
Weed Bldg. Your
confidence in Mr. Weber
will be well placed.

Tigers nip WHS
over fr om th e one in th e
second to score what proved
lo be lhe winning score.
Kri ebe l rushed 24 times for
90 yar ds . Gra y had 37 yards
in 16 &lt;rips. IHS had 10 fir st
down s, one of four passes for
38 yards and 166 total yards.
We lls ton had nine first
downs , five of 13 ae ria ls for 88
yard s and 94 total yards.
By quart er s:
6 0 0 0- 6
We llston
Iron ton
6 6 0 0-12

WINT·ERIZE
YOUR HOME
NOW BEFORE
COLD WEATHER
PRIME SIDING

..
,.".'
...

13: 2i:

.

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern's Eagles struck for a
first period touchdown then
added two more in the second
quarter here Friday night to
upend Federal Hocking, 22-6,
in a non-league encounter.
Coach Spike Berkheimer's
Eagles moved their season
record to 3-1 while Federal
Hocking dropped to 0-3-1.
Friday night, Eastern will
take its 2-0 SVAC record to
Kyger Creek for a headon
clash with the unbeaten
Bobcats .
Friday night, the Eagles
employed a running-passing
combination to defeat the
Lancers.
Eastern reached
the
scoreboard in the opening
stanza on a 22 yard pass from
junior quarterback Bob
McClure to sophomore Joe
Kuhn. A pass to senior Don
Eichinger was good for an 8-Q
lead.
The Eagles put the game on
ice in the second period
quarter on a 24 yard touchdown pass from McClure to
Kevin Barton and a 15-yard
run by Kuhn . Barton added
the extra points following his

'

•.

•

•••
•'
•'
., ,
::

••

··,
;;
,· '
'•
:,
';
,.'..

wznner

.•
c:•

95 ASQUARE

$

~

-

~:
•

·~

'

ASQUARE

•

Fiberglass Insulation
3'12"xl5". 10 SQ. FT.

$1 Q75 ROLl

R-19 HEAT VALUE
6"xl5" 40 SQ. FT.-- - - -6"x23" 61 SQ. FT.

....

$720· ROLl
$1 095 ROLl

J

~. ·

1_ uthe more

PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH OCT. •11. 1975

.you

~

up."

Beiinda,
during
her
Honolulu stopover, said "not
·one not two, not six women"
'~ wo~ld come between her and
her husband.
• ·All did 1 'hour and . 22
'
"' ininutes of roadwork before
~ dllwn today and chalked up a
,;

C9.

:!

..

MIDDJ;EPORT

I '

controv~sy

. ;, give me, the more I m bred

CASH AND CARRY- DELIVERY AVAILA-BLE

..Va~ley Lumber and .supply

~"

BY VICENTE MALIWANAG
MANILA
(UP!)
':.. Dismissing reports of marilal
•. trouble with his wife,
:~ Belinda, Muhammad Ali
'' insisted today he is not only
. ~ king of the ring ln!t also the
·" lord of his household.
,
The 33-year-old Ali said he
.,. was unperturbed about
,.• publicity over his lovely
''· companion, Veronica Por!' sch~, which apparently
::. cproh\p_ted his wife's · Jeaving
Manila Friday only 12 hours
, , after she had flown in from
the United States to join bini.
~
,. All that was on his mind,
::." Ali said as he went through
1 his daily workout, was to "eat
~ up" Joe Frazier during their
;~ Od. I (Sept. 30 in the U.S.)
• match and to "fill the
,.' theaters" on fight day.
':l Repeatedly, he said
~ problems were not new to
,; hini and that he always
••• overcame them. He said that
•: when his first wife, Sonjie,
~ whom he later divorced,
:/ walked out on hini in 1965 on
the eve of his title defense
;;&lt; against Sonny Liston, he went
/:. on to beat Liston.
~
"I'm used to controversy.
..:. This little stuff they print
·· about my Wife is just kin~ dergarten lalk ... no gun is big
l enough to scare me," he said.

WITH

$69S ROll

·'

'

'

six-pomter.
Federal Hocking finally
reached the end zone in tlie
fourth period on a 12-yard
pass from Jini Mobbs to Jim
Goodfellow. A pass for the
conversion was incomplete.
Offepsively, Mark Lawson
topped ail Eastern backs with
49 yards in 10 carries. Kuhn
gained 46 yards in 10 tries
while Eichinger had 38 yards
in eight attempts. The Eagle
defense held Federal Hocking
to an unbelievable minus 74
yards on the ground.
Leading
the
Eagle
defensive squad were Kuhn
and Lawson .
STATISTICS
DEPARTMENT
FH E
First Downs
3 12
Yards Rushing
-74 110
Yards Passing
119 63
Total Yardage
45 173
Passes. Attempted
19 11
Passes Completed
10
8
Fumbles
1 2
Fumbles Lost
1
2
Interceptions
I
I
Penalties
5-75 8 80
By Quarters
F-H
Eastern

A- C
Ande r so n (MIS 4
Gum IMJ
1 0
T hom p so n
(W I
17 7

I YG TO
0 44
1

0

0

0

82

0

0 00&amp;-6
8 14 0 0-22

Th e Maroon a nd Gold now
prepare for what m ight be
their bi ggest g ame of the
season when they travel to
Athe ns Friday night.
A victory ove r the Bulldogs
would es l&lt;lblish Meigs as the
"'team to beat " in th e SEOAI.
at the s easo n' s halfw ay
mar k.

total of six rounds hitting the
heavy bag and tbe speedball
and skipping ·rope .
While Ali appeared unperturbed about the whole affair,
members of his camp indicated some amount of
concern, although each one
who spoke to newsmen said it
was none of their business.
Ali's manager, Herbert
Muhammad, who arrived
here early today , said "he
told the press right- that
Belinda is his wife and she is
the · only wife he has.
Everything else is his private
affair. I'm sure nobody is
diggiJlg into anything you're
doing. He has his private
affairs and l have inine."
Ali,
overhearing
Muhammad , said ~~as long as
my boss is all right, I'll whip
the world."

Local Bowling
.wednesday Afternoon
Ladies League
Foursome ·•
Skyline Lanes

Sept. 24, 1'175
Standings
Team
Busy Beauty Salon
George 's Grocery
Team No . 1
Fou ntain of Yo u th
Na t ional Mine Service
Som erv i lle Re al E s t a t e

W.
22
22
18
16
16

16

L.
10
10
14
16
16

16
Sparky ' s Sunoco
U
10
Team No . 5
·- 4 28
Team No . 1 to ok 6 points
from Tea m No . 5 . Irene
Paul sen wa s high t o r t eam
No . 1 with 179-440 . V irg in ia
Darst had 167 -416 for Tea m
No . 5 .
Somer v ille Real Eslal e
took 2 points and Sparky 's
Sunoco -took 6. High for
Somer vi lle Rea l E s tate was
Carol Rou sh ( sub ) with l6f ·
450 , Vick i A dkins had 171 for
hign game a nd Alic e Ch ap .
man 515 ser i es for Sp ar ky's
Sunoco .
Georg e's Gro ce ry too k '6

game Friday night. In rear is Ma ra uder guard Da ve
Miller . 65. Closin g in for the tackl e are Ti ge rs Craig
Towler (80) and Dennis Dunn ( 30) . Meigs won, 37-7.

Ohio High School
Footb all R es ults
United Press Inte rnati on a l
G ar f iel d H eig ht s 20 Shak e r
H ei gh ts 8
O l ms ted F al ls 8 Ba y Vill age 0
Chagr in F8 l ls J4. Au r o r a o
Br ec k sv i ll e 6 Cloverlea f 0
P orts mo uth 24 Bo yd Co un t y
!Ky ) 0
W heele r sbu rg 57 V a lley 0
M in f o rd 26 Po r t smouth E 12
Port smo ut h W 11 N o rt hw est 7
Col E astmo or 26 Co l Mohawk

Ci n Woo d ward 18 Ci n W estern
H i ll s 0
Cin P u r c ell 7 Cin St . Sav ier 6
M i ddl e town 14 Ci n Roger
Ba con 7
N orwood 14 Ha m ilton T a f t 7
Read ing J4 Harrison 0
Cin Wi th r ow 7 C in T aft 0
E a stlak e N or th ],1 Brush 12
Indep end en ce 7 Brook l yn 6
N ewbury
20
R l c h m on d
H e ig h t s o
• Buc k eye 6 K e y s ton e 0
M edi n a 9 F ai r view 0
P i ke ton 66 Hun t ing t on 0
Un i oto 14 Miam i Trace 34
Cant on M cKi n ley J5 A !t ian c e
6

Tickets
on sale
Tuesday

p ol nf s from B usy Beaut y
Sa lo n . H igl1 for Ge orge ' s
G rocer y was ve rn a Ch a m b erlain wi 111 198-.448 . L u cy
Kerwood ha d 161 f or high
gam e and shared se r ies· wit h
Helen Lyons 427 .
F ou nlain ci f Yo u t h l os t all 8
poi n l s to Na.tiona l · M i n e
Servic e . Hig h f Or Fou n tain of
Yo uth was Ed ith J ac k son
w lfh a 208 -523 . Ru gh H a ll ha d
h ig h g am e 158 fo r N a t ion a l
M ine Se r vic e wh i le Ma r y An n
Sh arp had high ser i es 432 .

Pu nli ng
Yds No. Avg.
W illi a mson (M \ 62
2
Jl.O
Da ll y (W )
182
6
30 .. 3
Re c eivi ng
No . Yds TO
D avenport (M J
J
39
1
Magpolla CM l
1
5
0
Tow le r CW l
1
29
0
Thomas ( W l
6
53
1
KO RETURNS
Yds No. TO
M a g no t ta (M J
A4
2
0
Th om a s( M \
47
J
0
Mal o y (M l
JO
l
~ o
PUNT RETURNS
Yds No. TO
Magnolia (M l
74
5
0
J . Howar &lt;' { M J
0
1
0
SCORING

TO EP TP

Qua'll s
1
2
8
Bl ake
0
6
Bu fl ingt o n
1
8
Mag no lia
a
6
Da ve npo r t
0
6
Weber
0
3
3
SCORE BY QUARTERS
M eigs
21 16 o 0- 37
Wa verly
0 0 7 0- 7

Friday's high scores

12

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - The
Cincinnati Reds announced
Saturday they will be gin
accepting
mail
orders
postmarked no earlier than
Tuesday for $8 Loge re serve
seat tickets to possible 1975
World Series games at
Riverfront Stadium .
Reds' officials said persons
may order up to four seats for
one game and should specify
whether they want tickets for
the game Tuesday , Oct. 14;
Wednesday, Oct. 15 ; Thursday, Oct. 16; or if they will
accept tickets for any one of
the games. Game time each
night is 8:30p.m . EDT.
There is a $1 handling
cbarge per order and fans
were requested to enclose a
large self-addressed and
stamped return envelope ..
There is a liniit of one order
per person and any orders
postmarked prior to Tuesday,
Sept. 30, will be retllrned.
Fans ordering World Series
tickets by mail should make
checks payable to " Cincinnati Reds, Agent; order
only a maximum of four $8
lickets for one game; add $1
handling carge for each order·
and mail lhe requests to
Cincinnati Reds, Ag~nt, Post
Office Box 110200, Cincinnati ,
Ohio, 45201.
An over-the-counter sale of
$8 tickets will be held at a
later date.
Officials said there are
about 27,000 $8 tickets ( 9,000
per game ) available.

YG TCB Avg
31
\D
3. 1
-10
14
-0.7
18
4
.4 .5
35
5
7.0
5
1
5.0

3.

G r ov e po r t 14 Col W est l and 0
Mt . Ver non 7 De la w a r e 0
N ewark 17 L an c as t er 7
Dublin 22 Ma r ysv ill e 6
Ham i li on Twp . 3.4 Grandview
6
Co l F r a n kl in H eig h t s 14 w
J eff er son 0
L ogan Elm 40 F airf ield Un io n
6
Co t R ead y ?6 Bex ley 0
Jo na t h o n A l der 0 .Sou t h
ea stern 0 ( t i e )
Circ l e Yif le 33 Mad i son P la ins
0
Cin Prin ceton JO Lima Sr J
St Marys 18 L i ma Ba l h 14
R l v e r 6 New Martin sv ille ( W .
va . 1 o
Park er sb urg ( W . Va .l J
Ma r ie tt a 0
Bel p r e 24 Pa r kersb u r g ( W
Va . 1 Ca t h 20
On tar io 0 Cl ear F or k 0 ( tie l
L ex ing ton 22 Cr esl ti n e 6
F r ed eri c k t own 21 Pty mo ufh 8
U pper
A r l i ng to n
61
Chillicot he 14
(in A ik en 14 Ci n W alnut H ilts

BUDDY DUGAN (31 ) sophomore lailback for Meigs,
carries ball in this a.ction photo of the Meigs-Waverly

Rush i ng
S . Tho m "s
Th o mp so n
Silcotl
Maloy
R . Thomas

Mass i llon 3 Nil es 0
N Canton H o ov e r 8 Cle So ut h
6

L o u is v ille n M a rlin g ton 6
No r fh west 44 M in er v a 37
Eas t Canto n 1-1 T u s law 9
Ak r on Nor t h 28 Akron So uth 8
Barbe r ton 6 Wa l sh J esu i t 0
C uya hoga F a ll s 43 A kron
Ho ban 0
Fremont R oss 44 L orain
Adm ir a I K ing 7
Uppe r Sandusky 21 W i llard 7
N o r wa l k 26 B ucyru s 13
B e ll ev u ew 20· T if fin 14
B l a c k R lver 1.4 War r e n
Wester n R es 6

M onroev ille 13 Sou th Cenfral

0

Fl ndllly 24 Sand us k y 6
L orain Clea r vie w 6 Ve rmili on

0

E l yria 20 Ma r l on H ard ing 14
M a r t in s Fer r y 28 W hee li ng
CW V a . ) 6
Oa -;t o n Ca rroll 28 O a yt o,1
Jeffe r son 6
Frank l i n
14 M i d d l eto wn
F e nw i ck \3
Day to n Ro l h 22 Dayton K i ser
0
X e n ia 9 Ke t te r ing F a i rmont
E 6
Valle-; Vie w 15 N o rlhr l dge 6
T r oy I J W ayne 10
Doyer 15 Cos n oc ton 6
R i v e r View 20 N ew Concor d
Gl enn 8
Zan esvi ll e 26 G rov e City 6
Lakewo od 27 Be r e a 12
Eucli d l4 Bedford 14 ( tiel
Will o ug h by . s 14 Map le
Height s 0
F ai r por t 10 Kir tland 6
West M us k ln g u m 18 Philo 14
Maysvi ll e 14 Cl"ook sv llle 0
Morgan 21 Sh er i dan 12
N ew Lexing to n 55 Tr i -Valley
0
Shenandoah 6 woodsf i el d 0
Cald w e ll 12 M ea dowbrook 0
Barnesy i lle 14 Sr i ~g e po r t 10
Li c k i n g Va ll ey 21 Northridge

0
War r en

Ha r d ing
20
0
Ber e a M i dpar k 12 Parma 7
Tinor a 20 a l rvie w 7
A l"c hbold 30 Libe rty Cen t er
13
N orth Ba lt imo re 34 Hilltop 0
N ap o l e on 36 Sprin g f ie ld 14
Co l Lin den -M e K In ley 20 Col
Brookh a v en 0
Wor t h ing ton 23 R ey n ol dsburg
0
Gaha n na 28 Wh i le hall 14
T ea y s V al l ey 16 O l en t angy 0
Am a n da -Ciea r c reek
27
L i be r t y Un ion 0
Ca n al Winches t er 56 Be r ne
U n i on 0
Ca r roll 20 M i l l ers p or t 12
Plcke r i ngl on 22 Lan cas t er
Fi s.he r 6
Hea th 18 Watkins M em-Or i al
S l ~! ube n vi ll e

14

L i c k in g H eig h ts 26 Jo hnslown
14

Col Watte r son 1.4 Col W h et .
sto n e 0
Col Wa ln ut R idge 33 Col
Har tley 21
Col D eSal e's IJ Weste rv ill e
N orlh 7
Col A c a d emy .40 C in Counfry
D a y 14
L ondon
13
Spr i ngf i e l d
Shawnee 8
Wi lm in g ton 12 Gr ee nf i eld 7
R i ver V all e y 26 C o lonel
Craw ford 13
Moh a w k 20 R idgedale 0
Tol Woo dward 13 T o l Ce ntral
6
Tol Sl John 15 To l Li bbey 14
Tol DeVil b iss 12 Tal Start 7
To I Whit m e r 14 Or eg o n Cl ay 7
Tec u mse h 55 Huron 6
A l ex ander 24 M i lle r 7
Tr imble 34 Vi n to n County 8

Bucks on Otannel 5
Four
Ohio State Uni ver sity horut=
football games will .be seen
exclusi vely on Cable Chan nel
F ive.
·
P lay -by-play
will
be
provided by .Jay Wagne r ,
past pr eside nt of the Ohio
Spor tscasters
Assoc iation .
Color man will be former
Ohio State qu arterbac k Rex
Ker n , who al so played
professional football with the
Buff al o Bi lls a nd the
Balt im or e
Coils.
Th e

remainin g games which will
h-.! oo en on Channel Five
inc lude : Iowa , Wisconsin ,
Indiana and Minnesota .
The OS U-North Carolina
game wiii be seen Monday
night beg innin g at 5 p.m . and
repeated Wednesday at 7 ·
p .m . All subsequent games
will be playe d on a similar
delayed basis. The games can
only be seen on Channel 5.

REDME N TRIUMPH
RIO GRANDE - Host Rio
defea ted Cedarville Satur day
in a fi ve-mile cross coun try
meet. Ber nard Tiiley, the
Redmen's veteran rUnner ,
took individua l honors wilh a
time of 27.42. Second place
wen t to Rio's Greg Baldv.'in.
Billy Canfield fi nished third .
It was Rio Grande's firs t
meet of the yea r .

edge Twins

PT. PLE ASANT -

THOMPSON SNAGGED FOR LOSS - Waverly quarterba ck Chuck Thompson ' 16,
dark jersey ) wound up with a minus 10 in 14 trips rushing a gainst Meigs' defensive umt
Friday night. Making the stop on this play is George Gum ( 10 ) a nd an umde nto fted
Marauder.

Colts -counting on
'front four' today
BALTIMORE IUPI ) Ke nn y Stabler and th e
Oakland Raiders ' awesome
passing a ttack were expected
to prove a severe tes t for the
suspec t Baltimore defensive
secondary Sunday, but the
Colts were pinning their
. hopes on their front four .
" He ' s v ulnerable to a
s tron g rush by the front four
and we have the besl in the
leag ue," said defe nsive back
Ray Ol&lt;jham , ana~·zin g the

Raid ers ' all-pro quar terback .
" Los An geles put a strong
r ush on him in an exhibiti on
and he coughed up th e ball
three tiw.es, throwing ri ght
into the Rams ' de fensive
coverage·;" Oldham said.
"We saw it in the films
when the Raider s' played
Miami this week," added
lin ebF ker St an Whi te .
" That 's the answer , don't
g ive him time to throw ."
The four men ass i ~ ne d th e

task of breaking th roug h the
Oa kl and offensive line and
terrorizing the 6-3. 215-pound
Sta bler were Mike Barnes,
Joe Erhmaoin , J ohn Dutton
and Fred Cook.
Barnes and Erhmann were
rookies two years ago wh ~n
Stabler dissected the Colt
defe nse, completing a record
25 out of 29 passes in a 34-21
win. Cook an d Dutton were
s till in coll ege at tha t time .
Erhmann will play Sunday

though his effectiveness may
be hampered by a tender
ri ght an kle .
'· Defensive bac ks can
cove r good receivers only solong," sa id Wh ite . " You
simply can't give Stabler a lot
of time to throw. "
took
iss ue,
Oldh a m
howev er , with the Colt
secondary 's re putation for
weakness . He said if the fro nt
four could shake Stabler and
force him to throw early, the
defensi ve backs would finish
the job.
"We keep re ading that our
secondary is . garbage ,." he
said "We're not garbage and
we 've gal to prove it. ''

\Vhi.te Sox
BLOOMINGTON,
Minn .
UPI I Beli eve r Rich
Gossage hurled two-hit ball
over the last fi ve innings and
Brian Downing scored the
game's only run on Jerry
Ha irston's sac rifice fly in the
eigh th inning as the Chicago
Whi t e Sox shut out the
Minn eso ta
Twin s ,
1-0,
Saturda y.
Downing led off the inning
with a s ingl e off Bert
Blyleven, 15-10. He advanced
to third on a walk and a fly
out and scored on Hairston 's
game-breaker.
Gossage , 19-8, relieved
starter Claude Osteen with
nobody out and two on in the
fifth after Dave McKay and
Lyman Bostock singled. He
yielded a s ingle to pinchhitter
Tony Oliva in the eighth and a
two-out double to Bostock in
the ninth .
The game had a 10:30 CDT
s tart so as not to conflict with ·
th_e neighboring MinnesotaOre go n Co llege football
gam e.
I

·(

.I

\

Wa verly was mi nus yardage
fr om sn imma ge a s th e
Me igs· defense proved im pene tra ble.
Throug h the a irways,
Wa verly'!:i Th ompson comple ted} of 17 fo r 82 yard• a nd
one score. All but one or
Th omp so n's toss es wa s
caiJ!i ht by tail bac k Thomas
swi ngin15 nul of the back fi eld .
Meigs· Anderson comple ted 4
of 5 for 44 yards and a score
and Gwn 's only pass h:ll
incorn plc te .
In vic tory . the Marauders
upped their season record to 3
wins and only one loss. that
Coming al the hands or Point
Pleasant in the rain on the
fi"rst g ame of the year .
Wa verly 's record dips to J.

0

says he's
unperturbed

,'
,.
.,

Colors: Snow White~._Pastel Green, Pastel Brqwn
and YJarcoal Black.

R·ll HEAT VALUE
3'12"xl5" 70 SQ. FT.

Pe n a llies marr ed 1he
sec ond hal f of play as neither
learn cslnblis hed niUch of a
~ame plan . After trad ing
ptUl ts . Wa verly. be.hind the
runn ing and p ass in ~:: of
Thom pson; moved from its
own 39 to the onl y score uf the
second half when Thomp son
roWld Thoma s with ::~n eight
yard a r ie l
with
2:0 1
remaini ng in t he thi rd
quar ter . Daile v kicked the
PAT, and for all purposes.
that was the '" old ba ll game .'"
Statistica lly. Meigs won by
a narr ow ma rgin . counting
th e game as a whole. Qualls
led all run ners with 80 yards
in 8 carr ies and Buffi ng ton
addin g 49 ·yards in 5. Twelve
runners c e~rr i ed the ball for
Meigs as se vera l und ercla ssmen gained playin g time in
the second half.
Steve Thomas gained 31
yar ds in 10 tr ies for the
Ti gers . and ful lback Maloy
picked up 35 yards in five
a tt e mp ts. Total r us hi ng
yard s had Meigs ahea d 154 to
Wave rl y's 79. In the fir s! hall

WAVERLY

~T A T I S TI C S

D e pt .
M
W
F Ir s I D o wn s
7
8
B y rush ing
5
4
B y p a ssi ng
7
J
P l a y s lr orn sc r im m
· o~ o
51
Tot . n et y ards
198 16 1
Net y d s. ru sh .
154
79
Net yds. p ass .
AA
82
P asses (cm p all )
A 6 7 17
Punts (no . yds )
2 62 6 182
(a v er age 1
3 1 JQ_J
F u mb l es
4
4
N umber los t
3
1
P enalties
'32511115
IND. STA T IS TIC S
ME I GS
R us h i n g
YG T C B Avg
aua tt s
110
8
10.0
Bu ff i ngton
49
5
9.8
Mag n ott a
14
4
l .5
Gum
4
J
1. J
An d erson
7
2
) s
Seth
0
I
0.0
R Coa t s
7
2
J .S
T . Coats
3
1
J_O
D ug an
5
I
5.0
R andol ph
J
3
l.O
M ars h al l
0
1
0 .0
S te w a r t
6
'}
30
PASS IN G

8

~ Ali

SEAL-0 MATIC
SHINGLES

SEOAL ONLY
Team
W. L . T
P. OP
Meig s
1 o o 37
7
J a ck so n
1 o a 41 26
A th e n s
1 0 0 20 14
Iron t on
1 0 0 12
6
Wells t on
0 1 o
6 12
Gall i polis
o 1 0 14 20
L og a n
0 1 0 26 41
Waverl y
o 1 0
7 37
TOTALS
4 5 0 163 163
Friday 's results:
Meig s 37 wa v er ly 7
At hen s 20 Gallip olis 14
Jackson 41 Log an 26
Ironton 12 W e ll ston 6
Oct . 3 games:
Gal lipo l is at Iron to n
Logan af Wav erly
M ei g s at Athen s
Well sto n at Ja c k so n
Oak H ill at Sout h Point
Coa l Gr ov e al F airland
Boyd Co un ty a t Ro c k H i ll

A 15-yant pe na lty on
Waverly moved the ball to the
Tiger 25. The Mara uders
mo ve d lo the 14 where
Mag notla carried on four
s trai ght running plays. end:
ing o n a 2 yard holt for six
poin ts. Qua il s ad de d t he
convers ion on a run and
Me igs led 29-0 with 8: 55 left in
the sec ond period .
Wave rl y got the ball oul to
the ir own 45 where the Meigs
de fe n se fo rced a p unt.
Mag notta added a nother fi ne
re turn of 30 yards , behi nd
excelle nt blocki ng out to (he
midfiel d stripe .
The Ma ra uders moved to a
first down inside the Tiger 40
where qua rterbac k J tm
Anders on fired a 27 yard
s trike to end Mick Davenpor &lt;
for fir st down on the Tiger 10.
Two plays la ter . Anderson
aga in fo un d Davenport alone
fo r a 5 yard scorin g pass .
Buffin gton tacked on the final
Me igs poi nts by running over
the PAT, giving Me igs a 37-Q
lead they carried to the
locker r oom at ha lf.

Meigs- Waverly st Jtistics

Co l W es t 14 Col So uth 0
Co t M i ff l in I J Col N o rt h o
Co l N orth l and 6 Co t East o
W es t e n •i ll e So u t h 20 H i l liar-d

.

ROOFING SHINGLES

50

ca tc h on. the Marauder 32.
Meigs rolled to one fi rs t down
on an 11-yard burs t by Qual ls .
but Wa v erly 's~ fe nse stiffened. Bob Williamson's pun !
r olled out of boun ds on the
Tiger 28.
Afte r ho ld ing Wave rl y
again , Magnotla gathered in
Dailey's punt and re turned 14
yards to the Wave rl y 40. On
the ne:d play , sophomore
Buffington slashed over left
Iacki e for 3li yard s to the
Ti ger 5. lluffing ton followed
by going ove r left Iackie
again the final 5 yards and
anoth er first period Meigs
score. Weber conver ted .for a
21-0 lea d,
wit h
1:34
rema ining.
Wave rl y 's fin e senio r
ta ilbac k Steve Thom as
returned the ensuing kickoff
20 yards to the Tigers' own 40.
Una ble to move the ball ,
Da iley's short kic k was
hauled in by Mag notla and
the speedy co-captain zi gged
and zag ged his way 26 vards
to the Waverly 42 as the
quarter ended .

Lancers, 22-6

..

&gt;

12"xl6' LENGTHS

sprinted
th e
Wa ver ly
secondary on a 58 yard touchdown gallop.
Duane Weber 's . kick splil
the upri ghts a nd Me igs
jumped to 7-0 lead with 8: 10
remainin g in th e fir s t
quarter .
Wa ve rl y's so ph om or e
fUllba ck Dan Maloy re turned
Weber's ki ckoff 15 yard s, out
to the Waverl y 37. Two plays
later the Ti ge r s' bi g
qu a rterbac k
s ophomor e
Chuck Thompson was ridden
down behind the line and
fumbl ed . Maraud e r de fenseman
J ohn
Blake
scooped up the ball on the
Waverly 37 and lumbered in to
paydirt a ccomp a nied by
several jubilant teammates
protecting bini from would-be
tacklers .
Weber 's PAT kic k was good
and Meigs enjoyed a qui ck 140 with s lill 8: 10 left in the
initial stanza'
Again, the Tigers were
unable to mount a threat and
were forced to punt, with
Magnotta calling for a fa ir

Eagles trip

DAVID J. GOODWIN

•

THISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
( UPI) - Billy Wilson rode
Whack Away to victory here
Friday in the featured ninth
race at Thistledown.
The winner covered six
furlongs in 1:13 and 1-5 and
paid $7, $3 and $2.20.
Second was Chuckler and
third was Ral Beaut.
In the daily double, Fabs
Hammer (9) and High Return
(S) combined for a payoff of
$70.20. Friday's attendance
was 3, 746 a 1 d, the y bet
$411 ,951.
.

..,.

To my many friends,
personal and commercial,
whom I have had the
opportwrity to serve in the
past thirty years, I take this
way to say thanks to one
and all.

including a game-winning 76--yard 11sneak n with nine
minutes rema ining in the contest . Chasing the Bulldog ace
down th e sidelines are Dick Burdette , Bruce Scarberry.
Jim Simms a nd Kent Sha wver. Athens won, 20-14 .

~

By John Reece
POMEROY - The Meigs
Marauders, striking with the
speed of lightning , sped past
the Waverly Ti gers 37-7
Friday night on the Marauder
field
in eac h
team 's
Southeastern Ohio · Athletic
League opener .
t&gt;Ominating the ac tion of
the firs t half, Coach Charlie
Chancey 's startin g eleven
raced to a 37-{) halftime score
behind the running of tailback Terry Qualls, fUllback
Dan Buffington , and wingback Mike Magnotta . The
second half saw Meigs '
second and third units play
the Tigers ' first team to a
near-even slandstill.
Waverly received the
opening kickoff , but was
unable to move the ball , and
Mark Dailey punted 34 yards
to deepman Magnotla who
returned 4 to the Meigs 40 . On
the second play , Qualls took
the handoff from No . 2
quarterback George Gum,
shot through a gaping hole
over right guard, and tl)en out

..

Grid standings

14

L.

8: 30-10 p .m . Coli . Sw•m
8: 30-10 p .m . Coil. Swim
8: 30-10 p .m . Coil . Sw!m
7-8: 30 p .m . Open Sw1m
8: 30 -10 p .m . Co li. Swim
. 7-8: 30 p .m . OP,en Sw i m
• -CLOSED

NOTICE!

GAHS-Athens statistics

Player

7-9 p.m . College Sw ~ n,
7·8: 30 p .m . Open Sw! m

be c lased on Saturda y ,
Oc tober 4 fo r P ar e nt s Weeke nd activi t ies .

~

••

k
ac s0 n

Sept . ?9- 7-B: 30 p .m . Open Rec .
8: JQ. 10 p.m . Co ll 09e Rec .
Se pt. JQ-8 : 30-10 p .m . Co ll ege Rec.
Oc l. 1- 8: 30-10 p.m . Coll ege Rec .
Oc t. ?-· 7-8: JO p.m . Ope n Re c.
8: 30· 10 p .m . Co ll ege Rec .
Oct. 3- 7·8: 30 p.m . Ope n Re c.
Oc t 4- &gt;·CLOSED
·x- L yne Cente r g ym. a n d pool wil l

WE I.I.STON - Iron ton
recovered a We llston fun1ble
on the Tiger 3-yard line in the
final seconds of play, th en
held th e ball until time ran
out to edge hos &lt; Wells ton 12-6
here Friday.
It was Iro nt on's 26 th
s traight SEOA L win in four
year s .
Jeff Krie bel put IHS on top
with a 4-yard r un in the first.
Tony Gray tied it up with a 9yarder in the fir st.
QB Mik e Br own plowed

Marauders roll over Tigers, 37-7

2-Ap .m . Open Swi m

--·

'I

. '

�.. ,

,

I

~

.I

I

.·
••

'

.25 - The_Sunda}l-Tinies -Sentinel, Sunday, Sept . 28, 1975

24 - The Sunday Tinies - Sentinel , Sunday, Sept. 28, 1975

B~lld~gs do
it again, 20-14

.
RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
L YNE CENTER GYM AND POOL SCHEDULE
DATE - GYMNASIUM
POOL

Se pt 28- 1-Ap m . Ope n Rec .
· 7-9p .m . 'co ll ege Rec.

THE PLAINS - Ath ens
Ta king over on their own
maintained its home fi eld· 28, the Blue Devils mar c hed
jinx over visit.ing Gallipolis 55 yards in 16 plays to the
he re Friday night with a Bulldog 17. An off -sid e
surprising 20-14 Southeastern pena lty on fir st down stalled
Ohio Lea gue victor y over the drive . Fr ank Simpkins
1Budd y) the n sm eared Brent Johnson
Coac h Willard
for a fi ve yard loss to make it
Moore 's Blue Devils.
The Gallians , seekin g their second and 20 on the AHS 27.
first win ever on the Bulldogs' J ohnson then rifled a pass to
new field at The Pla ins a ft er Bren t Saunder s who was all
losing 7-0 and 21-20 heart- alone on the six, but Sa lHlders
breakers on Rutter F ield in slipped an d fell on the wet
1971 and 1973, ha ven't beate n grass . Th e ball fell hara Bulldo g s qu ad in the mless ly to th e gr ound. That
University City since Karl was proba bl y the game's
Ju stus' la ds turned lhe tri ck twn ing point . Johnso n was
8-0 bac k in 1963 .
racked up on the ensuing play
Friday's triumph
by after a fi ve yard ga in to th e
Athens not only wrecked Ath ens 22. Sa unders was
CHONKO UNSTOPPABLE - Athens Quarterback
Guilla Academy's two-year, stopped on the Buildog 18 on
Arnie Chonko , 6-5 •;., senior who tips the scales at 203
nine- game winning streak but four th down after a four -yard
pounds, was unstoppabl e again st Gallipolis Friday night
it gave the Athenians of gain .
as he picked up 130 yards in 15 trips 18.6 ya rds per carry)
Coach Les Walker a big plus
Chonko, on a keeper , ra ced
mark in the Slst annual for nine to th e 27. Neil Her... ,, ....
Southeastern Ohio League beri ck. fullback, picked up a
title chase.
firs t down on the Bulldog 28.
The vi ctory left Athens with
Chonko. on a sneak, broke
a 2-2 season mark . Ga llipolis four or five ta ckles just
beyond the line of scrimdropped to 3-1 on the year .
Gallipolis drew fir st blood . mage, cut to his right along
Bre tt Wilson field ed a short the GA HS sidelines and II was
Bill Greer punt on the Athens curtains for th e Blue Devils.
42 and zipped in to the endzone · The spec tacular 76 yard run
with 4:36 remaining in the .tame a fter Berberkk had
fir s t pe riod . Bra d Smith recovered a Bulldog fumble
s topped Dennis Salisbury on for a four-yard loss back to
the run for extra points.
the Ath ens 24. With 6:49
Athens wasted little lime in remaining, Lavery split the
s triking back. Following AI uprights and Athens enjoyed
Walton 's 13-yard kickoff a c omfortable 20-6 adreturn to the Bulldog 30, Ed vantage.
"Pennell took a handoff from
Brian Mink returned
QB Arnie Chonko, cut to his Lavery 's kickoff 13 yards to
left along the Athen s the GARS 37.
With GAHS signal caller
sidelines, and was 70 yards
long gone . Steve Lavery 's Johnson limping noticeably,
placekick from eight yards the Blue Devils finally put a
out ( AHS was penal- scoring drive together .
ized fiv e yards for delay
Johns on hit Brett Wilson
of game) with 4:0Ileft in the with a nine-yard pass gain .
period was perfect. The Mink picked up a first down.
Bulldogs were never headed . John son again connected
Athens got good field with Wilson for an 18-yard
position following a short gain . John son limped for five
Blue Devil punt (GAHS 39) more to the Bulldog 33.
late in the first stanza.
Following an incomplete
It took the Bulldogs only pass, Salisbury was dropped
nine plays lo punch lt over. for a two-yard loss before
Chonko sneaked It In from the Johnson hit Saunders with a
two wlth 9:00 left in the 24-yard strike and a first
second period to give Athens down on the Athens six.
a I~ advantage. Jim Simms
Salisbury got one, Mink two
and Kent Shawver blocked and Mink carried it in from
.,
Lavery's try for the extra the three with 2:39left in the
' '
point. Big gainer In that short game. Johnson passed to
TD drive was a 15-yarder by Wilson for th e two-point
JOHNSON STOPPED - The Smith boys, Brad, 18,
wingback ScoU Lawrence. conversion to reduce Athens
and Dave, 44, stopped GAHS QB Brent Johnson on this
Remainder of the first half lead to 20-14.
play during Friday night 's SEOAL grid game at The
wa s played on even terms
Walton returned Steve
Plains. In rear is Blue Devil Tri-Captain Steve Wallis (61)
with each team punting Wallis final kickoff six yards
center.
twice.
to the Bulldog 37. Chonko ran
Gallfpolis stopped a third seven straight times. Time
period Athens drive on the expired with Athens In ] .
Blue Devil 38, but was unable possession on Its own 46.
to get things moving until the ·Gallipolis is at Ironton
final three minutes of that Friday . Athens will host
quarter .
Meigs.
LOGAN - Jackson out- and J . Smith's kick cut
scored Logan 41-26 in a high- Jackson's lead to 22-20 early
scoring SEOAL game here in the third. Morrow's 4Friday.
yarder made it 28-20.
Steve Morrow gave JHS a
Specht's TD with 9:08 left
IHl
first
period
lead
.
David
P.
cut
Jackson's lead to 28-26. D.
INDIVIDUAL NET
Mik e Cliffo r d , Ken B arc us,
YARDS RUSHING
Davis scored in the second P . Davis ran 15 ya.rds and D.
Paul Fi nnicum .
(Gallipolis)
GUARDS
K e nt
with Tom Osborne converting A. Davis kicked the extra
Ptaver-Pos. Tcb. Yg. Avg.
Shawver , M i ke Wood , Lewis
B . Saunders, WB
6 34 5.6
the extras . Logan 's Hal points with 4:45 left to give
Schm i dt.
B. Mink, F B
15 48 3.2
CENTERS - Sf eve Wallis
Peppers cut it to 14-6 with a· Jackson a 35-26 lead . D. P .
D. Salisbury, TB 17 47 2.7 ( ee l; J im Sim m s .
B . Johnson , QB
5 10 2.0
nine-yarder
in the second. Davis' 3-yard run completed
BACKs Brent Johnson,
TOTALS
.
43 139 3.2
Denn i s
Salisbury , Brent
Conroy's 4-yard keeper made the game's scoring.
(Athens)
Saunders (ee l; Brian Mink ,
Player-Pas.
Tcb Yg . Avg
it
22-6. Greg Smith 's 6-yard
Bru c e
Sc arberry,
Keith
By quarters:
E . Pennell , TB
11 103 9.3
J ackson , David Wiseman.
pass
to
Scott
Hubbard
and
Jackson
6 16 6 13- 41
A . Chonko , QB
15 130 8.6
Je ff Wh"aley , Gary Dabney ,
S. Lawrence , WB
j
15 5.0 Sam Armstrong
Jeff Smith's kick made it 22- Logan
0 13 7 6- 26
N . Berberick, F B 15 30 2.0
(Athens)
13
at
halftime
.
TOTALS
44 278 6.3
ENOS - Andy Ping , Ji m
PASSING
John Specht's 2-yard TD
H e ady , Jeff Griffin , AJ
.·

&lt;Gallipolis)
C-A I YG TO
John son
4 -7 0 69
0
TOTALS
4-7 0 69
0
{ Athens)
,

Pla v.er

C-A I YG TO

Chonko

. 1·5 0

15

0

1-5

15

0

TOTALS

0

Recovered enemv fumbles:

None .

Kickoff returns : G AH S -

Min k . 3-50-0 ; Salis b ur y, 1-0 -0 .
Athen s - Walfon , 2-25-0.
Pas s interc e ption •run ba c k s: None .
· Punt return s: GA H S Wil son. 2 -45- 1. At h e n s Wa l ton . 2-10-0.
Punts : GAH S - Scarber r y ,
4-109 (27 .2). A t hens - Greer ,

5-156 (31.2 ).

.

Pass receptions : GAH S Wilson , 3-3-45 -0. Saunders , 14- 24 -0. Athens - Griffin . O-l -0 0 ; Laver-y , 0 -1-0-0 ; La.wrence ,
0- 2-0-0 ; Berberick. 1-1- 15 -0 .'
ScOring : GAHS Brett
Wilson . 42-yard punt return ,
4 : 36, first , run fail . Bri~Jl
Mink, J-yard run • .2 : 39 , four'lh
&lt;Johnson to Wilson) . Athens
Ed Pennell , 70 -yard run ,
4 : 01 first (Steve Lavery,
kick) ; Arnie Chonko , 2 - yar~
·run, . 9 : 00, second
(kick
blocked) ; . Arnj e Chonko, 76 yar.d sneak ~ 6 : 49. fourth
(S teve Lavery , kick) .

..

W a lton . Bob w est.
TACKLES
Ma tt
F aul k n e r , Bill Gr ee r , Jeff
Cour an t.
GUARDS F r an k Si m .
pk in s, Dwi ghf W esf, Tom
Se if e rth, Vi nso n Ya t es .
CENTERS
Gr eg
Co c hran .
BACKS Arnie Chonko ,
Ed Pennell , Scott L awrence ,
N ei l B e rberi c k , Don Gagle ,
Ro b Si mpk in s , Steve Lavery ,
Brad Sm i lh , T e rry Cun
n in g ha m , J im Caesa r , Mic k
Ha rt , Dav e Sm i th .
OFFICIALS Ge or ge
Hamer ick , Bo b Overly , Bo b
Chr is t i an and Jo hn Roan ,
Chill ico th e ch apter .
Score by quarters :
Gallipoli s
6 0 0 8- 14
A t hen s
7 6 o 7- 20

ALL GAMES
Team
W L T
P . OP
M e ig s
3 1.. · o ns 29
Ironto n
3 1 0 33 32
Wells ton
3 I 0 87 20
Gall i polis
3 1 o 110 26
Ro c kHill
2 1 0 46 40
Athens
2 2 o 39 52
J ackson
2 2 o 111 84
Logan
2 2 0 66 41
Wa verly
1 3 0 33 90
Coat Grov e
0 3 1 20 96
South Point
0 4 0
7 84
Non- league results:
Wayne 26 Soufh Po int 0
Ceredo -Kenova 31 Coal Grove

New_mark ·set Frichy

MARTINSVILLE, Va. record of 85.980 m .p.h.
(UP!) - Cale Yarborough · Darrell
Waltrip
of
couldn't wait for Sunday's Franklin, Tenn. , quali(ied
$75,000 Old Dominion 500 third in a Chevrolet while
TEAM STATISTICS
NASCAR
Grand National "David Pearson of Spar·Department
G
A
First downs
9
10
event to start breaking la.n burg, S.C., was fourth in a ·
Vardsrushing
147 296
records· .in his Chevrolet.
Mercury.
•. ~~~r~~~~~~g '
Fifth spot went to 2()-yearThe Timmonsville, S.C. ,
·Passes, attempted
7 , 5
Richie. Panch of Daytona
·
o
ld
driver
set
an
Old
Dominion
Passes completed
4
1·
Intercepted by
o
0 500 qualifying record Friday,
Beach, Fla ., while Richard
Yards passing
69
15
hitting
89.199
miles
per
hour
Petty,
who has won 14 tinies
Total yards
208 293
Return yardage
95
45
on the .525 mile Martinsville at Martinsville, qualified
Plays
50
:4.9
sixth.
. Fumbles .
0
4 Speedway" to lake the pale
LOst fumbles
o o.- position and $1;000.
Rounding out the top ten
Penaltle$ ·
4-30 7-75
Bobby Allison of Hueytown·, we re Dave Marcis of
Punts
·
·
4-109 5-156
L.INEUP5
Ala., in a .Malador, earned Wausau, Wis.; Lennie Pond
ENDS Ke.v Jackson .
the' outside pole with a speed of Petersburg, Va .; Benny '
eren Wilson fccl; Mil&lt;.e
Wiggres_,.orth "J K' eith ..Sur - o( 85.855 m .p.h. Yarborough 's
Parsons of Ellerbee, N.C.,
itiiHe .
J
.
of
speed broke AII\SOn 's · 1972 and Buddy ·Bake r
TACK
5, Jeff Bene,
'
Charlol!e.• N.C.
D i ~k Burdette 1 Sam corfi,as,
I

The Goodwin Printing Co.
has been purchased by
Vernon Weber, owner of
the Quality Print Shop in
Middleport, 0. Mr. Weber
will soon open a branch in
Pomeroy at the fonner I.
Weed Bldg. Your
confidence in Mr. Weber
will be well placed.

Tigers nip WHS
over fr om th e one in th e
second to score what proved
lo be lhe winning score.
Kri ebe l rushed 24 times for
90 yar ds . Gra y had 37 yards
in 16 &lt;rips. IHS had 10 fir st
down s, one of four passes for
38 yards and 166 total yards.
We lls ton had nine first
downs , five of 13 ae ria ls for 88
yard s and 94 total yards.
By quart er s:
6 0 0 0- 6
We llston
Iron ton
6 6 0 0-12

WINT·ERIZE
YOUR HOME
NOW BEFORE
COLD WEATHER
PRIME SIDING

..
,.".'
...

13: 2i:

.

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern's Eagles struck for a
first period touchdown then
added two more in the second
quarter here Friday night to
upend Federal Hocking, 22-6,
in a non-league encounter.
Coach Spike Berkheimer's
Eagles moved their season
record to 3-1 while Federal
Hocking dropped to 0-3-1.
Friday night, Eastern will
take its 2-0 SVAC record to
Kyger Creek for a headon
clash with the unbeaten
Bobcats .
Friday night, the Eagles
employed a running-passing
combination to defeat the
Lancers.
Eastern reached
the
scoreboard in the opening
stanza on a 22 yard pass from
junior quarterback Bob
McClure to sophomore Joe
Kuhn. A pass to senior Don
Eichinger was good for an 8-Q
lead.
The Eagles put the game on
ice in the second period
quarter on a 24 yard touchdown pass from McClure to
Kevin Barton and a 15-yard
run by Kuhn . Barton added
the extra points following his

'

•.

•

•••
•'
•'
., ,
::

••

··,
;;
,· '
'•
:,
';
,.'..

wznner

.•
c:•

95 ASQUARE

$

~

-

~:
•

·~

'

ASQUARE

•

Fiberglass Insulation
3'12"xl5". 10 SQ. FT.

$1 Q75 ROLl

R-19 HEAT VALUE
6"xl5" 40 SQ. FT.-- - - -6"x23" 61 SQ. FT.

....

$720· ROLl
$1 095 ROLl

J

~. ·

1_ uthe more

PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH OCT. •11. 1975

.you

~

up."

Beiinda,
during
her
Honolulu stopover, said "not
·one not two, not six women"
'~ wo~ld come between her and
her husband.
• ·All did 1 'hour and . 22
'
"' ininutes of roadwork before
~ dllwn today and chalked up a
,;

C9.

:!

..

MIDDJ;EPORT

I '

controv~sy

. ;, give me, the more I m bred

CASH AND CARRY- DELIVERY AVAILA-BLE

..Va~ley Lumber and .supply

~"

BY VICENTE MALIWANAG
MANILA
(UP!)
':.. Dismissing reports of marilal
•. trouble with his wife,
:~ Belinda, Muhammad Ali
'' insisted today he is not only
. ~ king of the ring ln!t also the
·" lord of his household.
,
The 33-year-old Ali said he
.,. was unperturbed about
,.• publicity over his lovely
''· companion, Veronica Por!' sch~, which apparently
::. cproh\p_ted his wife's · Jeaving
Manila Friday only 12 hours
, , after she had flown in from
the United States to join bini.
~
,. All that was on his mind,
::." Ali said as he went through
1 his daily workout, was to "eat
~ up" Joe Frazier during their
;~ Od. I (Sept. 30 in the U.S.)
• match and to "fill the
,.' theaters" on fight day.
':l Repeatedly, he said
~ problems were not new to
,; hini and that he always
••• overcame them. He said that
•: when his first wife, Sonjie,
~ whom he later divorced,
:/ walked out on hini in 1965 on
the eve of his title defense
;;&lt; against Sonny Liston, he went
/:. on to beat Liston.
~
"I'm used to controversy.
..:. This little stuff they print
·· about my Wife is just kin~ dergarten lalk ... no gun is big
l enough to scare me," he said.

WITH

$69S ROll

·'

'

'

six-pomter.
Federal Hocking finally
reached the end zone in tlie
fourth period on a 12-yard
pass from Jini Mobbs to Jim
Goodfellow. A pass for the
conversion was incomplete.
Offepsively, Mark Lawson
topped ail Eastern backs with
49 yards in 10 carries. Kuhn
gained 46 yards in 10 tries
while Eichinger had 38 yards
in eight attempts. The Eagle
defense held Federal Hocking
to an unbelievable minus 74
yards on the ground.
Leading
the
Eagle
defensive squad were Kuhn
and Lawson .
STATISTICS
DEPARTMENT
FH E
First Downs
3 12
Yards Rushing
-74 110
Yards Passing
119 63
Total Yardage
45 173
Passes. Attempted
19 11
Passes Completed
10
8
Fumbles
1 2
Fumbles Lost
1
2
Interceptions
I
I
Penalties
5-75 8 80
By Quarters
F-H
Eastern

A- C
Ande r so n (MIS 4
Gum IMJ
1 0
T hom p so n
(W I
17 7

I YG TO
0 44
1

0

0

0

82

0

0 00&amp;-6
8 14 0 0-22

Th e Maroon a nd Gold now
prepare for what m ight be
their bi ggest g ame of the
season when they travel to
Athe ns Friday night.
A victory ove r the Bulldogs
would es l&lt;lblish Meigs as the
"'team to beat " in th e SEOAI.
at the s easo n' s halfw ay
mar k.

total of six rounds hitting the
heavy bag and tbe speedball
and skipping ·rope .
While Ali appeared unperturbed about the whole affair,
members of his camp indicated some amount of
concern, although each one
who spoke to newsmen said it
was none of their business.
Ali's manager, Herbert
Muhammad, who arrived
here early today , said "he
told the press right- that
Belinda is his wife and she is
the · only wife he has.
Everything else is his private
affair. I'm sure nobody is
diggiJlg into anything you're
doing. He has his private
affairs and l have inine."
Ali,
overhearing
Muhammad , said ~~as long as
my boss is all right, I'll whip
the world."

Local Bowling
.wednesday Afternoon
Ladies League
Foursome ·•
Skyline Lanes

Sept. 24, 1'175
Standings
Team
Busy Beauty Salon
George 's Grocery
Team No . 1
Fou ntain of Yo u th
Na t ional Mine Service
Som erv i lle Re al E s t a t e

W.
22
22
18
16
16

16

L.
10
10
14
16
16

16
Sparky ' s Sunoco
U
10
Team No . 5
·- 4 28
Team No . 1 to ok 6 points
from Tea m No . 5 . Irene
Paul sen wa s high t o r t eam
No . 1 with 179-440 . V irg in ia
Darst had 167 -416 for Tea m
No . 5 .
Somer v ille Real Eslal e
took 2 points and Sparky 's
Sunoco -took 6. High for
Somer vi lle Rea l E s tate was
Carol Rou sh ( sub ) with l6f ·
450 , Vick i A dkins had 171 for
hign game a nd Alic e Ch ap .
man 515 ser i es for Sp ar ky's
Sunoco .
Georg e's Gro ce ry too k '6

game Friday night. In rear is Ma ra uder guard Da ve
Miller . 65. Closin g in for the tackl e are Ti ge rs Craig
Towler (80) and Dennis Dunn ( 30) . Meigs won, 37-7.

Ohio High School
Footb all R es ults
United Press Inte rnati on a l
G ar f iel d H eig ht s 20 Shak e r
H ei gh ts 8
O l ms ted F al ls 8 Ba y Vill age 0
Chagr in F8 l ls J4. Au r o r a o
Br ec k sv i ll e 6 Cloverlea f 0
P orts mo uth 24 Bo yd Co un t y
!Ky ) 0
W heele r sbu rg 57 V a lley 0
M in f o rd 26 Po r t smouth E 12
Port smo ut h W 11 N o rt hw est 7
Col E astmo or 26 Co l Mohawk

Ci n Woo d ward 18 Ci n W estern
H i ll s 0
Cin P u r c ell 7 Cin St . Sav ier 6
M i ddl e town 14 Ci n Roger
Ba con 7
N orwood 14 Ha m ilton T a f t 7
Read ing J4 Harrison 0
Cin Wi th r ow 7 C in T aft 0
E a stlak e N or th ],1 Brush 12
Indep end en ce 7 Brook l yn 6
N ewbury
20
R l c h m on d
H e ig h t s o
• Buc k eye 6 K e y s ton e 0
M edi n a 9 F ai r view 0
P i ke ton 66 Hun t ing t on 0
Un i oto 14 Miam i Trace 34
Cant on M cKi n ley J5 A !t ian c e
6

Tickets
on sale
Tuesday

p ol nf s from B usy Beaut y
Sa lo n . H igl1 for Ge orge ' s
G rocer y was ve rn a Ch a m b erlain wi 111 198-.448 . L u cy
Kerwood ha d 161 f or high
gam e and shared se r ies· wit h
Helen Lyons 427 .
F ou nlain ci f Yo u t h l os t all 8
poi n l s to Na.tiona l · M i n e
Servic e . Hig h f Or Fou n tain of
Yo uth was Ed ith J ac k son
w lfh a 208 -523 . Ru gh H a ll ha d
h ig h g am e 158 fo r N a t ion a l
M ine Se r vic e wh i le Ma r y An n
Sh arp had high ser i es 432 .

Pu nli ng
Yds No. Avg.
W illi a mson (M \ 62
2
Jl.O
Da ll y (W )
182
6
30 .. 3
Re c eivi ng
No . Yds TO
D avenport (M J
J
39
1
Magpolla CM l
1
5
0
Tow le r CW l
1
29
0
Thomas ( W l
6
53
1
KO RETURNS
Yds No. TO
M a g no t ta (M J
A4
2
0
Th om a s( M \
47
J
0
Mal o y (M l
JO
l
~ o
PUNT RETURNS
Yds No. TO
Magnolia (M l
74
5
0
J . Howar &lt;' { M J
0
1
0
SCORING

TO EP TP

Qua'll s
1
2
8
Bl ake
0
6
Bu fl ingt o n
1
8
Mag no lia
a
6
Da ve npo r t
0
6
Weber
0
3
3
SCORE BY QUARTERS
M eigs
21 16 o 0- 37
Wa verly
0 0 7 0- 7

Friday's high scores

12

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - The
Cincinnati Reds announced
Saturday they will be gin
accepting
mail
orders
postmarked no earlier than
Tuesday for $8 Loge re serve
seat tickets to possible 1975
World Series games at
Riverfront Stadium .
Reds' officials said persons
may order up to four seats for
one game and should specify
whether they want tickets for
the game Tuesday , Oct. 14;
Wednesday, Oct. 15 ; Thursday, Oct. 16; or if they will
accept tickets for any one of
the games. Game time each
night is 8:30p.m . EDT.
There is a $1 handling
cbarge per order and fans
were requested to enclose a
large self-addressed and
stamped return envelope ..
There is a liniit of one order
per person and any orders
postmarked prior to Tuesday,
Sept. 30, will be retllrned.
Fans ordering World Series
tickets by mail should make
checks payable to " Cincinnati Reds, Agent; order
only a maximum of four $8
lickets for one game; add $1
handling carge for each order·
and mail lhe requests to
Cincinnati Reds, Ag~nt, Post
Office Box 110200, Cincinnati ,
Ohio, 45201.
An over-the-counter sale of
$8 tickets will be held at a
later date.
Officials said there are
about 27,000 $8 tickets ( 9,000
per game ) available.

YG TCB Avg
31
\D
3. 1
-10
14
-0.7
18
4
.4 .5
35
5
7.0
5
1
5.0

3.

G r ov e po r t 14 Col W est l and 0
Mt . Ver non 7 De la w a r e 0
N ewark 17 L an c as t er 7
Dublin 22 Ma r ysv ill e 6
Ham i li on Twp . 3.4 Grandview
6
Co l F r a n kl in H eig h t s 14 w
J eff er son 0
L ogan Elm 40 F airf ield Un io n
6
Co t R ead y ?6 Bex ley 0
Jo na t h o n A l der 0 .Sou t h
ea stern 0 ( t i e )
Circ l e Yif le 33 Mad i son P la ins
0
Cin Prin ceton JO Lima Sr J
St Marys 18 L i ma Ba l h 14
R l v e r 6 New Martin sv ille ( W .
va . 1 o
Park er sb urg ( W . Va .l J
Ma r ie tt a 0
Bel p r e 24 Pa r kersb u r g ( W
Va . 1 Ca t h 20
On tar io 0 Cl ear F or k 0 ( tie l
L ex ing ton 22 Cr esl ti n e 6
F r ed eri c k t own 21 Pty mo ufh 8
U pper
A r l i ng to n
61
Chillicot he 14
(in A ik en 14 Ci n W alnut H ilts

BUDDY DUGAN (31 ) sophomore lailback for Meigs,
carries ball in this a.ction photo of the Meigs-Waverly

Rush i ng
S . Tho m "s
Th o mp so n
Silcotl
Maloy
R . Thomas

Mass i llon 3 Nil es 0
N Canton H o ov e r 8 Cle So ut h
6

L o u is v ille n M a rlin g ton 6
No r fh west 44 M in er v a 37
Eas t Canto n 1-1 T u s law 9
Ak r on Nor t h 28 Akron So uth 8
Barbe r ton 6 Wa l sh J esu i t 0
C uya hoga F a ll s 43 A kron
Ho ban 0
Fremont R oss 44 L orain
Adm ir a I K ing 7
Uppe r Sandusky 21 W i llard 7
N o r wa l k 26 B ucyru s 13
B e ll ev u ew 20· T if fin 14
B l a c k R lver 1.4 War r e n
Wester n R es 6

M onroev ille 13 Sou th Cenfral

0

Fl ndllly 24 Sand us k y 6
L orain Clea r vie w 6 Ve rmili on

0

E l yria 20 Ma r l on H ard ing 14
M a r t in s Fer r y 28 W hee li ng
CW V a . ) 6
Oa -;t o n Ca rroll 28 O a yt o,1
Jeffe r son 6
Frank l i n
14 M i d d l eto wn
F e nw i ck \3
Day to n Ro l h 22 Dayton K i ser
0
X e n ia 9 Ke t te r ing F a i rmont
E 6
Valle-; Vie w 15 N o rlhr l dge 6
T r oy I J W ayne 10
Doyer 15 Cos n oc ton 6
R i v e r View 20 N ew Concor d
Gl enn 8
Zan esvi ll e 26 G rov e City 6
Lakewo od 27 Be r e a 12
Eucli d l4 Bedford 14 ( tiel
Will o ug h by . s 14 Map le
Height s 0
F ai r por t 10 Kir tland 6
West M us k ln g u m 18 Philo 14
Maysvi ll e 14 Cl"ook sv llle 0
Morgan 21 Sh er i dan 12
N ew Lexing to n 55 Tr i -Valley
0
Shenandoah 6 woodsf i el d 0
Cald w e ll 12 M ea dowbrook 0
Barnesy i lle 14 Sr i ~g e po r t 10
Li c k i n g Va ll ey 21 Northridge

0
War r en

Ha r d ing
20
0
Ber e a M i dpar k 12 Parma 7
Tinor a 20 a l rvie w 7
A l"c hbold 30 Libe rty Cen t er
13
N orth Ba lt imo re 34 Hilltop 0
N ap o l e on 36 Sprin g f ie ld 14
Co l Lin den -M e K In ley 20 Col
Brookh a v en 0
Wor t h ing ton 23 R ey n ol dsburg
0
Gaha n na 28 Wh i le hall 14
T ea y s V al l ey 16 O l en t angy 0
Am a n da -Ciea r c reek
27
L i be r t y Un ion 0
Ca n al Winches t er 56 Be r ne
U n i on 0
Ca r roll 20 M i l l ers p or t 12
Plcke r i ngl on 22 Lan cas t er
Fi s.he r 6
Hea th 18 Watkins M em-Or i al
S l ~! ube n vi ll e

14

L i c k in g H eig h ts 26 Jo hnslown
14

Col Watte r son 1.4 Col W h et .
sto n e 0
Col Wa ln ut R idge 33 Col
Har tley 21
Col D eSal e's IJ Weste rv ill e
N orlh 7
Col A c a d emy .40 C in Counfry
D a y 14
L ondon
13
Spr i ngf i e l d
Shawnee 8
Wi lm in g ton 12 Gr ee nf i eld 7
R i ver V all e y 26 C o lonel
Craw ford 13
Moh a w k 20 R idgedale 0
Tol Woo dward 13 T o l Ce ntral
6
Tol Sl John 15 To l Li bbey 14
Tol DeVil b iss 12 Tal Start 7
To I Whit m e r 14 Or eg o n Cl ay 7
Tec u mse h 55 Huron 6
A l ex ander 24 M i lle r 7
Tr imble 34 Vi n to n County 8

Bucks on Otannel 5
Four
Ohio State Uni ver sity horut=
football games will .be seen
exclusi vely on Cable Chan nel
F ive.
·
P lay -by-play
will
be
provided by .Jay Wagne r ,
past pr eside nt of the Ohio
Spor tscasters
Assoc iation .
Color man will be former
Ohio State qu arterbac k Rex
Ker n , who al so played
professional football with the
Buff al o Bi lls a nd the
Balt im or e
Coils.
Th e

remainin g games which will
h-.! oo en on Channel Five
inc lude : Iowa , Wisconsin ,
Indiana and Minnesota .
The OS U-North Carolina
game wiii be seen Monday
night beg innin g at 5 p.m . and
repeated Wednesday at 7 ·
p .m . All subsequent games
will be playe d on a similar
delayed basis. The games can
only be seen on Channel 5.

REDME N TRIUMPH
RIO GRANDE - Host Rio
defea ted Cedarville Satur day
in a fi ve-mile cross coun try
meet. Ber nard Tiiley, the
Redmen's veteran rUnner ,
took individua l honors wilh a
time of 27.42. Second place
wen t to Rio's Greg Baldv.'in.
Billy Canfield fi nished third .
It was Rio Grande's firs t
meet of the yea r .

edge Twins

PT. PLE ASANT -

THOMPSON SNAGGED FOR LOSS - Waverly quarterba ck Chuck Thompson ' 16,
dark jersey ) wound up with a minus 10 in 14 trips rushing a gainst Meigs' defensive umt
Friday night. Making the stop on this play is George Gum ( 10 ) a nd an umde nto fted
Marauder.

Colts -counting on
'front four' today
BALTIMORE IUPI ) Ke nn y Stabler and th e
Oakland Raiders ' awesome
passing a ttack were expected
to prove a severe tes t for the
suspec t Baltimore defensive
secondary Sunday, but the
Colts were pinning their
. hopes on their front four .
" He ' s v ulnerable to a
s tron g rush by the front four
and we have the besl in the
leag ue," said defe nsive back
Ray Ol&lt;jham , ana~·zin g the

Raid ers ' all-pro quar terback .
" Los An geles put a strong
r ush on him in an exhibiti on
and he coughed up th e ball
three tiw.es, throwing ri ght
into the Rams ' de fensive
coverage·;" Oldham said.
"We saw it in the films
when the Raider s' played
Miami this week," added
lin ebF ker St an Whi te .
" That 's the answer , don't
g ive him time to throw ."
The four men ass i ~ ne d th e

task of breaking th roug h the
Oa kl and offensive line and
terrorizing the 6-3. 215-pound
Sta bler were Mike Barnes,
Joe Erhmaoin , J ohn Dutton
and Fred Cook.
Barnes and Erhmann were
rookies two years ago wh ~n
Stabler dissected the Colt
defe nse, completing a record
25 out of 29 passes in a 34-21
win. Cook an d Dutton were
s till in coll ege at tha t time .
Erhmann will play Sunday

though his effectiveness may
be hampered by a tender
ri ght an kle .
'· Defensive bac ks can
cove r good receivers only solong," sa id Wh ite . " You
simply can't give Stabler a lot
of time to throw. "
took
iss ue,
Oldh a m
howev er , with the Colt
secondary 's re putation for
weakness . He said if the fro nt
four could shake Stabler and
force him to throw early, the
defensi ve backs would finish
the job.
"We keep re ading that our
secondary is . garbage ,." he
said "We're not garbage and
we 've gal to prove it. ''

\Vhi.te Sox
BLOOMINGTON,
Minn .
UPI I Beli eve r Rich
Gossage hurled two-hit ball
over the last fi ve innings and
Brian Downing scored the
game's only run on Jerry
Ha irston's sac rifice fly in the
eigh th inning as the Chicago
Whi t e Sox shut out the
Minn eso ta
Twin s ,
1-0,
Saturda y.
Downing led off the inning
with a s ingl e off Bert
Blyleven, 15-10. He advanced
to third on a walk and a fly
out and scored on Hairston 's
game-breaker.
Gossage , 19-8, relieved
starter Claude Osteen with
nobody out and two on in the
fifth after Dave McKay and
Lyman Bostock singled. He
yielded a s ingle to pinchhitter
Tony Oliva in the eighth and a
two-out double to Bostock in
the ninth .
The game had a 10:30 CDT
s tart so as not to conflict with ·
th_e neighboring MinnesotaOre go n Co llege football
gam e.
I

·(

.I

\

Wa verly was mi nus yardage
fr om sn imma ge a s th e
Me igs· defense proved im pene tra ble.
Throug h the a irways,
Wa verly'!:i Th ompson comple ted} of 17 fo r 82 yard• a nd
one score. All but one or
Th omp so n's toss es wa s
caiJ!i ht by tail bac k Thomas
swi ngin15 nul of the back fi eld .
Meigs· Anderson comple ted 4
of 5 for 44 yards and a score
and Gwn 's only pass h:ll
incorn plc te .
In vic tory . the Marauders
upped their season record to 3
wins and only one loss. that
Coming al the hands or Point
Pleasant in the rain on the
fi"rst g ame of the year .
Wa verly 's record dips to J.

0

says he's
unperturbed

,'
,.
.,

Colors: Snow White~._Pastel Green, Pastel Brqwn
and YJarcoal Black.

R·ll HEAT VALUE
3'12"xl5" 70 SQ. FT.

Pe n a llies marr ed 1he
sec ond hal f of play as neither
learn cslnblis hed niUch of a
~ame plan . After trad ing
ptUl ts . Wa verly. be.hind the
runn ing and p ass in ~:: of
Thom pson; moved from its
own 39 to the onl y score uf the
second half when Thomp son
roWld Thoma s with ::~n eight
yard a r ie l
with
2:0 1
remaini ng in t he thi rd
quar ter . Daile v kicked the
PAT, and for all purposes.
that was the '" old ba ll game .'"
Statistica lly. Meigs won by
a narr ow ma rgin . counting
th e game as a whole. Qualls
led all run ners with 80 yards
in 8 carr ies and Buffi ng ton
addin g 49 ·yards in 5. Twelve
runners c e~rr i ed the ball for
Meigs as se vera l und ercla ssmen gained playin g time in
the second half.
Steve Thomas gained 31
yar ds in 10 tr ies for the
Ti gers . and ful lback Maloy
picked up 35 yards in five
a tt e mp ts. Total r us hi ng
yard s had Meigs ahea d 154 to
Wave rl y's 79. In the fir s! hall

WAVERLY

~T A T I S TI C S

D e pt .
M
W
F Ir s I D o wn s
7
8
B y rush ing
5
4
B y p a ssi ng
7
J
P l a y s lr orn sc r im m
· o~ o
51
Tot . n et y ards
198 16 1
Net y d s. ru sh .
154
79
Net yds. p ass .
AA
82
P asses (cm p all )
A 6 7 17
Punts (no . yds )
2 62 6 182
(a v er age 1
3 1 JQ_J
F u mb l es
4
4
N umber los t
3
1
P enalties
'32511115
IND. STA T IS TIC S
ME I GS
R us h i n g
YG T C B Avg
aua tt s
110
8
10.0
Bu ff i ngton
49
5
9.8
Mag n ott a
14
4
l .5
Gum
4
J
1. J
An d erson
7
2
) s
Seth
0
I
0.0
R Coa t s
7
2
J .S
T . Coats
3
1
J_O
D ug an
5
I
5.0
R andol ph
J
3
l.O
M ars h al l
0
1
0 .0
S te w a r t
6
'}
30
PASS IN G

8

~ Ali

SEAL-0 MATIC
SHINGLES

SEOAL ONLY
Team
W. L . T
P. OP
Meig s
1 o o 37
7
J a ck so n
1 o a 41 26
A th e n s
1 0 0 20 14
Iron t on
1 0 0 12
6
Wells t on
0 1 o
6 12
Gall i polis
o 1 0 14 20
L og a n
0 1 0 26 41
Waverl y
o 1 0
7 37
TOTALS
4 5 0 163 163
Friday 's results:
Meig s 37 wa v er ly 7
At hen s 20 Gallip olis 14
Jackson 41 Log an 26
Ironton 12 W e ll ston 6
Oct . 3 games:
Gal lipo l is at Iron to n
Logan af Wav erly
M ei g s at Athen s
Well sto n at Ja c k so n
Oak H ill at Sout h Point
Coa l Gr ov e al F airland
Boyd Co un ty a t Ro c k H i ll

A 15-yant pe na lty on
Waverly moved the ball to the
Tiger 25. The Mara uders
mo ve d lo the 14 where
Mag notla carried on four
s trai ght running plays. end:
ing o n a 2 yard holt for six
poin ts. Qua il s ad de d t he
convers ion on a run and
Me igs led 29-0 with 8: 55 left in
the sec ond period .
Wave rl y got the ball oul to
the ir own 45 where the Meigs
de fe n se fo rced a p unt.
Mag notta added a nother fi ne
re turn of 30 yards , behi nd
excelle nt blocki ng out to (he
midfiel d stripe .
The Ma ra uders moved to a
first down inside the Tiger 40
where qua rterbac k J tm
Anders on fired a 27 yard
s trike to end Mick Davenpor &lt;
for fir st down on the Tiger 10.
Two plays la ter . Anderson
aga in fo un d Davenport alone
fo r a 5 yard scorin g pass .
Buffin gton tacked on the final
Me igs poi nts by running over
the PAT, giving Me igs a 37-Q
lead they carried to the
locker r oom at ha lf.

Meigs- Waverly st Jtistics

Co l W es t 14 Col So uth 0
Co t M i ff l in I J Col N o rt h o
Co l N orth l and 6 Co t East o
W es t e n •i ll e So u t h 20 H i l liar-d

.

ROOFING SHINGLES

50

ca tc h on. the Marauder 32.
Meigs rolled to one fi rs t down
on an 11-yard burs t by Qual ls .
but Wa v erly 's~ fe nse stiffened. Bob Williamson's pun !
r olled out of boun ds on the
Tiger 28.
Afte r ho ld ing Wave rl y
again , Magnotla gathered in
Dailey's punt and re turned 14
yards to the Wave rl y 40. On
the ne:d play , sophomore
Buffington slashed over left
Iacki e for 3li yard s to the
Ti ger 5. lluffing ton followed
by going ove r left Iackie
again the final 5 yards and
anoth er first period Meigs
score. Weber conver ted .for a
21-0 lea d,
wit h
1:34
rema ining.
Wave rl y 's fin e senio r
ta ilbac k Steve Thom as
returned the ensuing kickoff
20 yards to the Tigers' own 40.
Una ble to move the ball ,
Da iley's short kic k was
hauled in by Mag notla and
the speedy co-captain zi gged
and zag ged his way 26 vards
to the Waverly 42 as the
quarter ended .

Lancers, 22-6

..

&gt;

12"xl6' LENGTHS

sprinted
th e
Wa ver ly
secondary on a 58 yard touchdown gallop.
Duane Weber 's . kick splil
the upri ghts a nd Me igs
jumped to 7-0 lead with 8: 10
remainin g in th e fir s t
quarter .
Wa ve rl y's so ph om or e
fUllba ck Dan Maloy re turned
Weber's ki ckoff 15 yard s, out
to the Waverl y 37. Two plays
later the Ti ge r s' bi g
qu a rterbac k
s ophomor e
Chuck Thompson was ridden
down behind the line and
fumbl ed . Maraud e r de fenseman
J ohn
Blake
scooped up the ball on the
Waverly 37 and lumbered in to
paydirt a ccomp a nied by
several jubilant teammates
protecting bini from would-be
tacklers .
Weber 's PAT kic k was good
and Meigs enjoyed a qui ck 140 with s lill 8: 10 left in the
initial stanza'
Again, the Tigers were
unable to mount a threat and
were forced to punt, with
Magnotta calling for a fa ir

Eagles trip

DAVID J. GOODWIN

•

THISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
( UPI) - Billy Wilson rode
Whack Away to victory here
Friday in the featured ninth
race at Thistledown.
The winner covered six
furlongs in 1:13 and 1-5 and
paid $7, $3 and $2.20.
Second was Chuckler and
third was Ral Beaut.
In the daily double, Fabs
Hammer (9) and High Return
(S) combined for a payoff of
$70.20. Friday's attendance
was 3, 746 a 1 d, the y bet
$411 ,951.
.

..,.

To my many friends,
personal and commercial,
whom I have had the
opportwrity to serve in the
past thirty years, I take this
way to say thanks to one
and all.

including a game-winning 76--yard 11sneak n with nine
minutes rema ining in the contest . Chasing the Bulldog ace
down th e sidelines are Dick Burdette , Bruce Scarberry.
Jim Simms a nd Kent Sha wver. Athens won, 20-14 .

~

By John Reece
POMEROY - The Meigs
Marauders, striking with the
speed of lightning , sped past
the Waverly Ti gers 37-7
Friday night on the Marauder
field
in eac h
team 's
Southeastern Ohio · Athletic
League opener .
t&gt;Ominating the ac tion of
the firs t half, Coach Charlie
Chancey 's startin g eleven
raced to a 37-{) halftime score
behind the running of tailback Terry Qualls, fUllback
Dan Buffington , and wingback Mike Magnotta . The
second half saw Meigs '
second and third units play
the Tigers ' first team to a
near-even slandstill.
Waverly received the
opening kickoff , but was
unable to move the ball , and
Mark Dailey punted 34 yards
to deepman Magnotla who
returned 4 to the Meigs 40 . On
the second play , Qualls took
the handoff from No . 2
quarterback George Gum,
shot through a gaping hole
over right guard, and tl)en out

..

Grid standings

14

L.

8: 30-10 p .m . Coli . Sw•m
8: 30-10 p .m . Coil. Swim
8: 30-10 p .m . Coil . Sw!m
7-8: 30 p .m . Open Sw1m
8: 30 -10 p .m . Co li. Swim
. 7-8: 30 p .m . OP,en Sw i m
• -CLOSED

NOTICE!

GAHS-Athens statistics

Player

7-9 p.m . College Sw ~ n,
7·8: 30 p .m . Open Sw! m

be c lased on Saturda y ,
Oc tober 4 fo r P ar e nt s Weeke nd activi t ies .

~

••

k
ac s0 n

Sept . ?9- 7-B: 30 p .m . Open Rec .
8: JQ. 10 p.m . Co ll 09e Rec .
Se pt. JQ-8 : 30-10 p .m . Co ll ege Rec.
Oc l. 1- 8: 30-10 p.m . Coll ege Rec .
Oc t. ?-· 7-8: JO p.m . Ope n Re c.
8: 30· 10 p .m . Co ll ege Rec .
Oct. 3- 7·8: 30 p.m . Ope n Re c.
Oc t 4- &gt;·CLOSED
·x- L yne Cente r g ym. a n d pool wil l

WE I.I.STON - Iron ton
recovered a We llston fun1ble
on the Tiger 3-yard line in the
final seconds of play, th en
held th e ball until time ran
out to edge hos &lt; Wells ton 12-6
here Friday.
It was Iro nt on's 26 th
s traight SEOA L win in four
year s .
Jeff Krie bel put IHS on top
with a 4-yard r un in the first.
Tony Gray tied it up with a 9yarder in the fir st.
QB Mik e Br own plowed

Marauders roll over Tigers, 37-7

2-Ap .m . Open Swi m

--·

'I

. '

�'

.
I

...
•

26 - The Sunday T1mes - Senti nel, Sunday , Sept 28, 1975

Co_u nty agent's corner
POMEROY - Don 't take a chance on s il o gases bnn gmg
tragedy to your home.
During the silo hllmg pe n od, brown, ye llow a nd ora nge
gases may be seen on top of the silage or sp1lhng down the
chute. These gases are formed by bactenal a ctiOns tha t take
place during early silage fermentatiOn , says W C. Stuckey .
Extension Leade r , safety, The OhiO State Uruvers1ty.
Under certain conditions, dea dly gases f01·m that ca n
seriously mjure or k1ll hwnans and hvestock. One of the most
common Is rutrogen dioxid e. When mtrogen ox1de gases arc
mh a led, severe damage to lungs ma y occur . E: ven bnef ex.
posures ca n cause death or permanent lil JUI y, St4ckey sa ys
All but one of the gases are brown, ; ellow or oran ge m
color . They have an odor similar to hypochlonte used m bleach
and da ir y disinfecta nts. Smce they a re heav1e r than mr, they
flow down ward a nd settle m low areas m and a round the Silo
Wheri a person ts exposed , a b w·mng sensa tion JS felt m l he

nose and th roat. Severe exposure w1llresult in chokmg
Al though these gases a r c formed durmg the f1rst 48 hours ,
they may remam a senous problem to man and lives tock for 10
to 14 days,lf areas a re not well ven tliated
To protect your self agamst gases when fl llmg slios, keep
doors open as near the leve l of crop fi JI as poss ible . If doors a rc

By John E. RICe
Extension Age nt , A!,'l"lculture

::::::;::::-::::::::::':&gt;:::::::::::::,:_::: ::::::: ' ?:::::::::::,://:::::::,:::

;ij!!ii

closed a bove th e level of sila ge, gases ca n accwnulate m th1s
po cket. Venl!late the silo, s1lo chute, and surroundings by
run nmg the bl owe r for 10 lo 15 mmutes before entenng the s ilo
or chute durin g the filling pen od a nd the first two weeks after
f1 lhn g Comple lely vent il ate the silo area durmg the two-week
pen od by openmg roof doors, wmdows a nd doors or sila ge
room, and top of the ch ute , where poss1ble. Smce gases ha re
heavier than a 1r, th ey accwn ulate a t the base of the s1lo a nd m
surroundmg areas. Keep children and livestock a way from
these areas
After the two-week perwd, if a blower is not ava ila ble,
ca utwusly chmb up the chute to the lop door . Detec t presence
of gases by s1ght and smell before entermg the silo If s1Io 1s
dark , ta ke a fl ashlight with you . Leave the area unmedmt ely 1f
brown, yellow a nd ora nge gases a re seen or 1f burmng a nd
chokmg ar e felt in the nose a nd throa t.
('" " II your doctor un m edia lely 1f acc identally exposed to
the gases Do nQl be deceived by an a pparent recovery shortl y
after expos ure
Umvcr sa l gas masks are not recommended. These are of
no value where there IS a lac k of oxy gen due to displacement
by gases TI1e only protective dev1ce 1s a self-conta med one
where the oxy gen tank IS a pa rt of the ~ ear .

•

Your Wayne National Forest:li-r~
By T: Allan Wolter
District Ran ger
IR ONTON - Last Tuesday at
lJ .55 a. m . I EST ) th e sun passed
over the equator on its celesti al
JOUrn ey southwa rd . Alth ough
un ac c omp a m ed by a ny e ve nt
nol!cea ble to us ear thlings, we have
la beled it th e aut umna l eqUinox the beg inmng of a utumn.
Ove r many millions of years, th e
bwlog ical processes in plan ts and
animals have been synchronized
w1th the equinoxes Subtle changes
m da y le ngth a nd te mperatures have
caressed the delicate cherrus try of
na tur e , triggering a whole ne w
se n es of achvil!es.
.
The red and yellow pg1ment of

hapless shrub or bush where velvet
will be shredded from underlying
weaponry.
Unknown to the deer, a hormone
has sent an invis ible message to th e
hai r cells _ "come on, fellow s, Jet 's
ge t cracking onawinter coat.forthis
fellow or he 'll freeze before the fir st
snowflakes hits the ground . No, not
while dummies, gray! I'm s tarting
another gr oup on while for th e
wease l and snowshoe rabbit
tomorrow . Yes , I know thi s 1s
overtime work, but there 's no tim e
an d a ha lf. Qwl gnping and ge l to
work "
As- a hedge against wmter
s tarvatiOn the beaver oegms S&lt;OC Kpiling hi s food by imbeddmg short

weight will blanket each acre of the
forest .floor providing protecti on to
the soil from the winter r ains,
s he lter for all manner of insec ts and
small animal s, nourishment for
future years growth , and perhaps
fuel for a hungry fire .
Na t ure 's children , ha v in ~; ·:-:-:-: "
survived the first tests of life mdultht' ,': ,:::,-_',:':. :.:,_-' ):
wild are well on the way to a
hood . Carbon copies of their parents ,
the y too hear the m ysterious beat of
'
a d1fferent drwnmer
Nut s and fruits of all colors,
shapes and sizes - acorns, grapes,
"
apples , paw paws, persimmons and
"
pine cones- will ripen and drop hke
r a m . Th e thunderc loud that
spawned such a cornucopia came --:-:-

dommeermg chlorophyl of sprmg
and swnmer faded a way .
lnstmc l!ve ly , the sqUirrel beg ins
to hoard part of thi s ye ar 's bumper
crop of nut s. An mborn restlessness
takes over the or derhness of sumproposed rates will be
mer a cllVIlies as migra tory birds
gather for the ir annua l fli ght.
s ide r ed 1f submitted 10
wr1 tmg by Oc tober 6, 1975 to --.·
A terrible 1lchmg begms m the
the Du·ector , Tobacco a nd :-: ve lve t ed a nt) e r s of the dee r
Pea nu t DI VISIO n, Ag ri cultur a l _:: signah ng the des lruc twn of some
St a bili za ti on
and
Con- :·..,.

storm s and 1ce as he sits cozily
mun ching a spen bark from the
storehouse outside his lodge.
Tr ees
th e gr ea t a ir conditioners and oxygen producer s
of summer, will soon stand naked
a gamst the wmter sky revealin g the
bare hills and hollows their canopy
of green hid from our summer eyes .
A microscopic layer of cells w1ll
die, severmg each leaf from the
moth erm g twig . Their 7 tons of

Man 's ac tivities also change.
Perhaps it is a realization that the
days are growing shorter, or the
sight of ripemng corn, a bright
orange pumpkin , or possibly a slight
nip in the morning air that sets the
scene for a new mood and tempo
a cross the land .

:··· :

;:-:·_:·
:._(

:-:-· -:
::· :-:·

(USDA , The rates 1 ange
fr om $0 71 to $t o:t per po und
and refl ec t an ave ra ge
suppor t of 9fi 1 cents per
pound - tOJ cenls per pound
ubov e th e 1974 leve L

SAVE $377
riiiilWHEEL HORSE
~lawn &amp; garden tractor

Powerful B H P Ranqer
features ELECTRJ( ' sto; 1
comes complete w1\h

32-mch mo wer
1975
mod el year dosecut
Also Used
Riding
Mowers

se r v al10n Se r vice, U. S.
Depar tment of Agri cul ture,
Wa shington, D C. 20250. Th e
comments will be a vaila ble
for public inspection m the
Offi ce of the Direc tor , Room
6939 , Agn c ullu re Departme nt 's South Buildin g,
dunn g r eg ul ar bus iness
hours, 8: 15 a rn . to 4:45 p.m .

REGULARLY $1076.

SALE
$699
M O DEL NO. A.·80 £

-__...
...

Small Payment will hold til Ma y 1976 at '7 5
prices. Use our Lay-Away Plan Now!
QUANTLTIES LIMITED. OfFER GOOD ONLY AS SUPPLY LASTS

LlffiE'S TRADING CENTER

St. Rt. 554

As ill the past , no loans \ 0,. Ill
be a vaila ble on any tobacco
graded No.{; t no gra de ), U
1 unso und ) ,
W ! do ubtf ul
keepm g orde1J. or scrap
Mar ketmgs of the se gr ades.
however , w11l be charged
aga inst the quotas for ll1e
far ms upon wh1ch th ey were
produced .
T he
c o op e r at i ve
a ss oc tat10n t hrou gh wht ch
a dvan ces are ma de available
is authorized to deduct one
cent per pound to appl y
agams t overhead costs.
Comme nts regardin g th e

Cheshire. 0 .

Ph . 367-7329

·AUTOMATIC OILING
LIGHTWEIGHT

Soil surveys ·on
Ohio land ready
COLUMBUS
" Soil
surveys , prepared by the
Na tional Coo perative Soil
Survey , are now complete for
over 45 percent of Ohio's land
ar ea ," says Rober t E
Quilli a m ,
sta te
con serv atioms l for the U. S. Soil
Conservation Service I SCS)
m Ohio. ' 'The s urveys are
already published or are soon
to be published for 40 counties," he sa1d .
In his report on progress of
soil surveys in Ohio, Quilham
noted that an other 22 percent
of the slate is curre ntly bemg
mapped and readi e d for
publication . Many individual
farms and developing areas
are being mapped in the
remammg parts of the state,
mcluding Meigs Couinty.
Mappmg soil in d e tail
reqUires walking each acre
and classifying the smls.
" With 26 million acres to map
in Ohio it could take another
10 or more years to complete
the National Cooperative Soil
Survey Program m our
s late," Quilliam estimates .
A soil s urvey map shows
where each kmd of sml occurs
on the lands ca pe . " To
prepare such a map IS an
accomplishment in modern
technology," Quilliam said.
Each soil ha s a combinatiOn
of properties alii Is own. Each
soil is named and placed into
the natwnal system of so1l
classification set up by the
NatiOn a l Cooperative So1l
Sur ve y. This syst em 1s
s imilar to the botanical
na~ng of trees .
A botamst, for example ,
includes a ll maple trees mlo
the "acer " group. By the
same process, a s01l scientist
includes all dark colored,
very poorly drained soils that
have
cer t am
clayey
charactenstics into th e
Arg1aguoll group.
Quilliam noted that the use
of such unusual sounding

words as "arg1aquolls" is
part of a new language used
by mod ern s c1en lls ts t o
a nd
cla ss ify
a rr a nge
scientific knowledge about
soils The "a rgi" part of this
word denotes clayey ; ''aqu,"
wetness; and " oils," comes
from m olhs, meanin g soft
and dark. This and much
other mforrnatio n is being
asse mbled in the surveys .
They also include easy to
unders tand mtrepr~ Iatwn s of
soils, wh1ch can be used by
farm ers and other s who can
better under stand what the ir
land is capable of bemg used
for .
Copi es of soil sur vey
reports are available at the
local SCS office , the county
soil and water conservation
dis trict, or th e Cooperativ e
Exte nsion Servi ce Office .
Reports for counties having a
publis hed USDA report can
be obt a in e d by written
requests to the congressman
representing those counties.
Also, progress reports can be
obtamed for many counties
from the Ohfo Deparimen t of
N atural
Res o urces,
Columbus, Oh1o.
The Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District is c o·
loca led with the Pomeroy
field office of the Soil Conservallon Service. Write P. 0 .
Box 432, 221 W. Second St.,
Pomeroy, Oh10 or phone 9923628 regarding soils informahon in Me1gs County.

BUYS AYRSHIRE
J eff
GALLIPOLIS
Mc Ke nzie , Gallipolis,
recently made an initial
purchase of a registered
Ayrsh1re female from Tom B.
Fenton &amp; Sons, Wmchester,
Ohio, a ccording to the Ayr-

shire Breeders'

FOR THE PRO AND THE MAN
WHO WANTS TO CUT LIKE ONE.

... are more than money!

~.

'"

&gt;J

"l!c-

''

I

POMEROY
·. lANDMARK
5er•l'lt Meigs, co.nie end
Mason Countifl.
' ' Jeck W. Carsey, Mgr.

PH. 991-2111

Storeo;.nw
Mon.- s.t.
,
'I

I '

Federal Land Bank Loans are long-term and
are avai lable at a reasonable rate with repayment schedules tatlored to your farm in"
come flow; includtng prepayment privileges
w1thout penalty- all advantage s to the
member-borrower.
228 Upper River Road
P . O. Box 207, Gallipolis
Phone 446-0203

'

Clyde B. Walker. Mgr.

~~~:::.:r~v~:~:~du:'eutw~:_buried ::_::_\!\.;

if::::..: ~

It 's great to be alive, to be able to
enjoy, to wonder at the splendor and
abundance all around us.

•

Bidwell Feed Mill is

bought by Co-op group
BIDWELL
Luther
Ferguson, president of the
Southeastern OhiO Farmers
Co-op, announced Saturday
the organization has purchased the Bidwell F eed Mill
and future operations will be
conducted from that facility .
Ferguson sa1d the co-op no
longer operates from the rear
of a t ruck hke it had to do
while organizing during the
past year . The president said
feed and fertilizer is now in
stock and the co-op is taking
orders for fall seeding . The
new facility's phone nwnber
is 388-8700.
The organization meets the

first Tuesday of each month
at the Production Credit
Assoc-iation Building,
beginning at 8 p.m . All area
farmers are mviled to jom
the co-op.
New co-op officers are:
Luther Ferguson, president ;
Bob Swann, vice pres1dent;
David Vaughn , secretary;
John Haber, treasurer.
Board members are Bill
Reynolds, Dallas Thacker, J.
Holhs Wood, Homer Hill,
Darrell Young , Robert Green
and Fred Taylor.

..·.. \(

~

Reedsville
News lliOfeS

'Generation Rap
Sut~

I

[J

I I

I

I I

I

a barn and barnlot from
being wet as it now is. The
diversion will - intercept
surface water coming off a
nearby hill and carry it to an •
outlet thus preventing water
from collecting around the
barn.
Okey R. King of SCS made
detailed engineering plans
for this ditch.

tJ

D[I11J

I

A

Big capacity plus fine,
uniform chopping

F · F FA C~l

'
For Sales

For Sale

For Sale
191 5 F IREBIRO F or m ul a .tOO
A .C.. 1111 wheel , fac rorv
I ape, mags and ga u g es L ow
mileage Phon e 1• 1 S9oi 3
9 1A At e
TWO 1 178 • I• Good yea r Steel
be lted snow ll res Contact
Al qe rt H il t a t 949 ·'2 '261 .
9 16 6tc

U SED

CHAIN

sawa , ne

Locus t St .. M iddlepor t.
Pnono 992 3092 .
9 - 18 26tc

O NE SMITH and Wesson 44
Maonum . •color blue, 4 Inch
barrel , br.-nd new, still In
box . Call 992 3889

9 21 -llc

--------------

2000 . STEREO -RAOIO . AM -FM . I
tra c k tape comb i nat i on
Balance S101 29 or terms .
9·22 6t c
Call 992 3965
9 21 tfc
1954 F ER G U SON trac tor w lt h
acc essor 1es Phon e 84 3 2561
• WHEEL DRIVE Ford 7x9
9 24 ·6t c
flat dump truck , Harold
Brewer . Long Bottom . Ohio .
1971 KAWASA KI 500 Ca ll 247
61« 985 355«
2813
9·21 tfc
9 2C 61p
CA TERPILL A R 0 6 bu ll dozer
197J F XJSO Har ley Da vid son .
hydraulic angle blade .
less than 1.000 m i les , saoo
heavy cab Good condit ion
Pho ne 992 2967 after S p .m
Harold
Brewer ,
Long
9 '24 4tc
Bottom , 6.1A 985 355A
9 21 tiC
COMPLETE Disp 20 hUd of
hor se s . Re!iJ I Siered and FUE L OIL Furnace complete
gra de , Show and pleasure
w i th p ipes and. reg isters.
Phon e ( 61A ) 388 0991 or 367
K enmore oas range end
7481
d ishwasher, 1911 Model T
9 2• 6tc
Ford truck Phone (614 ) 985
Al18
H &amp; N D A Y old or started
9-25 6tc
L eghorn pu llet s Bo t h floor
or c ag e grown available
19H YAMAHA J60 MX , eX·
Poultry
housint;;~
and
cellent cond ition, S800.Aiso ,
a u tom a t1o n
M o dern
a c hannel Helllcraller CB
Poullr y, J99 W
Main ,
rad i o , uo
James
L
Pom ero y , 99 1 2164
Chadwell , Rt 1, Rtedtv llle ,
9 28 lt c
Oh io 45772

SUNDAY,

650 FORAGE HARVESTER

ALj):Y OOP

lnternattonal® 650 IS available 1n recutterblower and dtrect-throw models . .
o 9 -kntfe cutterhead w1th tungsten~arb1de surfaced knives
o Rugged power tra1n completely designed to
handle today's btg-power tractors
o Reversible shear bar Extra heavy-duty
knuckles Bu!lt-tn knife sharpener Welded
steel main frame
o Corn Hopper attachment converts 650 tnto
stationary gnnder- blower
Come In and get all the facts on corn,
hay pickup and cutterbar units avail·
able on the 650.

We Have 650 &amp; 555 Models in Stock

Meigs Equipment Co.

9 -25 -Jic

PIONEER~
CHAIN SAWS

- -------------r

HOL STEIN c ow bred to Reg
Angu s bull. S200 Phone 992

2789

9 28 H e

G REEN bean s, pick. your own
Andrew Cross , Le tart Falls ,
Oh1 0 Phone 2A7 ·2852 .
9 28 M e
SA V E SAVE SAVE
Se ll 1ng out our stock of guns ,
bows and am m o All guns
w ill be sold At 10 percent
above
wholesa l e
pius
shipp1n g 870 Remlngtons .
Sl40 Sale will l.nt till all
guns are gone Ind ian Joe 's
Sports and CB ' s , 308 Page
St . M iddleport
9 28 lOic
F IREPLACE Wood
RNR
F u el can c ollect (3041 675
1820 after 6 p m
9 28 ltp
1974 SU ZU K I TS185 Lots of
ex tra s Extre tow m!lea!iJe
Pr 1ced to sell Phone 949
4551
9 28 Hp

ONE se t f ireplace ga s logs
L1k e new
Reasonably
pri ced Phone 992 2773
9-28 ·2tp

9 25 51 c
REMINGTON \1 ,000 auto ,
new 12 or 20 ga S172 .50 .
Fife 's, Middleport, Oh io
9 25 26tc
ITHACA Model J1 pump , new
12 or 20 oa . S129 95, Fife'•·
Middleport . Oh io .
9 25 -6tc

mp x radio , 8 tra ck stereo
Cal l qq 2 396 5
9 4 tfc

22
23
2S
27
28
30
31
33
35
36
37
39
41
42
44
47

Waterways
Ptptr measure
Soak
Holda btck
Stud+O
Jump
Masculine

SMAll ENGINES

498 Locust Street
Middleport, Ohio
Ph. 992-3092

9 25 31c
5 FT 3 PT HITCH . buSh hog ,
$225 00 Phone 985 3594 .
9- 19 -8\p
Ford or Ferguson tractor
$1'25 00 Phone US 359•
9·19 .8tp

SEPTEMBER 28. 197S

21 Objet!

WILKINSON

CLARINET , good condition ,
reasonable Phone 949 ·4114.

--------------- ------ ---------

17 College degrM
ltbbr l

service all saws
and precision grind
chain.
We

GUN S and Ammo . Our fall
stock
Is
now
nere .
Complet e l i ne of Rem
l ngton .
Win c hester ,
WHOLESALE shot shells ,
llh l ca , Savage StuO barrels
deer slugs , 22 long rUle , 22
in stock. for most brand shot
mao bear and Jennings
gun s, but 1n short supply
bows , 40 pet off list Fife ' s,
Get t h em wh i le they last
Middleport. Ohio
Money short , lay .a .wev
9 25 ·61c
your fall huntmg needs . New
Fall star• hours s tarting
TWO BLACK POODLES , 1
Sept 5. 10 a m 10 9 p m .,
male and 1 female AKC
Registered. conn trumpet ,
Monday -Sa t urday
VIllage
Gun Shoppe , '2 66 M i ll 5~ •
1 veer old, Like new Sear ' s
PI'! one 992 5177 , financing
Ted Williamson ' s 7VJ h .p
available
outboard motor , Sear's amp
9 ·3 ·26tc
for elec . gu itar , J hookups
Phone 1304 ) 882 .J205
- --- --- ~ --- - -9-25 6tc

-------------1N D AS H iJ Channel Ci tiZen ' s ---- - ---------Band transceiver , am tm 3 PT HITCH mower to fll

62 Church counc1l
129 Tallied
64 Semor (abbr ,l
131 Hawauen
65 Ex11t1
rootatock
1 Meeting roomt
132 City tn RuAtl
6 Wooden cont•lner 66 T1me gone by
67 Generate
133 Dawn goddtu
11 Make ready
69 Ktnd of shovel
134 Spanish for "river··
18 Man' s neme
71 EQutlltY
136 Twist
19 Shows affection
73 Stnve to
137 Th1n coating
for
eQual another
138 Part of ptav
20 Train of
74 Paradtsa
139 Oentalman
attendants
76
Discovers
!Navy abbr 1
21 Talks idly
79 Stgn of zodtac
140 Butn
23 Repet1tion
81 Latm for " God"
141 Southwestern
24 Theater 11gn
82 Numbers labbr I
lnd1an
!abbr .)
84 We1rd
142 Ireland
26 Wolfhound
85 Lawmakmg group 143 Fondle
27 Sun god
87 Break suddenly
144 More preCIPitOUI
29 Black b~rd
90 Drug takers
146 Omtment
30 Meadows
92 E11 1st
148 Communion
31 Encounter
93 Mass1ve
plate
32 Bnc k -carrying
95 Gastropod
149 Tell
device
mollusk
.. 150 Oomest1cates
33 Oepos1t
97
Brother
of
Jacob
151 Reg1ons
34 Above
98 Near
35 Fra1l
DOWN
99 Preh11 down
36 Run easily
101
European
fmch
38 Cylindncal
1 Perfect
103 N01se
40 Metal
fehc1ty
104 Part of ¥!Olin
41 Pretense
2
Change
105
Wh1te
poplar
42 Burrow1ng an1mal
3 Hold on property
108 Sea eagle
43 Temporary bed
4 Spen+sh plural
110 Earned
45 Substance
article
112
Cravats
46 Pnnter' s
5 Steamship labbr l
113 Ha111
measure
6 loose coat
114 Prepos1t10n
47 P1le
Decay•
7
115
House
for
48 Sleeveless cloak
8 1-tallt
ch1ckens
49 Heavenly bodies
9 Symbol for
117 Man's name
51 Hmdu garment
tellurtum
118
Entwme
52 Compass po+nt
10
Ancient Hebrew
119
Touch
53 Dtne
ascetiC
120 Bone
54 D1ving b1rds
11 Guard•
121 Send forth
55 Deem unsuitable
12 Note of scala
123 La1r
57 Dutch town
13 Greenland
124 War god
S8 Former Ruu.1an
settlement
125
Young
salmon
rulers
14 Helm'lman
126 Greek letter
60 Unit of Ita han
15 Charm
127 Ate to lose
currency (pl. I
16 Hurry
we1ght
61 Preposit1on

ACROSS

3 SE TS - -4 chai r d inettes , S75
ea . 2 dr. refrigerator duo,
$175; eye level oven and
range top . gas. harvest 90ld.
Sl2 5 ; art i fic i al fireplace ,
S50 , beds , $25 ea . . coffee.
table and end table. $35 ;
Sear ' s stereo AM FM Tape
Track console , $200. All
these ere new Phone "2·
17 77 ,

19 72 FO RO l r a c.to r
Phon e 99 2 2990

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

LAST YEAR'S PRICES
ON THIS YEAR'S
Fl ELD HARVESTERS

992 -2176

~
~

ICAUPE~
j
~)

8e Heving ttra

a

Mountalnt of

Sou1h Amlflca

89 Remunerated
80 Mtn't nlckneme
91 Trade union
{abbr.)
94
r'-d
98 Prepoaltion
98 Son of Adem
Br~stklt
99 Otttrm lned
Con1unctk&gt;n
100 Act of we~rlng
Policemen \.Jangl
away
Mighwavt
102 BIHbtll teemt
Things, 1n law
104 Fith limbe
Oce~ns
105 Declare
Manufacturt
106 Untill
Strvttl
107 Stor11in a tiki
Po11t111vt
109 Pan of ftce
pronoun
(pl.l
48 Ortpet
111 Vettlge
49 Fathered
112 Bound
50 8ectute
113 Oantsh ttland
54 Pesugawayt
116 Place
65 Venet11n ruler
118 S1ng+ng btrd
56 Loops
119 Cultivated lend
59 Vent+latmg
122 Wuder
60 Pra1te
124 Apprehend
61 Symbol for iron
125 Wan
63 lns1de informa126 Smooths the
11on ltlang l
fe~thera of
66 Afternoon (abbr.! 128 Roedside
67 Ex11t
rtttturtnt
68 Presented tor
130 Not1n
acceptance
131 Wetries
70 Buccaneer
132 Sh.. lh tround
71 Dance atep
leafstalk
72 E11111t
135 Soup 1ngredient
73 Hold 1n
137 Basketball team
h1gh regard
138 Set+ate
75 Sounds
140 The urial
77 Goddess of heeling 142 Shade tree
78 Blsl'\opr+c
143 Veh1cle
80 Organs of
144 Symbol for t1n
heanng
145 Laun COnJUOCIIOn
83 Command
147 Cooled lava
to cat
148 Parent lcolloq '

w..

For Sunder. llept. 21, 1111

ARIES (Morch 21·Aprtt 11)
You '.r e not overly patient with
the family today If everyone's
walkmg around the house With
a long face. you may be to
blame

TAURUS (Aprtt 20-Mor 20)
Gtvlng orders comes easy to
you today However , if you
want others to follow your
edicts. you'd better try to sel a
good example

GEMINI (Mor 21-June 20) If
you ·ve comm•tted yourself to

pick ing up the lab loday . Urst
check the prices or you 'll make
a king· slze dent m your wallet.

CANCER (Juno 21-Julr 22)
Others will make such heavy
demands on your t1me you
won 't have much to yourself
Put your dreams away for
another day

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) You will
be hypersenslttve loday. Wetgh
what others say or you'll mls·
take a sincere comment for a
put-down

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sopt 22) Have
fun with friends today . but
don't mix tn money or things of
a material nature. It you do.
hard feettngs will result

LIBRA (Sopt 23-0ct 23) Normally, you're very considerate
of others' feelmgs Today,
you'll be so mtent on having
your way you' ll get someone's
hackles up

SCORPIO (Oc1. 24-NoY 22) Be
conlent to let sleeping dogs he
You ·re ltkely to unwittingly
dredge up some old , unpleasant tssue that c ou ld be very
disturb ing to a fr iend
SAGITTII/IfUS (Nov 23-Doc
21) It's a los1ng proposition to
g1ve bus+ness advic e to a friend
today If the sltuat ton doesn't
pan o ut . he'll blame yo u for his
ta tlure
CAPRICORN (Doc 22-Jon 18)
You're not a good team player
today Avo1d ge lling mto a
S+1uat•on where you m ust rely
on a partn er Ne1the r w1ll be
happy

POME

AQUARIUS (Jon 20-Fob 11)
Whe re usually you're wllhng to
lend hel ping hand , today you
w1ll re sent 11 deeply 11 anyone
ask s for a favor

a

WE APPRECIATE
THE PATIENCE
OF OUR
CUSTOMERS

' CASES REMAIN
WASHINGTON (UPI )
Attorney General Edward H.
Lev1 has decided not to shut
down
the
Watergate
prosecutor 's office and will
soon name a new special
prosecutor
to
handle
.remaining cases, it was
learned Saturday. Special
Prosecutor Henry S. Ruth
Jr., the third to hold the job
since it was created 2'h years
ago, w11l resign in mida
October after what had been
expected to be a final report
on the work of the office is
issued.

IN HOLZER
POMEROY - Mrs. Freda
. M. Smith , 566 W. Main St. ,
Pomeroy, is a · medical
patient at Holzer Medical
Center. Her room number is
211-A.

drainage system picks up
water from a seepy area as
well as a centralized vein
which formerly came out as a
spring . Technicians of SCS
helped her with detailed
plans for this development.
Forrest Legg of Flatrock is
making plans to construct a
diversion ditch. The purpose
of the diversion is to prevent

'
lltUe he11vier than they were ;.~:::...w,:::::::::::::&gt;1:=!=:;;:;,:;::;:::::::::::::.:::::~:::·:·::~:::·:::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::--:::::.:-:-:·:·:·::.':::·;
her brother. Charles Russell when t he y left ·and a re
from Tulsa , Okla., rode to already looking forward to
• Great Falls on his motor- their trip back to that Big Sky ~
~
p
~
7\T
cycle. From Grants, New CQWI try again Qext fall.
li!
By Helen and
Bonel
Mexico. her younger sister
....
Mr . and Mrs . Lml oul ~
drove in to Greai Falls with JQhnson spent a three day '
FearlsHardtoUveWith
·
her daughter-in -law and weekend in Nashville, Tenn.,
Rap :
By Mrs. Lyle Balderson
granddaughter; they all met
My mother left my father about two years ago, and since
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bam- at one central point 213-281h where they a t tended The
then she's~ paranoid she won 'tlet us kids go out by ourselves ,
G~and Ole Opry on FMday
hart and son, Garey, arrived St. South in Great Falls,
or be a lone m the house. She sa ys he may try to kidnap us. Sbe
horne after a five week Montana for a reunion with night, On Saturday they took
tells us over and over about th e time he tried to murder her ,
vac11tion in the "Beautiful their 74 year old mother, Ora a lour of the Country Music
and
he may even come and kill us all. This scares the littler
Big. Sky Country" of Mon- Russell. The family had not Stars homes, the Upper
kids
to death , but I know my Dad , and I don' t believe her. They
tana. They saw bountiful been together for 13 years Room and Country Music used to fight a lot, but she hit him more than he hit her. Mostly
croi&gt;s of corn, alfalfa hay, and prior to this, so you can bet Hall of Fame . They also
he just pushed her away to avoid getting hurt. He's not cruel or
grain while traveling through they all had a good time visited Opryland U.S.A. On dangerous !
Indiana , Illinois, Iowa , recalling old limes . Also the way , the Johnsons visited
I've met Dad when I've been on dales w1th my boyfriend,
Minnesota , North and South while the Barnharts were Cave City, Ky . and My Old
and
he's worried. He says Mom needs he lp, like from a
Kentucky Home in BardsDakota and Wyoming. While
there , a lot of fishing was town, Ky.
Jl'IYChiatrist.
there Mrs. Barnhart's sister, going on with them bringing
If I mention this to her she'll say I'm against her too. She's
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Marie Hallan, her daughter
home 27 pints of rainbow Mrs. David A. Smith and getting worse, and my brother and sister, aged Sand 7, are real
and husband and two children trout. They also visited with
Diana were Mr. and Mrs. nerve cases.
and another grandchild from
many other relatives while Tom Drake of Reynoldsburg ,
What can I do ? - " 16"
Washmglon State came. Also
there and all came back a Mr. and Mrs. David G. Smith Dear 16 :
You say , " If I mentwn this to her she'll say I'm against her
of Marietta and Mr. and Mrs.
too,"
but do you KNOW this • Why not talk to your mother,
George Six of Point Pleasant,
woman
to woman, about her fears • Making her face them may
W. Va.
hv t-U llolf.'l! AF-lNOl rJ '"'" BOflll {
Mr . and Mrs . Edward be a first step toward the therapy she needs .
Paranoia, never questioned , can become a way of life . But
Un~cramble these four Jumble.,
Chevalier spent a few days
one letter to each square, to
W!th Mr . and Mrs. Lowell if someone says, " Look , it wasn 'tthal way, and it 1sn't this
form four ordinary words .
Chevalier and family at way !" - well, it may shock your mother into facing the truth .
- HELEN
Mansfield.
" 16":
Recent vi\ilors at the
How about another talk with your Dad? If he's truly
Williams-Balllerson home
worried, he 'll contact someone who can help your mother .
were Mrs. Roy Fick and Beth
Have you thought she rrught be doing the paranoid scene
Anne of Colwnbus, and Karen
for
sp1te
- so that you kids will hate him as much as she does ?
PWE/,
Fick of Long Bottom R. D.
Whatever , she must be shown the damage she is domg - to
herself as well as the children.
If your Dad sidesteps. then try the grandparents.
And tell your brother and sister their fath er isn 't like that.
It
's
lime they knew ! - SUE
HOYBIS
Of'ENHANt::&gt;Et::&gt;- ~ U T
Dear Rap:
HARDl-Y FRIENDLY.
I'd like to tell you about my brother :
He is the one who will do almost anything you ask him to
Classified Ads
do , who will let you use his car, even if he must sit home.
Now arranp the circled letten 1
He argues and fights with you, but you both know you love
to form the 1urpriae anawer. u $
brtng you
each other .
:==~===~~~~===~:·u~~~~~ested by the above cartoon,
He's the one who always wants you to find his clothes and
extra cash
,_____Prill_'_.._;_SIII_IIIISt
-'-IIISWlii
---'-==
·::________JI
~ron them. The one that sometimes gets in trouble and once
for
to jail and you cry when you see him m a place like that.
went
(,...wen Monday)
But he's also the one everyone likes.
shopptng sprees
Jumht.-. BROOK HUMID CONVOY PAGODA
Ynle rday"e
He is the one you're really gettmg to feel you can talk to.
An1wrr: Whl'n th~ famllll* lracl. ~t far join ed th(• caM{.
at 20, he gets hung up on a girl , and he hears
Then,
lhep{ag ma11agf!d lohaue thi11 - A GOOD RUN
something about her and he feels he can't live without her , and
he has so many problems that he just can't face them .
He's the one who ends his life with an overdose, and I know
be didn ' t want to do it. It was just a mistake, an accident , and I
ask why , why , but I'll never get the answer .
There will always be an empty place ms1de me because the
T HAT FA (~ AT
brother
I was just beginnmg to really know, I can never know
TH' WINDOW L IF
'f C A ~ C: C CA LL IT
oow. - HIS LOVING SISTER

I I

Conservation planning is requested
By John Cooper
how to use the land.
Soli Cons. Service
Donald Shinn, who owns a
63-acre farm in the LeonPOINT PLEASANT
Several people have become Baden area, is interested in a
cooperators of the Western spring development and
Soil ConservatiOn District, grassland management.
askmg ass istance m planning
Okey R King and John
as well as the establishment Cooper of the SOil Conof conservation practices.
servation Service office in Pt.
Randy Edwards, on Crab Pleasant attended the annual
Creek whose farm consists of meeting of the professional
of
soil
cons ociety
The meeting of
lay of the land servationists.
the Soil Conservation Society
was held at Blackwater Falls.
230 acres , IS one of these . In
The main subject brought
addi li on to the plan he out by speakers was land use,
requested he is interested in how to attain better land use
pasture Improvement. At the by farmers as well as other
present time he IS clearing users of the land.
some land fr om brush in
One of the featured
order to Improve his pasture. speakers was Dr . Dale Zinn,
Charles McCartney, w1th a new Dean of the College of
62-acre farm on Redmond Agriculture at West Virginia
Ridge , is anoth e r new University. Dr. Zinn is a
cooperator. His chief· interest former West Virginian who
is in the construction of a was born on a farm in Dodfarm pond.
dridge County and for the last
John T. Kearn s, Jr ., whose few years has been on the
farm consists of 37 acres coiiege faculty in one of the
behmd West Columbia, is western states.
another new cooperator. He
MARY FROENDT of West
asked for planning assistance Columbia is planning to mto determine the uses that slall a watering trough as a
could be made of his land.
water supply for livestock.
Herman Morgan bought a This trough will be located
50-acre farm on Guyan Creek near the outlet of a hie
and asked for plannmg drainage .system that was
assistance to help him dec1de installed last year . The

27 - The Sund~y Times - Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 28, 1975

I VALAN

;: ;:;···;:· :·:··::;:·:;:·;. : .::)};.):}·~:~ ~.~:: ~{:?~:: ~; ~=~·(~{}:~;;:~:~;::;::)/:}.:~:.:~;~:;;~;::~::.::)i

secretary .

WITH 10" BAR AND CHAIN

·:'\&lt;"'"(,o
ur Dhcount Hotpolnt •Dealer
•
··~.'-· . ''P"-.el 011 Heating Stov..

~ ::. . : ::::: ::;:~:··~·-::;~:::;{'/.{::::.:;~ ;.(~:)::~;:::{:~:::{\?~:~:: ~:~ ::~ ~ ~

A ssociation

FAST STARTING -

..

~e:1v:~nandsp~~~~orbur~tft~~rth ~~: ~~~~s ;a~en~u!~~~~~ ~~=•s:~r;:~

Grade loan rates for hurley noted
'WASHI NG TON
A
proposed schedule of grade
loan ra tes for 1975-c r op
burley t oba c co wa s a nnoun_ced las t week by the U
S Depar tment of Agmulture

r

::''/t::: :'::,:r:::::}:)::::t;,L':\{{''}' ' :: : :;:;: : : '{::r::::r::::::r'{('' '''''}':'tt'L/ittttr:::::: :r::;::1

I

PISCES (Fob 20-Morch 20)
Take no nsks today where
someo ne el se IS c all1 ng the
shots If yo u c an't b e captam of
your own sh+ p pass t he action

A., Your
~Birthday
OOE5m' AN&gt;OoiE
WA NT lOHEAR
AeouT TH E NEW
NEIG HeoR: NEXT

DOOR?

During the past two weeks
· while we were installing a new
elevator to better serve you.

I"JJPE. rrtf; A WIDCYIN

I'.OMN BILLY, AND I
OFFERED 10 HELP HER

UNPACK 5EEIN'8HE5
ALL AL.DNE: IN
THE w:;.RLD_

Sept. 28, 1975

Eve nls and c o nd1h on s w1\l
Ioree you to be extremely amb+t+ous this coming year Just
be sure to repay favors to
anyone who's helped on the
way up
! NF. WSPA Pt:ft E!'iTf:H PRI S ~ A.S.'\N '

•'.•

.our customer.

., .....

CEIITIII.G'
al r' ' I Olil

''

'I

~Oiifi'IOS

..

\

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.
I

...
•

26 - The Sunday T1mes - Senti nel, Sunday , Sept 28, 1975

Co_u nty agent's corner
POMEROY - Don 't take a chance on s il o gases bnn gmg
tragedy to your home.
During the silo hllmg pe n od, brown, ye llow a nd ora nge
gases may be seen on top of the silage or sp1lhng down the
chute. These gases are formed by bactenal a ctiOns tha t take
place during early silage fermentatiOn , says W C. Stuckey .
Extension Leade r , safety, The OhiO State Uruvers1ty.
Under certain conditions, dea dly gases f01·m that ca n
seriously mjure or k1ll hwnans and hvestock. One of the most
common Is rutrogen dioxid e. When mtrogen ox1de gases arc
mh a led, severe damage to lungs ma y occur . E: ven bnef ex.
posures ca n cause death or permanent lil JUI y, St4ckey sa ys
All but one of the gases are brown, ; ellow or oran ge m
color . They have an odor similar to hypochlonte used m bleach
and da ir y disinfecta nts. Smce they a re heav1e r than mr, they
flow down ward a nd settle m low areas m and a round the Silo
Wheri a person ts exposed , a b w·mng sensa tion JS felt m l he

nose and th roat. Severe exposure w1llresult in chokmg
Al though these gases a r c formed durmg the f1rst 48 hours ,
they may remam a senous problem to man and lives tock for 10
to 14 days,lf areas a re not well ven tliated
To protect your self agamst gases when fl llmg slios, keep
doors open as near the leve l of crop fi JI as poss ible . If doors a rc

By John E. RICe
Extension Age nt , A!,'l"lculture

::::::;::::-::::::::::':&gt;:::::::::::::,:_::: ::::::: ' ?:::::::::::,://:::::::,:::

;ij!!ii

closed a bove th e level of sila ge, gases ca n accwnulate m th1s
po cket. Venl!late the silo, s1lo chute, and surroundings by
run nmg the bl owe r for 10 lo 15 mmutes before entenng the s ilo
or chute durin g the filling pen od a nd the first two weeks after
f1 lhn g Comple lely vent il ate the silo area durmg the two-week
pen od by openmg roof doors, wmdows a nd doors or sila ge
room, and top of the ch ute , where poss1ble. Smce gases ha re
heavier than a 1r, th ey accwn ulate a t the base of the s1lo a nd m
surroundmg areas. Keep children and livestock a way from
these areas
After the two-week perwd, if a blower is not ava ila ble,
ca utwusly chmb up the chute to the lop door . Detec t presence
of gases by s1ght and smell before entermg the silo If s1Io 1s
dark , ta ke a fl ashlight with you . Leave the area unmedmt ely 1f
brown, yellow a nd ora nge gases a re seen or 1f burmng a nd
chokmg ar e felt in the nose a nd throa t.
('" " II your doctor un m edia lely 1f acc identally exposed to
the gases Do nQl be deceived by an a pparent recovery shortl y
after expos ure
Umvcr sa l gas masks are not recommended. These are of
no value where there IS a lac k of oxy gen due to displacement
by gases TI1e only protective dev1ce 1s a self-conta med one
where the oxy gen tank IS a pa rt of the ~ ear .

•

Your Wayne National Forest:li-r~
By T: Allan Wolter
District Ran ger
IR ONTON - Last Tuesday at
lJ .55 a. m . I EST ) th e sun passed
over the equator on its celesti al
JOUrn ey southwa rd . Alth ough
un ac c omp a m ed by a ny e ve nt
nol!cea ble to us ear thlings, we have
la beled it th e aut umna l eqUinox the beg inmng of a utumn.
Ove r many millions of years, th e
bwlog ical processes in plan ts and
animals have been synchronized
w1th the equinoxes Subtle changes
m da y le ngth a nd te mperatures have
caressed the delicate cherrus try of
na tur e , triggering a whole ne w
se n es of achvil!es.
.
The red and yellow pg1ment of

hapless shrub or bush where velvet
will be shredded from underlying
weaponry.
Unknown to the deer, a hormone
has sent an invis ible message to th e
hai r cells _ "come on, fellow s, Jet 's
ge t cracking onawinter coat.forthis
fellow or he 'll freeze before the fir st
snowflakes hits the ground . No, not
while dummies, gray! I'm s tarting
another gr oup on while for th e
wease l and snowshoe rabbit
tomorrow . Yes , I know thi s 1s
overtime work, but there 's no tim e
an d a ha lf. Qwl gnping and ge l to
work "
As- a hedge against wmter
s tarvatiOn the beaver oegms S&lt;OC Kpiling hi s food by imbeddmg short

weight will blanket each acre of the
forest .floor providing protecti on to
the soil from the winter r ains,
s he lter for all manner of insec ts and
small animal s, nourishment for
future years growth , and perhaps
fuel for a hungry fire .
Na t ure 's children , ha v in ~; ·:-:-:-: "
survived the first tests of life mdultht' ,': ,:::,-_',:':. :.:,_-' ):
wild are well on the way to a
hood . Carbon copies of their parents ,
the y too hear the m ysterious beat of
'
a d1fferent drwnmer
Nut s and fruits of all colors,
shapes and sizes - acorns, grapes,
"
apples , paw paws, persimmons and
"
pine cones- will ripen and drop hke
r a m . Th e thunderc loud that
spawned such a cornucopia came --:-:-

dommeermg chlorophyl of sprmg
and swnmer faded a way .
lnstmc l!ve ly , the sqUirrel beg ins
to hoard part of thi s ye ar 's bumper
crop of nut s. An mborn restlessness
takes over the or derhness of sumproposed rates will be
mer a cllVIlies as migra tory birds
gather for the ir annua l fli ght.
s ide r ed 1f submitted 10
wr1 tmg by Oc tober 6, 1975 to --.·
A terrible 1lchmg begms m the
the Du·ector , Tobacco a nd :-: ve lve t ed a nt) e r s of the dee r
Pea nu t DI VISIO n, Ag ri cultur a l _:: signah ng the des lruc twn of some
St a bili za ti on
and
Con- :·..,.

storm s and 1ce as he sits cozily
mun ching a spen bark from the
storehouse outside his lodge.
Tr ees
th e gr ea t a ir conditioners and oxygen producer s
of summer, will soon stand naked
a gamst the wmter sky revealin g the
bare hills and hollows their canopy
of green hid from our summer eyes .
A microscopic layer of cells w1ll
die, severmg each leaf from the
moth erm g twig . Their 7 tons of

Man 's ac tivities also change.
Perhaps it is a realization that the
days are growing shorter, or the
sight of ripemng corn, a bright
orange pumpkin , or possibly a slight
nip in the morning air that sets the
scene for a new mood and tempo
a cross the land .

:··· :

;:-:·_:·
:._(

:-:-· -:
::· :-:·

(USDA , The rates 1 ange
fr om $0 71 to $t o:t per po und
and refl ec t an ave ra ge
suppor t of 9fi 1 cents per
pound - tOJ cenls per pound
ubov e th e 1974 leve L

SAVE $377
riiiilWHEEL HORSE
~lawn &amp; garden tractor

Powerful B H P Ranqer
features ELECTRJ( ' sto; 1
comes complete w1\h

32-mch mo wer
1975
mod el year dosecut
Also Used
Riding
Mowers

se r v al10n Se r vice, U. S.
Depar tment of Agri cul ture,
Wa shington, D C. 20250. Th e
comments will be a vaila ble
for public inspection m the
Offi ce of the Direc tor , Room
6939 , Agn c ullu re Departme nt 's South Buildin g,
dunn g r eg ul ar bus iness
hours, 8: 15 a rn . to 4:45 p.m .

REGULARLY $1076.

SALE
$699
M O DEL NO. A.·80 £

-__...
...

Small Payment will hold til Ma y 1976 at '7 5
prices. Use our Lay-Away Plan Now!
QUANTLTIES LIMITED. OfFER GOOD ONLY AS SUPPLY LASTS

LlffiE'S TRADING CENTER

St. Rt. 554

As ill the past , no loans \ 0,. Ill
be a vaila ble on any tobacco
graded No.{; t no gra de ), U
1 unso und ) ,
W ! do ubtf ul
keepm g orde1J. or scrap
Mar ketmgs of the se gr ades.
however , w11l be charged
aga inst the quotas for ll1e
far ms upon wh1ch th ey were
produced .
T he
c o op e r at i ve
a ss oc tat10n t hrou gh wht ch
a dvan ces are ma de available
is authorized to deduct one
cent per pound to appl y
agams t overhead costs.
Comme nts regardin g th e

Cheshire. 0 .

Ph . 367-7329

·AUTOMATIC OILING
LIGHTWEIGHT

Soil surveys ·on
Ohio land ready
COLUMBUS
" Soil
surveys , prepared by the
Na tional Coo perative Soil
Survey , are now complete for
over 45 percent of Ohio's land
ar ea ," says Rober t E
Quilli a m ,
sta te
con serv atioms l for the U. S. Soil
Conservation Service I SCS)
m Ohio. ' 'The s urveys are
already published or are soon
to be published for 40 counties," he sa1d .
In his report on progress of
soil surveys in Ohio, Quilham
noted that an other 22 percent
of the slate is curre ntly bemg
mapped and readi e d for
publication . Many individual
farms and developing areas
are being mapped in the
remammg parts of the state,
mcluding Meigs Couinty.
Mappmg soil in d e tail
reqUires walking each acre
and classifying the smls.
" With 26 million acres to map
in Ohio it could take another
10 or more years to complete
the National Cooperative Soil
Survey Program m our
s late," Quilliam estimates .
A soil s urvey map shows
where each kmd of sml occurs
on the lands ca pe . " To
prepare such a map IS an
accomplishment in modern
technology," Quilliam said.
Each soil ha s a combinatiOn
of properties alii Is own. Each
soil is named and placed into
the natwnal system of so1l
classification set up by the
NatiOn a l Cooperative So1l
Sur ve y. This syst em 1s
s imilar to the botanical
na~ng of trees .
A botamst, for example ,
includes a ll maple trees mlo
the "acer " group. By the
same process, a s01l scientist
includes all dark colored,
very poorly drained soils that
have
cer t am
clayey
charactenstics into th e
Arg1aguoll group.
Quilliam noted that the use
of such unusual sounding

words as "arg1aquolls" is
part of a new language used
by mod ern s c1en lls ts t o
a nd
cla ss ify
a rr a nge
scientific knowledge about
soils The "a rgi" part of this
word denotes clayey ; ''aqu,"
wetness; and " oils," comes
from m olhs, meanin g soft
and dark. This and much
other mforrnatio n is being
asse mbled in the surveys .
They also include easy to
unders tand mtrepr~ Iatwn s of
soils, wh1ch can be used by
farm ers and other s who can
better under stand what the ir
land is capable of bemg used
for .
Copi es of soil sur vey
reports are available at the
local SCS office , the county
soil and water conservation
dis trict, or th e Cooperativ e
Exte nsion Servi ce Office .
Reports for counties having a
publis hed USDA report can
be obt a in e d by written
requests to the congressman
representing those counties.
Also, progress reports can be
obtamed for many counties
from the Ohfo Deparimen t of
N atural
Res o urces,
Columbus, Oh1o.
The Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District is c o·
loca led with the Pomeroy
field office of the Soil Conservallon Service. Write P. 0 .
Box 432, 221 W. Second St.,
Pomeroy, Oh10 or phone 9923628 regarding soils informahon in Me1gs County.

BUYS AYRSHIRE
J eff
GALLIPOLIS
Mc Ke nzie , Gallipolis,
recently made an initial
purchase of a registered
Ayrsh1re female from Tom B.
Fenton &amp; Sons, Wmchester,
Ohio, a ccording to the Ayr-

shire Breeders'

FOR THE PRO AND THE MAN
WHO WANTS TO CUT LIKE ONE.

... are more than money!

~.

'"

&gt;J

"l!c-

''

I

POMEROY
·. lANDMARK
5er•l'lt Meigs, co.nie end
Mason Countifl.
' ' Jeck W. Carsey, Mgr.

PH. 991-2111

Storeo;.nw
Mon.- s.t.
,
'I

I '

Federal Land Bank Loans are long-term and
are avai lable at a reasonable rate with repayment schedules tatlored to your farm in"
come flow; includtng prepayment privileges
w1thout penalty- all advantage s to the
member-borrower.
228 Upper River Road
P . O. Box 207, Gallipolis
Phone 446-0203

'

Clyde B. Walker. Mgr.

~~~:::.:r~v~:~:~du:'eutw~:_buried ::_::_\!\.;

if::::..: ~

It 's great to be alive, to be able to
enjoy, to wonder at the splendor and
abundance all around us.

•

Bidwell Feed Mill is

bought by Co-op group
BIDWELL
Luther
Ferguson, president of the
Southeastern OhiO Farmers
Co-op, announced Saturday
the organization has purchased the Bidwell F eed Mill
and future operations will be
conducted from that facility .
Ferguson sa1d the co-op no
longer operates from the rear
of a t ruck hke it had to do
while organizing during the
past year . The president said
feed and fertilizer is now in
stock and the co-op is taking
orders for fall seeding . The
new facility's phone nwnber
is 388-8700.
The organization meets the

first Tuesday of each month
at the Production Credit
Assoc-iation Building,
beginning at 8 p.m . All area
farmers are mviled to jom
the co-op.
New co-op officers are:
Luther Ferguson, president ;
Bob Swann, vice pres1dent;
David Vaughn , secretary;
John Haber, treasurer.
Board members are Bill
Reynolds, Dallas Thacker, J.
Holhs Wood, Homer Hill,
Darrell Young , Robert Green
and Fred Taylor.

..·.. \(

~

Reedsville
News lliOfeS

'Generation Rap
Sut~

I

[J

I I

I

I I

I

a barn and barnlot from
being wet as it now is. The
diversion will - intercept
surface water coming off a
nearby hill and carry it to an •
outlet thus preventing water
from collecting around the
barn.
Okey R. King of SCS made
detailed engineering plans
for this ditch.

tJ

D[I11J

I

A

Big capacity plus fine,
uniform chopping

F · F FA C~l

'
For Sales

For Sale

For Sale
191 5 F IREBIRO F or m ul a .tOO
A .C.. 1111 wheel , fac rorv
I ape, mags and ga u g es L ow
mileage Phon e 1• 1 S9oi 3
9 1A At e
TWO 1 178 • I• Good yea r Steel
be lted snow ll res Contact
Al qe rt H il t a t 949 ·'2 '261 .
9 16 6tc

U SED

CHAIN

sawa , ne

Locus t St .. M iddlepor t.
Pnono 992 3092 .
9 - 18 26tc

O NE SMITH and Wesson 44
Maonum . •color blue, 4 Inch
barrel , br.-nd new, still In
box . Call 992 3889

9 21 -llc

--------------

2000 . STEREO -RAOIO . AM -FM . I
tra c k tape comb i nat i on
Balance S101 29 or terms .
9·22 6t c
Call 992 3965
9 21 tfc
1954 F ER G U SON trac tor w lt h
acc essor 1es Phon e 84 3 2561
• WHEEL DRIVE Ford 7x9
9 24 ·6t c
flat dump truck , Harold
Brewer . Long Bottom . Ohio .
1971 KAWASA KI 500 Ca ll 247
61« 985 355«
2813
9·21 tfc
9 2C 61p
CA TERPILL A R 0 6 bu ll dozer
197J F XJSO Har ley Da vid son .
hydraulic angle blade .
less than 1.000 m i les , saoo
heavy cab Good condit ion
Pho ne 992 2967 after S p .m
Harold
Brewer ,
Long
9 '24 4tc
Bottom , 6.1A 985 355A
9 21 tiC
COMPLETE Disp 20 hUd of
hor se s . Re!iJ I Siered and FUE L OIL Furnace complete
gra de , Show and pleasure
w i th p ipes and. reg isters.
Phon e ( 61A ) 388 0991 or 367
K enmore oas range end
7481
d ishwasher, 1911 Model T
9 2• 6tc
Ford truck Phone (614 ) 985
Al18
H &amp; N D A Y old or started
9-25 6tc
L eghorn pu llet s Bo t h floor
or c ag e grown available
19H YAMAHA J60 MX , eX·
Poultry
housint;;~
and
cellent cond ition, S800.Aiso ,
a u tom a t1o n
M o dern
a c hannel Helllcraller CB
Poullr y, J99 W
Main ,
rad i o , uo
James
L
Pom ero y , 99 1 2164
Chadwell , Rt 1, Rtedtv llle ,
9 28 lt c
Oh io 45772

SUNDAY,

650 FORAGE HARVESTER

ALj):Y OOP

lnternattonal® 650 IS available 1n recutterblower and dtrect-throw models . .
o 9 -kntfe cutterhead w1th tungsten~arb1de surfaced knives
o Rugged power tra1n completely designed to
handle today's btg-power tractors
o Reversible shear bar Extra heavy-duty
knuckles Bu!lt-tn knife sharpener Welded
steel main frame
o Corn Hopper attachment converts 650 tnto
stationary gnnder- blower
Come In and get all the facts on corn,
hay pickup and cutterbar units avail·
able on the 650.

We Have 650 &amp; 555 Models in Stock

Meigs Equipment Co.

9 -25 -Jic

PIONEER~
CHAIN SAWS

- -------------r

HOL STEIN c ow bred to Reg
Angu s bull. S200 Phone 992

2789

9 28 H e

G REEN bean s, pick. your own
Andrew Cross , Le tart Falls ,
Oh1 0 Phone 2A7 ·2852 .
9 28 M e
SA V E SAVE SAVE
Se ll 1ng out our stock of guns ,
bows and am m o All guns
w ill be sold At 10 percent
above
wholesa l e
pius
shipp1n g 870 Remlngtons .
Sl40 Sale will l.nt till all
guns are gone Ind ian Joe 's
Sports and CB ' s , 308 Page
St . M iddleport
9 28 lOic
F IREPLACE Wood
RNR
F u el can c ollect (3041 675
1820 after 6 p m
9 28 ltp
1974 SU ZU K I TS185 Lots of
ex tra s Extre tow m!lea!iJe
Pr 1ced to sell Phone 949
4551
9 28 Hp

ONE se t f ireplace ga s logs
L1k e new
Reasonably
pri ced Phone 992 2773
9-28 ·2tp

9 25 51 c
REMINGTON \1 ,000 auto ,
new 12 or 20 ga S172 .50 .
Fife 's, Middleport, Oh io
9 25 26tc
ITHACA Model J1 pump , new
12 or 20 oa . S129 95, Fife'•·
Middleport . Oh io .
9 25 -6tc

mp x radio , 8 tra ck stereo
Cal l qq 2 396 5
9 4 tfc

22
23
2S
27
28
30
31
33
35
36
37
39
41
42
44
47

Waterways
Ptptr measure
Soak
Holda btck
Stud+O
Jump
Masculine

SMAll ENGINES

498 Locust Street
Middleport, Ohio
Ph. 992-3092

9 25 31c
5 FT 3 PT HITCH . buSh hog ,
$225 00 Phone 985 3594 .
9- 19 -8\p
Ford or Ferguson tractor
$1'25 00 Phone US 359•
9·19 .8tp

SEPTEMBER 28. 197S

21 Objet!

WILKINSON

CLARINET , good condition ,
reasonable Phone 949 ·4114.

--------------- ------ ---------

17 College degrM
ltbbr l

service all saws
and precision grind
chain.
We

GUN S and Ammo . Our fall
stock
Is
now
nere .
Complet e l i ne of Rem
l ngton .
Win c hester ,
WHOLESALE shot shells ,
llh l ca , Savage StuO barrels
deer slugs , 22 long rUle , 22
in stock. for most brand shot
mao bear and Jennings
gun s, but 1n short supply
bows , 40 pet off list Fife ' s,
Get t h em wh i le they last
Middleport. Ohio
Money short , lay .a .wev
9 25 ·61c
your fall huntmg needs . New
Fall star• hours s tarting
TWO BLACK POODLES , 1
Sept 5. 10 a m 10 9 p m .,
male and 1 female AKC
Registered. conn trumpet ,
Monday -Sa t urday
VIllage
Gun Shoppe , '2 66 M i ll 5~ •
1 veer old, Like new Sear ' s
PI'! one 992 5177 , financing
Ted Williamson ' s 7VJ h .p
available
outboard motor , Sear's amp
9 ·3 ·26tc
for elec . gu itar , J hookups
Phone 1304 ) 882 .J205
- --- --- ~ --- - -9-25 6tc

-------------1N D AS H iJ Channel Ci tiZen ' s ---- - ---------Band transceiver , am tm 3 PT HITCH mower to fll

62 Church counc1l
129 Tallied
64 Semor (abbr ,l
131 Hawauen
65 Ex11t1
rootatock
1 Meeting roomt
132 City tn RuAtl
6 Wooden cont•lner 66 T1me gone by
67 Generate
133 Dawn goddtu
11 Make ready
69 Ktnd of shovel
134 Spanish for "river··
18 Man' s neme
71 EQutlltY
136 Twist
19 Shows affection
73 Stnve to
137 Th1n coating
for
eQual another
138 Part of ptav
20 Train of
74 Paradtsa
139 Oentalman
attendants
76
Discovers
!Navy abbr 1
21 Talks idly
79 Stgn of zodtac
140 Butn
23 Repet1tion
81 Latm for " God"
141 Southwestern
24 Theater 11gn
82 Numbers labbr I
lnd1an
!abbr .)
84 We1rd
142 Ireland
26 Wolfhound
85 Lawmakmg group 143 Fondle
27 Sun god
87 Break suddenly
144 More preCIPitOUI
29 Black b~rd
90 Drug takers
146 Omtment
30 Meadows
92 E11 1st
148 Communion
31 Encounter
93 Mass1ve
plate
32 Bnc k -carrying
95 Gastropod
149 Tell
device
mollusk
.. 150 Oomest1cates
33 Oepos1t
97
Brother
of
Jacob
151 Reg1ons
34 Above
98 Near
35 Fra1l
DOWN
99 Preh11 down
36 Run easily
101
European
fmch
38 Cylindncal
1 Perfect
103 N01se
40 Metal
fehc1ty
104 Part of ¥!Olin
41 Pretense
2
Change
105
Wh1te
poplar
42 Burrow1ng an1mal
3 Hold on property
108 Sea eagle
43 Temporary bed
4 Spen+sh plural
110 Earned
45 Substance
article
112
Cravats
46 Pnnter' s
5 Steamship labbr l
113 Ha111
measure
6 loose coat
114 Prepos1t10n
47 P1le
Decay•
7
115
House
for
48 Sleeveless cloak
8 1-tallt
ch1ckens
49 Heavenly bodies
9 Symbol for
117 Man's name
51 Hmdu garment
tellurtum
118
Entwme
52 Compass po+nt
10
Ancient Hebrew
119
Touch
53 Dtne
ascetiC
120 Bone
54 D1ving b1rds
11 Guard•
121 Send forth
55 Deem unsuitable
12 Note of scala
123 La1r
57 Dutch town
13 Greenland
124 War god
S8 Former Ruu.1an
settlement
125
Young
salmon
rulers
14 Helm'lman
126 Greek letter
60 Unit of Ita han
15 Charm
127 Ate to lose
currency (pl. I
16 Hurry
we1ght
61 Preposit1on

ACROSS

3 SE TS - -4 chai r d inettes , S75
ea . 2 dr. refrigerator duo,
$175; eye level oven and
range top . gas. harvest 90ld.
Sl2 5 ; art i fic i al fireplace ,
S50 , beds , $25 ea . . coffee.
table and end table. $35 ;
Sear ' s stereo AM FM Tape
Track console , $200. All
these ere new Phone "2·
17 77 ,

19 72 FO RO l r a c.to r
Phon e 99 2 2990

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

LAST YEAR'S PRICES
ON THIS YEAR'S
Fl ELD HARVESTERS

992 -2176

~
~

ICAUPE~
j
~)

8e Heving ttra

a

Mountalnt of

Sou1h Amlflca

89 Remunerated
80 Mtn't nlckneme
91 Trade union
{abbr.)
94
r'-d
98 Prepoaltion
98 Son of Adem
Br~stklt
99 Otttrm lned
Con1unctk&gt;n
100 Act of we~rlng
Policemen \.Jangl
away
Mighwavt
102 BIHbtll teemt
Things, 1n law
104 Fith limbe
Oce~ns
105 Declare
Manufacturt
106 Untill
Strvttl
107 Stor11in a tiki
Po11t111vt
109 Pan of ftce
pronoun
(pl.l
48 Ortpet
111 Vettlge
49 Fathered
112 Bound
50 8ectute
113 Oantsh ttland
54 Pesugawayt
116 Place
65 Venet11n ruler
118 S1ng+ng btrd
56 Loops
119 Cultivated lend
59 Vent+latmg
122 Wuder
60 Pra1te
124 Apprehend
61 Symbol for iron
125 Wan
63 lns1de informa126 Smooths the
11on ltlang l
fe~thera of
66 Afternoon (abbr.! 128 Roedside
67 Ex11t
rtttturtnt
68 Presented tor
130 Not1n
acceptance
131 Wetries
70 Buccaneer
132 Sh.. lh tround
71 Dance atep
leafstalk
72 E11111t
135 Soup 1ngredient
73 Hold 1n
137 Basketball team
h1gh regard
138 Set+ate
75 Sounds
140 The urial
77 Goddess of heeling 142 Shade tree
78 Blsl'\opr+c
143 Veh1cle
80 Organs of
144 Symbol for t1n
heanng
145 Laun COnJUOCIIOn
83 Command
147 Cooled lava
to cat
148 Parent lcolloq '

w..

For Sunder. llept. 21, 1111

ARIES (Morch 21·Aprtt 11)
You '.r e not overly patient with
the family today If everyone's
walkmg around the house With
a long face. you may be to
blame

TAURUS (Aprtt 20-Mor 20)
Gtvlng orders comes easy to
you today However , if you
want others to follow your
edicts. you'd better try to sel a
good example

GEMINI (Mor 21-June 20) If
you ·ve comm•tted yourself to

pick ing up the lab loday . Urst
check the prices or you 'll make
a king· slze dent m your wallet.

CANCER (Juno 21-Julr 22)
Others will make such heavy
demands on your t1me you
won 't have much to yourself
Put your dreams away for
another day

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) You will
be hypersenslttve loday. Wetgh
what others say or you'll mls·
take a sincere comment for a
put-down

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sopt 22) Have
fun with friends today . but
don't mix tn money or things of
a material nature. It you do.
hard feettngs will result

LIBRA (Sopt 23-0ct 23) Normally, you're very considerate
of others' feelmgs Today,
you'll be so mtent on having
your way you' ll get someone's
hackles up

SCORPIO (Oc1. 24-NoY 22) Be
conlent to let sleeping dogs he
You ·re ltkely to unwittingly
dredge up some old , unpleasant tssue that c ou ld be very
disturb ing to a fr iend
SAGITTII/IfUS (Nov 23-Doc
21) It's a los1ng proposition to
g1ve bus+ness advic e to a friend
today If the sltuat ton doesn't
pan o ut . he'll blame yo u for his
ta tlure
CAPRICORN (Doc 22-Jon 18)
You're not a good team player
today Avo1d ge lling mto a
S+1uat•on where you m ust rely
on a partn er Ne1the r w1ll be
happy

POME

AQUARIUS (Jon 20-Fob 11)
Whe re usually you're wllhng to
lend hel ping hand , today you
w1ll re sent 11 deeply 11 anyone
ask s for a favor

a

WE APPRECIATE
THE PATIENCE
OF OUR
CUSTOMERS

' CASES REMAIN
WASHINGTON (UPI )
Attorney General Edward H.
Lev1 has decided not to shut
down
the
Watergate
prosecutor 's office and will
soon name a new special
prosecutor
to
handle
.remaining cases, it was
learned Saturday. Special
Prosecutor Henry S. Ruth
Jr., the third to hold the job
since it was created 2'h years
ago, w11l resign in mida
October after what had been
expected to be a final report
on the work of the office is
issued.

IN HOLZER
POMEROY - Mrs. Freda
. M. Smith , 566 W. Main St. ,
Pomeroy, is a · medical
patient at Holzer Medical
Center. Her room number is
211-A.

drainage system picks up
water from a seepy area as
well as a centralized vein
which formerly came out as a
spring . Technicians of SCS
helped her with detailed
plans for this development.
Forrest Legg of Flatrock is
making plans to construct a
diversion ditch. The purpose
of the diversion is to prevent

'
lltUe he11vier than they were ;.~:::...w,:::::::::::::&gt;1:=!=:;;:;,:;::;:::::::::::::.:::::~:::·:·::~:::·:::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::--:::::.:-:-:·:·:·::.':::·;
her brother. Charles Russell when t he y left ·and a re
from Tulsa , Okla., rode to already looking forward to
• Great Falls on his motor- their trip back to that Big Sky ~
~
p
~
7\T
cycle. From Grants, New CQWI try again Qext fall.
li!
By Helen and
Bonel
Mexico. her younger sister
....
Mr . and Mrs . Lml oul ~
drove in to Greai Falls with JQhnson spent a three day '
FearlsHardtoUveWith
·
her daughter-in -law and weekend in Nashville, Tenn.,
Rap :
By Mrs. Lyle Balderson
granddaughter; they all met
My mother left my father about two years ago, and since
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bam- at one central point 213-281h where they a t tended The
then she's~ paranoid she won 'tlet us kids go out by ourselves ,
G~and Ole Opry on FMday
hart and son, Garey, arrived St. South in Great Falls,
or be a lone m the house. She sa ys he may try to kidnap us. Sbe
horne after a five week Montana for a reunion with night, On Saturday they took
tells us over and over about th e time he tried to murder her ,
vac11tion in the "Beautiful their 74 year old mother, Ora a lour of the Country Music
and
he may even come and kill us all. This scares the littler
Big. Sky Country" of Mon- Russell. The family had not Stars homes, the Upper
kids
to death , but I know my Dad , and I don' t believe her. They
tana. They saw bountiful been together for 13 years Room and Country Music used to fight a lot, but she hit him more than he hit her. Mostly
croi&gt;s of corn, alfalfa hay, and prior to this, so you can bet Hall of Fame . They also
he just pushed her away to avoid getting hurt. He's not cruel or
grain while traveling through they all had a good time visited Opryland U.S.A. On dangerous !
Indiana , Illinois, Iowa , recalling old limes . Also the way , the Johnsons visited
I've met Dad when I've been on dales w1th my boyfriend,
Minnesota , North and South while the Barnharts were Cave City, Ky . and My Old
and
he's worried. He says Mom needs he lp, like from a
Kentucky Home in BardsDakota and Wyoming. While
there , a lot of fishing was town, Ky.
Jl'IYChiatrist.
there Mrs. Barnhart's sister, going on with them bringing
If I mention this to her she'll say I'm against her too. She's
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Marie Hallan, her daughter
home 27 pints of rainbow Mrs. David A. Smith and getting worse, and my brother and sister, aged Sand 7, are real
and husband and two children trout. They also visited with
Diana were Mr. and Mrs. nerve cases.
and another grandchild from
many other relatives while Tom Drake of Reynoldsburg ,
What can I do ? - " 16"
Washmglon State came. Also
there and all came back a Mr. and Mrs. David G. Smith Dear 16 :
You say , " If I mentwn this to her she'll say I'm against her
of Marietta and Mr. and Mrs.
too,"
but do you KNOW this • Why not talk to your mother,
George Six of Point Pleasant,
woman
to woman, about her fears • Making her face them may
W. Va.
hv t-U llolf.'l! AF-lNOl rJ '"'" BOflll {
Mr . and Mrs . Edward be a first step toward the therapy she needs .
Paranoia, never questioned , can become a way of life . But
Un~cramble these four Jumble.,
Chevalier spent a few days
one letter to each square, to
W!th Mr . and Mrs. Lowell if someone says, " Look , it wasn 'tthal way, and it 1sn't this
form four ordinary words .
Chevalier and family at way !" - well, it may shock your mother into facing the truth .
- HELEN
Mansfield.
" 16":
Recent vi\ilors at the
How about another talk with your Dad? If he's truly
Williams-Balllerson home
worried, he 'll contact someone who can help your mother .
were Mrs. Roy Fick and Beth
Have you thought she rrught be doing the paranoid scene
Anne of Colwnbus, and Karen
for
sp1te
- so that you kids will hate him as much as she does ?
PWE/,
Fick of Long Bottom R. D.
Whatever , she must be shown the damage she is domg - to
herself as well as the children.
If your Dad sidesteps. then try the grandparents.
And tell your brother and sister their fath er isn 't like that.
It
's
lime they knew ! - SUE
HOYBIS
Of'ENHANt::&gt;Et::&gt;- ~ U T
Dear Rap:
HARDl-Y FRIENDLY.
I'd like to tell you about my brother :
He is the one who will do almost anything you ask him to
Classified Ads
do , who will let you use his car, even if he must sit home.
Now arranp the circled letten 1
He argues and fights with you, but you both know you love
to form the 1urpriae anawer. u $
brtng you
each other .
:==~===~~~~===~:·u~~~~~ested by the above cartoon,
He's the one who always wants you to find his clothes and
extra cash
,_____Prill_'_.._;_SIII_IIIISt
-'-IIISWlii
---'-==
·::________JI
~ron them. The one that sometimes gets in trouble and once
for
to jail and you cry when you see him m a place like that.
went
(,...wen Monday)
But he's also the one everyone likes.
shopptng sprees
Jumht.-. BROOK HUMID CONVOY PAGODA
Ynle rday"e
He is the one you're really gettmg to feel you can talk to.
An1wrr: Whl'n th~ famllll* lracl. ~t far join ed th(• caM{.
at 20, he gets hung up on a girl , and he hears
Then,
lhep{ag ma11agf!d lohaue thi11 - A GOOD RUN
something about her and he feels he can't live without her , and
he has so many problems that he just can't face them .
He's the one who ends his life with an overdose, and I know
be didn ' t want to do it. It was just a mistake, an accident , and I
ask why , why , but I'll never get the answer .
There will always be an empty place ms1de me because the
T HAT FA (~ AT
brother
I was just beginnmg to really know, I can never know
TH' WINDOW L IF
'f C A ~ C: C CA LL IT
oow. - HIS LOVING SISTER

I I

Conservation planning is requested
By John Cooper
how to use the land.
Soli Cons. Service
Donald Shinn, who owns a
63-acre farm in the LeonPOINT PLEASANT
Several people have become Baden area, is interested in a
cooperators of the Western spring development and
Soil ConservatiOn District, grassland management.
askmg ass istance m planning
Okey R King and John
as well as the establishment Cooper of the SOil Conof conservation practices.
servation Service office in Pt.
Randy Edwards, on Crab Pleasant attended the annual
Creek whose farm consists of meeting of the professional
of
soil
cons ociety
The meeting of
lay of the land servationists.
the Soil Conservation Society
was held at Blackwater Falls.
230 acres , IS one of these . In
The main subject brought
addi li on to the plan he out by speakers was land use,
requested he is interested in how to attain better land use
pasture Improvement. At the by farmers as well as other
present time he IS clearing users of the land.
some land fr om brush in
One of the featured
order to Improve his pasture. speakers was Dr . Dale Zinn,
Charles McCartney, w1th a new Dean of the College of
62-acre farm on Redmond Agriculture at West Virginia
Ridge , is anoth e r new University. Dr. Zinn is a
cooperator. His chief· interest former West Virginian who
is in the construction of a was born on a farm in Dodfarm pond.
dridge County and for the last
John T. Kearn s, Jr ., whose few years has been on the
farm consists of 37 acres coiiege faculty in one of the
behmd West Columbia, is western states.
another new cooperator. He
MARY FROENDT of West
asked for planning assistance Columbia is planning to mto determine the uses that slall a watering trough as a
could be made of his land.
water supply for livestock.
Herman Morgan bought a This trough will be located
50-acre farm on Guyan Creek near the outlet of a hie
and asked for plannmg drainage .system that was
assistance to help him dec1de installed last year . The

27 - The Sund~y Times - Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 28, 1975

I VALAN

;: ;:;···;:· :·:··::;:·:;:·;. : .::)};.):}·~:~ ~.~:: ~{:?~:: ~; ~=~·(~{}:~;;:~:~;::;::)/:}.:~:.:~;~:;;~;::~::.::)i

secretary .

WITH 10" BAR AND CHAIN

·:'\&lt;"'"(,o
ur Dhcount Hotpolnt •Dealer
•
··~.'-· . ''P"-.el 011 Heating Stov..

~ ::. . : ::::: ::;:~:··~·-::;~:::;{'/.{::::.:;~ ;.(~:)::~;:::{:~:::{\?~:~:: ~:~ ::~ ~ ~

A ssociation

FAST STARTING -

..

~e:1v:~nandsp~~~~orbur~tft~~rth ~~: ~~~~s ;a~en~u!~~~~~ ~~=•s:~r;:~

Grade loan rates for hurley noted
'WASHI NG TON
A
proposed schedule of grade
loan ra tes for 1975-c r op
burley t oba c co wa s a nnoun_ced las t week by the U
S Depar tment of Agmulture

r

::''/t::: :'::,:r:::::}:)::::t;,L':\{{''}' ' :: : :;:;: : : '{::r::::r::::::r'{('' '''''}':'tt'L/ittttr:::::: :r::;::1

I

PISCES (Fob 20-Morch 20)
Take no nsks today where
someo ne el se IS c all1 ng the
shots If yo u c an't b e captam of
your own sh+ p pass t he action

A., Your
~Birthday
OOE5m' AN&gt;OoiE
WA NT lOHEAR
AeouT TH E NEW
NEIG HeoR: NEXT

DOOR?

During the past two weeks
· while we were installing a new
elevator to better serve you.

I"JJPE. rrtf; A WIDCYIN

I'.OMN BILLY, AND I
OFFERED 10 HELP HER

UNPACK 5EEIN'8HE5
ALL AL.DNE: IN
THE w:;.RLD_

Sept. 28, 1975

Eve nls and c o nd1h on s w1\l
Ioree you to be extremely amb+t+ous this coming year Just
be sure to repay favors to
anyone who's helped on the
way up
! NF. WSPA Pt:ft E!'iTf:H PRI S ~ A.S.'\N '

•'.•

.our customer.

., .....

CEIITIII.G'
al r' ' I Olil

''

'I

~Oiifi'IOS

..

\

�I

..

,

28 - The Sunday Times- Sen! mel, Sunday, Srpl. 28. 1975

..

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Seittinel Classifieds :~
WANT A DS

Nan ted

INFORMATI ON
DEADLIN ES
5 P M
Day
f; efo rc
l oca l io n .
Monday DP f!ci l in c 9 u ,,,

YARD SA LE , a ll day ';u nday , US ED J M q rllvrly hcd . $77Sc , 4
Se p t ·28 , R o u te 7 hyp ass.
N ew I dea N o 7 corn ptc k crs,
nl' a r H obson
~650
5675. J qr a \11 t y beds
9 26 1I c
nnd waqon s. ~ 4 75 ea , Fo r d 9
N t ra c tor $995 . 3 co r n
H UGE Yard :,a t e Ocl
ele vator s S ilO
'!it40 SJ95 ,
through J. 9 to 6. Sta te Rl
Li m e spr ea der , $15 0. N ew 4
')!J.t , t i . mdes fro m Ch esh ,r e
tt
and 5 ft
J pt rota ry
o n Stat e Rt . 7,
Ot shes ,
mower '5365 S3!! 5 N ew draw
ocpres s. 1on q las.s. new and
bars. , 516 ea Erm cl L u ck ett ,
use d c lo th es , qir l 's cl othf'S. ,
wash rnq t on S t . Al bany ,
ru q s. d r,1p es. baby cl othe s .
Oh 10 Phone 698 3031 or 698
) ornethin q tor e .. e ry one
781l 1
9?86 t c 1
9 18 3t c

QC, I I

Can ce l Ia t 10n
CorrP c 1iO I IS
I I l tfc
Wil l b e &lt;~&lt; ccptcd u ntd 9 il 111
t or D ay o f P ubl,cn r ,on
REGULATION S
The Pubi1 Silc r r eserves rrw
rigt1t to e d1 t or r e tcc t &lt;~ny ud ~ ::.O MEO N E IO wash ou!Srdl' of
deem ed
ob t cct,onnl
T tH•
su n por ch and wrnd ows Also
pu b I i s h e r
will
no t
be
do full pa tn t1nq R c l f'rl'nces
re-sp o n srble for m o r e thCin o ne
rcqu ,r cd
Phone 99/ 7677
mc orrect rn se r tron
Y 7t1 Jt c

Help Wanted

RATES

For Want A d S C' rv •c e
5 c ents per Wo r e! onf' rll&lt;;r&gt;rr.o n
Minimum Cha r qf' ~ ~ Oll
IJ cents pE' r wor ct t tur •c
co n secutive rnsertron s
26 cen rs p er wo r d s r" lon
sc c utrv(• rnsc r ·iono;;,
25 Per Cent Drs c our1t u r1 tJClld
a d s and i'lds. p.'lrd wrthrr1 10

Notice
PIANO Tun, nq I .1nc Dan1PI&lt;; ,
Phonc 'I'll i'ORI
1 1\ LL Sprcrnl&lt;; thr u Oct I ~
Ju t1 e · s
1\ cnu ty
Shop
Ch esler 0~.1'0 Phone 16 1·11
9fl'i Jl..lR
9 /8 ]lc

nays

CARD OF TH ANKS

8. ObiluOtry
$2 00 for 50 w o r d 'n'n'" 'l! " '
E~~ ... ;:,C,:Id !U nal w o rd 3c
BLIND ADS
Add,t,ono l t'ic ChCJ r ne ~ L· r
.1\ dv ertrs e m c n l
I CE HOUR S
• 8 30 C1OFF
m to ~ O!l p 1n D.tily
8 30 am
to \ l 00 N oo n
:, aturdny

Sales and Service

In Memory

located At

GURNEY
L
MI C H AEL
L AST MEIG S COU N TY
SPANI S H
AMERICliN
Juncl ton 7-33
W AR VETERA N
Gurney
La f a yette Mrchae l was bo r n
May 18. 1878 . at Ge org e
Pomeroy
town , West V 1rgtnla . t he son
of Sam uel R and Harriet
L ewr s Michael H e departed N E W
·O IL
OF
M I NK "
th is lt l e August 27 . 197 ~. nt
produ c ts , new catalogs G!:' t
Ve t er a n s
M emo r 1al
on our qrowmq cus romer
Ho s p ita l . Pom e r oy, m110 ,
I tS! Or rnay be you wou ld
aged 97 year s, 3 mo n th s and
l 1kc to t~1k.f' orde r s? Pho ne
9 days H e was pr ece ded in
Helen J
Bro w n, 992 5 11J,
de at h by h1S pare n ts, hts
KO SCOT
I ndependen t
tw rn sis te r A lt a , hi s brott1cr
Dt s'ri buto r
O tto , a n d his sts t er Anna H e
9 71 li e
ior ned th e Mclhodtsr Ch urch
at
the age o f
16 an d
rema ined a fa ith ful member
a l l h is l i fe H e was ed uca ted
in fhe pub lic sc hoo l s o f th e
Georg e tow n
area
an d
Sta r t ing October I we
r eceive d
hrs
teache rs
are
buying Bla ck
traini n g
at
Fa i rmont
T e acher s Co ttcge . H e taught
Walnut s at market
in the schools of W es t
price
. Bring your
Vjrginra and Wa s hingto n
State H e en l 1s ted in th e
Black Waln uts to:
sen, ic e at his country du r ing
the Spanish Ame r ica n War
tn t h e F ir st Reg iment 6f
west Vrrginta Volun te ers
and served from June 17 ,
1898 , to Fe bruary 4, 1899 H e
wa s u n it ed in · marr i age to
Box 267
Florenc e
Atk i n s on
Pom er oy. Oh10
D ecember 27 . 1908 , a t Mead .
Wash ington . To thiS un1on
W ILL BE g i\/ing p1a no
were bo rn two c hildr en ,
l essons
in
my
h ome
Nellie Parker and Wayne
beg i n n ing Se p t. 22
Fo r
Samu e l
M1cha et
Mr .
appotnt me n t. ca ll 949 1803.
Micha e l w as a pion ee r in
9 26 6t c
many fi el d s . He took up u
hom estead near the present
G r and
C ou lee
Dam , W ILL cnr e for e lderly wo me n
rn m y ho me P~1o n e 992 73 14 .
Was h ington
I n 191 3 he
9 26 61c
retur ne d to W est Virgrnra to
assis t in th e care of hrs
Mat c h.
Corn
par ents
He
c ont,n u cd SHOOTING
H ollow, Sund ay, Sept 28 , at
farm mg and work ed on the
1 p .m. 1 mi le past M tle
construc t ion o f Loc k 21 in
Cemete ry out o f Ru tla nd
th e Ohio Rive r . He came to
9 26 2t c
Meigs Cou n ty i n 1920 and
pur chase d
th e
E l ihu
Robinson
prop erty
rn W I LL Ct• R E to r et d ee rty
fe m ale pat,e n t rn my home .
Chester Township where h e
Phon e (6 14 1 667 3402
re sided the res t o f his lt fe
9 25 Sl c
He was a memb er of the
firs t
Soi l
Co n serva l 1on
Board in M e1gs Cou n ty He
wa s a membe r of th e M eigs
County F ar m Bureau fro m
SHE EP su pplie s WiH"Ited
its begrn n1ng . H e. served on
Ph one 992 55·17
the b oa r d of Me igs Coun ty
9 28 6tc
Farm Bureau a nd Mc tg s
County Farm Bureau Coop
10FT STEP LADDER . 20ft
( now Landmar k l. The f irst
extensio n lad der, 4.5 c u . It
manag er o f t he Co -op .
wh eel barrow . Phon e 742
Harold Hill iq as call ed h1m
5&lt;t J5 .
" Daddy Michae l , daddy of
9 26 2t p
the Co'op " H e and Mrs
Michael helped found Fa rm .)LD turn ttu re . i ce
box es ,
Bureau Councrl 3 A. one of
bra ss beds, or comple t e
the fi r st Farm Councils in
ho usr holct s
Wri t e M
D ..
Meig s Counly . H e w as a l so a
Mi"ller, Rl
.1,
Po me roy ,
member of th e Grange . H e
O h to C&lt;1ll 9?'2 7760.
is surv i ved by hr s fat thful
10 7 7 &lt;1
wife, his two children , six
grand ch i l dren .
Martha
Parke r Poo le, Eric Pa rke r ,
Gary
Mrc h ael ,
L enora CH I CHUA HU A dogs, One
M ic ha el Lei fh eit , Lou i se
blacK Fema l e , 3 yr ol d , and
Michael
and
Edw arct
6 month old pup . Phone 742
Parker , and fou r gr eat .
4465
grandchildren · Wrll Poo l e.
9.75 3t c
Randy Parker ; Matth e w
and
K i m be rl y
M ichae t. WELL T RA INED Beag l es
several nteces and nep h ews,
Also, pups f rom 5 week s to 5
and a host of frtends .
m ont h s Phone 742.3810, o r
9 28 1tp
after Oct. 3, 742 2521.
9 .26 ·61p

r

Works, Inc.

Wanted To Buy

Pets

Lost

A KC R eg . Ir i sh Seller. mat e 1
year 5 mo nt hs old , $65.
Co n t act . Dean Schrac k , Box
REWARD for informat i on
91 Rulland , Ohio
lead ing to t he r ecovery of 3
9 24 tltp
pieces . 20 fl . long of 12"
galvan ized c u·l\/ert pipe TO GIVE AWAY
7 pupp it•s,
stolen from construclion Sile
part
Beegl e and
p art
of Chesler ·Tupp er s Pla1ns
Bluetick . Pl1on e 949 5 172 .
Water Di s tri ct, n ew offi ce
9 24 6t c
Contact
Brll
PUl l ins,
Pomeroy , Ohio . 992 24 78
9 26 -3tc
··CAR PORT Sa t e, Rain or
shine . F riday , Oct . 3, 9 a .m.
LO S T ~ License pla tes, Z 618
ttll 5 p m. 9 18 South T h ird ,
B, Phone D ante ! Davrdso n .
Middlep orr . Infants, g 1rls
1747 Chester R d, Pom er o y ,
a n d adult s, c loth ing , avon s,
992 .7208 .
fu rn tture, m i se
9 25 3tc
9 28 3tp

Yard Sale

For Rent ,
NEW LY turn t sh ed . 2 bed rm .
ap t , modern k llc hen . wull
to wall c&lt;Jrpct /\d ull s an i·,. ,
n o 01 il dr c n o r pets .)hone
9.!9 )7ll 3
9 28 61 C
.t

ROOM house. double car
ga r age , rn Pom e roy
For
in tor m.:atr o n . call 992 2502
9 28 Jf c

TR AIL ER s pa ce. ' ~ mr l c
nor th a t M et gs H 1gh Schoo l
on o ld R r J3 Ph on e 992 2941
9 78 l i e
2 sto ry house rn Mid
Pho ne
dlcporr , f ur n •s h ed
(3 04 ) 675 18)1 .
9 25 6t c

1 RM

4 RM apar tment , coup l e on l y .
Phone 992 397 5
9 25 tic
R f·.\

-1

renl

rUR Nt SH EO itpl
Phon e 99/ 36)!1

9 3 ' fc
..1

ROOM hou se, do ub le car
garage rn Pomero y
For
tnt or matton call 992 2502
9 24 3t c

N I 1 I R 001\'\ furn 1Shl'd d iiCt

,lp,lrtnll'nl s

u n furn . ~. l lC' d

P ho n1 · 99 7 '1.1 1 1

3 RM S l u rt1 1Shed and ba fh
apt o n g round llo or Ad u l ts
Cit II 992
on I y . r e f er ence
2050 a fl e r I p m
9 23 St c

Ralph ·Rodehaver •

CAI~NAHAN AUCTION CO.

'
•
;., ' t
• Navy Recruitin....g · SJa~iori

J. Carnahan' ~~ • •
949-2708 .
Racin e

221 Columbus Road

'

,.

W I LL do oil patnttng s o f your
home or any sub1 ec t matte r
of
your
c h oice .
Ex
per tence d . Sara h Wt!l(' 992
27 ~9 after 5 p .m
9 26 lie
CA RPENTRY ,
pune l tnq,
ttoor 1ng and ce llinq Pho ne
99 2 /759
9 17 76tc

Mobile Homes for Sale
1973 MOB I LE Home, 12 x 70,
total el ec tr tc. Ca ll coll ec t
afte r 6 p .m Pho ne ( 6U) 695
·1181
9 28 6tc
1V 71 MOB IL E Ho me . c lo se to
Me rgs M ines
Phon e 742
6582
9 23 61 p

6 ROOM an a bath , ttr ept ace.
full basemen t , t uel o il heat .
drt ll ed w elL 4 r oom s . and
halt c arp e t ed . 2 rooms,
hardwood f l oor s, a l um inum
sidi ng , sto r m
window s,
garage and too l shed Phon e
2J7 2063 or 1J.7 252 1 alte r 5.
9 25 4tc

.

D. Smith
949-2033

92 1 J01 c

Racine Plumbing

Emerg e ncy
949·22 11 or 992 - 5700
Co m p l e te &lt;Hr condr tro n tnq
s. a i (&gt; S a nd serv ,cc . he at,nq ,
p t u mbinq , r oofing and
gene ra l sh ee t me tal w or k .
Fr ee Esti m ates
9 14 1 mo

NO. 141 - 4 Bedroom o l der
home on quiet street off
street parki ng. Some b uil t .
in cabinet s, larg e front
porch , large fruit cellar.
$11 ,500 .
NO. 142 - Approximate l y
98 acres. 2 acre lak e
s to c k e d , large ba rn , new
roof , new alum . s torm
w indows, lot s of w ood s,
close to n ew m ine area,

Paint
Paint
Paint
Paint

Houses
Barns
Roofs
Anything

Dan's Shoe Repair
318 N . 2nd

Middleport , 0 .

TEXAS WE~TERN
BOOTS
KNAPP SHOES
SHEBOYGAN
Steel Toe Safety Shoe s

Dan's Shoe Repair
9·2· 1 mo .

FREE ESTIMATES

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown inlo WaIts &amp; Attics

STORM
WINOOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIO ING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

LARRY

LAVE~DER

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph . 992 -3993
4 10 l mo

Ph. 742-5081

HO US E for sate , 128 Laurel
St
P ome r oy . I dea l f or
co uple or co up le wtlh
ch il d . Larg e back yard ,
qar d en plo t Wil l se ll par
tia lly furnished , or wt thout
On e outbuildin g on lot For
f urthe r m ror m atio n . ca ll
997 3868
9 28 6tc
HOU SE l or sate. reasonabl e
Prtced Phone 992 7648 .
9 28 6 t c

9 17 1 mo .
If

YOU are in te r ested 1n
budd1n g a n ew h ome o r
hav ing your presen t home
r emod eled . contact Rou sh
Con str u ct ton , 992 7583 , Gr eg
Rou sh
9 17 lit e

WE SPECIAL IZE in mobi l e
ho me f ur nace repair . Phone
992 5858
9 18 lf c

! EXPERIENCED
' " .
I Radiato
.
Service - -:-·-

l
I

F rom the la r ges t Truck or
Bul ldoze-r Ra diator to the
s n;~atl esr Heate r Core .
Nathan Bigg s.
Radiator Spec1al15t

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

BR I CK hou se on Sec ond St ,
WE DO alumt num Stdrng,
P ome roy .
down town
Pom eroy
gut1er
work ,
r oo ftn g,
Ph . 992 ·2174
Su ll ab te for 11\lin g qu ar t ers
pane
l
ing
,
paintmg
,
plu
m
u pstairs , sma ll business
brng , We f tx the whole
down. off ice or home Withtn
house AI Tromm , 747 5081.
\ EWING
MACHINE .
walk ,ng d i sta n ce o f a l l
9 74 tf c
R c p:tir s . se rv1c e . a l l ma k es.
s tor es . Ca ll 992 .]489
99? //Fi t TIH 1 rpbr1 c, r.t10p ,
9 28 -lt c
EF'TIC 1 f, NK S Clf'anect
PonH• r oy '•u t horilcd ~&gt; rng cr
t-.'od ern 'clrl l l iltt on 99? J9'i.l
' ,, res a nd Se rv, cc
we
3
BEDRM
home.
j us t
or'l9/ll19
s t1a r pcn &lt;; cissor~
t tnished , re mod eling, Salem
9 13 tt c
J 29 tI c
St . , Ru tl and P ho ne 7J2 3615
a lt er 4 p m o r see M i lo B
DOZERWdRK E,._ cav at 1n g, 1- 0 R -T /1 B L E
T-0 I L E T
H utchtSOil
lnnd c lear ing , po n ds a nd
RE N TA L
Cons tru c tton
9 2J .tf c
b,l se m e nt s.
and
lnn d
Ou tdo or
even t s
Phone
sc ap n1g
P ull inS
Ex
G&lt;~ llip otis ,
.t t fr J7 3"/ .
3 BEDRM home and bat h ,
C&lt;l\laling, phone 992 2J73 .
R uss cll" s Pl um bi ng and
basement , do ub le ga r age ,
82630tc
t·t e at tng
car port , works hop O\/er
8 19 l f C
ga r age, 3 o u t buildrng s,
BACKHc.JEfo r r ent, hour or
Sa l em St
R uti and PhOne
R eg . or
ex . W I LL TRIM or c ut trees and
c onrract .
742 411 1
cavattng typ e Se ptt c ta nk s
Phone 949 322 1
shrubb ery
9 23 6tc
rnsta ll ed Bil l P ul lin s. Phone
o r 742 4441 .
992 2478
9 -7-24tc
8 27 -tfc

R E ~DY

Virgil B., Sr.

TEAFORD

Real Estate for Sale

REALTOR
ti ~JM~oth&lt;~mt St
Qf./ ")

33?'&gt;

Pomt'roy . 0 .

7 FAMILY - Bri ck honie wi th
2 baths, nat . gas furna ce and
la rg e lol . $1/ ,000
P O MER OY -- 3 bedrooms. 11 ~
bath s, h ot water hea t , garage
,1nd n i ce view $25,000
RACINE
3
bedroom
ren ov ated
hom e
Dr y
basement .
garag e
&amp;
wo rk sho p. $23,500

RIVER

COTTAGE

J

be dr oo m s. d r ille d we ll , o i l
f ur na ce on 12·1 A sking $14,000 .
13 AC R ES 4 B R . hom e,
m od bath. furn ac e. enc l o sed
p orch. base m en t r:~nd exce ll enl
v i ew SJO,OOO .

POMEROY - 3 B R. hom e.
br1lh . fn m rl y room , Na t . g as,
an d c dy water for only $8,500 .

RAC INE - 3 B.R. home. mod .
kit , dtn in g, na t. gas furna ce
and l evel l ot. $19 ,000 or good
offer.

POM EROY -

J B

R. home,

ba th , na t gas fur n ace, mod
kt t c hen . Fu ll basement . N ear
st ore . $17, 000

5 BEDROOMS -

Mod. ki l·

ch e n, 2 baths . one mod ..
sew in g
room ,
st udy,
fir epla ces. gas f u rnac e and 2
l ots N ow $77 ,000
LOT S - In al l sc hool d istri c ts.
$ 1500 up .

NEW LISTING - 2 B.R home
wi th coral bath lixtur es, l ike
ne w
N .G.
fur nace.
Full
ba seme nt for only $5 ,000.

WORK HARD. IN VEST
WI SELY, WILL MAKE YOU
WEALT HY.

CLELAN[)
608 E.
.REALTY
MAIN

t&gt;OME ROV, o
OVE~LOOKo I he RIVER
- 2 st o ry fram e (recen tl y
renova t ed) 3 1arge BRs . J1 1
bat h s, carpeted , pane led ,
ti led. N G for ced a ir heat.
l ull
basemen!.
2 car
ga rage , new s id ing. ONLY

$18,500.
WALK TO SHOP - Older 2
story frame
, i n good
condi tion ) 3 BR s 2 baths ,
d in i ng
R ..
uti l ity
R. ,
s lorage bldg .
BELOW

MARKET AT $8,300.
NEW 2 BR

5 MILE OUT -

bath ,
ca rp ete d ,
full
basen te nt
w ith
l ovely
rec r eation R ., carport &amp;
storag e 1 acre . $22,500

OUTSTA NDIN G BUY - 1
floor plan , 2 BR , bath, all
r ecently reno vat ed . N1ce
kitchen. NG forced air
heat. lu ll basement . T HI S

MIX CONCR
dc l1v ered r1qht t o
pro i ec t r ast a nd easy
e"&gt;tima t es P ho ne · 197
Go e g l em R ea d y Mt"1-M i ddle port . Oh1 0 .

El E
yo u r
r ree
3284.
Co.

6 30

tt C'

WOULu YOU BELIEVE?
Budd an a ll stee l burld,ng at
Pol e Barn pr ices? Golden
G iant A ll Steel B uil di ngs,
Rt
4, Bo x 14B , Waver l y,
O h tO Phon e 9117 ·2296 .
7-24 -tfc

"'

TEAFORD Sr.

•

Realtor
'
512 Second Aven ut· •

Gallipolis.

Jobbel" tn .

Free Estimates
AI Tromm

Real Estate for Sale

Oh to

LOT BY RIVER
You ca n buy th is wi!h o~
without
19 73
12 x60
Cham pion mobile h &lt;?me , 3
bedroom , f ul l y e qu~pped .
Drilled well. n1ce frsh tng
spot for we eke nd or a ll
year ro und , located be
tween St at e Rt 7 and t he
Oh ioRiver .
Ll
BEAUTIFU
BEDROOM
Fu l l basement. n ice la rge
fam"il y r oom . mode rn
kitchen. w bat h s, garage ,
central a ir , fully car .
peted, loca te d on a large
lot Approx . 2 ye ars old .
Like new . M us t see to
app r eciate
10 ACRES6 ROOMS
Ni ce r e mod eled home, 4
be dr oom s , L sh
su n
deck , 2 sets
ca rpe ti n g,
e
a
modern bat h, modern
k i tc he n bui l t in cab i net~ .
Appro x 5 m li es from R 10
Grande N1 ce h ome and
some land 10 e.:pa nd .
LIKE NEW HOME
Country sett ing
3
bedroom s , br,ck .L'I'nd
wood
s iding ,
large
modern k i t che n with lots
of cabinets , garage, 2
yea r s o ld o n a n ice l ot In
c rty Sch oo l Dis t rict .
I A . - HOUSE
Nic e comfo rtab le 5 room
house located on Rt . 141
Just out of c ity l imits wtlh
lots of
shade
trees.
basement , mrdern ktl .,
chenb nat . gas furnace,
c i ty wat er. l arge nice
ca rport , n ice
16'xl8'
sto rage building, ga rden
space . Ca ll now .
68ACRES
Beaut i fu l O ld Style home
in exce lle nt con dition and
ri-lodern . 8 ro o ms fu l l of
go od furniture , barn a nd
ot her
o utbuildings,
ca rpet ed, l oc at e d approx .
1'1 m il e off St ale H rg hway
325 n ear
the Mines .
Bott o m land . Call now .
SACRES
5 Room Hou se, porch ,
patio , r ural water, bu,il t .
in cabi n ets, dbl
stn k
located in Kyger Cree k
Sc hool Dis !.. A dd is on
Twp
A BEAUTIFUL
NEW HOME
Lo cated in a Restricted
M e adowgreen
E state.
Buy t his home and get a
$2, 000 income tax cred i t.
II has a tam i l y room with
wood burning f ire pla ce,
2'-'• baths, 2 car garage, 2
story modern home with
dishwasher . Located on a
la rge l ot. Must see this
home to appreciate
WHAT A BUY
5 roo ms, larg
l ot
plen t y
Por c h .

DURING OUR

••
•

•
•

GOOD BUY '75

•

CLEARANCE SALE

•

14 Ford Maverick6 •••••••••••••••••s2995A ·

4ll r . Sedan , 750c u . in .,
beautiful car .

cyt., powe r stee ring , au to . trans .

~2 Opel 2 Dr. Sedan ••••••••••••• s1995

S6arp 4 cy l. Gas M tse r

"

7%J.

Chevrolet 6 cyl. •••••••••••••••• $2195

1~ ton Pickup, std shift , onl y 250 cu . In engrne One very
c l!refullocal own er V e ry clea n . Gas mi ser tor truck

7.1 Torino Coupe•••••••••••••••••• s1495

..

Std . shift makes th is ve ry easy on ga s. Sma ll est v 8

7;0 Plymouth Duster •••••••••••••• !1195
2~ Dr .

Sedan , std . shift , 6 cyl. e ngine .

15 Ford Granv.a,Torino •••••••••••••• SAVE

4l&gt;r . Sedan , small
a i r condilioned. Only 5. 165easy miles
~ Dr i ver 's Training .

Z~

Ford Gran Torino ••••••••••••••s3495

4' Or . Sedan , sma ll

v.a,

air co nditio ne d , beautiful in a p .
pE!arance. Excellent condition .

1o Ford Maverick ••••••••••••••••••~95
'

Z~Dr. Sedan, 6cyl. , s t d. shift , ga s miser .

See : Fred Blaettnar, Pat Hill. or Dan Thompson.
OPEN EVENINGS TIL 7,00
EXCEPT THURS . AND SAT. TIL s,oo

'

'

•

•

DAN THOMPSON

RICH ARD D . JACKSO N
D IR ECTOR
Rev

FORD

Se p 1. 28, Oct

,.

PHONE

461 S. Third

1 12 hp

Grllwe~

992-2196

Middleport

in. Mower

30
7 rooms a
basement ,
ga
disposal , ci ty
wa
carport , n ice l e\/e l
garden space,
clean and ni
Priced to sell.

.,. K ~ 7 6

WEST
• A J 53

Mower and llozer Blade
1 10 hp Wheel Horse, Automatic with 42
in. Mower, Like New
1 7 hp Wheel Horse with 36 in. Mowe.r
4 New Wheel Horse Demonstration Units

CONTACT :
loi s Pauley
Bran ch Manager .

1974 CHEV. % TON PICKUP. •• 13695

350, auto., P. S., P.B., fact. air , tape. Like New .

V-8, auto., P. S., P. B., radio, real sharp truck .

1974
V.W. BUG.~ •••••••••••••• .'2895
Orange in co lor . This is a c lea n local ca r.

1974 PLYMOUTH VALIANT•••• ~3895

1973 FORD GRAN TORINQ.!2695

1973 PONTIAC CATALINA.&lt;t~;-;_~3195

• 9 4

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
Open Evenings Till7 P. M. &amp; New Hours on Sat. 9 A.M. TillS P.M.
JOBLESS UP
COLUMBUS ( UP! 1
lni tial cla im s for jobl ess
benefits in lhe sta te increased
by 3.9 per cent last week ,
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services Administrator
Albert G. Giles said Wednesday.

MORE LAID OFF
COLUMBUS i UPI J- The
Department of Natural
Resources
Wednesday
notified 150 employes in 26
eastern and northea ste rn
Ohio counties they will be faid
off Oct. 11 because of budget
costs.

r ·- ·- · - ·- · - ·- ·- ·- ·- ·- ·- ·- ·- ·- · - · - ·- ,- ·-.,

I'

- -----------------------

'I
'I

74 Cadillac
Eldorado Coupe

I
I

SOUTH
• --

• Q9

• K_J 10 7 53 2

•

I

*7500
73 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

9 32
'

East-Wes l vulnerabl e

G r een w ith green vi n.y l and green l ea th er interior -f u ll power , AM -FM , stereo tape , T . &amp; T . w hee L cr uise
con tro l. r adia l ttres, f actory air , 24, 000 mil es .

!
I

j
.
1·

I

1

hearts and led a low club. South ·

SHARP

North

East

s outh

'5400

73 Cadillac Sedan DeVille
Yellow wi th w hite viny l \OP and white leather i nt erior,
full pow , AM . FM st ereo tape, T&amp; T w hee L fa ctory ai r ,
radtal tir es.

"E lWOOD BOWERS t-&lt;EPA I R
Sweep (! r s , toa sters , trans.
a ll sma ll applian ces Lawn
m o wer , nex t t o s rnt e H ,gh
way G arag e on Ro ut e 7·
Phon e 985 3~25.
4 16 lfc

3•

EVERYBODY

Obi.

3 N. T

4•

Pass
4 N . T . Pass
Obi.
Pass
Pa ss
Openi ng lead- A •

Shops the

of where the ace of clubs wa s.

played dummy's king and wh en

5
Pass

it held , c l aimed h1 s co ntract .
He announced that he would

+

WAS $5 100

WANT AD

992 .5342

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
.
,
North and So.uth w.ere pla)'ing (&amp;\ (.,fl.:. ill'av • . ~
sound

pre emptive

brds.

At l easl

North thought they were. He
assumed that South would have
astdeaceforht sthree-diamond
openmg whereupon he could
. s at ~otrump .
count on• 10 ~nck
or course, tf South dtd hold an
ace, a double of four spade s was
c learly indicated , but North
didn 't think of that. He wanted
the game.
South wanted no part of four
notrump and ran to five
diamonds . He anticipated a
double of four notrump , but that
dtdn 't keep West from doubling

Ca ll:
Steve Snowden
PH. 992·7155
Middleport, 0 ..

'''
I'
'I'

1975 CHEVROLET CAPRICE

•4995

NOW

Cadillac -Oldsmobile
GMAC Finan'cif1g Available

1972 COMET 2 DR ..... ............... s1350
6 cy l. std trans., radi o, lik e n ew w -w tir es. b lu e l in rs h ,
n ice ca r wt fh good economy .

350
autom a ti c trans ., power steering ana orakes,
dark green fini s h , v inyl roof , saddle buck e t sea t s,
con sol e, radio , like new w · w tir es .

Pomeroy

1972 CHEVROLET 2 TON .......... .s2995
102 " ·CAv blue cab &amp; c l ean rn t e rior , fine service r ecord
&amp; never ha uled heavy l oads , 292 ·6 cy l. , 15000 lb, 2
speed r e ar a x l e, 82Sx20
10 p l y l tr es .

l
l
l

ON DISPLAY

'

NEW CHEVROLET LARK
MINI HOME

"You' ll like Ou r Qua li ly Way o f Doing Bu si ness"

By Travel Equipment Corp.

A Kansas reader wants to
See one of these courteous salesmen: .
know what a perf eel safety play j Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
is A perfec t safety play ts one .
Marv' ' ' Keebaugl!
h 1 ·
contract 1
I
La
In
su
res
your
against any and a ll possible "-"·- - -·- -·- ·- -·- ·- ·- -··- -·- ·- ··- - -,
adverse ho ldings.
Notice
(Do you have a quest1o n for N AO MI' S Wigs, Pr of essiona l
rhe .Jacot'J ys? Wnte 'Ask the
st y l1 ng , 405 Seco nd Ave
J

a co

'J

ys ·

ca re oI

t h 's

Phon e 446 8533 .

•••WE HAVE THE RIGHT DEAL
FOR-YOU

Notice

CHANGE of o ff rce hours , D an
No tter, D VM , e ffect Oct
1975 . Office hours by appt
227 -2

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

207 30
n e w spaper
The mos t ln --------------rerestmg quest1on s w111 be
used rn tl11 s colu mn _ a nd . DEAD sto c K removed . Nc
wnters w11/ recerve cop1es of
charge Call 2.t5 551.1

.JACOBY MODERN )

11

$5298

Cpe , less than 7,000 miles, delux e belts , tint g l as s, air
conditioned , d eluxe bu mper s and guard s, remote LH &amp;
RH mirror , 400· 4 8 8 1 engine , A M radio and tape , aux .
lighting , comfort il l wheel . Lik e new and a r ea l sharpie .

Open Eves. Tii6-Til5 p.m. Sat.

~11\:. ~U~~

SPECIAL

992 -2126

If

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves . Til 8

Pomeroy

ALUMINUM

AUCTION SALE!

Big Reduction Sale!

The Holzer Hospital Foundation w ill offer for sa l e at 10:00 A.M., on
October 11, 19·75, at the front door of the Gall ia County Court House.
Gallipolis, Ohio. under the terms hereinafter set forth, the fol lowtng
described real estate:

Reg.
Sale
Pl"ice
Price
2 Lo ve Seati S---------~5.00 ea.
15.00ea .
2 Other Lo ve Seat
169.95 ea.
139.95 ea .
Green Hide· A · Be
199.95
169.95
Green So f
39 .95
18.00
2 Pc. Beige lR . Sui te
169.95
115.00
3 P c . Livin g Room Sui t
139 .95
88.00
2 Pc . L iving Room Suit
9 .95
15.00

Gold Elec. Drver.like ne
Copper 2 Oven Range
Copper Hoover Port . Wash er

TRACT I : 6 rooms and bath and lot at 553 First Avenue, Gallipolis.
Ohio, be ing part of Garden Lot No. 20, fronting appro ximately 42 feet
on First Avenue and running the same w td th throughout to the low
water mark of the Ohio River . Being more particularly described tn
Vo lum e 151. page537, Deed Records of Gallia County. Ohio.

29.95 ea. 15.00ea. '
175 .00
139.95
29.95
139 .95
135.00

TRACT II : 5 rooms and bath and lot at 549 First Avenue. Gallipoli~.
Ohio, being part of Garden Lot No. 20, fronting approxtmately 40 feet
on First Avenue and running the same w1dth t~roughout to the lo.w
water mark of the Ohio River . Being more parttcularly descrtbed m
Vo lum e 174, page867 , Deed Record s of Gallta County , Ohto .

89 .95

15 Sets ol Bunk BediL-::-o===::-With Jth '' post, innerspri·ng 'mattress....._l 99.00 ea . l2Y.95
ea
·
3 Portable T elev i sion'':;;;-;:;;t;:;;;i!r:;;====::s~o.oo up
Upright Freezer, like new , frost free
288.00
21 cu . ft. Chest Freeze
239.95
T-win Size Mattresse
0.00 up
Small Open Front Heate
19,95
14 Desks , all size
49.95 up

Said properties are conti·guous to each other and will be f i rst offered
as individual tracts, and bids for each will be tabulated, th~reaft.•; ·
said properties will be offered as one tract and b tds taken ; tfthe btd
for sa id properties as one tract exceeds the sum total of the btds for
separate tracts , said properties shall be sold as one t~act · The Hol~er
Hospital Foundation r eserves the right to re1ect all b1ds.

BAUM
TRUE VALUE

'

Chf)ster, Ohio
OPEN UNTIL 9 P.M. SATURDAYS

Said properties may be viewed each Monday. Wednesday and
Friday from 9:00 A.M. to 12: 00 noon, or by .appotntment by call tng
CharlesAdkins,446-5115. A detailed description of each tract may be
obtained from Charles Adkins.
1'
TERMS OF 1SALE : Cash in hand on day of sale .

SIDING
90&lt;~,

a square foot
Gutter , 30t;,a foot with
sising. Al so shingled
roofs.
For
free
estimates call

CALL 446-9499
lWO WAY Radi9 S Sates 8.
Se r v ice N ew &amp; U sed CB 's,
pol 1c e monilors. antenna s.
etc
Bob's Citizen Ba n d
Ra dio
Eq uip , Georges
Cr ee k R d . Ga ll ipol i s. , Ohio
446 4517
? 12 If
SW EEPER
and
sewi n g
machin e r eparr , part5 and
su pp l ies . P ick up
and
d elivery
Da\l tS Vacuum
C lea n er '. m i te up Geo r ges
Cree k Rd Ph 4.1.6 07 9~
16 ] If
BEST JET STEAM
CARPET CLEANING
BY Professionals . Re sid ential
and Comme r ci al . I nsi de
your h·ome ·or busin ess .
" Clean , quiet and effic i ent "
Out si de in ou r t ruck Noi se .
Ext ra cted Wa te r
Heavy
Equipment , F r ee est ima tes .
For more inf or . conr~ct :
Sc o tc h Clean Cleaner , 656
2nd Ave , Ph 446 9027 Duke
Cleaners , 248 2nd Ave Ph .
446 14 12.
20.4 I f

-- ----- --

HI GL EY 'S Trading Post &amp;
Gun ~h op . Upper Rt 7. Ph .
446 0002 .
2 0~ If
1

I

' j

1973 BUICK LeSABRE .............. '3295
Cu stom H .T. Cpe ., tOca i -Owner, th at ' s really sharp
inside &amp; o u t. good w-w t ires , c ustom wheel s, dark
green \/ln yl roof . green f inish , AM radio &amp; tape , fa ct ory
atr , au t omat ic, P . steenng &amp; brakes .

1970
CHEV. CAMARO.................S2Q95
VB

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

discard one c lub o n each of

L _:__ _:__ _ _ _ _ _ __j dummy 's major-su tt ktngs

1973 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX ... s3395
Grand Prix coupe, black f in i sh , black vinyl top , SJ
option , stereo , rad i o and tape , factory air, power
stee ring and brakes White strip e radial tires. Ni ce and
sharp .

Wh i te , b lu e vi n yl top , b lue doth interior , f ull power.
Climate Con trol a 1r, T&amp; T w heel. AM FM st ereo tape,
radia l l rres .

decided that to play low would

Pass

''i
I
I'

73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

be to go down one 1rrespect 1ve
ExcAv·AnNG,
bc ... Kho e ,
dozer and d it c h er . Gas,
e l ectr i c and water l ine
buri al . basements , footers ,
sept ic sys te ms and brush
·cle a n ing W i l l haul fil l d1rt.
top so"il. san d and gra\/el,
l imes tone for driveways a na
roads . Phone Cha r les R .
Hatfi eld . Backhoe Service,
Rt . 1, Rutland , Ohio , 742 ·
6092
7· 11 -9otc

4 door , Co. Dem p .. sa ndstone fini sh , vinyl t o p &amp; vi n yl
tr i m. AM radio &amp; tape, air cond , automati c, P. S., P. B.,
P. door locks, P . wi ndows , Cruise ControL comfortil t ,
de luxe bumpe r &amp; guards . T his car is r eally loaded &amp;
ca rr ies new car title &amp; bal of wo:1rran t y . Save

'5100

pau sed to consider possibilities,
Wesl

.1975 CAPRICE a.ASSIC .... ······· '5495

Full power , vinyl roof. leather interior, T&amp; T
wheel, one owner .

I

condone back to·his 10. Then he I
led the nine or hea rts If West I
ducked , South would win in j
dummy, discard h1s oth er heart j
on the king of spades and lose .
two club tri cks.
I
Actu ally, West took h1s ace or I

10

Ha s all the extras , r ea l nice for 69 model.

DON'T YOU WANT TO DO BUSINESS WITH A FRIENDLY DEALER?
IF SO, COME E)N IN TO SMITH NELSON MOTORS,
YOUR FRIENDLY DEALER.

South used a rather standard

• 6

·~ ·

1969 OLDS TORONAD0••••••••••• !895

Ha s nearly all the extras on it, loca l owner.

home.

"'Q
ID I

2 Dr . H. T., vi nyl top, air . tap e, one of the sharpest in town .

1973 BUICK RIVIERA •••••••••!4495

EAST

• AJ 4

Brougham 2 dr. H. T.. 6 cyl. , auto ., P. S., air, only
12,621 mil es.

2 Dr . H.T., auto ., P.S., P. B., new Pontia c trad ein . Low mileage.

• Q 1?_9,,7 6 4 play . He ruffed the spade. led a
'I w 6 J w
t rump to dummy's ace and a se- ·

• A J 84

EXC·\V1\TI NG . dozer . loa d er
and ba ck.hoe work . se p t ic
tan k s
in stalled .
dump •
tru c k s and lo boys for hrre ,
w tll h aul f rll di rt. top soil ,
l1m esto n e and grav etr Call
no b p r Roge r Je f fers , da y
phone 992 7089 , n1gh t phone
9 'l7 3525 o r 99 2 52 31
2 11 lfc

2 Breakfasf Set

1 10 hp Case Riding Tractor with 36 m.

1975 PONTIAC FIREBIRD••••••4495

, - - - -- - - - - ---,the diamond contract.
NORTH
27
West's hand clearly called for
• K 82
a trump lead. but he opened the
• K73
ace of spades which gave South
• AQ8
all he needed to bring the hand

$10.000 .
WE HAVE 4 FARMS CA LL
FOR
IN·
FORMATION , OR A LIST.
WANTED !

Riding Tractor with 40

SMITH NELSON MOTORS INC., PH. 992-2174

Sound play save unsound bid!

M E NTS - l arg e home tn
good condition . 5 BR s, 2
baths, NG for ced air heat .
Por ches L arge a tti c J U ST

FOR SALE

ON NEW BUICK &amp; PONTIAC TRADE-INS
SOME GREAT USED CAR BUYS

------------~------------- ,

YOU MU ST SEE. $13,000.
COU LD HAVE 2 APART.

TOD A\
PH, 'E 992-2259

5

'

FALL· SALE

WIN AT BRIDGE

$40,000

307 Spnng Ave .
Pomeroy
992-2298'

8 17 73

W e h ave mteres te d buyers
for your property . (LIST

NO. 135 - 8.64 acres vacant
land on paved road-3 miles
from new mine area .

$10,500.00.

We
We
We
We

Your H e i t D ealer
Third St .
Racine , Ohio
Ph 949 · 5961

Strout Realty
NO. 136 - 2 BR older hom e
w ith full base .• dose to
st ores , includes gas range
&amp; 1 yr. old heating sys t em,

WANTED TO BUY
WILL PAY
76 tor 1964 a nd olde r
dim es.
65 for 1964 and older
quart C" r S
1. 1 30 for 1964 and old er
ha l \/ es
$3 40 for 19)5 and olde r
rt olt ar\,.
- - - - FOR SALE - - - I WH EAT BACK PENNIES
.B5A ROLL
, BUFFALO NICKELSS7 .00
A ROLL
SILVER CERTIFICATES
$1.25 EACH
S2.00 Bill s - $3.25 e ach .
ss 00 Gold coin s X F con d .
$88 .00
CALL 742 -365 1
R•J11and - Roger Wamsley

&amp;Heating

11.1 ACRE
on
Rt . 7 in
"Pome ro y. e lc c ., sewe r , an d
wate r , $3000 or wou ld t ake
p i cku p or la nd in country in
tr ade . Phone (304 ) 773 -5975 .
9 '}5 3tp

For Sale

Atlanta coal heater with warming oven,
bolts , nuts, pipe f ittings , paint , stepladder,
shovels , clocks. watches, copper fittings,
stove pipe, r.ope and other items found in a
t\ardware stor e and some it ems not found in
a
hardware
store
OWNER : T. o, STEWART
TERMS : CASH
Lunch Available
Not responsible for accident or loss of
property .

r

1 If &lt;;

N II&lt;'-"
11/IO b l l t
l tom e
l ',llh. f.lt '' ten 111il 1'"n or th
nt Pon,•ro y L ,1 r q1 · lots w 1l h
roncn •tr p1 110S &lt;,rc!Pw alk s.
rt l l' '' r r &lt;, c~r t d o t t &lt;, tr cr r
p,l r &gt; ,n q l 'honc 'I'J .' 1 "/ 'I
I 1 , I tfc HOU SE. 51 , ac res in Po r t l a nd
Ca ll (6 141 86&lt;1 1876 , aft er 5
sp ace l or ren t. A ll
1
p
m
~ ~ l~i~ ,;: Phon e 992 553.S .
9 24 12 tc
9 16 t i c
N EW 3 bedr m home . brr ck
T UR NI SH ED
apartmenl.
fron t , 1 cnr ga ra ge, modern
adu tl s only in Mrdd l eport
all el ec. 1 mile o u1 o f
P hone 992 38/.1
Cheste r . Ca l l 94 9 4692 or 84]
3 25 tt c
2667
9 24 12 tp
TRAILER space lor rent near
Ch es ter
$15 p er mon t h
Pt1on e 949 3521
UPPER SECT ION Ru s t i c
9 26 Jtc
Hills ,
Syr acu se,
Ohio ,
- -------------2 BE DRM . mobi l e ho me
Mode r n 3 bedr oo m , a ll
electric. 52,000 BTU a tr
Contact A l be rt Hill Phone
co ndilion e r
J ust bu ilt
949 2261.
Recreatio n room . A ll car
9 26 61C
peted 27x 14 , 524,000 Phon e
992 -7523
NEW
VILLAGE
M anor
9 -21 6tp
Apa rrm e nt s rn M i dd l ep or t , 1
bed ro om ap ts fr om Sl 04 plu s
etec Ca l l 992 327J or see
MIDDLEPORT ,
new
Mrs
Keat ley . Apt . 10 1,
d ec or a t e d , ca r pe l ed, g a s
Rtverside Apartments
for ced a rr . 3 bedroom. I ' }
8-28 ·2 6tp
s tory co r ner lot. s 1ngl e
g arage . n ear sc ho o l and
s hopp1n g ce nt er . 5 17 ,5 00 .
T R A ILE-R spa ce fo r re nt 1n
992 7614 , 586 Li ncoln St.,
Midd l epor t P hon e 992 5434
Middlr?po rt
8 29 261 c
9 16 lie
PR IV A T E n1 ee trnq r oom for
any orq antlii ii On ph o n e 99 ? JO
ACRE
Far m ,
ap
19 ! ~
proximately 17 acres far 1 11 lf c
m ing gro und Lo ca t ed one
mrl e back of P hi lip Sporn
Plant . On bla ck topp ed road .
Call (3041 8B2 2297 after 5 p
m
9 -25 6tc
10 10 J OH N DEERE dozer ,
dies e l e ngi n e , $45,000 .00 . 985
3594
5 ROOM S a nd bat h , modern
ki tch en , approximately 1
9 19 Sip
acre of ground, 2 garden
1010JOH N DEEREdozer,6 f t.
SifJaces, 3 outbuild tngs . own
bl ade,
canapy ,
w in ch,
wat e r sup ply, fU el oil heat
r eve rse r
bar ,
g a sol in e
off R t. 143on Ba ll Run Road
P hon e 992 -2889. Shown by
eng me $rl 5, 000.00 985 3594 .
appo intment on ly
9 19 8tp
9 26 3tc
("(

Stewart's Hardware and Gunshop is
discontinuing the hardware end of their
business and will sell new merchandise on
the premises located on Main Street in
Rutland, Ohio.

and many more to
choose from. -. Challeng ing
opportun ities . Good to ugh
training . For th e m ,an .
who's willi ng to work hard
and do his share of the
c hor·e s. Benefits include :
hous i ng ,. cJo"t hing, food . ·
· m~icaJ and dental at.
tenfiorv 30 paid v.acation
days if year, a chanc~ :vo to
travel. ai'ld a ·~ chan ce to
become SomeOne Special.
To find out ni1or'e, see your'

~

service.

Accountant
Phone 992 -6173

1968 DODGE . good cond tli On .
a1r cond tt ronmq, See at 13 1
Laure l St ., Pomeroy , Ohio
9 ?3 6t c

f./E I\ t..." o...• EL II'J G.
Pturn tJ, nq .
hr,1 t inq ~1nd a l l l yp cs · of
l.lC' lt t•r a l
rf'pr11r
Wor f...
(jUM C! tlt LCd
')Q
'{ CUr'&gt; (' )(
prr,f' n CP
Ptwrtl' •l4/ I 109

supp~

LARRY WHOBREY,

1966 FA L (ON , 60.000 mrles.
qood de pe nd able car for
$260. o r best off er
Phone
9925 190
9 23 Si p

Wanted

U.S. COINS

Collection systems,

1966 C H RY SLER N ewport , J
new t ire s Phone [61 4 ) 91l5
33 07 or 985 JJJ 4
9 25 }t(

Real. Estate for Sale

! f.

BOOKKEEPING,
Tax Advisory Service,

We Have Pintos &amp; Mustang
' '
•
MPG's

Virgil B.

' · - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - : - ----1

office

ONE 1969 Com m unity HomC's,
(3 bedrm ) all e l ec t ric
mob tle ho me a n d I ac r e to t .
TR1\ILER lo!. goo d loca tion .
Ready to li ve tn
Price
c l os e to sc hool bu s, gas,
$9 ,5 00 .
I
mile s
fr om
water, e lc c
Av ailab le rn
Rutland Ca n be seen by
Mrd d l eport P ho ne 992 2664
app t. by ca lltng 992 3537
9 2&lt;1 6tc
a f ter 5 pm
9 23 tf c
.1 RM
and ba t h l urntshed
upstair s ap t P~10ne 992 590 8
9 2·1 ti c

SATURDAY, OCT. 4, 1975
10:00 A.M.

MANY
OPENINGS
LIKE
THESE.
WE'LL TRAIN YOU ..
- Nuclear Technicians
- Data· Processors
- Builders
-f(lachinists

l or

Business Services

Auto Sales

~mployment

PUBLIC SALE

JOBS.

Athens, Ohio 45701
Ph. 614·593-3566•

Sa te , Mo nday thru
::. u t u1 ~· ~y from 10 t il l 5
C loth es, ''c:;hes. toy s, book s
r1 nd mi se'
' OC'ms
P r rced
ChCi'lP O l d R I "' 1 turn a t
H r&gt;rn toc k Grove , or Pil SS
pa r ks
on
n ew
h1Qh
way
a nd
turn
r iQht
on R t 68 t abO\Ie Darw1n
si gn
W,l1Ch
t o r srg n s
J,lme s Cu nnrnQhllm
9 /8 Jtp

Y/l.r.r'J

Walnuts Are Cash!

Excelsior Salt

U.S. Navy Recruiter :

') I f·M I LY Ya r d Sal"? F rtday
and Saturday , Oc t 3 and .1
S(&gt; w,n g ma chtne, rad i o ,
t ur ni turC' , chi l dren and adu lt
c l othe~ . nnd a l o t o f m,sc
19.1 13l'l'Ch ~t. M1dtllepo r t.
Ohio
9 28 6tc

D&amp;M APPLIANCE

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTQRS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbu s, Ohio
September 19 , 197S
Contract Sales L egal Copy
No. 75 ·611
UNIT PR-ICE CONTRACT
PMS-0005 (27)
Sea led proposals wi ll be
rece i ved at the office of the
Director o f th e OhiO Depart
ment
of
Transportat ion ,
·to lum bus . Oh i o . uni t! 10 :00
A .M . , Ohio Sta n dard T ime ,
T ues day , October 2 1, 1975, f or
imp ro vements in .
Athens , Gall i a , H ock i ng ,
Me .g s , Monro e , Mor ga n ,
Vinton
aod
Wash rngton
Count i es , Ohio , on various
- roads. in A TH , Gal
Ct t ies o f
Crown Ci ty , Rio G rand e tn
Gallia Coun ty , H OC . MEG
~Jiltages
of
M i ddleport .
Pomeroy in Me i gs County ,
MOE
Vill a ge o f Sta ff ord in
Monroe County ;
MR G
Vrll ag eso f Matta . Stockport in
Morgan County , VI N . Vi lla ge
of Zateska in Vinton Coun ly ;
WAS Ci ty of Be lpre , Villages
of
Lowell .
Macksburg ,
TownSh i pS o f Musk i ngurn ,
Warren
in
Washi n 51 10n
Cou nty . b y apply ing edge ,
center and la ne l 1nes
Pav eme nt W1dlh - Varres
Project and wo r k Length Va ry
The Oh io Dep11 r tment of
T ransportat ro n
hereby
not i f ies all bidd ers that i t wi ll
affirmat i\le l y insu r e that rn
any con tract entered in to
pu rsuan t
ro
t his
ad
ve rt i sement .
m inort fy
business ent&amp;rprises w tlt be
afforded full ! opport untt y to
submit bid s in response to this
invitaltOn and w i ll n ot be
d isc r imi na ted aga 1nst vn the
grounds of ra ce, color , or
natul"at origin in cons 1dera tro n
for an award .
" Minimum wage rat es lo r
this
pro jec t
have
been
predetermined as r equi r ed by
law and are set fort h in th e bid
proposa I . "
" The dat e set for com p letto n
of t his work shall be set f o r t h
in the bidding pro posal "
Ea c h
b i dder
s hal l
be
r eQuir ed to l it e wi th h is bid a
ce rt if ie d chec k or cashie r 's
c hec k tor an amou n t eQua l to
five per cent of his bid , but in
no eve nt mor e than fifty
thousand dollars , or a bond for
ten per cent of his bid , payable
to the Director .
Bidders. must apply , on the
proper forms , fo r Qu a 1ifica t ion
a t le ast ten days pr ior to the
date set for open ing b ids in
ac cordance wit h Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised Code .
P l ans an d speci f ications are
o n f i le in the- Department of
Transpor t atio n and the o ft tce
of
th e
Di st r i c t
D e p u ty
D irector
T h e Direc tor r eserves t he
righ t to reject an y and all b ids .

Real Estate For S31e

Yard Sale

(1\ . ., H pa id tOI ~11 n\ilt..f' ... i"lno
rl 10df'l". o-f mobrl £' ho mes
f' ~1 on C (lr C cl COll C 6 I .1 .j"l)

Pub

.•
29 - The SWiday Tlmes- Sentinel, SWiday., Sept. 28, 1975

r~------~~~~--~-----,

I!

10M RUE MOTORS

!

SAVE ON THESE
NEW '75's

I

!
j

!

j

1
1
1
1

I

1

!

I

1 Chrysler Town and CountiJ
Station Wagon
1
1 New Yorker 2 dr. (Tom's Car)'
1 Plymouth Gran FuiJ Hardtop
(Ray's Car)
2 Valiant 6 cyl. 4, diS.
1 with Air
1 Scamp 6 cyl. 2 dr. H.T.
1 Duster 318 V-8, 2 Dr. HT
with Air
SEE TOM RUE OR RAY DOUGLAS

l

TOM .RUE MOTORS

::J

I
4)
I
992 -2594
""""""
S
. AT. T'L 5
CHRYSLER
IL_.._._..OPEN
_______,......_____
MOI DIIS CCR,OUIIO "
I

-

·. '

\.
I '

f
I
I

..
'

'

-

�I

..

,

28 - The Sunday Times- Sen! mel, Sunday, Srpl. 28. 1975

..

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Seittinel Classifieds :~
WANT A DS

Nan ted

INFORMATI ON
DEADLIN ES
5 P M
Day
f; efo rc
l oca l io n .
Monday DP f!ci l in c 9 u ,,,

YARD SA LE , a ll day ';u nday , US ED J M q rllvrly hcd . $77Sc , 4
Se p t ·28 , R o u te 7 hyp ass.
N ew I dea N o 7 corn ptc k crs,
nl' a r H obson
~650
5675. J qr a \11 t y beds
9 26 1I c
nnd waqon s. ~ 4 75 ea , Fo r d 9
N t ra c tor $995 . 3 co r n
H UGE Yard :,a t e Ocl
ele vator s S ilO
'!it40 SJ95 ,
through J. 9 to 6. Sta te Rl
Li m e spr ea der , $15 0. N ew 4
')!J.t , t i . mdes fro m Ch esh ,r e
tt
and 5 ft
J pt rota ry
o n Stat e Rt . 7,
Ot shes ,
mower '5365 S3!! 5 N ew draw
ocpres s. 1on q las.s. new and
bars. , 516 ea Erm cl L u ck ett ,
use d c lo th es , qir l 's cl othf'S. ,
wash rnq t on S t . Al bany ,
ru q s. d r,1p es. baby cl othe s .
Oh 10 Phone 698 3031 or 698
) ornethin q tor e .. e ry one
781l 1
9?86 t c 1
9 18 3t c

QC, I I

Can ce l Ia t 10n
CorrP c 1iO I IS
I I l tfc
Wil l b e &lt;~&lt; ccptcd u ntd 9 il 111
t or D ay o f P ubl,cn r ,on
REGULATION S
The Pubi1 Silc r r eserves rrw
rigt1t to e d1 t or r e tcc t &lt;~ny ud ~ ::.O MEO N E IO wash ou!Srdl' of
deem ed
ob t cct,onnl
T tH•
su n por ch and wrnd ows Also
pu b I i s h e r
will
no t
be
do full pa tn t1nq R c l f'rl'nces
re-sp o n srble for m o r e thCin o ne
rcqu ,r cd
Phone 99/ 7677
mc orrect rn se r tron
Y 7t1 Jt c

Help Wanted

RATES

For Want A d S C' rv •c e
5 c ents per Wo r e! onf' rll&lt;;r&gt;rr.o n
Minimum Cha r qf' ~ ~ Oll
IJ cents pE' r wor ct t tur •c
co n secutive rnsertron s
26 cen rs p er wo r d s r" lon
sc c utrv(• rnsc r ·iono;;,
25 Per Cent Drs c our1t u r1 tJClld
a d s and i'lds. p.'lrd wrthrr1 10

Notice
PIANO Tun, nq I .1nc Dan1PI&lt;; ,
Phonc 'I'll i'ORI
1 1\ LL Sprcrnl&lt;; thr u Oct I ~
Ju t1 e · s
1\ cnu ty
Shop
Ch esler 0~.1'0 Phone 16 1·11
9fl'i Jl..lR
9 /8 ]lc

nays

CARD OF TH ANKS

8. ObiluOtry
$2 00 for 50 w o r d 'n'n'" 'l! " '
E~~ ... ;:,C,:Id !U nal w o rd 3c
BLIND ADS
Add,t,ono l t'ic ChCJ r ne ~ L· r
.1\ dv ertrs e m c n l
I CE HOUR S
• 8 30 C1OFF
m to ~ O!l p 1n D.tily
8 30 am
to \ l 00 N oo n
:, aturdny

Sales and Service

In Memory

located At

GURNEY
L
MI C H AEL
L AST MEIG S COU N TY
SPANI S H
AMERICliN
Juncl ton 7-33
W AR VETERA N
Gurney
La f a yette Mrchae l was bo r n
May 18. 1878 . at Ge org e
Pomeroy
town , West V 1rgtnla . t he son
of Sam uel R and Harriet
L ewr s Michael H e departed N E W
·O IL
OF
M I NK "
th is lt l e August 27 . 197 ~. nt
produ c ts , new catalogs G!:' t
Ve t er a n s
M emo r 1al
on our qrowmq cus romer
Ho s p ita l . Pom e r oy, m110 ,
I tS! Or rnay be you wou ld
aged 97 year s, 3 mo n th s and
l 1kc to t~1k.f' orde r s? Pho ne
9 days H e was pr ece ded in
Helen J
Bro w n, 992 5 11J,
de at h by h1S pare n ts, hts
KO SCOT
I ndependen t
tw rn sis te r A lt a , hi s brott1cr
Dt s'ri buto r
O tto , a n d his sts t er Anna H e
9 71 li e
ior ned th e Mclhodtsr Ch urch
at
the age o f
16 an d
rema ined a fa ith ful member
a l l h is l i fe H e was ed uca ted
in fhe pub lic sc hoo l s o f th e
Georg e tow n
area
an d
Sta r t ing October I we
r eceive d
hrs
teache rs
are
buying Bla ck
traini n g
at
Fa i rmont
T e acher s Co ttcge . H e taught
Walnut s at market
in the schools of W es t
price
. Bring your
Vjrginra and Wa s hingto n
State H e en l 1s ted in th e
Black Waln uts to:
sen, ic e at his country du r ing
the Spanish Ame r ica n War
tn t h e F ir st Reg iment 6f
west Vrrginta Volun te ers
and served from June 17 ,
1898 , to Fe bruary 4, 1899 H e
wa s u n it ed in · marr i age to
Box 267
Florenc e
Atk i n s on
Pom er oy. Oh10
D ecember 27 . 1908 , a t Mead .
Wash ington . To thiS un1on
W ILL BE g i\/ing p1a no
were bo rn two c hildr en ,
l essons
in
my
h ome
Nellie Parker and Wayne
beg i n n ing Se p t. 22
Fo r
Samu e l
M1cha et
Mr .
appotnt me n t. ca ll 949 1803.
Micha e l w as a pion ee r in
9 26 6t c
many fi el d s . He took up u
hom estead near the present
G r and
C ou lee
Dam , W ILL cnr e for e lderly wo me n
rn m y ho me P~1o n e 992 73 14 .
Was h ington
I n 191 3 he
9 26 61c
retur ne d to W est Virgrnra to
assis t in th e care of hrs
Mat c h.
Corn
par ents
He
c ont,n u cd SHOOTING
H ollow, Sund ay, Sept 28 , at
farm mg and work ed on the
1 p .m. 1 mi le past M tle
construc t ion o f Loc k 21 in
Cemete ry out o f Ru tla nd
th e Ohio Rive r . He came to
9 26 2t c
Meigs Cou n ty i n 1920 and
pur chase d
th e
E l ihu
Robinson
prop erty
rn W I LL Ct• R E to r et d ee rty
fe m ale pat,e n t rn my home .
Chester Township where h e
Phon e (6 14 1 667 3402
re sided the res t o f his lt fe
9 25 Sl c
He was a memb er of the
firs t
Soi l
Co n serva l 1on
Board in M e1gs Cou n ty He
wa s a membe r of th e M eigs
County F ar m Bureau fro m
SHE EP su pplie s WiH"Ited
its begrn n1ng . H e. served on
Ph one 992 55·17
the b oa r d of Me igs Coun ty
9 28 6tc
Farm Bureau a nd Mc tg s
County Farm Bureau Coop
10FT STEP LADDER . 20ft
( now Landmar k l. The f irst
extensio n lad der, 4.5 c u . It
manag er o f t he Co -op .
wh eel barrow . Phon e 742
Harold Hill iq as call ed h1m
5&lt;t J5 .
" Daddy Michae l , daddy of
9 26 2t p
the Co'op " H e and Mrs
Michael helped found Fa rm .)LD turn ttu re . i ce
box es ,
Bureau Councrl 3 A. one of
bra ss beds, or comple t e
the fi r st Farm Councils in
ho usr holct s
Wri t e M
D ..
Meig s Counly . H e w as a l so a
Mi"ller, Rl
.1,
Po me roy ,
member of th e Grange . H e
O h to C&lt;1ll 9?'2 7760.
is surv i ved by hr s fat thful
10 7 7 &lt;1
wife, his two children , six
grand ch i l dren .
Martha
Parke r Poo le, Eric Pa rke r ,
Gary
Mrc h ael ,
L enora CH I CHUA HU A dogs, One
M ic ha el Lei fh eit , Lou i se
blacK Fema l e , 3 yr ol d , and
Michael
and
Edw arct
6 month old pup . Phone 742
Parker , and fou r gr eat .
4465
grandchildren · Wrll Poo l e.
9.75 3t c
Randy Parker ; Matth e w
and
K i m be rl y
M ichae t. WELL T RA INED Beag l es
several nteces and nep h ews,
Also, pups f rom 5 week s to 5
and a host of frtends .
m ont h s Phone 742.3810, o r
9 28 1tp
after Oct. 3, 742 2521.
9 .26 ·61p

r

Works, Inc.

Wanted To Buy

Pets

Lost

A KC R eg . Ir i sh Seller. mat e 1
year 5 mo nt hs old , $65.
Co n t act . Dean Schrac k , Box
REWARD for informat i on
91 Rulland , Ohio
lead ing to t he r ecovery of 3
9 24 tltp
pieces . 20 fl . long of 12"
galvan ized c u·l\/ert pipe TO GIVE AWAY
7 pupp it•s,
stolen from construclion Sile
part
Beegl e and
p art
of Chesler ·Tupp er s Pla1ns
Bluetick . Pl1on e 949 5 172 .
Water Di s tri ct, n ew offi ce
9 24 6t c
Contact
Brll
PUl l ins,
Pomeroy , Ohio . 992 24 78
9 26 -3tc
··CAR PORT Sa t e, Rain or
shine . F riday , Oct . 3, 9 a .m.
LO S T ~ License pla tes, Z 618
ttll 5 p m. 9 18 South T h ird ,
B, Phone D ante ! Davrdso n .
Middlep orr . Infants, g 1rls
1747 Chester R d, Pom er o y ,
a n d adult s, c loth ing , avon s,
992 .7208 .
fu rn tture, m i se
9 25 3tc
9 28 3tp

Yard Sale

For Rent ,
NEW LY turn t sh ed . 2 bed rm .
ap t , modern k llc hen . wull
to wall c&lt;Jrpct /\d ull s an i·,. ,
n o 01 il dr c n o r pets .)hone
9.!9 )7ll 3
9 28 61 C
.t

ROOM house. double car
ga r age , rn Pom e roy
For
in tor m.:atr o n . call 992 2502
9 28 Jf c

TR AIL ER s pa ce. ' ~ mr l c
nor th a t M et gs H 1gh Schoo l
on o ld R r J3 Ph on e 992 2941
9 78 l i e
2 sto ry house rn Mid
Pho ne
dlcporr , f ur n •s h ed
(3 04 ) 675 18)1 .
9 25 6t c

1 RM

4 RM apar tment , coup l e on l y .
Phone 992 397 5
9 25 tic
R f·.\

-1

renl

rUR Nt SH EO itpl
Phon e 99/ 36)!1

9 3 ' fc
..1

ROOM hou se, do ub le car
garage rn Pomero y
For
tnt or matton call 992 2502
9 24 3t c

N I 1 I R 001\'\ furn 1Shl'd d iiCt

,lp,lrtnll'nl s

u n furn . ~. l lC' d

P ho n1 · 99 7 '1.1 1 1

3 RM S l u rt1 1Shed and ba fh
apt o n g round llo or Ad u l ts
Cit II 992
on I y . r e f er ence
2050 a fl e r I p m
9 23 St c

Ralph ·Rodehaver •

CAI~NAHAN AUCTION CO.

'
•
;., ' t
• Navy Recruitin....g · SJa~iori

J. Carnahan' ~~ • •
949-2708 .
Racin e

221 Columbus Road

'

,.

W I LL do oil patnttng s o f your
home or any sub1 ec t matte r
of
your
c h oice .
Ex
per tence d . Sara h Wt!l(' 992
27 ~9 after 5 p .m
9 26 lie
CA RPENTRY ,
pune l tnq,
ttoor 1ng and ce llinq Pho ne
99 2 /759
9 17 76tc

Mobile Homes for Sale
1973 MOB I LE Home, 12 x 70,
total el ec tr tc. Ca ll coll ec t
afte r 6 p .m Pho ne ( 6U) 695
·1181
9 28 6tc
1V 71 MOB IL E Ho me . c lo se to
Me rgs M ines
Phon e 742
6582
9 23 61 p

6 ROOM an a bath , ttr ept ace.
full basemen t , t uel o il heat .
drt ll ed w elL 4 r oom s . and
halt c arp e t ed . 2 rooms,
hardwood f l oor s, a l um inum
sidi ng , sto r m
window s,
garage and too l shed Phon e
2J7 2063 or 1J.7 252 1 alte r 5.
9 25 4tc

.

D. Smith
949-2033

92 1 J01 c

Racine Plumbing

Emerg e ncy
949·22 11 or 992 - 5700
Co m p l e te &lt;Hr condr tro n tnq
s. a i (&gt; S a nd serv ,cc . he at,nq ,
p t u mbinq , r oofing and
gene ra l sh ee t me tal w or k .
Fr ee Esti m ates
9 14 1 mo

NO. 141 - 4 Bedroom o l der
home on quiet street off
street parki ng. Some b uil t .
in cabinet s, larg e front
porch , large fruit cellar.
$11 ,500 .
NO. 142 - Approximate l y
98 acres. 2 acre lak e
s to c k e d , large ba rn , new
roof , new alum . s torm
w indows, lot s of w ood s,
close to n ew m ine area,

Paint
Paint
Paint
Paint

Houses
Barns
Roofs
Anything

Dan's Shoe Repair
318 N . 2nd

Middleport , 0 .

TEXAS WE~TERN
BOOTS
KNAPP SHOES
SHEBOYGAN
Steel Toe Safety Shoe s

Dan's Shoe Repair
9·2· 1 mo .

FREE ESTIMATES

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown inlo WaIts &amp; Attics

STORM
WINOOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIO ING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

LARRY

LAVE~DER

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph . 992 -3993
4 10 l mo

Ph. 742-5081

HO US E for sate , 128 Laurel
St
P ome r oy . I dea l f or
co uple or co up le wtlh
ch il d . Larg e back yard ,
qar d en plo t Wil l se ll par
tia lly furnished , or wt thout
On e outbuildin g on lot For
f urthe r m ror m atio n . ca ll
997 3868
9 28 6tc
HOU SE l or sate. reasonabl e
Prtced Phone 992 7648 .
9 28 6 t c

9 17 1 mo .
If

YOU are in te r ested 1n
budd1n g a n ew h ome o r
hav ing your presen t home
r emod eled . contact Rou sh
Con str u ct ton , 992 7583 , Gr eg
Rou sh
9 17 lit e

WE SPECIAL IZE in mobi l e
ho me f ur nace repair . Phone
992 5858
9 18 lf c

! EXPERIENCED
' " .
I Radiato
.
Service - -:-·-

l
I

F rom the la r ges t Truck or
Bul ldoze-r Ra diator to the
s n;~atl esr Heate r Core .
Nathan Bigg s.
Radiator Spec1al15t

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

BR I CK hou se on Sec ond St ,
WE DO alumt num Stdrng,
P ome roy .
down town
Pom eroy
gut1er
work ,
r oo ftn g,
Ph . 992 ·2174
Su ll ab te for 11\lin g qu ar t ers
pane
l
ing
,
paintmg
,
plu
m
u pstairs , sma ll business
brng , We f tx the whole
down. off ice or home Withtn
house AI Tromm , 747 5081.
\ EWING
MACHINE .
walk ,ng d i sta n ce o f a l l
9 74 tf c
R c p:tir s . se rv1c e . a l l ma k es.
s tor es . Ca ll 992 .]489
99? //Fi t TIH 1 rpbr1 c, r.t10p ,
9 28 -lt c
EF'TIC 1 f, NK S Clf'anect
PonH• r oy '•u t horilcd ~&gt; rng cr
t-.'od ern 'clrl l l iltt on 99? J9'i.l
' ,, res a nd Se rv, cc
we
3
BEDRM
home.
j us t
or'l9/ll19
s t1a r pcn &lt;; cissor~
t tnished , re mod eling, Salem
9 13 tt c
J 29 tI c
St . , Ru tl and P ho ne 7J2 3615
a lt er 4 p m o r see M i lo B
DOZERWdRK E,._ cav at 1n g, 1- 0 R -T /1 B L E
T-0 I L E T
H utchtSOil
lnnd c lear ing , po n ds a nd
RE N TA L
Cons tru c tton
9 2J .tf c
b,l se m e nt s.
and
lnn d
Ou tdo or
even t s
Phone
sc ap n1g
P ull inS
Ex
G&lt;~ llip otis ,
.t t fr J7 3"/ .
3 BEDRM home and bat h ,
C&lt;l\laling, phone 992 2J73 .
R uss cll" s Pl um bi ng and
basement , do ub le ga r age ,
82630tc
t·t e at tng
car port , works hop O\/er
8 19 l f C
ga r age, 3 o u t buildrng s,
BACKHc.JEfo r r ent, hour or
Sa l em St
R uti and PhOne
R eg . or
ex . W I LL TRIM or c ut trees and
c onrract .
742 411 1
cavattng typ e Se ptt c ta nk s
Phone 949 322 1
shrubb ery
9 23 6tc
rnsta ll ed Bil l P ul lin s. Phone
o r 742 4441 .
992 2478
9 -7-24tc
8 27 -tfc

R E ~DY

Virgil B., Sr.

TEAFORD

Real Estate for Sale

REALTOR
ti ~JM~oth&lt;~mt St
Qf./ ")

33?'&gt;

Pomt'roy . 0 .

7 FAMILY - Bri ck honie wi th
2 baths, nat . gas furna ce and
la rg e lol . $1/ ,000
P O MER OY -- 3 bedrooms. 11 ~
bath s, h ot water hea t , garage
,1nd n i ce view $25,000
RACINE
3
bedroom
ren ov ated
hom e
Dr y
basement .
garag e
&amp;
wo rk sho p. $23,500

RIVER

COTTAGE

J

be dr oo m s. d r ille d we ll , o i l
f ur na ce on 12·1 A sking $14,000 .
13 AC R ES 4 B R . hom e,
m od bath. furn ac e. enc l o sed
p orch. base m en t r:~nd exce ll enl
v i ew SJO,OOO .

POMEROY - 3 B R. hom e.
br1lh . fn m rl y room , Na t . g as,
an d c dy water for only $8,500 .

RAC INE - 3 B.R. home. mod .
kit , dtn in g, na t. gas furna ce
and l evel l ot. $19 ,000 or good
offer.

POM EROY -

J B

R. home,

ba th , na t gas fur n ace, mod
kt t c hen . Fu ll basement . N ear
st ore . $17, 000

5 BEDROOMS -

Mod. ki l·

ch e n, 2 baths . one mod ..
sew in g
room ,
st udy,
fir epla ces. gas f u rnac e and 2
l ots N ow $77 ,000
LOT S - In al l sc hool d istri c ts.
$ 1500 up .

NEW LISTING - 2 B.R home
wi th coral bath lixtur es, l ike
ne w
N .G.
fur nace.
Full
ba seme nt for only $5 ,000.

WORK HARD. IN VEST
WI SELY, WILL MAKE YOU
WEALT HY.

CLELAN[)
608 E.
.REALTY
MAIN

t&gt;OME ROV, o
OVE~LOOKo I he RIVER
- 2 st o ry fram e (recen tl y
renova t ed) 3 1arge BRs . J1 1
bat h s, carpeted , pane led ,
ti led. N G for ced a ir heat.
l ull
basemen!.
2 car
ga rage , new s id ing. ONLY

$18,500.
WALK TO SHOP - Older 2
story frame
, i n good
condi tion ) 3 BR s 2 baths ,
d in i ng
R ..
uti l ity
R. ,
s lorage bldg .
BELOW

MARKET AT $8,300.
NEW 2 BR

5 MILE OUT -

bath ,
ca rp ete d ,
full
basen te nt
w ith
l ovely
rec r eation R ., carport &amp;
storag e 1 acre . $22,500

OUTSTA NDIN G BUY - 1
floor plan , 2 BR , bath, all
r ecently reno vat ed . N1ce
kitchen. NG forced air
heat. lu ll basement . T HI S

MIX CONCR
dc l1v ered r1qht t o
pro i ec t r ast a nd easy
e"&gt;tima t es P ho ne · 197
Go e g l em R ea d y Mt"1-M i ddle port . Oh1 0 .

El E
yo u r
r ree
3284.
Co.

6 30

tt C'

WOULu YOU BELIEVE?
Budd an a ll stee l burld,ng at
Pol e Barn pr ices? Golden
G iant A ll Steel B uil di ngs,
Rt
4, Bo x 14B , Waver l y,
O h tO Phon e 9117 ·2296 .
7-24 -tfc

"'

TEAFORD Sr.

•

Realtor
'
512 Second Aven ut· •

Gallipolis.

Jobbel" tn .

Free Estimates
AI Tromm

Real Estate for Sale

Oh to

LOT BY RIVER
You ca n buy th is wi!h o~
without
19 73
12 x60
Cham pion mobile h &lt;?me , 3
bedroom , f ul l y e qu~pped .
Drilled well. n1ce frsh tng
spot for we eke nd or a ll
year ro und , located be
tween St at e Rt 7 and t he
Oh ioRiver .
Ll
BEAUTIFU
BEDROOM
Fu l l basement. n ice la rge
fam"il y r oom . mode rn
kitchen. w bat h s, garage ,
central a ir , fully car .
peted, loca te d on a large
lot Approx . 2 ye ars old .
Like new . M us t see to
app r eciate
10 ACRES6 ROOMS
Ni ce r e mod eled home, 4
be dr oom s , L sh
su n
deck , 2 sets
ca rpe ti n g,
e
a
modern bat h, modern
k i tc he n bui l t in cab i net~ .
Appro x 5 m li es from R 10
Grande N1 ce h ome and
some land 10 e.:pa nd .
LIKE NEW HOME
Country sett ing
3
bedroom s , br,ck .L'I'nd
wood
s iding ,
large
modern k i t che n with lots
of cabinets , garage, 2
yea r s o ld o n a n ice l ot In
c rty Sch oo l Dis t rict .
I A . - HOUSE
Nic e comfo rtab le 5 room
house located on Rt . 141
Just out of c ity l imits wtlh
lots of
shade
trees.
basement , mrdern ktl .,
chenb nat . gas furnace,
c i ty wat er. l arge nice
ca rport , n ice
16'xl8'
sto rage building, ga rden
space . Ca ll now .
68ACRES
Beaut i fu l O ld Style home
in exce lle nt con dition and
ri-lodern . 8 ro o ms fu l l of
go od furniture , barn a nd
ot her
o utbuildings,
ca rpet ed, l oc at e d approx .
1'1 m il e off St ale H rg hway
325 n ear
the Mines .
Bott o m land . Call now .
SACRES
5 Room Hou se, porch ,
patio , r ural water, bu,il t .
in cabi n ets, dbl
stn k
located in Kyger Cree k
Sc hool Dis !.. A dd is on
Twp
A BEAUTIFUL
NEW HOME
Lo cated in a Restricted
M e adowgreen
E state.
Buy t his home and get a
$2, 000 income tax cred i t.
II has a tam i l y room with
wood burning f ire pla ce,
2'-'• baths, 2 car garage, 2
story modern home with
dishwasher . Located on a
la rge l ot. Must see this
home to appreciate
WHAT A BUY
5 roo ms, larg
l ot
plen t y
Por c h .

DURING OUR

••
•

•
•

GOOD BUY '75

•

CLEARANCE SALE

•

14 Ford Maverick6 •••••••••••••••••s2995A ·

4ll r . Sedan , 750c u . in .,
beautiful car .

cyt., powe r stee ring , au to . trans .

~2 Opel 2 Dr. Sedan ••••••••••••• s1995

S6arp 4 cy l. Gas M tse r

"

7%J.

Chevrolet 6 cyl. •••••••••••••••• $2195

1~ ton Pickup, std shift , onl y 250 cu . In engrne One very
c l!refullocal own er V e ry clea n . Gas mi ser tor truck

7.1 Torino Coupe•••••••••••••••••• s1495

..

Std . shift makes th is ve ry easy on ga s. Sma ll est v 8

7;0 Plymouth Duster •••••••••••••• !1195
2~ Dr .

Sedan , std . shift , 6 cyl. e ngine .

15 Ford Granv.a,Torino •••••••••••••• SAVE

4l&gt;r . Sedan , small
a i r condilioned. Only 5. 165easy miles
~ Dr i ver 's Training .

Z~

Ford Gran Torino ••••••••••••••s3495

4' Or . Sedan , sma ll

v.a,

air co nditio ne d , beautiful in a p .
pE!arance. Excellent condition .

1o Ford Maverick ••••••••••••••••••~95
'

Z~Dr. Sedan, 6cyl. , s t d. shift , ga s miser .

See : Fred Blaettnar, Pat Hill. or Dan Thompson.
OPEN EVENINGS TIL 7,00
EXCEPT THURS . AND SAT. TIL s,oo

'

'

•

•

DAN THOMPSON

RICH ARD D . JACKSO N
D IR ECTOR
Rev

FORD

Se p 1. 28, Oct

,.

PHONE

461 S. Third

1 12 hp

Grllwe~

992-2196

Middleport

in. Mower

30
7 rooms a
basement ,
ga
disposal , ci ty
wa
carport , n ice l e\/e l
garden space,
clean and ni
Priced to sell.

.,. K ~ 7 6

WEST
• A J 53

Mower and llozer Blade
1 10 hp Wheel Horse, Automatic with 42
in. Mower, Like New
1 7 hp Wheel Horse with 36 in. Mowe.r
4 New Wheel Horse Demonstration Units

CONTACT :
loi s Pauley
Bran ch Manager .

1974 CHEV. % TON PICKUP. •• 13695

350, auto., P. S., P.B., fact. air , tape. Like New .

V-8, auto., P. S., P. B., radio, real sharp truck .

1974
V.W. BUG.~ •••••••••••••• .'2895
Orange in co lor . This is a c lea n local ca r.

1974 PLYMOUTH VALIANT•••• ~3895

1973 FORD GRAN TORINQ.!2695

1973 PONTIAC CATALINA.&lt;t~;-;_~3195

• 9 4

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
Open Evenings Till7 P. M. &amp; New Hours on Sat. 9 A.M. TillS P.M.
JOBLESS UP
COLUMBUS ( UP! 1
lni tial cla im s for jobl ess
benefits in lhe sta te increased
by 3.9 per cent last week ,
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services Administrator
Albert G. Giles said Wednesday.

MORE LAID OFF
COLUMBUS i UPI J- The
Department of Natural
Resources
Wednesday
notified 150 employes in 26
eastern and northea ste rn
Ohio counties they will be faid
off Oct. 11 because of budget
costs.

r ·- ·- · - ·- · - ·- ·- ·- ·- ·- ·- ·- ·- ·- · - · - ·- ,- ·-.,

I'

- -----------------------

'I
'I

74 Cadillac
Eldorado Coupe

I
I

SOUTH
• --

• Q9

• K_J 10 7 53 2

•

I

*7500
73 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

9 32
'

East-Wes l vulnerabl e

G r een w ith green vi n.y l and green l ea th er interior -f u ll power , AM -FM , stereo tape , T . &amp; T . w hee L cr uise
con tro l. r adia l ttres, f actory air , 24, 000 mil es .

!
I

j
.
1·

I

1

hearts and led a low club. South ·

SHARP

North

East

s outh

'5400

73 Cadillac Sedan DeVille
Yellow wi th w hite viny l \OP and white leather i nt erior,
full pow , AM . FM st ereo tape, T&amp; T w hee L fa ctory ai r ,
radtal tir es.

"E lWOOD BOWERS t-&lt;EPA I R
Sweep (! r s , toa sters , trans.
a ll sma ll applian ces Lawn
m o wer , nex t t o s rnt e H ,gh
way G arag e on Ro ut e 7·
Phon e 985 3~25.
4 16 lfc

3•

EVERYBODY

Obi.

3 N. T

4•

Pass
4 N . T . Pass
Obi.
Pass
Pa ss
Openi ng lead- A •

Shops the

of where the ace of clubs wa s.

played dummy's king and wh en

5
Pass

it held , c l aimed h1 s co ntract .
He announced that he would

+

WAS $5 100

WANT AD

992 .5342

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
.
,
North and So.uth w.ere pla)'ing (&amp;\ (.,fl.:. ill'av • . ~
sound

pre emptive

brds.

At l easl

North thought they were. He
assumed that South would have
astdeaceforht sthree-diamond
openmg whereupon he could
. s at ~otrump .
count on• 10 ~nck
or course, tf South dtd hold an
ace, a double of four spade s was
c learly indicated , but North
didn 't think of that. He wanted
the game.
South wanted no part of four
notrump and ran to five
diamonds . He anticipated a
double of four notrump , but that
dtdn 't keep West from doubling

Ca ll:
Steve Snowden
PH. 992·7155
Middleport, 0 ..

'''
I'
'I'

1975 CHEVROLET CAPRICE

•4995

NOW

Cadillac -Oldsmobile
GMAC Finan'cif1g Available

1972 COMET 2 DR ..... ............... s1350
6 cy l. std trans., radi o, lik e n ew w -w tir es. b lu e l in rs h ,
n ice ca r wt fh good economy .

350
autom a ti c trans ., power steering ana orakes,
dark green fini s h , v inyl roof , saddle buck e t sea t s,
con sol e, radio , like new w · w tir es .

Pomeroy

1972 CHEVROLET 2 TON .......... .s2995
102 " ·CAv blue cab &amp; c l ean rn t e rior , fine service r ecord
&amp; never ha uled heavy l oads , 292 ·6 cy l. , 15000 lb, 2
speed r e ar a x l e, 82Sx20
10 p l y l tr es .

l
l
l

ON DISPLAY

'

NEW CHEVROLET LARK
MINI HOME

"You' ll like Ou r Qua li ly Way o f Doing Bu si ness"

By Travel Equipment Corp.

A Kansas reader wants to
See one of these courteous salesmen: .
know what a perf eel safety play j Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
is A perfec t safety play ts one .
Marv' ' ' Keebaugl!
h 1 ·
contract 1
I
La
In
su
res
your
against any and a ll possible "-"·- - -·- -·- ·- -·- ·- ·- -··- -·- ·- ··- - -,
adverse ho ldings.
Notice
(Do you have a quest1o n for N AO MI' S Wigs, Pr of essiona l
rhe .Jacot'J ys? Wnte 'Ask the
st y l1 ng , 405 Seco nd Ave
J

a co

'J

ys ·

ca re oI

t h 's

Phon e 446 8533 .

•••WE HAVE THE RIGHT DEAL
FOR-YOU

Notice

CHANGE of o ff rce hours , D an
No tter, D VM , e ffect Oct
1975 . Office hours by appt
227 -2

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

207 30
n e w spaper
The mos t ln --------------rerestmg quest1on s w111 be
used rn tl11 s colu mn _ a nd . DEAD sto c K removed . Nc
wnters w11/ recerve cop1es of
charge Call 2.t5 551.1

.JACOBY MODERN )

11

$5298

Cpe , less than 7,000 miles, delux e belts , tint g l as s, air
conditioned , d eluxe bu mper s and guard s, remote LH &amp;
RH mirror , 400· 4 8 8 1 engine , A M radio and tape , aux .
lighting , comfort il l wheel . Lik e new and a r ea l sharpie .

Open Eves. Tii6-Til5 p.m. Sat.

~11\:. ~U~~

SPECIAL

992 -2126

If

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves . Til 8

Pomeroy

ALUMINUM

AUCTION SALE!

Big Reduction Sale!

The Holzer Hospital Foundation w ill offer for sa l e at 10:00 A.M., on
October 11, 19·75, at the front door of the Gall ia County Court House.
Gallipolis, Ohio. under the terms hereinafter set forth, the fol lowtng
described real estate:

Reg.
Sale
Pl"ice
Price
2 Lo ve Seati S---------~5.00 ea.
15.00ea .
2 Other Lo ve Seat
169.95 ea.
139.95 ea .
Green Hide· A · Be
199.95
169.95
Green So f
39 .95
18.00
2 Pc. Beige lR . Sui te
169.95
115.00
3 P c . Livin g Room Sui t
139 .95
88.00
2 Pc . L iving Room Suit
9 .95
15.00

Gold Elec. Drver.like ne
Copper 2 Oven Range
Copper Hoover Port . Wash er

TRACT I : 6 rooms and bath and lot at 553 First Avenue, Gallipolis.
Ohio, be ing part of Garden Lot No. 20, fronting appro ximately 42 feet
on First Avenue and running the same w td th throughout to the low
water mark of the Ohio River . Being more particularly described tn
Vo lum e 151. page537, Deed Records of Gallia County. Ohio.

29.95 ea. 15.00ea. '
175 .00
139.95
29.95
139 .95
135.00

TRACT II : 5 rooms and bath and lot at 549 First Avenue. Gallipoli~.
Ohio, being part of Garden Lot No. 20, fronting approxtmately 40 feet
on First Avenue and running the same w1dth t~roughout to the lo.w
water mark of the Ohio River . Being more parttcularly descrtbed m
Vo lum e 174, page867 , Deed Record s of Gallta County , Ohto .

89 .95

15 Sets ol Bunk BediL-::-o===::-With Jth '' post, innerspri·ng 'mattress....._l 99.00 ea . l2Y.95
ea
·
3 Portable T elev i sion'':;;;-;:;;t;:;;;i!r:;;====::s~o.oo up
Upright Freezer, like new , frost free
288.00
21 cu . ft. Chest Freeze
239.95
T-win Size Mattresse
0.00 up
Small Open Front Heate
19,95
14 Desks , all size
49.95 up

Said properties are conti·guous to each other and will be f i rst offered
as individual tracts, and bids for each will be tabulated, th~reaft.•; ·
said properties will be offered as one tract and b tds taken ; tfthe btd
for sa id properties as one tract exceeds the sum total of the btds for
separate tracts , said properties shall be sold as one t~act · The Hol~er
Hospital Foundation r eserves the right to re1ect all b1ds.

BAUM
TRUE VALUE

'

Chf)ster, Ohio
OPEN UNTIL 9 P.M. SATURDAYS

Said properties may be viewed each Monday. Wednesday and
Friday from 9:00 A.M. to 12: 00 noon, or by .appotntment by call tng
CharlesAdkins,446-5115. A detailed description of each tract may be
obtained from Charles Adkins.
1'
TERMS OF 1SALE : Cash in hand on day of sale .

SIDING
90&lt;~,

a square foot
Gutter , 30t;,a foot with
sising. Al so shingled
roofs.
For
free
estimates call

CALL 446-9499
lWO WAY Radi9 S Sates 8.
Se r v ice N ew &amp; U sed CB 's,
pol 1c e monilors. antenna s.
etc
Bob's Citizen Ba n d
Ra dio
Eq uip , Georges
Cr ee k R d . Ga ll ipol i s. , Ohio
446 4517
? 12 If
SW EEPER
and
sewi n g
machin e r eparr , part5 and
su pp l ies . P ick up
and
d elivery
Da\l tS Vacuum
C lea n er '. m i te up Geo r ges
Cree k Rd Ph 4.1.6 07 9~
16 ] If
BEST JET STEAM
CARPET CLEANING
BY Professionals . Re sid ential
and Comme r ci al . I nsi de
your h·ome ·or busin ess .
" Clean , quiet and effic i ent "
Out si de in ou r t ruck Noi se .
Ext ra cted Wa te r
Heavy
Equipment , F r ee est ima tes .
For more inf or . conr~ct :
Sc o tc h Clean Cleaner , 656
2nd Ave , Ph 446 9027 Duke
Cleaners , 248 2nd Ave Ph .
446 14 12.
20.4 I f

-- ----- --

HI GL EY 'S Trading Post &amp;
Gun ~h op . Upper Rt 7. Ph .
446 0002 .
2 0~ If
1

I

' j

1973 BUICK LeSABRE .............. '3295
Cu stom H .T. Cpe ., tOca i -Owner, th at ' s really sharp
inside &amp; o u t. good w-w t ires , c ustom wheel s, dark
green \/ln yl roof . green f inish , AM radio &amp; tape , fa ct ory
atr , au t omat ic, P . steenng &amp; brakes .

1970
CHEV. CAMARO.................S2Q95
VB

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

discard one c lub o n each of

L _:__ _:__ _ _ _ _ _ __j dummy 's major-su tt ktngs

1973 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX ... s3395
Grand Prix coupe, black f in i sh , black vinyl top , SJ
option , stereo , rad i o and tape , factory air, power
stee ring and brakes White strip e radial tires. Ni ce and
sharp .

Wh i te , b lu e vi n yl top , b lue doth interior , f ull power.
Climate Con trol a 1r, T&amp; T w heel. AM FM st ereo tape,
radia l l rres .

decided that to play low would

Pass

''i
I
I'

73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

be to go down one 1rrespect 1ve
ExcAv·AnNG,
bc ... Kho e ,
dozer and d it c h er . Gas,
e l ectr i c and water l ine
buri al . basements , footers ,
sept ic sys te ms and brush
·cle a n ing W i l l haul fil l d1rt.
top so"il. san d and gra\/el,
l imes tone for driveways a na
roads . Phone Cha r les R .
Hatfi eld . Backhoe Service,
Rt . 1, Rutland , Ohio , 742 ·
6092
7· 11 -9otc

4 door , Co. Dem p .. sa ndstone fini sh , vinyl t o p &amp; vi n yl
tr i m. AM radio &amp; tape, air cond , automati c, P. S., P. B.,
P. door locks, P . wi ndows , Cruise ControL comfortil t ,
de luxe bumpe r &amp; guards . T his car is r eally loaded &amp;
ca rr ies new car title &amp; bal of wo:1rran t y . Save

'5100

pau sed to consider possibilities,
Wesl

.1975 CAPRICE a.ASSIC .... ······· '5495

Full power , vinyl roof. leather interior, T&amp; T
wheel, one owner .

I

condone back to·his 10. Then he I
led the nine or hea rts If West I
ducked , South would win in j
dummy, discard h1s oth er heart j
on the king of spades and lose .
two club tri cks.
I
Actu ally, West took h1s ace or I

10

Ha s all the extras , r ea l nice for 69 model.

DON'T YOU WANT TO DO BUSINESS WITH A FRIENDLY DEALER?
IF SO, COME E)N IN TO SMITH NELSON MOTORS,
YOUR FRIENDLY DEALER.

South used a rather standard

• 6

·~ ·

1969 OLDS TORONAD0••••••••••• !895

Ha s nearly all the extras on it, loca l owner.

home.

"'Q
ID I

2 Dr . H. T., vi nyl top, air . tap e, one of the sharpest in town .

1973 BUICK RIVIERA •••••••••!4495

EAST

• AJ 4

Brougham 2 dr. H. T.. 6 cyl. , auto ., P. S., air, only
12,621 mil es.

2 Dr . H.T., auto ., P.S., P. B., new Pontia c trad ein . Low mileage.

• Q 1?_9,,7 6 4 play . He ruffed the spade. led a
'I w 6 J w
t rump to dummy's ace and a se- ·

• A J 84

EXC·\V1\TI NG . dozer . loa d er
and ba ck.hoe work . se p t ic
tan k s
in stalled .
dump •
tru c k s and lo boys for hrre ,
w tll h aul f rll di rt. top soil ,
l1m esto n e and grav etr Call
no b p r Roge r Je f fers , da y
phone 992 7089 , n1gh t phone
9 'l7 3525 o r 99 2 52 31
2 11 lfc

2 Breakfasf Set

1 10 hp Case Riding Tractor with 36 m.

1975 PONTIAC FIREBIRD••••••4495

, - - - -- - - - - ---,the diamond contract.
NORTH
27
West's hand clearly called for
• K 82
a trump lead. but he opened the
• K73
ace of spades which gave South
• AQ8
all he needed to bring the hand

$10.000 .
WE HAVE 4 FARMS CA LL
FOR
IN·
FORMATION , OR A LIST.
WANTED !

Riding Tractor with 40

SMITH NELSON MOTORS INC., PH. 992-2174

Sound play save unsound bid!

M E NTS - l arg e home tn
good condition . 5 BR s, 2
baths, NG for ced air heat .
Por ches L arge a tti c J U ST

FOR SALE

ON NEW BUICK &amp; PONTIAC TRADE-INS
SOME GREAT USED CAR BUYS

------------~------------- ,

YOU MU ST SEE. $13,000.
COU LD HAVE 2 APART.

TOD A\
PH, 'E 992-2259

5

'

FALL· SALE

WIN AT BRIDGE

$40,000

307 Spnng Ave .
Pomeroy
992-2298'

8 17 73

W e h ave mteres te d buyers
for your property . (LIST

NO. 135 - 8.64 acres vacant
land on paved road-3 miles
from new mine area .

$10,500.00.

We
We
We
We

Your H e i t D ealer
Third St .
Racine , Ohio
Ph 949 · 5961

Strout Realty
NO. 136 - 2 BR older hom e
w ith full base .• dose to
st ores , includes gas range
&amp; 1 yr. old heating sys t em,

WANTED TO BUY
WILL PAY
76 tor 1964 a nd olde r
dim es.
65 for 1964 and older
quart C" r S
1. 1 30 for 1964 and old er
ha l \/ es
$3 40 for 19)5 and olde r
rt olt ar\,.
- - - - FOR SALE - - - I WH EAT BACK PENNIES
.B5A ROLL
, BUFFALO NICKELSS7 .00
A ROLL
SILVER CERTIFICATES
$1.25 EACH
S2.00 Bill s - $3.25 e ach .
ss 00 Gold coin s X F con d .
$88 .00
CALL 742 -365 1
R•J11and - Roger Wamsley

&amp;Heating

11.1 ACRE
on
Rt . 7 in
"Pome ro y. e lc c ., sewe r , an d
wate r , $3000 or wou ld t ake
p i cku p or la nd in country in
tr ade . Phone (304 ) 773 -5975 .
9 '}5 3tp

For Sale

Atlanta coal heater with warming oven,
bolts , nuts, pipe f ittings , paint , stepladder,
shovels , clocks. watches, copper fittings,
stove pipe, r.ope and other items found in a
t\ardware stor e and some it ems not found in
a
hardware
store
OWNER : T. o, STEWART
TERMS : CASH
Lunch Available
Not responsible for accident or loss of
property .

r

1 If &lt;;

N II&lt;'-"
11/IO b l l t
l tom e
l ',llh. f.lt '' ten 111il 1'"n or th
nt Pon,•ro y L ,1 r q1 · lots w 1l h
roncn •tr p1 110S &lt;,rc!Pw alk s.
rt l l' '' r r &lt;, c~r t d o t t &lt;, tr cr r
p,l r &gt; ,n q l 'honc 'I'J .' 1 "/ 'I
I 1 , I tfc HOU SE. 51 , ac res in Po r t l a nd
Ca ll (6 141 86&lt;1 1876 , aft er 5
sp ace l or ren t. A ll
1
p
m
~ ~ l~i~ ,;: Phon e 992 553.S .
9 24 12 tc
9 16 t i c
N EW 3 bedr m home . brr ck
T UR NI SH ED
apartmenl.
fron t , 1 cnr ga ra ge, modern
adu tl s only in Mrdd l eport
all el ec. 1 mile o u1 o f
P hone 992 38/.1
Cheste r . Ca l l 94 9 4692 or 84]
3 25 tt c
2667
9 24 12 tp
TRAILER space lor rent near
Ch es ter
$15 p er mon t h
Pt1on e 949 3521
UPPER SECT ION Ru s t i c
9 26 Jtc
Hills ,
Syr acu se,
Ohio ,
- -------------2 BE DRM . mobi l e ho me
Mode r n 3 bedr oo m , a ll
electric. 52,000 BTU a tr
Contact A l be rt Hill Phone
co ndilion e r
J ust bu ilt
949 2261.
Recreatio n room . A ll car
9 26 61C
peted 27x 14 , 524,000 Phon e
992 -7523
NEW
VILLAGE
M anor
9 -21 6tp
Apa rrm e nt s rn M i dd l ep or t , 1
bed ro om ap ts fr om Sl 04 plu s
etec Ca l l 992 327J or see
MIDDLEPORT ,
new
Mrs
Keat ley . Apt . 10 1,
d ec or a t e d , ca r pe l ed, g a s
Rtverside Apartments
for ced a rr . 3 bedroom. I ' }
8-28 ·2 6tp
s tory co r ner lot. s 1ngl e
g arage . n ear sc ho o l and
s hopp1n g ce nt er . 5 17 ,5 00 .
T R A ILE-R spa ce fo r re nt 1n
992 7614 , 586 Li ncoln St.,
Midd l epor t P hon e 992 5434
Middlr?po rt
8 29 261 c
9 16 lie
PR IV A T E n1 ee trnq r oom for
any orq antlii ii On ph o n e 99 ? JO
ACRE
Far m ,
ap
19 ! ~
proximately 17 acres far 1 11 lf c
m ing gro und Lo ca t ed one
mrl e back of P hi lip Sporn
Plant . On bla ck topp ed road .
Call (3041 8B2 2297 after 5 p
m
9 -25 6tc
10 10 J OH N DEERE dozer ,
dies e l e ngi n e , $45,000 .00 . 985
3594
5 ROOM S a nd bat h , modern
ki tch en , approximately 1
9 19 Sip
acre of ground, 2 garden
1010JOH N DEEREdozer,6 f t.
SifJaces, 3 outbuild tngs . own
bl ade,
canapy ,
w in ch,
wat e r sup ply, fU el oil heat
r eve rse r
bar ,
g a sol in e
off R t. 143on Ba ll Run Road
P hon e 992 -2889. Shown by
eng me $rl 5, 000.00 985 3594 .
appo intment on ly
9 19 8tp
9 26 3tc
("(

Stewart's Hardware and Gunshop is
discontinuing the hardware end of their
business and will sell new merchandise on
the premises located on Main Street in
Rutland, Ohio.

and many more to
choose from. -. Challeng ing
opportun ities . Good to ugh
training . For th e m ,an .
who's willi ng to work hard
and do his share of the
c hor·e s. Benefits include :
hous i ng ,. cJo"t hing, food . ·
· m~icaJ and dental at.
tenfiorv 30 paid v.acation
days if year, a chanc~ :vo to
travel. ai'ld a ·~ chan ce to
become SomeOne Special.
To find out ni1or'e, see your'

~

service.

Accountant
Phone 992 -6173

1968 DODGE . good cond tli On .
a1r cond tt ronmq, See at 13 1
Laure l St ., Pomeroy , Ohio
9 ?3 6t c

f./E I\ t..." o...• EL II'J G.
Pturn tJ, nq .
hr,1 t inq ~1nd a l l l yp cs · of
l.lC' lt t•r a l
rf'pr11r
Wor f...
(jUM C! tlt LCd
')Q
'{ CUr'&gt; (' )(
prr,f' n CP
Ptwrtl' •l4/ I 109

supp~

LARRY WHOBREY,

1966 FA L (ON , 60.000 mrles.
qood de pe nd able car for
$260. o r best off er
Phone
9925 190
9 23 Si p

Wanted

U.S. COINS

Collection systems,

1966 C H RY SLER N ewport , J
new t ire s Phone [61 4 ) 91l5
33 07 or 985 JJJ 4
9 25 }t(

Real. Estate for Sale

! f.

BOOKKEEPING,
Tax Advisory Service,

We Have Pintos &amp; Mustang
' '
•
MPG's

Virgil B.

' · - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - : - ----1

office

ONE 1969 Com m unity HomC's,
(3 bedrm ) all e l ec t ric
mob tle ho me a n d I ac r e to t .
TR1\ILER lo!. goo d loca tion .
Ready to li ve tn
Price
c l os e to sc hool bu s, gas,
$9 ,5 00 .
I
mile s
fr om
water, e lc c
Av ailab le rn
Rutland Ca n be seen by
Mrd d l eport P ho ne 992 2664
app t. by ca lltng 992 3537
9 2&lt;1 6tc
a f ter 5 pm
9 23 tf c
.1 RM
and ba t h l urntshed
upstair s ap t P~10ne 992 590 8
9 2·1 ti c

SATURDAY, OCT. 4, 1975
10:00 A.M.

MANY
OPENINGS
LIKE
THESE.
WE'LL TRAIN YOU ..
- Nuclear Technicians
- Data· Processors
- Builders
-f(lachinists

l or

Business Services

Auto Sales

~mployment

PUBLIC SALE

JOBS.

Athens, Ohio 45701
Ph. 614·593-3566•

Sa te , Mo nday thru
::. u t u1 ~· ~y from 10 t il l 5
C loth es, ''c:;hes. toy s, book s
r1 nd mi se'
' OC'ms
P r rced
ChCi'lP O l d R I "' 1 turn a t
H r&gt;rn toc k Grove , or Pil SS
pa r ks
on
n ew
h1Qh
way
a nd
turn
r iQht
on R t 68 t abO\Ie Darw1n
si gn
W,l1Ch
t o r srg n s
J,lme s Cu nnrnQhllm
9 /8 Jtp

Y/l.r.r'J

Walnuts Are Cash!

Excelsior Salt

U.S. Navy Recruiter :

') I f·M I LY Ya r d Sal"? F rtday
and Saturday , Oc t 3 and .1
S(&gt; w,n g ma chtne, rad i o ,
t ur ni turC' , chi l dren and adu lt
c l othe~ . nnd a l o t o f m,sc
19.1 13l'l'Ch ~t. M1dtllepo r t.
Ohio
9 28 6tc

D&amp;M APPLIANCE

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTQRS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbu s, Ohio
September 19 , 197S
Contract Sales L egal Copy
No. 75 ·611
UNIT PR-ICE CONTRACT
PMS-0005 (27)
Sea led proposals wi ll be
rece i ved at the office of the
Director o f th e OhiO Depart
ment
of
Transportat ion ,
·to lum bus . Oh i o . uni t! 10 :00
A .M . , Ohio Sta n dard T ime ,
T ues day , October 2 1, 1975, f or
imp ro vements in .
Athens , Gall i a , H ock i ng ,
Me .g s , Monro e , Mor ga n ,
Vinton
aod
Wash rngton
Count i es , Ohio , on various
- roads. in A TH , Gal
Ct t ies o f
Crown Ci ty , Rio G rand e tn
Gallia Coun ty , H OC . MEG
~Jiltages
of
M i ddleport .
Pomeroy in Me i gs County ,
MOE
Vill a ge o f Sta ff ord in
Monroe County ;
MR G
Vrll ag eso f Matta . Stockport in
Morgan County , VI N . Vi lla ge
of Zateska in Vinton Coun ly ;
WAS Ci ty of Be lpre , Villages
of
Lowell .
Macksburg ,
TownSh i pS o f Musk i ngurn ,
Warren
in
Washi n 51 10n
Cou nty . b y apply ing edge ,
center and la ne l 1nes
Pav eme nt W1dlh - Varres
Project and wo r k Length Va ry
The Oh io Dep11 r tment of
T ransportat ro n
hereby
not i f ies all bidd ers that i t wi ll
affirmat i\le l y insu r e that rn
any con tract entered in to
pu rsuan t
ro
t his
ad
ve rt i sement .
m inort fy
business ent&amp;rprises w tlt be
afforded full ! opport untt y to
submit bid s in response to this
invitaltOn and w i ll n ot be
d isc r imi na ted aga 1nst vn the
grounds of ra ce, color , or
natul"at origin in cons 1dera tro n
for an award .
" Minimum wage rat es lo r
this
pro jec t
have
been
predetermined as r equi r ed by
law and are set fort h in th e bid
proposa I . "
" The dat e set for com p letto n
of t his work shall be set f o r t h
in the bidding pro posal "
Ea c h
b i dder
s hal l
be
r eQuir ed to l it e wi th h is bid a
ce rt if ie d chec k or cashie r 's
c hec k tor an amou n t eQua l to
five per cent of his bid , but in
no eve nt mor e than fifty
thousand dollars , or a bond for
ten per cent of his bid , payable
to the Director .
Bidders. must apply , on the
proper forms , fo r Qu a 1ifica t ion
a t le ast ten days pr ior to the
date set for open ing b ids in
ac cordance wit h Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised Code .
P l ans an d speci f ications are
o n f i le in the- Department of
Transpor t atio n and the o ft tce
of
th e
Di st r i c t
D e p u ty
D irector
T h e Direc tor r eserves t he
righ t to reject an y and all b ids .

Real Estate For S31e

Yard Sale

(1\ . ., H pa id tOI ~11 n\ilt..f' ... i"lno
rl 10df'l". o-f mobrl £' ho mes
f' ~1 on C (lr C cl COll C 6 I .1 .j"l)

Pub

.•
29 - The SWiday Tlmes- Sentinel, SWiday., Sept. 28, 1975

r~------~~~~--~-----,

I!

10M RUE MOTORS

!

SAVE ON THESE
NEW '75's

I

!
j

!

j

1
1
1
1

I

1

!

I

1 Chrysler Town and CountiJ
Station Wagon
1
1 New Yorker 2 dr. (Tom's Car)'
1 Plymouth Gran FuiJ Hardtop
(Ray's Car)
2 Valiant 6 cyl. 4, diS.
1 with Air
1 Scamp 6 cyl. 2 dr. H.T.
1 Duster 318 V-8, 2 Dr. HT
with Air
SEE TOM RUE OR RAY DOUGLAS

l

TOM .RUE MOTORS

::J

I
4)
I
992 -2594
""""""
S
. AT. T'L 5
CHRYSLER
IL_.._._..OPEN
_______,......_____
MOI DIIS CCR,OUIIO "
I

-

·. '

\.
I '

f
I
I

..
'

'

-

�..

•

.r

30 - The SWJday Tlffies - Sent mel, Sunday , Sept 28 1975

~For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifie4s

Notice

For Rent

RUMM AGE ~a l e
Frtday
Sept

t F r I I~Jl

Monctay
3

'lQ O c t
N othtn g ove r one doll.;~r

Mobile Homes For Sale

1 t!

1&gt;1"''1 () 11 1

l"n~

r

t

"

1111 II

' h. l y
I 'O t t l

39

I t

tI

Tt&gt;xas Rd

128 3
B ON AT

P er manen ts

prlt('li fO il &lt;,
~pCC1a l
W{'('k l y
r tl l r&gt;".
c. r c l e s Motel 1380 E a ste rn
Ave J.J6 ]~0 1

1.: f

Rcq

now

Sll 50

$12 50
Sca lp
treatm e nts 53 50 plus se t
Bo bb t Ane s Cur let t e
Ph

615 1960 Now thr u Oct

HOMEM AD E

Be an
at

&lt;;L EEP IN G

J

r i'll £'

daly

Hu t

Jackso n P tk.e

ThC'

B urq cr

Skrd m ore,

w ~c K i y

Roon1

a Hote l

to

379 2151 or

UR N
Ave

f

446

no

t

on N e,q h borhood Rd
w•'h s 1o ve and r e tr .g 3 rrn s
ilnd new c arpet Dep req
I 16 :l:.!ri
2256

Protect Your Mobtlc H ome
Complete Scrv•ce Call Ron
1756

tf

nR Mobdr ho me

?

c ly
lul lr,ll .lrr i'ldv tt ::; only 416

t(l rcllt Ht

fr f'r r o,f,l l &lt;.

l

TARA

t

TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townhouses
1112 Baths
Pay Only On e Utolity
Addoson, OhiO
For Information
Call Shorley Adkm s

l l 1.1
t

PIN G SERVICE S

Wol l do
all kmrl s of lypm q 1n ITIY
hom e Ca ll 1&lt;16 !999
75 ! If
P&lt;'lPC' TITHJ
Lr •u
ext f'r•or
p11rrtrnq
R caSO i l d bl~
Pll
1 If&gt; 11 7 1 or
I 10 16 I I
1 1 'i If

- Cen tral Atr Condttton1ng
...... Wall to Wall Carpetmg
Color
Coordmated
Appliances
- Pnval e, Enclosed Pallo
Prtvate Well l1ghted
Entran ce
K1lch en Piinlry
- Att1c Stor age
- Sound proof ed and We i'
In sulate d
Nobody lives above or
below you m th ese luxury 1
apar tm e nt s
b e droom
located aroun d a b ea uttful
lake sw 1mmmg pool and a
tot Jot pro vtde d for
c h1ldre n

AMERI CA N Cancer Soc 1ely
needs part 1 me Exec ut,v e
Drre cto r to r Gal l1a Cou n ty'
Mu st h ave managemen t
abtltty
off•ce expenence
and entoy workmg wllh
p eople P re fe r someone w rt h
experr ence wor k1ng W l l h
co m m itte es a nd c om mun,ty
, a ctnn t res
Requ rre s ap
pro x~ma t e l y
12 hrs
per
if.tieek Sen d resume 1n care
, Of Box 376
Gall rp o trs
)f Tnbune
22612

MODEL OPEN
MONDAY
THRU FRIDAY 1 TO

(i

5

SATURDAY&amp;
SUNDAY2 T05
located 112 mole west
of Holzer Hospota I on
Rt 35.
PH 446 1599

For Rent

228 3
--~ --- ---- ----

f= URN apt 2 m lies from town
on old R t 35 4&lt;16 0390
228 tf

NICE
two
be d room
an d
basement modern h ome m
Ce nt enary
Depos it and
refer ence requrred Ca ll 446
4053
2283
1973 3 BR M H

38899SO

228 6
MODERN 3 BR ran ch w w
c arpel gar age, located 3
m1
from tow n , S200 pel'"
month plus depo sil Phone
:.t46 0008
223 ff

t

------- - ----

HOUSE Unfurn 4 rooms and
bath fully c arpeted on Bob
McCormtckRd, 5 m 1nutes
d r 1ve fr om town No pe ts,
R ef req A du l t s on l y Ca ll
&lt;146 2543
226 3

2 BR total el ec tr 1c a t Qua 1
Creek. M ob 1l e Pa rk. P h 245
502 1
205 II
UN F URN apt
4 rms an d
bath
ftr s t fl oo r
446 04-14
aller630pm
226 6
2 BR MH
for sa te
,_

-

no ch ld no pet s
1 MH 4~6 391 B
227 3

- -----------

FU R N
api
ad ult s o nly
ut 11 I es pd
no pe ts
2S8
Stat e Sf , 446 0085
227 2
T RAI LER l ot 1n M1ddlepor t
gas
wat e r
and e lec tr c
ava table 992 2864
227 3

' FICI ENCY apart me n t $75
qF
u trltlres pa •d
l ur n 1s h ed
adults 446 '1416 after 2 p m
224 6 .rl /\RGE room fac n g park
I ght
housekecp •n g
FURNI SHED apar tment Sl OO
e l e vator
fa cdll es
t or
5 rooms l1rst f loor gas
r et rr ed perso n Park Ce n tral
furnac e o ff street park.rng
Hot e l
44tl 4416 after 2 p m
9RH
22'1 6
F IR ST
3 BR HOME at 20 18 E aste rn
Ave
4J6 0008
$ 14 0 plus
secunty d e p
215 II
TRAIL ER 2 Br Hil l Top Dr
off N e ,ghborhood Rd
Ph
67S 4886 Wr t h dep
I 18 If

MOBILE home spucc 1 m li t?
from hospit al d 16 3805
190 1f
OFF I CE Space
down town
!46 0008

l or

fl oor B radbu ry s e l f
a pi
Ulilil1eS pd
adu l ts
on l y no p ets JJ 6 0957
216 !t

MO BI L E H ome

Ph

4.160756
21 6 t f

N EW R ege n cy
Inc
a •ar t
ment 2 BR c arpet~d total
eleclrrc P h 67 5 510 4 or 675
53 86 Sand H til Rd
Po 1nl
P leasant w Va
32 If

re nt
152 If

I

NOW AVAILABLE

W A NTED A full l 1me Reg
ARRT
Rad 10l ogrc
Technologrs t 1S n eeded F or
further 1n l ormat10n c ontact
the P e r s onnel D1 r ec tor
0 Ble n ess
Memorrul
Hosp1tal At hen s Ohro 6 14
593 555 1 Ext 290 A n Equal
Opportun '' y Em player
228 3

Call ~460571

}I~ t

t

l f&lt;' l 511'1 1 [ MOBILJ
H OME 5
1'1 II I ' " (
( &lt;lfJdlft d
1\ ~~
!' If.~ 1\) • ~U N lll Cfl .., llR
t if
Ill
II I 1 ~ r
I I
I J
II
I I dl
I r &lt;l V 1 I

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN
APARTMENTS

MAINTEN A N CE man And
welde;
Mus! app l y 1n
person
N o phone ca l ls
Co n tact Ed H opk ins P 0
Box 45 '1 Gal l rpoi1S Rt 35 W
Ga ll ipO li s Reductton
728 l 'l

MO B ILE ho me
after 4

111 1 1\~
11,000

I r

1,

!f

11

ll
II{ I
1'-f f(

I

11

11

dn •

f•

0

I J!&gt;i •t

II

MOBILE COMMUNITY

EW all etectr~c mob de home
1n Galll polrs
Adults only
Ph 446-0338
207 ff

LOTS FOR RENT

Moil i CQO
c xc
co nd
1 f( &lt;lll{
Whrl "
IOfJ I l l 'dfl1 or

nrdc s
fl&lt;l '

1'169 G T O t204sp
4 10 J567

Sl 000 Call

room
78 ff

FURN APl
an uttr r ll~:&gt; ~-'"'
Adu l ts only 446 9523
219 I f
F UHNI !i HED ap a r 1men1 , orr
s lreet p a rkmg , 1 or 2 adults ,
centrally loc at e d 4 46 0338
208 If

'

---~-- -- -----'----

EFF

•

A PT $ 125 mo
I

- ~ -- ·

l- - -

446 3643
I 79 I f

? BR Mobile H omes \IOU mo
3 BR Mob 1le H ome $1'75 mo
Ph ~46 01 75 or 4.46 19ld
I
180 If

'

·'

Lots for rent R ent me tudes
wa t e r ,
H~Wagc,
tr ash
co ll ec f•on , T V hook up, 2
acre re creaf1on area
Rodney Cora Rd
Rodn ey Oh10
Ph 245 5021 Gallipoli s area
992 7777 Pomeroy are a

Mobile Homes For Sale
TO SE LL rmmed 1ate l y, mus t
sac r 1fr ce. mob1le home 2
BR wrth screEjned 1n po r ch
A!l elect r •c E.')(C co nd Ph
446 4090 before s, 245 5293
eve n~ng s

I
- - - - - - - - - - ___[ ___ "" -

227 6

19 72 DAt " UN 240Z ar AM
FM 3000C m1 tes 30 mpg
nsoo Ph 446 3731 o r 446
0198
126 3

SA LE 20 PERCENT OFF ON
ALL
LIVING
ROOM
SUITES
RICE 'S
FUR
NITURE 854 SECOND &lt;146
9 52 3

lr1vfl tr
r'h 4 &lt; 1 67~77
B ,1 nk F •rl.l nc n ,q

~

I H9

I

A UL I ~ Mob d e Horrre ~c r
v1c e SK rt nq r oo t coat n g
pntros
awn nqs
&lt;lnchor s
ce rnc n t
wo r l-..
I r ec
es1 1mat es
l oll ! 2 1 ~ 94 11
or 2 15 9172 ;~ It er 1 30 p m
7 "
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME ~
Pt Pl e t~ sa nt w v a
197 1 11x6'l 2 OR Concord 11po ut
19 69 l~x6.'&gt; 3 UR Lr iJ ert y
196Q lhllO 2 f!R Dud cl v
19 69 11x60 J O R 01 nd r~ l e E')l
p .lnd o
1%1 l?xllO 1 llR Cllil mp ,o n

- ,_

196 2 I N T DUM P tr u ck. 8 ft
bed S600 18 f t eq u1pment
lrader S600 Ph 446 8568
22.1 6
974 GREM LIN X $2 300 7
G e rman
AK C
R eg
Sheph e rd pups 8 wk s old
388 908 I
reasonable
Ph
a lt er4p m
224 6
,-~~~~~~~~~~~- ~

COMPLETE DISP.
20 Head of Horses

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20~

REG &amp; GRADE

388.9991 or 367-7481

SET of good bunk b ~ d s m g ood
cond 245 5353 ex ! 35 or It
GE H L
se llunl oa dng
a lt e r 5 p m 446 3624
wagon S400
16 Ge hl self
226 3
unloadmg wagon $ 1,4 00 No
880 N ew H olland for age
BUYING
cho ppe r
w rlh
co rnhead
OLD Sil ver CO in S 196 1 and
$3 000 No 12 John Deere
un d er $ 1 tor hal ves SOc for
lor age c h opper w.th c orn
quart ers
?Oc lor d m es
head a nd hay p1 cku p a t
Prem 1um for s l ver do llar s
tachment S500 Goo d
N ew
Naom , w .gs lOS :lnd Ave
Va n Dal e s lo unto aders
Ph
11 6 85] 3 Hr s
Tues
and fo r age wagons
N ew
Wed
I hurs
Sa t
10 30
Pape c f o rag e c hoppel'"s
5 30 f' r
10 30 10 7 p m
blower s an d wago n s Grave l
109 if
H rll Farm Sa l es F rank B uz
and
Dav1d M lis
Crown
C1 ty OhiO 256 6~28

Pets

227 2

---------------

BOAR DING nn d 1\KC We sty
pup s C1rc te L Kenn'" l s 116
11:17 t
16 I 11
AKC Reg Collte pup s Call
446 4205 after 5 p m or on
weekends
225 18
P IN E RIDGE COLL IE S
AKC Req Co llr es Sil ble- a nd
whrte ( 6 14 ) 156 1167
283 II
80 BB I S Pood l e Bout ,que
Prof esS ional gro om m g by
appor nt me n t Ph .JJ6 19 44
60 If

FOR SALE
1970FIREBIRD ES PI TE
P S , P B , AM .fM, atr
cond

4 s peed

U S ED
FU RNITURE
Sl eeper tr rp le dresse r ca rl
sprmg s gas rang e Phrlco
st er eo
C han nel Master
port ab l e
AM FM tap e
play er
CORBIN SNYDER FURN

Wanted To Rent
A H OUSE 2 or 3 b edroom tor
family o f 4 W1lh rn frv e miles
of Ga lli pOliS Ca ll 446 7890
2246

For Sale or Trade
GA RR ET T tre e farme r, log
skrdder new eng1n e Wo ul d
lrk. e a J D 350 wr th w nch 388
9906
2236

Camping Equipment
FA L L SA LE ~ N ew Apache
Sol1d State C amp er Trailer
s lee ps 6 was $2 495 n ow
$2 19 5 One Eag l e Fo ul'"
ca mper was. S1 125 n ow $99 5
U sed Apache Raven wa s
$350 now $299 A m sbary 's
Tra le r Sa les
63 1 Fo urt h
Aven u e Gal lipOl iS Ohro
228 3

Auto Sales
FOR your T1r e and Battery
needs co m e to Se ars T1re
Shop tn Th e S•lver B r~d o e
P l aza
33 If
1970 FOR D L TOPS PB a1r
55 ,000 acl u al mrles See to
bel 1eve
$1 3'50 Suzuk• of
Ga ll tpolls
228 2
SH AR P to oktng 69 Plymo ut h
F ury 3 Low m tleage 245
5862
227 2
H V W VAN R ebuilt eng 1ne,
man v ex tra s 446 3521
227 3

1968 OL DS 88 I ow ner low
m rteag e P S PB a1r good
cond P h 4&lt;16 1694 or 446
1S46
2 I 8 If

221 If

CLUB CALVES
Charolaos
Angus
Cross .
Excellent
Breed mg.
Bowman Charolaos
Ranch
Gallipolis, Ohoo
Ph. 446-3345

___

...__

__..

44 SHEET S of ~a 10 F1rec ode
Commerc1al d ry wa ll new
15 pet oft c on t ra cto rs cost,
also 6 sh eets of ce dar srdt ng
4)(8 P h 446 7486

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN
W e sel l :-.n.,. thtnq
an y b ody a t our .1\uc lr
B •.rn or m \OlJI ho nlt
•nform,ltion dlld p1c ku
scrv rc c c&lt;~lt 156 69 0
Sate E:.v er y S.l lu r&lt;lay
Nrql1t PI 7 p m

SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE
t-.LniHIIl SWd ll! fd·~ ·
CQrncr Third~ Olrv c

OH I O STO KER W Va lump
c oa l 1 r ewoo d B loc ks trte
cc m c n1 mortar
Ga llrpoll s
B lo c k Co Ph 416 2783
293 If

Plumbing &amp; Heating
STAND AR D
P lum b1ng Heal1ng
?14 Th1rd Ave '146 3782
187 I'
CAR T ERS PLUMBING
A ND HE AT ING
Cor Fourth 8. P me
Phone 446 3888 or 4&lt;16 1477
165 I f

rr

or t 1 E E tectr ,c
Po r
1.1 h l f' E I Pc \ r c A lt er n a tor
1rr tl Pow e r r't,m ts Ph 116
17(, rt

GENE PLANTS&amp; SON
P L UMB I NG - Healtng - A1r i
Condli10 n1ng JOO Fourth,
Av e Ph 446 1637

drag bush hog S100
2
moto r cycles $500
65 tn t
1700 Loadster 211ft f lat bed
tande m w tl h ext ra s
388
9906
2236

DEWITT S PL U MBING
AND HEATIN G
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone 140 2735
187 tf

Real Estate For Sale

STROUT REALTY
CLOSE
TO
TOWN
Lovely 3 BR ran ch has HW
fl oors ga s heal atr co nd
and ga rag e Th e ·k dc h en ts
co mp l e t e wllh ga rbag e
d•SP d Shwashe r eye l eve l
oven
range
hood an d
r ef er
Pr ,ced to sell a t
$23 000

PRICE
REDUCED
ASSUME 8 PCT
LOAN
and
tak e
1m me dr a t e
possess 1o n of thrs almost
new 3 BR ran ch Spe c1 al
features are a modern
k1tc h en n1c e laundry , cen t
aJr and ga rag e located tn a
n 1cc resrde nttal a r ea
LOTS

HARRISON TWP
65
ac r es of wooded h ill s wrth
fro ntag e o n 2 road s about
10 m1 f rom town $ 12 900

co

Phone446 117 1

- - -r - -

825 Th1rd Av e
G.-l lhpoll s 0

NEAR VINTON 20 A
plu s a 2 BR mobde home
The la n d ts mos tly t rlla bl e
and fronts on 2 road s

Call446 0076
or 446 0026

BOARDING&amp; AKC PUPPIES
K
P Kenne l s 388 B274 Rt
551
1 m '
eas t of Porter
305 II
KIT TE N S
S1a m es e
a nd
H rmalaya ns
both
C FA
446 3844 a ft e r I p m
224 6

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune

7 4 VEGA cam back wagon
A C P S auto S2 295 6 II

~ S how &amp; Pleasure

Wanted To Buy

6for\IOO

'"

LOW DOWN PAYMENT New double w1de mobtl e
ho me o ff e r s 3 BRs , l arg e
L R DR ktiCh~n With Stov e
and
ref e r
and
n rce
cab ,nets shag c arpe l and a
f l a t lot w d 1 trade for f arm
OWNER
IS
LEAVING
TOWN AND MUST SELL
l h• s 4 B R ran ch Th 1s hom e
1s lrk e new and conta1ns a
com pl ete burtt m k!lchen
lar ge dtn 1n g ar e a laundry
r oo m ww ca rpet love l y
drapes gas h ea t cen t a 1r ,
and ga rage
wilh
c ily
sc hool s and ulili11eS Be th e
l 1rst to see lh1 S one

OF

LOTS A ll
W h e th e r
burldm g or buyrng a mob il e
hom e c all 446 0008 to day
d ~rectJo ns

NEAR CENTENARY
OWNER WAS transferred
and otters th 1s 3 BR ranch
•n ct ly sc hool dts t w1lh 2
bat hs
mod ern k.ilche n
laundry rm
ww carpet
garage and l arge lo t
$22 500
I
LISTINGS NEEDED WE
ADVERTISE
NATIONALLY - WE BUY
SELL - TRADE
FINANCING AVAILABLE
- Lovely briCk. and frame
b• level tea t ures 3 B R s , l'h
baths , fam ily rm , large
dmrng area , 2 car garage ,
cent a•r and kttchen wrth
built tn range, hood d1sh
washer and drsp $32 ,900
WORLD'S LARGEST
THE LEADER SINCE 1900
IN
SERVING
THE
NATION'S BUYERS AND
SELLERS
ph 446 0008

RANNY BLACKBURN, BRANCH MANAGER

227 3 "-------------------------------------------~

3 PC BEDROOM surte SSO
bet g e fur love c ou ch $90
blu e and green s how er
cu rta1n s scales clo thes
ham p er to match Call 446
2532 before 5 and 446 2572
after 5
??7 1

73 CAMARO, mu st sac rrfrce.
cream puff 6 cyl
Make
offer Ca ll 256 6652
227 6

MACHINERY
SALE
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1

12:00 NOON

23' F LOOR mode l b l ack. and
wh rte set , 1n exc co nd 446
4739
227 3

located 7 mo. south of Gallipolis, Ohio on
Rt. 7.

COMPLE TE D 1sp 20 head of
horses
Reg
and Grade
show and p l easure 38 8 9991
or 367 7.48 1
225 5

KNOTTS

School of
Auctioneering
Approved by the Oh10
Slate Board of School
and
College
Reg1 strafl on
at
Columbus, Oh1o
R.ege strat1on No 71 12

0286H
Phone Gallipolis
446 29 17

TYPE LT
Fact ory at r J SP€f.d mag
whe el s 77 000 mile s A M
FM Book Pn ce $3725 00
Sm1 lh 's Specra l Pnce

1975- 350 long de1sel w1th less than 60 hrs, 7112 ' 3 pt
d 1sk s, J 0 2- 14" plows, 3 pt Century blow sprayer,
451 New Holland mower, 7' lm co pull type cutter , J 0
12 A Subs01l er, 1 row c ull1vato r , metal 2 wheel trailer ,
J D 290 corn ptanter , 200-Bv Ktlbros Gravtty bed, 8 ton
wagon hydrau liC auger for wagon , Freeman manure
loader , Shave r heavy duty transplanter, 1970 Ford 250
p1ckup, 21' 5th wheel tra1ler w1 th ltves tock bed , all of
the above farm machm ery has been purchased w•thm
the past yea r

LIVESTOCK EQUIPMENT -

TH.M5-CASH

LOOK CLOSt!- HERE'S THE BUY OF A
LIFETIME
You must be thinkong of buyong or you
wouldn't be readong thos Well. don't buy
unlol you've seen thos fantastiC 4 Bedroom
home (Largest bedrooms on town) Includes
family room, 3 baths. formal donong , wood
burning foreplace, 1 acre lot woth s uper
river voew, 2 car garage E ~cellent con·
structoon Ovvner movong out of town and
must sell Pnce reduced.
PRICE REDUCED
SALE

Attrach\/1;' 3 bedr oom b•
le v e l , la rge k1fch en full of
.cabtnets
(r ang e
drsh
washer ) 2 f replac es 2' ~
baths large family room
w 1th bar 2 c ar garage fla t
lot Clos.e to Holz e r S39 900
buys thrs b e auly
LIKE COUNTRY
LIVING
Her es your ch ance L ovely ma mtena nce free
ran c h 3 larg e bedrooms ,
huge 11v1ng famil y an d
d 1n1ng room 2 bath s 2 car
garage larg e flat lo t on
c ounty road
SUPER NICE HOME
bed r oom al l cedar ran ch
a b1g tot large L R
Itorn-" 1 d1n1ng, excelle n t
k.!lch e M tam 1ly r oom l arge
master
bedroom
wilh
pnvale bath You lll rke the
looks of lh •s one and 11 s
pr•ced at only S39 900
PRICE REDUCED
40 ac r e s wilh small home
S20 000 buys 11
The re 's
more th an enough good
coat to pay for lh1s o n e
ATTRACTIVE BRICK
NEAR HOSPITAL
We ,usll tsted lh1 s very well
o nstru cte d 3 bedroom
hom e
Beauti ful k.r tc hen
f u lly ca rp eted
11 2 bath
fm1 shed fam!ly room and
basemen!
Nat
g as and
central a1 r
flag land
lot Owner trans
t e rred to lndrana
Must
se ll

$18 000
Sect1on 30 Hr:~rr 1so n Twp 14 acres l or $6 000 ca n b e
fman ce d c l ose l o Ra ccoon Creek:

SPRING VALLEY
OWNER TRANS
FER RED

FOR
IMMEDIATE

44 acres o l level grou nd l ocr~ l ed ad 1acen t to Tycoon
Lake can be f 1nan ced hac, one traile r hoo k up on I
rur a l wa t e r jUst aQ,Oed to fr on t of prope r ty Pr1ced

·, !'74
CHEVY MALIBU Cl!SSIC 2 DR Ht.~ •.•••••••••••• !3795 t*
t: Exira sh arp
~ t '74 FORD PINTO STATION WAGON ••••••••••••••••••• !2995 lf-t

Two lot s left on Kem per Ho l low , pr 1ced S.1 850 o n land
con tra c t

:!t: '74 PPONTIAC
LeMANS SPORT 2 DR. HT•••••••••••••• !3895 !Jt.
P B,
~ t:£ '74 OLDS CUTlASS SUPREME...................Now s3795 *
;

J un c tton of Bu l avlll e Road and Route 160 lhr ee
bedroom house family room , l a rge ult l 1ty r oom large
barn , pr~ced for a qutck sale

, .,.

T h rs lo vely brtck. and
fram e 3 bedr oom sets on
large lot offenng n tce v rew
and 1ncludes la r ge l rvrng
room , huge fam il y krfchen
wllh f trep la ce. 11 ~ baths
tuft d1v1ded ba se m en t
Prrc ed S38 500
LIKE NEW
3 BEDROOM
Brrck and f rame w1th
ce ntra l a 1r
f rreplac e
l
acre Tot No mon ey down
vof'" Vets A very n1 ce ho m e
FIVE BEDROOMS
Lo v e ly fully c arpeted 5
bedroom b• l eve l 1ncludecl
a huge family room ntce
kilchen (bUil l 1n appl ), su n
deck garage , cen t a1r
nat gas. heat 2 baths and
flat Lot Owner transfer red
to norther n Oh ro Must sell

~

Air

~

Sharp , loaded

\

1975 PONTIAC

Arr cond 23 .J77 md es AM
FM , st eel be lt s ex ira nr c e
V1ny l lop smnll V 8

CATALINA
4 Dr
stralor

L ooi'lded

Demon

only 12.000 miles

Sm all
motel
exceller
locat ro n 1n clu ded 8 un "'
and 6 room house for t he
owner Keep your present

N rc e 11 yea!'" old 3 bed roo m
frame on Jl/ 2 acres. close
town Rural water oil heat
very good garden spot
Pr1ced lo sell at $22 500
THREE ACRES PLUS
Two sto ry 3 bedroom Ira me
c lose town
Paved roa d
rural
water,
ga rage ,
outs1d e cellar and storage
Moderately
pr rced
at
$17 ,000
4 ROOM HOUSE With bath , 111
City , $8500 Ph 4&lt;16 3224
226 3

3 B R Mob de Hom e o n 1 acre
lot wrth new ga rage Call
after 5 &lt;146 33~6
152 f

318 engine

A~r stereo

...

...

P B

: SEE:

*

P S

...

OVER 50 LATE MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM

~
1639 EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, 446-32Z3
:
~****•**********•******•~****************••**•
Real Estate For Sale
Real l:.state For Sale
Real Estate For Sale
· LO T S for sale tn C1ty and
Co untr y
also
Bus1ness.
Srtes
Robert A
Queen
Ph on e 446 0168

Btl

DAIRY QUEEN
Domg exce llen t bus. rnes.s
For sale for on ly 30 days
Yours for $29,000 If run
prope rly Will pay for s.ett 1n
two years

-·
·-

25 Locust 51
Howard Brannon, Broker
Off 446-2 674
Lucille Brannon
Eve 446 1226 or 446-2674

•

FOR THOSE WHO
HAVE EVERYTHING
(And need a place lo put
1tl One of a krnd 2 story
br1ck
ar:~d
stone
profeSSIOnally
decorated
hom e
Lovely entrance
foyer lead s to spaCIOUS
k1tch en w1fh all the built
ms and S1 de laundry room ,
formal DR , fam1ly rm
W1lh fireplace, oversrze LR
and frreplace Beauf•ful
wmd1ng sta1rcase to second
floor w1 t h a p1cturesque
v1ew from the ma ste r BR
many c losets plus large
walk rn
cedar
storage
room, 2 more BRs, 31f2
baths a full basement W1fh
re c and play roo m deluxe
heat tng
and
c ool 1ng
system AI! thrs located on
a love ly shaded lol ex
tendtng from Second Ave
to lhe R1ver

•·

SMALL ACREAGE

10 acres on Jo hnson R tdge
Ideal
co nv en 11onal
or
mobile hom e srte
Farm
pond good fences paved
road and a barn
On!
$7,950

,.

we need 11stmgs Call the
W1seman Agency 446 3641
Gallra Co ' s Largest Real
Estate Sales Agency
Off1ce 446 -3643
E venmqs Call
1ke W 1sem an 446-3796
E N W1seman 446·4500
Bud McGhee 446-1255

:

DOWNTOWN
Two family bilck - &lt;I large
BRs eat 1n krtchen forma l
DR , w w carpet, laundry
rm ,
double
ca rport
storage buttdlng, n ew link
fenced play area A lso, 3
rooms &amp; bath w1th pr tvate
entrance
A very small
change could make thts a
one tam lly home
WOODEt' ACREAGE
10 Acres tus.t 4 m 1 from
to wn A beau t iful &lt;1 B R
2
bath ranc h style home 2
large
wood burn1ng
f1repla ces., full d i vided
basem ent, delu )( k 1tchen &amp;
d1n1ng room , w w carpel
patio , 2 car garage &amp; barn

50 ACRES. 70 model KirkwoOd
MH 3 br , 1112 bath, pond,
s1lo can be bought , w1th or
Without cattle and eQUit:l,
mmeral r1ghtS mtact, J
Thacker , Wood Mill Rd,
Bidwell, Oh lo
226 3
- - - - - - - - - - - - -- STARKS MAN 's apples, Rt 2,
BidwelL 245 5246

Large 2 story home located
on a n1ce cornerlot 3 BR ,
w w carpet. larg e eat m
kttchen,
formal
OR ,

DDJDL IJ PROPANE

$17 ,500

L

!
CIOOD FOR ONE
~

11 ACRI=S
A very n1ce. on € -floor plan
home , 3 BR , large deluxe
kitchen
with
spac1ous
cab.ner space &amp; ra nge ,
oven &amp; ref, utility room ,
fam1ly
room ,
covered
pat10 , 20'x70' too l shed &amp;
22')(50' barn
Just 6 mt
from town

GOOO LOTS

wTwo good lots located 4 m I
.:-#rom Gallrpol!s Ideal tor
mob1le homes or lo build a
~new home on In Galllpol ts
School
o , str~ct ,
rura l
water
Price $1 ,800 &amp;

2,200

~

., TWO MOBILE HOMES
r One 1971 mode l 12'x65' A ll
furn•fur e. 1 acre wooded
lot Pr1ce S11 ,000

'

"One

DI.TE
KEEPER·JS"MONTH
CALENDAR
Availtble
now at yow Doxol dealer's

1502 Eastern Ave., Galhpolls
PhOne 446-2264

2 BR HOME 1n village of
V1nton , garage, large lot ,
shade trees , Inside c om
ptetely rerr odeled, 388 8772
221 12

- -R:E

FOR SALEIN GALLIPOLIS

197 1 model
12'x60'
'?'xpa ndo - on nrce SIZe lot
)~...VIII se ll on land con t ract
-iPnce $12 soo

-

3

bedroom home, front
room wrth fireplace, toyer ,

bath. bullt. on kotchen w1th
lots of
doors

cabtnets, storm
and
wtndows,

basement

VINTON

. """""'"

A PPROX
67 A
Ranch or
Farm
Plen ty
water
Beautiful 3 le vel land Dr i ve
over 1n car Approx one half
cleared Fme hay , ttmber,
game Borders Danv ille
388 8229 B1dwett Also large
home and lotm Boc.!l Raton ,
Fla near ocean 2Aif:or
Motor Home all extras and
more
20' Sea Boat
Sta
Wagon 6 All or part Terms
Consider
t rades
most
anywhere 583 ,600
228 1

w [

jOb becaus.e yo u and your
wde can operate th1s
success fu l ly
Call
Ike
Wtseman tor part1culars

JORDAN'S GAS SERVICE

...

:GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH i

NEAR TOWN

IIGIIlll.

:

...

Heres a dandy, l arge
carpeted L R
f orma l
dmtng
n tce k.tt
and 2
bedroom on matn floor
plus 2 bedroom s up Larg
2 c ar garag e w il h
Fl at lot o n u S 35

showroom. Offer expun 12/31/7S

SAVE
1973 CHEV.
PICKUP VB

1973 CAPRI
M etall i c bl ue 4 speed , gas
saver Shd rp

1974 CAMARO

Standa rd tran s, Flee t s 1de

32 126 miles Wa s S7595 00

A1r cond , automatic, p
stee r1ng
s port wheels,
124
mtles,
sharpJ
N AOA Book pr1ce $4400 00

n

NOW ON DISPLAY! ·

A1r P

Large corner lot , 3 BR
home , very n1ce k.rtchen
and laundry, many burl! 1n
cab1nets and storage Call
to see thts home now &amp;
make an offer

lm.l~

AM F M air cond ,
mlle5 , vinyl top.
mobile
home
dea
1fade

914 Th 1rd Av e nu e thr ee bedroom fram e dwc llmg
bath st orm d oors a nd wm d ows sh1ngled ou l stde
priCed s 11 000

FOUR BEDROOM

COOK BOOK

Air cond , stee l belts
Verd lt green Wa s $2897
Week End Spec13l

. :.., '72
OODGE OIARGER •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• !2495::
Auto P S . 318 e ng~ne
:. : '71 FORD LID 4 DOOR ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••51195 :

226 3

rfiTU1[;

red
au l omahc
These are hard to l 1nd
ShMp

76 BUICKS and PONTIACS

*

Loaded w 1th extras

:

now

30 years of leadership and still offering
top quality propane, neal workmanship,
lank Installations, a full line of gas
appliances and pleasant courteous professional
service. CaD us, you11 be glad you did!

G T

W e ll ke pt thr ee bedroom home , full ba sement , stor m
doo r s and w1ndows 1u st outs,de c1ty l 1m1 t s pr1te d To
se ll

OUR BARGAIN COUNTER
LIKE NEW
One of our bes t buys S1X
year old 3 bedroom fram e ,
rural water central heat 3
lots 65 ' )( 166 , $22,500 or
house and 1 lot $19 500

sn.soo

1973 CHEV.
CAPRICE 4 DR HT

1973 OPEL

: ! '72 DODGE
CORONET 4 DOOR••••••••••••••••••••••• !2395 tJt.
S,

-41

BUSINESS
WE HAVE TWO
Th ts IS a really great op
portun.ty lor somebody Long eslabltshed grocery
do1ng
an
excellent
busmess f ully stocked and
equtpped Owner ret rrtng
due to 111 health Call tke
W1seman for particulars

...

11 Burger Str ee t two bedroom s up and o ne down g r1 s
furnac e s t orm doors and st orm w 1ndow s $ 1.:1000 FHA
loan can be assumed a t 71o1 P et w1 lh down paym e nt

SAVE

~ ~ '73 CHRYSLER NEWPORT 4 DOOR •••••••••••••••••• .S2895 :

i

•

1973 MUSTANG

South o f drtve m theater olf State Route 7 t hree
bed room home n1ce kt l chen cab 1nets la rg e lrv1ng
room , ca rpet e d f m1shed basement w 1f h firepl ace
garage pr1ce d $25 000

r--

7

S,

WANT YOUR OWN

lunch Served

Tommy Joe Stewarl - Auctioneer '
Gallipolis, Ohio
Note: This is a very clean sale witlt very few
small items
be here on time.

A uto , extra c lean, 10,000 m1les

. t:

20 galvaniZed &amp; p1pe

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Richard Buchy - Owners

b.1 r c ond , tape , blllboord,
4, 500
mHes,
sh ow room cond

h res,

$3397

N ew three bedroom, bnck on Rou t e 35, tully carpe ted
bath and a half , u t1llty room f amily room larg e front
room , modern krtchen plenty of cab1nc l s co rn e r lo t ,
prt ted $36 ,000

Formall H &amp; Super C tra c tor s, wtth cultivators,
mower for C. front grader blade for C, 7' pull type
d1 s ks, Cobey P T 0 manure s pr eader. pull plows
gates ( IO 'x16'l 2 steer stutters , 2 Holden creep feeders,
3 Starcraft se lf waters, 2- 16' hay racks, 4Q--16' hog &amp;
ca ttl e panels , 1 heat gate, 7Q--7' Cresote posts , 20 stee l
posts e lectriC fencmg &amp; charger , V et supplies, 4 rolls
of barbed w1re, lumber 2x l 2 2x6 2x4, 6' portable feed
auger 4" 21 ft, 4" auger, 5 H P stngle phase elect
motor 6 H P W1scon sin e ng me, 2 H P elct motor , 32'
a lum ladder ,Devault Rad1al arm saw , Dayton 8 ~'
bench grmder &amp; st a nd , heat heuser for 30 10 J 0 &amp; Ford
!radar , a few hand tools, large assortment of patnt,
large dehumidif ier, 2 S1mpltttty rota ttl ler s, 2
r e frigerators and a few household 1tems

Delta Royal e 7 dr hdtp ,
19 377 m1l e&lt;&gt;
r:11r c ond
v m y l l op
AM F M
Ex
cepttonc'\ll y sh (lr p

Book Pr 1cc S3700

KEMPER HOLLOW
ROAD

SWEE T potatoes fo r sa le 388
8754
227 12

N e w GMC
Truck H eadquar t ers
1970 Da ts un P c ku p tr u ck.
1972
1 T
Ch ev
Cab 8.
Chass rs
197 1 GMC Ta nd em l rve Ax l e
Cab and ChaSS IS
GM C Cab and
1971 212 T
Chass's
1968 '. T GM C P•ckup
11971 GMC Subu rba n
1973 1 T GMC Prckup
197 0 1 T F nrd P1ckup
1970 MonJe Ca rl o
1965 1 T F ord P 1c k.up
SOMMERS G M C
Truck !. Inc
133 PtneSt
446 2532

1973 CAMARO

A LL
T Y P E:-.
o f build 1n g
ma 1e r1als
block
br1ck,
se wer
p pe s
Win dows
lm te l s etc C laud e Wmter~
R 10 G rande 0
Ph o n e 145
'i l 21 after 5

N EW F ran.,lm F urna ce W1th,
a cce ssor es
ma d e
by
A lla n ! c Stov e Co Sme lt zer
Garde n Cente r Phone &lt;146
\B IB
86 II

1975 PONnAC
FIREBIRD

1974 OLDS 88

Off. 446·3643

SOL t D c h e r ry bu ff et, ex
c e!len t cond Ph 446 9700
22 3 6

36 :c23 ... 009

G RAVE LY Trac tor wil h 50 1n
m ower
Goo d c ond •T ton
S35 0 Phone 367 7634
221111

Atr cond , steel belled t1res,
19 1?7 mtl es , automa t 1c,
vmyl top Ex pec l t he best

12) If

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

For Sale

1974 PONTIAC
FIREBIRD

REALTOR

9x12 M ATC H IN G all w ool GO O D c l ean lump and slok e
ru gs a nd pads ca rp eltng l or
c oal
Car t w ,nt(' r s
R ro
s1arrs a nd ha ll O n e U l l
Gr a n d e Ph 1 15 5 115
cub1c r e f r1g JJ6 1159
728 l
245 II

7

...- . ..

446-1066

The WISEMAN Agency

HOLSTEIN Baby Ca lv es
Male o r Fe ma l e all.:iges 10 L I ME STONE for dr, ... eway s
Polled H er ef o&lt;d cows w
Ca r l W rnter s
Phone 245
calves Ph 379 2184
"' II 'i '
178 I
/45 If

I

1970FORO L TD P S PB a1r
55 000 ac t u al m .tes Sce to
bet e ... e
1350 Su zuk1 of
Gall polrs
226 j

7"-~----- ------

LIG HT ho usek.eepr ng
Park Cen tral Hot el

WELL KEPT ca rp e ts Sh ow 1974 GREMLIN X S2 300 7
lhe r esu tl s o f regu lar B lu e
AKC
R eg
German
Lus tr e spo t c tean,ng R en t
She pherd pups 8 WkS Old
ch. c tr,c
s h am p ooer
$1
R eas onabl e Ph 388 9081
Ce ntral Supp ly
afle r 4 pm
2186
'125 6

1967 D I AMO ND 318 10 spd
$ 1 750 1968 Dor se y tra ler
&lt;tO It
9 IT spr ea d Ph 669
&lt;1723
224 6

I IPrp o t

1972 GREMLIN , 28,000 m il es,
good shape 245 5064
227 3

QUAIL CREEK

l: f..!lUh' Y

Ill Vll l yl

V..

I 0~ t I

Help Wanted

HOUSE fur rent , 5 rm s
L ocat ed on V rnt on Ave W ill
be available m 1d d l e of
October
Prefer
older
cou pl e $130 , plus secur1 ty
depos1t Wilt con s1de r lease
R ef req Wnte
Bill Day
3824 Cumbe rland Parkway
Vrrgrnra B each Va 23452 or
ca ll 804 34 0 3979
228 6

STARCRAFT
fl.. IOirJd own s
1'&lt;1' G.II&lt;Jx~ ~1 119
&lt;. tar
m,l&lt;;ter ~~ /'J'l
XL delu xf'
S l uc,
C&lt;lrll P
Con l e y
'&gt; larlr 11! ~ &lt;JI&lt; ~ Rl 6} N P I
P l"l&lt;;&lt;l" I

I

102 GARF I ELD Ave
2 Bk
trailer
n ew ca rp et
n ew
l 1v1nQ roo m t u rn
na t ural
gas furna c e co upl e only
n eed rel e&lt;ence
$125 per
mon th
225 If

M A N to do ex terr or pa nt ,ng or
othe r work
Ca l l 388 8865
227 3

f

l

MU 't'I T 5E L L
O NE O W N ER
17 00 0 m l e::.
197 4 O l d s
Culla"-S
~ up r ernc
go od
cond
\3900 Ca ll IJ641 13
bPI Ore 5 p rl1
228 6

RUSSELL WOOD
REALTOR

Real ESt..te For Sale

For Sale

I Rf iLER ~

367-7250

\111 1 t

BABYS IT TING m my home
for Childr en und er sc hool
a ge lots of e xp &lt;146 1946
'2263

'J ) ')I f

709 I f

Jhlonl nq

p1

t

728 3

II'J

I ! L 1 'i
M OI~ILE::
Home
'&gt;&lt; rv C.l
'&gt; k r11nq
ro o t
oo1 IIHI f.loJ IJO S n wn nqs
c~n cr ors cenH. nt work
1 ree
estrndiL&lt;&gt; C'l l l ? l 'i 9111 1 or
7 !&gt;91J / ,1 11cr l)Opm

f

!f1(1)

Wanted To Do
!'t

lo r 1 rrl

Goo d

I&lt;

NI CE --, PR Mobil! hom f' n r&gt;a r
HMC &lt;Hi lii i S on ly Ph !1(,

446 441 5

p,lp.- r nq

r c, p ,H

l&gt;o

I 5? I I

n

/ I'&lt;

/\PT tor l('ilSC 3:?8
? nd f,vf'
o verto okrn q c t v pa r k 1 U R
ltvrng
rrn
kil c tlcn
"" lh
range
rc fr q
a nct dmmq
area ba tll 1\v &lt;til&lt;tbl ~ Oct 1
SlJS p e r
n1onth
y(:ar -:.
l e as e Coi l PJ s tl6 IHIQ o r

,.,~II

II I

19! 0 fOI-II NO $1 lUlJ
cond 1!18 8798

ljll(&gt;(f

ns6

For lease

l Q N Y ".

f-.~ (&gt; 1

APT at 63 1 rourth
U t rl1l es p ad and r et

12~!:l

f I 'I

M OB ILE HOM E SE RVICES
\'\OB IL E HOM E OWNERS
Save on your fu e l bill by
und cr prnntng All types of
r eparr tr e down !. co mpl ete
serviCe
Fo s t e r
Mob rt e
Hom e s~rVIC C 4&lt;16 2781 or
Elm er SkHimor e 446 3419
2:2~ 12

HOU ~ E

FOR MaxtmUill Secunt-,. u se
An c ho r!&gt;

1I

~03 t

77 111

Down

C.r~tl

Soup or

chilt

Tte

'\ t j 'I

I I

11th

2lb l

'\L,( 'N

For Sale

Auto Sales

Real Estate for Sale

621

Thtrd

Avenue Behmd th1s homt:
[ must sell with the front

MASSIE

1 GARAGE APARTMENT
2 bedrooms w1th hardwood
floors. modern kitchen and

Realty, 32 State St.

balh w1th large front room •
ca rpeted, 2 car garage, live
1n one and rent the other
Contact
Larry
Boyer.
Admtn1strator
of
the
estate
Phone 446 4223

Tel. 614 446-1998
NEAR

ROONEY

Beaut1ful 7 rm home , all
elec , all carpet, 1112 baths,
plenty storage rm 11 has a
2 car gar plus small barn
and storage bldg Located
on a 2 A fenced lot, plenty
yoJng ptnes and pond
SIO£ked Wlfh f1Sh ASk1ng

Shown by appt only

L-

-

Realty lnc.

5T RT 218 - 2n1Ce Mobile
homes on 2 23 A lot Both
are 10' x 55
both are m
good
co nd1f10n
un
derp 1nned and carpeted
Potenj1al In come S250 per
mo Prrce S16 000

446 3434
~EALTORS

NEW LISTING- Lovely
bedf'"m ranch , all electrrc
bath w 1th sh ower
tully
carpeted,
kil c hen
gas
range ,
refr1geralor
d 1sposa1
large family
r oom wtth a beaul1ful
fireplace, large garage and
ce llar house Located on
21' ? acres on n tce land c lose
to Chesh 1re

GEORGES CR. RD
Good 6 rm
house
all
carpet , plenty k1f ca b , 2
baths . F A Nal gas heat
storage bldg and b1g lot
Pr~ce S25 SOO
BULlSKIN RD E)(tra
n1ce , 6 rms
and bath
cou ntry home , has been
comp letel y redone 1nS1de ,
w1th panel1ng , carpet, 2
f1reptaces. and elec heal
Located on a 3 A wooded
tot Pn ce d •n the teens

LOW DOWN PAYMENTGood 6 rm house and bath ,
garage large level lot Pay
only $1,000 down
and
S120 57 per month

PATRIOT - 7 rm frame 2
story home wrth base fur
heat , cen atr bath. ca rpet
over H W floors , 25' n1ce
kit
cabinets , has barn
gar , and '!::&gt; A tot Pnce
S18.000

LOVELY OlDER HOME
-Take a look at t h1s lovely
2 story home on a niCe
shaded lot , has 4 bedrooms ,
Jl 12 baths , new furnace ,
new roof, needs some work
.nstde but would make a
nice fam1ly home , loc at ed
a1 Cenlerv llle

KLICKER RD 80 A 4
rm house Prr ce $12 , 500

CLOSE TO GSI
Af
trac11ve 2 bedroom ranch
W1th large k•tchen, fully
carpeted ufll1ty rm , good
buy for $16,500

NEAR LECTA - Farm, 42
A Tob base 20 A clea[1
and l1llabte Good &lt;I b19
rms , bath , base and fur
heal Barn 38! )( 48' Bldgs
not old and m good con
dtfiOn Askmg S27 ,000

1112 ACRES - Lovely ranc h
wrth 3 bedrooms , n1ce bath ,
all elecfrtc , large garagedetached from the house ,
good buy for only S21 900

STEWART R D 18 A
some bot tom, to b base and
barn
Pr1ce
S18 , 000
W1thout house and 1 A
$4,500

l ACRES Very niCe
place rn the co untry , 3
bedrooms
bath
n1ce
kllchen chn.ng, wrth range
refr1gerator, washer and
dryer , county water 1 barn
and a small burld•ng , land
1$ clear and n1ce lo cate d
close to Evergreen Good
buy for $13 ,500

VICTORY RO - 45 A Wlfh
' 73 model Mob il e home. b rg
barn , lob base and --good
fences Only.$13,500 Wrfh 2
Mobile "'ames $17 ,500

ANY Y R 446- 1998

CONSULTANT

C&lt;j&lt;.ar Ba1rd
John Fuller
.loug Wether holt
152 Second Ave
GallipoliS , 0

CENTENARY Nrce ~
rm house w1th bath, base ,
athc storagE', new cerpet,
F A fur and F P Ideal for
relrred
coup le
or
newlyweds Askrng $17 ,000

$21,000

---~--~--i

OHIO RIVER

$36,500

SWAN CR
9 years
old ,
4
b tg
rms ,
ba t h and att
gar
Has
a store bldg
barn and
sto rage bldg Tob base and
3 A
level land
Pnce

-

'

WE BUY, SELL, TRAOf
EVLntnq ~ (~ It

John r: ullcr 446 4ll7
l • r John!&gt;on 1S6 6740
Do utt W r lh( r topll 146 "1 4

'

40 MORE TO CHOOSE FROM

FOR RENT
101 Gar f 1e ld Avenue t wo b edroom tr ailer ne w c .vpe l
ne w ltvmg room f u r n1lur e natural ga s fu rnace co up l e
on l y , need f'" e fe r e n ce $12 5 00 a month

SMALL DOWN PAYMENTS, UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY
BANK &amp;
FINANCI

EVENINGS
RUSSELL WOOD ~44 6 4618
N I CE

ouse In City
J BR bnck , full basement.
eKcellent locatiOn , back ol
house faces Galhpolts Golf
Cour se Newly decorated
Ph 446 952l or 446 1443

.,
'

t"l. R homf' 1n co un try
m des
fr o m
'own
C om p lete ly
r emodele d
m s •d e a nd o ut \\ llh rura l
,...ater a nd &lt;tppr ox 1 acres
o l lA nd Ca ll uny 1 111e ?56
I 116
196 II
!

R'

222 If
POMEROY E s tabl ished
bus l nessoppo r tun rly S150M
gross S23 M
net Ow ner
ret 1r1ng Call l or detail s
POMEROY I n vest m en t
opportunrty 40 x 80 br1c k
bus1n ess
bldg
corne r
lo ca t ro n good tena n ts good
return Call Jay Shepard
today
LOTS Bl dg lots - Mobile
home tots We go t them We
build yo ur plans or ours
ACREAGE We got 1t A ll
pr iCe
ranges
good
local ron s
NEAR MINES
14 ACRE S level la nd Creek 3
BR mobrle home 2 BR block
home Lot of fr ont age on
You ca n
K eysto ne Road
make money he r e
See
to day
VINTON
Bus1ness
opportunrty
Pnc e of a
home will buy thr s good
bus•ness 1nclud1ng r ea l
estate and equ1pment Call
Jay Sheppard tor de1cHi s

SALE NOW GOING ON .
NOW
OR
NEVER

SAVE

BEAT THE PRICE
INCREASE NOW

Broker s Budden
Auct•one ers
RANCHO COMPANY
AddiSOn 367 0300
Gall1po11s. 446 0001

WANTS
PROPER TV
WtTH US

YOUR
SOLD LIST

SAVE

SAVE

ON 1975 MODEL DODGE CARS &amp;TRUCKS

GREEN SCHOOLS
THREE or f our b e droo m
h ome on Rf
141
Lrvrng
room family room k.ttch en
drn1ng room
New c arp el
Fenced lot Low S20 s

NEAL REALTY

•

Also up to $300
Factory
Cash
Rebates on variclus
models.

NO REASONABLE
OFFER REFUSED

SO COME PREPARED TO BUY OR TRADE

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

Ofl•ce Ph &lt;146 1694
Ev en1ng s
CharlesM N ea l446 1546
J MIChael N ea I 446 1503
Sa m N eal,446 7358
FOR SALE by owner m pr1m e
res,dent,al
area
near
downtown
and
r1v er
Redecorated , car peted , 2
f rreptaces, paneled den
huge k1tchen w dishwasher
and new cabrnets 4 huge
bedrooms, new furnace ,
utility rooms , patlo, pond ,
large lot Call after srJr: or
any t1 me weekends
4&lt;16
0726
222 7
Ux40 CABIN two bedroom
lrv1ng room , bath and k 1t
chen ,
f u lly
rnsu l a fe d ,
paneled and c arpe te d Ph
67 5 4079
227 2

Real Estate For Sale
ATTN HOME BUYERS
OV ER 500 Hom e pl a n s to
choose from
you r tot or
ou r s. We sav e you 1 me and
money
up to $2 000 tax
c r ed rt Rancho Co Add son
367 0300 Ga llrp oi1S 4 16 000 1
199 l f

Services Offered
ROOF tNG and g utt e r o l all
kmd s hot a sp h alt We fi x
t he f l at o n es. Ph on e 367 0'&gt;9 1
Pau l W alk er
216 26

Services Offered
SANDY A ND BEAVER In
surance Co
has o ff er ed
serv1ces fo r F 1re In suran ce
cove ra ge 1n Gall1a Cou n ty
for almosl
a ce n t ury
Fa rms
hom es
and per
sona l prope rt y coverage s
are a va il able to mee t rn
d r v1dua l n ee d s
Conta ct
L ew's H ughes you r ne1gh
bar an d agent
228 6
C U STOM R E M O DE LtNG 20
years e)( per1 enc e 388 BJOS
N ew dry wall ce t11n g w11 h
swrrl or te)(t ur e d estgns
O th e r dry w all repa1r \/1nyl
wallpapen ng
new b ath s
n ew k.l! c hen s ~\ny thrng 1n
r emod e l 1ng o r repa1r
11 II

GE N E R AL Contra clo r Ro om
add 1l10ns ho u se raz ,ng and
levelrng atum rnum o r v1 nyt
2 YEAR old br 1c k l1ke new on
s rd1n g
c arpen try o t all
Debby Dr 10 large rooms, 3
krnds
roo f 1ng
3 67 0591
baths , double garage, w tow
Paul Walker
AlBERT EJ-iMAN
carpel t hrough out, centr al
Wate r D eltvery Se r vrc e
216 26
a1r , $55 900 by appomtment
Pat rrol Star Gall rpol,s
446 7569
P h 37 9 2 133
224 12 BACK HOE: work se p l rc tank
243 II
and 'warer lrn es 1n sta ll ed c
-- U M 1ller Rto Grande , Ph
KOTALIC LANDSC APING
245 S5J5
~
APPRO X 2 m ile Sout h of Rro
RIO GRANOE , OHIO
204
26
Gri:lnde o n St 325 n 1ce 5 - --- COMP LETE PROGRESSIVE
----room s w1th bath, an 2 rms
LAND SCAP ING
roR
1 HE
o es t
,n
ar 'S HRUB S
u pstatrs part crally fmrshed
TREES , ROCK
c
h
,
te
clu
;
al
des•gn
and
pl
ans
New roof and pam t tob , 27
UA RDEN S
ALL
for new ho mes
sm-.att
acres appro)(
t 2 m lie o f
GUARA NTEED Pa t iO and
commercral build ngs apts
road frontage OM St 325 Call
POOl tandsc ap1ng
S l one
or r emode l 1ng
c all B d l
245 5023 o r co n t act Charles
sa nd
to o l
sh r ubb&lt;&gt; r y
W
alker
Thurma
n
Ohm
1
W
Bloss , Ml
Z1on Rd
t r 1mm1ng
Dump
tru cK
OR'l 7 t9B
serv1ces 245 9131
Ja c k son Oh 286 2526 o r 286
198 ' I
2184
187 If

-------------

---

Serv1ces Offered

Services Offered

FU RNIT URE
UPHOL ST ERIN G
p rompt
serv1ce r ea so nabl e rates
We 1nV1IC YOU IO VIS I OUr
modern Shop lo c at ed at
Mas.on Co Far rqround CT&amp; T
a r eal or ca ll f o r f ree
est,mates
Mowre y &lt;;
Upholster,ng
• Po1nt
P l easant 67 'i 415J
/19 t f
D ALE
Sanders
D etr vcry /56 6667

•'· a ter
2 I 1 rt

(P H OE &lt;
l nd do;or v..orK
\ ('plrC t,l n ". o; nn d krlch ln d s
"'BM !lB6'i or l8e 8&lt;'10
1 \0 t f

Cl',LL Roqer "'.d1 te t or p1U I Il0
.ng i\n d rep a rrs Ph 156 I /3'1
or 1~6 61\ 1
5) I f
, ERMITE PEST CONTROL
rnspt'C.IIOII
(nil J..\6
32-1 5
f'./,e rrrl l
0 Dell
Operator by Ex term • ne~t
Te r m1 1e Serv rce 10 Be lm ont
De
26! tl

~ REE

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY Pa1n 1rn q
res od ent,al and co mm Pr cr al
1nter or and ex te r ,or f\c1rns
and r oot s a1r1 ess sprav rnQ
fr ee
est,m&lt;lte
P n nl
anywhe re 2'i 6 1119

DOZ E~

w o rk excav ating,
land
c l e ar1ng,
ponds.
basements
l andscap ing
Call 446 005 1
163 "tt

AD DI S Portab l e weld1ng end
cu lt.ng se r v 1ce Ph 256 6312
225 10
----- --~-- ----

P' ' OLJl\LE
E1ectr •ca1
&amp;
lnsula l ,ng
10.1 Cedar St ,
Gaii1 P"I S Ph 4~6 2716
126 tt
C /!. R PAI NT Center, Inc
Ben tarn n Mo ore paints
s1nce 18B3
Wall P!lJ).~
Qua lif ie d
pa 1n ter
8SJ ,
Second Ph J4 6 9458

130t!
I'O RUER Garage Builders
1 rf'E' rS ii!lli\te !. 756 6J 7?
119 it
II ORDE R S GARAG E Door
..,l' rV 1CP
Comm e-rc1a l and
rt s den 11,11
spec, a l rzrng 10
opcri\ Tor s Local
?56 647?
189 I I
PORT..3.BLE TOILET
I
Rt::NTAl,
CO N Sl f.&lt;,...,CT I O N
OuldOor
Evf'nts Pl1 Galll p('IIS 446
1 ..A"' Russe ll s Plumbmg &amp;
ll r al ltHl
1"lt1

I

1

�..

•

.r

30 - The SWJday Tlffies - Sent mel, Sunday , Sept 28 1975

~For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifie4s

Notice

For Rent

RUMM AGE ~a l e
Frtday
Sept

t F r I I~Jl

Monctay
3

'lQ O c t
N othtn g ove r one doll.;~r

Mobile Homes For Sale

1 t!

1&gt;1"''1 () 11 1

l"n~

r

t

"

1111 II

' h. l y
I 'O t t l

39

I t

tI

Tt&gt;xas Rd

128 3
B ON AT

P er manen ts

prlt('li fO il &lt;,
~pCC1a l
W{'('k l y
r tl l r&gt;".
c. r c l e s Motel 1380 E a ste rn
Ave J.J6 ]~0 1

1.: f

Rcq

now

Sll 50

$12 50
Sca lp
treatm e nts 53 50 plus se t
Bo bb t Ane s Cur let t e
Ph

615 1960 Now thr u Oct

HOMEM AD E

Be an
at

&lt;;L EEP IN G

J

r i'll £'

daly

Hu t

Jackso n P tk.e

ThC'

B urq cr

Skrd m ore,

w ~c K i y

Roon1

a Hote l

to

379 2151 or

UR N
Ave

f

446

no

t

on N e,q h borhood Rd
w•'h s 1o ve and r e tr .g 3 rrn s
ilnd new c arpet Dep req
I 16 :l:.!ri
2256

Protect Your Mobtlc H ome
Complete Scrv•ce Call Ron
1756

tf

nR Mobdr ho me

?

c ly
lul lr,ll .lrr i'ldv tt ::; only 416

t(l rcllt Ht

fr f'r r o,f,l l &lt;.

l

TARA

t

TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townhouses
1112 Baths
Pay Only On e Utolity
Addoson, OhiO
For Information
Call Shorley Adkm s

l l 1.1
t

PIN G SERVICE S

Wol l do
all kmrl s of lypm q 1n ITIY
hom e Ca ll 1&lt;16 !999
75 ! If
P&lt;'lPC' TITHJ
Lr •u
ext f'r•or
p11rrtrnq
R caSO i l d bl~
Pll
1 If&gt; 11 7 1 or
I 10 16 I I
1 1 'i If

- Cen tral Atr Condttton1ng
...... Wall to Wall Carpetmg
Color
Coordmated
Appliances
- Pnval e, Enclosed Pallo
Prtvate Well l1ghted
Entran ce
K1lch en Piinlry
- Att1c Stor age
- Sound proof ed and We i'
In sulate d
Nobody lives above or
below you m th ese luxury 1
apar tm e nt s
b e droom
located aroun d a b ea uttful
lake sw 1mmmg pool and a
tot Jot pro vtde d for
c h1ldre n

AMERI CA N Cancer Soc 1ely
needs part 1 me Exec ut,v e
Drre cto r to r Gal l1a Cou n ty'
Mu st h ave managemen t
abtltty
off•ce expenence
and entoy workmg wllh
p eople P re fe r someone w rt h
experr ence wor k1ng W l l h
co m m itte es a nd c om mun,ty
, a ctnn t res
Requ rre s ap
pro x~ma t e l y
12 hrs
per
if.tieek Sen d resume 1n care
, Of Box 376
Gall rp o trs
)f Tnbune
22612

MODEL OPEN
MONDAY
THRU FRIDAY 1 TO

(i

5

SATURDAY&amp;
SUNDAY2 T05
located 112 mole west
of Holzer Hospota I on
Rt 35.
PH 446 1599

For Rent

228 3
--~ --- ---- ----

f= URN apt 2 m lies from town
on old R t 35 4&lt;16 0390
228 tf

NICE
two
be d room
an d
basement modern h ome m
Ce nt enary
Depos it and
refer ence requrred Ca ll 446
4053
2283
1973 3 BR M H

38899SO

228 6
MODERN 3 BR ran ch w w
c arpel gar age, located 3
m1
from tow n , S200 pel'"
month plus depo sil Phone
:.t46 0008
223 ff

t

------- - ----

HOUSE Unfurn 4 rooms and
bath fully c arpeted on Bob
McCormtckRd, 5 m 1nutes
d r 1ve fr om town No pe ts,
R ef req A du l t s on l y Ca ll
&lt;146 2543
226 3

2 BR total el ec tr 1c a t Qua 1
Creek. M ob 1l e Pa rk. P h 245
502 1
205 II
UN F URN apt
4 rms an d
bath
ftr s t fl oo r
446 04-14
aller630pm
226 6
2 BR MH
for sa te
,_

-

no ch ld no pet s
1 MH 4~6 391 B
227 3

- -----------

FU R N
api
ad ult s o nly
ut 11 I es pd
no pe ts
2S8
Stat e Sf , 446 0085
227 2
T RAI LER l ot 1n M1ddlepor t
gas
wat e r
and e lec tr c
ava table 992 2864
227 3

' FICI ENCY apart me n t $75
qF
u trltlres pa •d
l ur n 1s h ed
adults 446 '1416 after 2 p m
224 6 .rl /\RGE room fac n g park
I ght
housekecp •n g
FURNI SHED apar tment Sl OO
e l e vator
fa cdll es
t or
5 rooms l1rst f loor gas
r et rr ed perso n Park Ce n tral
furnac e o ff street park.rng
Hot e l
44tl 4416 after 2 p m
9RH
22'1 6
F IR ST
3 BR HOME at 20 18 E aste rn
Ave
4J6 0008
$ 14 0 plus
secunty d e p
215 II
TRAIL ER 2 Br Hil l Top Dr
off N e ,ghborhood Rd
Ph
67S 4886 Wr t h dep
I 18 If

MOBILE home spucc 1 m li t?
from hospit al d 16 3805
190 1f
OFF I CE Space
down town
!46 0008

l or

fl oor B radbu ry s e l f
a pi
Ulilil1eS pd
adu l ts
on l y no p ets JJ 6 0957
216 !t

MO BI L E H ome

Ph

4.160756
21 6 t f

N EW R ege n cy
Inc
a •ar t
ment 2 BR c arpet~d total
eleclrrc P h 67 5 510 4 or 675
53 86 Sand H til Rd
Po 1nl
P leasant w Va
32 If

re nt
152 If

I

NOW AVAILABLE

W A NTED A full l 1me Reg
ARRT
Rad 10l ogrc
Technologrs t 1S n eeded F or
further 1n l ormat10n c ontact
the P e r s onnel D1 r ec tor
0 Ble n ess
Memorrul
Hosp1tal At hen s Ohro 6 14
593 555 1 Ext 290 A n Equal
Opportun '' y Em player
228 3

Call ~460571

}I~ t

t

l f&lt;' l 511'1 1 [ MOBILJ
H OME 5
1'1 II I ' " (
( &lt;lfJdlft d
1\ ~~
!' If.~ 1\) • ~U N lll Cfl .., llR
t if
Ill
II I 1 ~ r
I I
I J
II
I I dl
I r &lt;l V 1 I

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN
APARTMENTS

MAINTEN A N CE man And
welde;
Mus! app l y 1n
person
N o phone ca l ls
Co n tact Ed H opk ins P 0
Box 45 '1 Gal l rpoi1S Rt 35 W
Ga ll ipO li s Reductton
728 l 'l

MO B ILE ho me
after 4

111 1 1\~
11,000

I r

1,

!f

11

ll
II{ I
1'-f f(

I

11

11

dn •

f•

0

I J!&gt;i •t

II

MOBILE COMMUNITY

EW all etectr~c mob de home
1n Galll polrs
Adults only
Ph 446-0338
207 ff

LOTS FOR RENT

Moil i CQO
c xc
co nd
1 f( &lt;lll{
Whrl "
IOfJ I l l 'dfl1 or

nrdc s
fl&lt;l '

1'169 G T O t204sp
4 10 J567

Sl 000 Call

room
78 ff

FURN APl
an uttr r ll~:&gt; ~-'"'
Adu l ts only 446 9523
219 I f
F UHNI !i HED ap a r 1men1 , orr
s lreet p a rkmg , 1 or 2 adults ,
centrally loc at e d 4 46 0338
208 If

'

---~-- -- -----'----

EFF

•

A PT $ 125 mo
I

- ~ -- ·

l- - -

446 3643
I 79 I f

? BR Mobile H omes \IOU mo
3 BR Mob 1le H ome $1'75 mo
Ph ~46 01 75 or 4.46 19ld
I
180 If

'

·'

Lots for rent R ent me tudes
wa t e r ,
H~Wagc,
tr ash
co ll ec f•on , T V hook up, 2
acre re creaf1on area
Rodney Cora Rd
Rodn ey Oh10
Ph 245 5021 Gallipoli s area
992 7777 Pomeroy are a

Mobile Homes For Sale
TO SE LL rmmed 1ate l y, mus t
sac r 1fr ce. mob1le home 2
BR wrth screEjned 1n po r ch
A!l elect r •c E.')(C co nd Ph
446 4090 before s, 245 5293
eve n~ng s

I
- - - - - - - - - - ___[ ___ "" -

227 6

19 72 DAt " UN 240Z ar AM
FM 3000C m1 tes 30 mpg
nsoo Ph 446 3731 o r 446
0198
126 3

SA LE 20 PERCENT OFF ON
ALL
LIVING
ROOM
SUITES
RICE 'S
FUR
NITURE 854 SECOND &lt;146
9 52 3

lr1vfl tr
r'h 4 &lt; 1 67~77
B ,1 nk F •rl.l nc n ,q

~

I H9

I

A UL I ~ Mob d e Horrre ~c r
v1c e SK rt nq r oo t coat n g
pntros
awn nqs
&lt;lnchor s
ce rnc n t
wo r l-..
I r ec
es1 1mat es
l oll ! 2 1 ~ 94 11
or 2 15 9172 ;~ It er 1 30 p m
7 "
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME ~
Pt Pl e t~ sa nt w v a
197 1 11x6'l 2 OR Concord 11po ut
19 69 l~x6.'&gt; 3 UR Lr iJ ert y
196Q lhllO 2 f!R Dud cl v
19 69 11x60 J O R 01 nd r~ l e E')l
p .lnd o
1%1 l?xllO 1 llR Cllil mp ,o n

- ,_

196 2 I N T DUM P tr u ck. 8 ft
bed S600 18 f t eq u1pment
lrader S600 Ph 446 8568
22.1 6
974 GREM LIN X $2 300 7
G e rman
AK C
R eg
Sheph e rd pups 8 wk s old
388 908 I
reasonable
Ph
a lt er4p m
224 6
,-~~~~~~~~~~~- ~

COMPLETE DISP.
20 Head of Horses

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20~

REG &amp; GRADE

388.9991 or 367-7481

SET of good bunk b ~ d s m g ood
cond 245 5353 ex ! 35 or It
GE H L
se llunl oa dng
a lt e r 5 p m 446 3624
wagon S400
16 Ge hl self
226 3
unloadmg wagon $ 1,4 00 No
880 N ew H olland for age
BUYING
cho ppe r
w rlh
co rnhead
OLD Sil ver CO in S 196 1 and
$3 000 No 12 John Deere
un d er $ 1 tor hal ves SOc for
lor age c h opper w.th c orn
quart ers
?Oc lor d m es
head a nd hay p1 cku p a t
Prem 1um for s l ver do llar s
tachment S500 Goo d
N ew
Naom , w .gs lOS :lnd Ave
Va n Dal e s lo unto aders
Ph
11 6 85] 3 Hr s
Tues
and fo r age wagons
N ew
Wed
I hurs
Sa t
10 30
Pape c f o rag e c hoppel'"s
5 30 f' r
10 30 10 7 p m
blower s an d wago n s Grave l
109 if
H rll Farm Sa l es F rank B uz
and
Dav1d M lis
Crown
C1 ty OhiO 256 6~28

Pets

227 2

---------------

BOAR DING nn d 1\KC We sty
pup s C1rc te L Kenn'" l s 116
11:17 t
16 I 11
AKC Reg Collte pup s Call
446 4205 after 5 p m or on
weekends
225 18
P IN E RIDGE COLL IE S
AKC Req Co llr es Sil ble- a nd
whrte ( 6 14 ) 156 1167
283 II
80 BB I S Pood l e Bout ,que
Prof esS ional gro om m g by
appor nt me n t Ph .JJ6 19 44
60 If

FOR SALE
1970FIREBIRD ES PI TE
P S , P B , AM .fM, atr
cond

4 s peed

U S ED
FU RNITURE
Sl eeper tr rp le dresse r ca rl
sprmg s gas rang e Phrlco
st er eo
C han nel Master
port ab l e
AM FM tap e
play er
CORBIN SNYDER FURN

Wanted To Rent
A H OUSE 2 or 3 b edroom tor
family o f 4 W1lh rn frv e miles
of Ga lli pOliS Ca ll 446 7890
2246

For Sale or Trade
GA RR ET T tre e farme r, log
skrdder new eng1n e Wo ul d
lrk. e a J D 350 wr th w nch 388
9906
2236

Camping Equipment
FA L L SA LE ~ N ew Apache
Sol1d State C amp er Trailer
s lee ps 6 was $2 495 n ow
$2 19 5 One Eag l e Fo ul'"
ca mper was. S1 125 n ow $99 5
U sed Apache Raven wa s
$350 now $299 A m sbary 's
Tra le r Sa les
63 1 Fo urt h
Aven u e Gal lipOl iS Ohro
228 3

Auto Sales
FOR your T1r e and Battery
needs co m e to Se ars T1re
Shop tn Th e S•lver B r~d o e
P l aza
33 If
1970 FOR D L TOPS PB a1r
55 ,000 acl u al mrles See to
bel 1eve
$1 3'50 Suzuk• of
Ga ll tpolls
228 2
SH AR P to oktng 69 Plymo ut h
F ury 3 Low m tleage 245
5862
227 2
H V W VAN R ebuilt eng 1ne,
man v ex tra s 446 3521
227 3

1968 OL DS 88 I ow ner low
m rteag e P S PB a1r good
cond P h 4&lt;16 1694 or 446
1S46
2 I 8 If

221 If

CLUB CALVES
Charolaos
Angus
Cross .
Excellent
Breed mg.
Bowman Charolaos
Ranch
Gallipolis, Ohoo
Ph. 446-3345

___

...__

__..

44 SHEET S of ~a 10 F1rec ode
Commerc1al d ry wa ll new
15 pet oft c on t ra cto rs cost,
also 6 sh eets of ce dar srdt ng
4)(8 P h 446 7486

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN
W e sel l :-.n.,. thtnq
an y b ody a t our .1\uc lr
B •.rn or m \OlJI ho nlt
•nform,ltion dlld p1c ku
scrv rc c c&lt;~lt 156 69 0
Sate E:.v er y S.l lu r&lt;lay
Nrql1t PI 7 p m

SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE
t-.LniHIIl SWd ll! fd·~ ·
CQrncr Third~ Olrv c

OH I O STO KER W Va lump
c oa l 1 r ewoo d B loc ks trte
cc m c n1 mortar
Ga llrpoll s
B lo c k Co Ph 416 2783
293 If

Plumbing &amp; Heating
STAND AR D
P lum b1ng Heal1ng
?14 Th1rd Ave '146 3782
187 I'
CAR T ERS PLUMBING
A ND HE AT ING
Cor Fourth 8. P me
Phone 446 3888 or 4&lt;16 1477
165 I f

rr

or t 1 E E tectr ,c
Po r
1.1 h l f' E I Pc \ r c A lt er n a tor
1rr tl Pow e r r't,m ts Ph 116
17(, rt

GENE PLANTS&amp; SON
P L UMB I NG - Healtng - A1r i
Condli10 n1ng JOO Fourth,
Av e Ph 446 1637

drag bush hog S100
2
moto r cycles $500
65 tn t
1700 Loadster 211ft f lat bed
tande m w tl h ext ra s
388
9906
2236

DEWITT S PL U MBING
AND HEATIN G
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone 140 2735
187 tf

Real Estate For Sale

STROUT REALTY
CLOSE
TO
TOWN
Lovely 3 BR ran ch has HW
fl oors ga s heal atr co nd
and ga rag e Th e ·k dc h en ts
co mp l e t e wllh ga rbag e
d•SP d Shwashe r eye l eve l
oven
range
hood an d
r ef er
Pr ,ced to sell a t
$23 000

PRICE
REDUCED
ASSUME 8 PCT
LOAN
and
tak e
1m me dr a t e
possess 1o n of thrs almost
new 3 BR ran ch Spe c1 al
features are a modern
k1tc h en n1c e laundry , cen t
aJr and ga rag e located tn a
n 1cc resrde nttal a r ea
LOTS

HARRISON TWP
65
ac r es of wooded h ill s wrth
fro ntag e o n 2 road s about
10 m1 f rom town $ 12 900

co

Phone446 117 1

- - -r - -

825 Th1rd Av e
G.-l lhpoll s 0

NEAR VINTON 20 A
plu s a 2 BR mobde home
The la n d ts mos tly t rlla bl e
and fronts on 2 road s

Call446 0076
or 446 0026

BOARDING&amp; AKC PUPPIES
K
P Kenne l s 388 B274 Rt
551
1 m '
eas t of Porter
305 II
KIT TE N S
S1a m es e
a nd
H rmalaya ns
both
C FA
446 3844 a ft e r I p m
224 6

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune

7 4 VEGA cam back wagon
A C P S auto S2 295 6 II

~ S how &amp; Pleasure

Wanted To Buy

6for\IOO

'"

LOW DOWN PAYMENT New double w1de mobtl e
ho me o ff e r s 3 BRs , l arg e
L R DR ktiCh~n With Stov e
and
ref e r
and
n rce
cab ,nets shag c arpe l and a
f l a t lot w d 1 trade for f arm
OWNER
IS
LEAVING
TOWN AND MUST SELL
l h• s 4 B R ran ch Th 1s hom e
1s lrk e new and conta1ns a
com pl ete burtt m k!lchen
lar ge dtn 1n g ar e a laundry
r oo m ww ca rpet love l y
drapes gas h ea t cen t a 1r ,
and ga rage
wilh
c ily
sc hool s and ulili11eS Be th e
l 1rst to see lh1 S one

OF

LOTS A ll
W h e th e r
burldm g or buyrng a mob il e
hom e c all 446 0008 to day
d ~rectJo ns

NEAR CENTENARY
OWNER WAS transferred
and otters th 1s 3 BR ranch
•n ct ly sc hool dts t w1lh 2
bat hs
mod ern k.ilche n
laundry rm
ww carpet
garage and l arge lo t
$22 500
I
LISTINGS NEEDED WE
ADVERTISE
NATIONALLY - WE BUY
SELL - TRADE
FINANCING AVAILABLE
- Lovely briCk. and frame
b• level tea t ures 3 B R s , l'h
baths , fam ily rm , large
dmrng area , 2 car garage ,
cent a•r and kttchen wrth
built tn range, hood d1sh
washer and drsp $32 ,900
WORLD'S LARGEST
THE LEADER SINCE 1900
IN
SERVING
THE
NATION'S BUYERS AND
SELLERS
ph 446 0008

RANNY BLACKBURN, BRANCH MANAGER

227 3 "-------------------------------------------~

3 PC BEDROOM surte SSO
bet g e fur love c ou ch $90
blu e and green s how er
cu rta1n s scales clo thes
ham p er to match Call 446
2532 before 5 and 446 2572
after 5
??7 1

73 CAMARO, mu st sac rrfrce.
cream puff 6 cyl
Make
offer Ca ll 256 6652
227 6

MACHINERY
SALE
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1

12:00 NOON

23' F LOOR mode l b l ack. and
wh rte set , 1n exc co nd 446
4739
227 3

located 7 mo. south of Gallipolis, Ohio on
Rt. 7.

COMPLE TE D 1sp 20 head of
horses
Reg
and Grade
show and p l easure 38 8 9991
or 367 7.48 1
225 5

KNOTTS

School of
Auctioneering
Approved by the Oh10
Slate Board of School
and
College
Reg1 strafl on
at
Columbus, Oh1o
R.ege strat1on No 71 12

0286H
Phone Gallipolis
446 29 17

TYPE LT
Fact ory at r J SP€f.d mag
whe el s 77 000 mile s A M
FM Book Pn ce $3725 00
Sm1 lh 's Specra l Pnce

1975- 350 long de1sel w1th less than 60 hrs, 7112 ' 3 pt
d 1sk s, J 0 2- 14" plows, 3 pt Century blow sprayer,
451 New Holland mower, 7' lm co pull type cutter , J 0
12 A Subs01l er, 1 row c ull1vato r , metal 2 wheel trailer ,
J D 290 corn ptanter , 200-Bv Ktlbros Gravtty bed, 8 ton
wagon hydrau liC auger for wagon , Freeman manure
loader , Shave r heavy duty transplanter, 1970 Ford 250
p1ckup, 21' 5th wheel tra1ler w1 th ltves tock bed , all of
the above farm machm ery has been purchased w•thm
the past yea r

LIVESTOCK EQUIPMENT -

TH.M5-CASH

LOOK CLOSt!- HERE'S THE BUY OF A
LIFETIME
You must be thinkong of buyong or you
wouldn't be readong thos Well. don't buy
unlol you've seen thos fantastiC 4 Bedroom
home (Largest bedrooms on town) Includes
family room, 3 baths. formal donong , wood
burning foreplace, 1 acre lot woth s uper
river voew, 2 car garage E ~cellent con·
structoon Ovvner movong out of town and
must sell Pnce reduced.
PRICE REDUCED
SALE

Attrach\/1;' 3 bedr oom b•
le v e l , la rge k1fch en full of
.cabtnets
(r ang e
drsh
washer ) 2 f replac es 2' ~
baths large family room
w 1th bar 2 c ar garage fla t
lot Clos.e to Holz e r S39 900
buys thrs b e auly
LIKE COUNTRY
LIVING
Her es your ch ance L ovely ma mtena nce free
ran c h 3 larg e bedrooms ,
huge 11v1ng famil y an d
d 1n1ng room 2 bath s 2 car
garage larg e flat lo t on
c ounty road
SUPER NICE HOME
bed r oom al l cedar ran ch
a b1g tot large L R
Itorn-" 1 d1n1ng, excelle n t
k.!lch e M tam 1ly r oom l arge
master
bedroom
wilh
pnvale bath You lll rke the
looks of lh •s one and 11 s
pr•ced at only S39 900
PRICE REDUCED
40 ac r e s wilh small home
S20 000 buys 11
The re 's
more th an enough good
coat to pay for lh1s o n e
ATTRACTIVE BRICK
NEAR HOSPITAL
We ,usll tsted lh1 s very well
o nstru cte d 3 bedroom
hom e
Beauti ful k.r tc hen
f u lly ca rp eted
11 2 bath
fm1 shed fam!ly room and
basemen!
Nat
g as and
central a1 r
flag land
lot Owner trans
t e rred to lndrana
Must
se ll

$18 000
Sect1on 30 Hr:~rr 1so n Twp 14 acres l or $6 000 ca n b e
fman ce d c l ose l o Ra ccoon Creek:

SPRING VALLEY
OWNER TRANS
FER RED

FOR
IMMEDIATE

44 acres o l level grou nd l ocr~ l ed ad 1acen t to Tycoon
Lake can be f 1nan ced hac, one traile r hoo k up on I
rur a l wa t e r jUst aQ,Oed to fr on t of prope r ty Pr1ced

·, !'74
CHEVY MALIBU Cl!SSIC 2 DR Ht.~ •.•••••••••••• !3795 t*
t: Exira sh arp
~ t '74 FORD PINTO STATION WAGON ••••••••••••••••••• !2995 lf-t

Two lot s left on Kem per Ho l low , pr 1ced S.1 850 o n land
con tra c t

:!t: '74 PPONTIAC
LeMANS SPORT 2 DR. HT•••••••••••••• !3895 !Jt.
P B,
~ t:£ '74 OLDS CUTlASS SUPREME...................Now s3795 *
;

J un c tton of Bu l avlll e Road and Route 160 lhr ee
bedroom house family room , l a rge ult l 1ty r oom large
barn , pr~ced for a qutck sale

, .,.

T h rs lo vely brtck. and
fram e 3 bedr oom sets on
large lot offenng n tce v rew
and 1ncludes la r ge l rvrng
room , huge fam il y krfchen
wllh f trep la ce. 11 ~ baths
tuft d1v1ded ba se m en t
Prrc ed S38 500
LIKE NEW
3 BEDROOM
Brrck and f rame w1th
ce ntra l a 1r
f rreplac e
l
acre Tot No mon ey down
vof'" Vets A very n1 ce ho m e
FIVE BEDROOMS
Lo v e ly fully c arpeted 5
bedroom b• l eve l 1ncludecl
a huge family room ntce
kilchen (bUil l 1n appl ), su n
deck garage , cen t a1r
nat gas. heat 2 baths and
flat Lot Owner transfer red
to norther n Oh ro Must sell

~

Air

~

Sharp , loaded

\

1975 PONTIAC

Arr cond 23 .J77 md es AM
FM , st eel be lt s ex ira nr c e
V1ny l lop smnll V 8

CATALINA
4 Dr
stralor

L ooi'lded

Demon

only 12.000 miles

Sm all
motel
exceller
locat ro n 1n clu ded 8 un "'
and 6 room house for t he
owner Keep your present

N rc e 11 yea!'" old 3 bed roo m
frame on Jl/ 2 acres. close
town Rural water oil heat
very good garden spot
Pr1ced lo sell at $22 500
THREE ACRES PLUS
Two sto ry 3 bedroom Ira me
c lose town
Paved roa d
rural
water,
ga rage ,
outs1d e cellar and storage
Moderately
pr rced
at
$17 ,000
4 ROOM HOUSE With bath , 111
City , $8500 Ph 4&lt;16 3224
226 3

3 B R Mob de Hom e o n 1 acre
lot wrth new ga rage Call
after 5 &lt;146 33~6
152 f

318 engine

A~r stereo

...

...

P B

: SEE:

*

P S

...

OVER 50 LATE MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM

~
1639 EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, 446-32Z3
:
~****•**********•******•~****************••**•
Real Estate For Sale
Real l:.state For Sale
Real Estate For Sale
· LO T S for sale tn C1ty and
Co untr y
also
Bus1ness.
Srtes
Robert A
Queen
Ph on e 446 0168

Btl

DAIRY QUEEN
Domg exce llen t bus. rnes.s
For sale for on ly 30 days
Yours for $29,000 If run
prope rly Will pay for s.ett 1n
two years

-·
·-

25 Locust 51
Howard Brannon, Broker
Off 446-2 674
Lucille Brannon
Eve 446 1226 or 446-2674

•

FOR THOSE WHO
HAVE EVERYTHING
(And need a place lo put
1tl One of a krnd 2 story
br1ck
ar:~d
stone
profeSSIOnally
decorated
hom e
Lovely entrance
foyer lead s to spaCIOUS
k1tch en w1fh all the built
ms and S1 de laundry room ,
formal DR , fam1ly rm
W1lh fireplace, oversrze LR
and frreplace Beauf•ful
wmd1ng sta1rcase to second
floor w1 t h a p1cturesque
v1ew from the ma ste r BR
many c losets plus large
walk rn
cedar
storage
room, 2 more BRs, 31f2
baths a full basement W1fh
re c and play roo m deluxe
heat tng
and
c ool 1ng
system AI! thrs located on
a love ly shaded lol ex
tendtng from Second Ave
to lhe R1ver

•·

SMALL ACREAGE

10 acres on Jo hnson R tdge
Ideal
co nv en 11onal
or
mobile hom e srte
Farm
pond good fences paved
road and a barn
On!
$7,950

,.

we need 11stmgs Call the
W1seman Agency 446 3641
Gallra Co ' s Largest Real
Estate Sales Agency
Off1ce 446 -3643
E venmqs Call
1ke W 1sem an 446-3796
E N W1seman 446·4500
Bud McGhee 446-1255

:

DOWNTOWN
Two family bilck - &lt;I large
BRs eat 1n krtchen forma l
DR , w w carpet, laundry
rm ,
double
ca rport
storage buttdlng, n ew link
fenced play area A lso, 3
rooms &amp; bath w1th pr tvate
entrance
A very small
change could make thts a
one tam lly home
WOODEt' ACREAGE
10 Acres tus.t 4 m 1 from
to wn A beau t iful &lt;1 B R
2
bath ranc h style home 2
large
wood burn1ng
f1repla ces., full d i vided
basem ent, delu )( k 1tchen &amp;
d1n1ng room , w w carpel
patio , 2 car garage &amp; barn

50 ACRES. 70 model KirkwoOd
MH 3 br , 1112 bath, pond,
s1lo can be bought , w1th or
Without cattle and eQUit:l,
mmeral r1ghtS mtact, J
Thacker , Wood Mill Rd,
Bidwell, Oh lo
226 3
- - - - - - - - - - - - -- STARKS MAN 's apples, Rt 2,
BidwelL 245 5246

Large 2 story home located
on a n1ce cornerlot 3 BR ,
w w carpet. larg e eat m
kttchen,
formal
OR ,

DDJDL IJ PROPANE

$17 ,500

L

!
CIOOD FOR ONE
~

11 ACRI=S
A very n1ce. on € -floor plan
home , 3 BR , large deluxe
kitchen
with
spac1ous
cab.ner space &amp; ra nge ,
oven &amp; ref, utility room ,
fam1ly
room ,
covered
pat10 , 20'x70' too l shed &amp;
22')(50' barn
Just 6 mt
from town

GOOO LOTS

wTwo good lots located 4 m I
.:-#rom Gallrpol!s Ideal tor
mob1le homes or lo build a
~new home on In Galllpol ts
School
o , str~ct ,
rura l
water
Price $1 ,800 &amp;

2,200

~

., TWO MOBILE HOMES
r One 1971 mode l 12'x65' A ll
furn•fur e. 1 acre wooded
lot Pr1ce S11 ,000

'

"One

DI.TE
KEEPER·JS"MONTH
CALENDAR
Availtble
now at yow Doxol dealer's

1502 Eastern Ave., Galhpolls
PhOne 446-2264

2 BR HOME 1n village of
V1nton , garage, large lot ,
shade trees , Inside c om
ptetely rerr odeled, 388 8772
221 12

- -R:E

FOR SALEIN GALLIPOLIS

197 1 model
12'x60'
'?'xpa ndo - on nrce SIZe lot
)~...VIII se ll on land con t ract
-iPnce $12 soo

-

3

bedroom home, front
room wrth fireplace, toyer ,

bath. bullt. on kotchen w1th
lots of
doors

cabtnets, storm
and
wtndows,

basement

VINTON

. """""'"

A PPROX
67 A
Ranch or
Farm
Plen ty
water
Beautiful 3 le vel land Dr i ve
over 1n car Approx one half
cleared Fme hay , ttmber,
game Borders Danv ille
388 8229 B1dwett Also large
home and lotm Boc.!l Raton ,
Fla near ocean 2Aif:or
Motor Home all extras and
more
20' Sea Boat
Sta
Wagon 6 All or part Terms
Consider
t rades
most
anywhere 583 ,600
228 1

w [

jOb becaus.e yo u and your
wde can operate th1s
success fu l ly
Call
Ike
Wtseman tor part1culars

JORDAN'S GAS SERVICE

...

:GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH i

NEAR TOWN

IIGIIlll.

:

...

Heres a dandy, l arge
carpeted L R
f orma l
dmtng
n tce k.tt
and 2
bedroom on matn floor
plus 2 bedroom s up Larg
2 c ar garag e w il h
Fl at lot o n u S 35

showroom. Offer expun 12/31/7S

SAVE
1973 CHEV.
PICKUP VB

1973 CAPRI
M etall i c bl ue 4 speed , gas
saver Shd rp

1974 CAMARO

Standa rd tran s, Flee t s 1de

32 126 miles Wa s S7595 00

A1r cond , automatic, p
stee r1ng
s port wheels,
124
mtles,
sharpJ
N AOA Book pr1ce $4400 00

n

NOW ON DISPLAY! ·

A1r P

Large corner lot , 3 BR
home , very n1ce k.rtchen
and laundry, many burl! 1n
cab1nets and storage Call
to see thts home now &amp;
make an offer

lm.l~

AM F M air cond ,
mlle5 , vinyl top.
mobile
home
dea
1fade

914 Th 1rd Av e nu e thr ee bedroom fram e dwc llmg
bath st orm d oors a nd wm d ows sh1ngled ou l stde
priCed s 11 000

FOUR BEDROOM

COOK BOOK

Air cond , stee l belts
Verd lt green Wa s $2897
Week End Spec13l

. :.., '72
OODGE OIARGER •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• !2495::
Auto P S . 318 e ng~ne
:. : '71 FORD LID 4 DOOR ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••51195 :

226 3

rfiTU1[;

red
au l omahc
These are hard to l 1nd
ShMp

76 BUICKS and PONTIACS

*

Loaded w 1th extras

:

now

30 years of leadership and still offering
top quality propane, neal workmanship,
lank Installations, a full line of gas
appliances and pleasant courteous professional
service. CaD us, you11 be glad you did!

G T

W e ll ke pt thr ee bedroom home , full ba sement , stor m
doo r s and w1ndows 1u st outs,de c1ty l 1m1 t s pr1te d To
se ll

OUR BARGAIN COUNTER
LIKE NEW
One of our bes t buys S1X
year old 3 bedroom fram e ,
rural water central heat 3
lots 65 ' )( 166 , $22,500 or
house and 1 lot $19 500

sn.soo

1973 CHEV.
CAPRICE 4 DR HT

1973 OPEL

: ! '72 DODGE
CORONET 4 DOOR••••••••••••••••••••••• !2395 tJt.
S,

-41

BUSINESS
WE HAVE TWO
Th ts IS a really great op
portun.ty lor somebody Long eslabltshed grocery
do1ng
an
excellent
busmess f ully stocked and
equtpped Owner ret rrtng
due to 111 health Call tke
W1seman for particulars

...

11 Burger Str ee t two bedroom s up and o ne down g r1 s
furnac e s t orm doors and st orm w 1ndow s $ 1.:1000 FHA
loan can be assumed a t 71o1 P et w1 lh down paym e nt

SAVE

~ ~ '73 CHRYSLER NEWPORT 4 DOOR •••••••••••••••••• .S2895 :

i

•

1973 MUSTANG

South o f drtve m theater olf State Route 7 t hree
bed room home n1ce kt l chen cab 1nets la rg e lrv1ng
room , ca rpet e d f m1shed basement w 1f h firepl ace
garage pr1ce d $25 000

r--

7

S,

WANT YOUR OWN

lunch Served

Tommy Joe Stewarl - Auctioneer '
Gallipolis, Ohio
Note: This is a very clean sale witlt very few
small items
be here on time.

A uto , extra c lean, 10,000 m1les

. t:

20 galvaniZed &amp; p1pe

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Richard Buchy - Owners

b.1 r c ond , tape , blllboord,
4, 500
mHes,
sh ow room cond

h res,

$3397

N ew three bedroom, bnck on Rou t e 35, tully carpe ted
bath and a half , u t1llty room f amily room larg e front
room , modern krtchen plenty of cab1nc l s co rn e r lo t ,
prt ted $36 ,000

Formall H &amp; Super C tra c tor s, wtth cultivators,
mower for C. front grader blade for C, 7' pull type
d1 s ks, Cobey P T 0 manure s pr eader. pull plows
gates ( IO 'x16'l 2 steer stutters , 2 Holden creep feeders,
3 Starcraft se lf waters, 2- 16' hay racks, 4Q--16' hog &amp;
ca ttl e panels , 1 heat gate, 7Q--7' Cresote posts , 20 stee l
posts e lectriC fencmg &amp; charger , V et supplies, 4 rolls
of barbed w1re, lumber 2x l 2 2x6 2x4, 6' portable feed
auger 4" 21 ft, 4" auger, 5 H P stngle phase elect
motor 6 H P W1scon sin e ng me, 2 H P elct motor , 32'
a lum ladder ,Devault Rad1al arm saw , Dayton 8 ~'
bench grmder &amp; st a nd , heat heuser for 30 10 J 0 &amp; Ford
!radar , a few hand tools, large assortment of patnt,
large dehumidif ier, 2 S1mpltttty rota ttl ler s, 2
r e frigerators and a few household 1tems

Delta Royal e 7 dr hdtp ,
19 377 m1l e&lt;&gt;
r:11r c ond
v m y l l op
AM F M
Ex
cepttonc'\ll y sh (lr p

Book Pr 1cc S3700

KEMPER HOLLOW
ROAD

SWEE T potatoes fo r sa le 388
8754
227 12

N e w GMC
Truck H eadquar t ers
1970 Da ts un P c ku p tr u ck.
1972
1 T
Ch ev
Cab 8.
Chass rs
197 1 GMC Ta nd em l rve Ax l e
Cab and ChaSS IS
GM C Cab and
1971 212 T
Chass's
1968 '. T GM C P•ckup
11971 GMC Subu rba n
1973 1 T GMC Prckup
197 0 1 T F nrd P1ckup
1970 MonJe Ca rl o
1965 1 T F ord P 1c k.up
SOMMERS G M C
Truck !. Inc
133 PtneSt
446 2532

1973 CAMARO

A LL
T Y P E:-.
o f build 1n g
ma 1e r1als
block
br1ck,
se wer
p pe s
Win dows
lm te l s etc C laud e Wmter~
R 10 G rande 0
Ph o n e 145
'i l 21 after 5

N EW F ran.,lm F urna ce W1th,
a cce ssor es
ma d e
by
A lla n ! c Stov e Co Sme lt zer
Garde n Cente r Phone &lt;146
\B IB
86 II

1975 PONnAC
FIREBIRD

1974 OLDS 88

Off. 446·3643

SOL t D c h e r ry bu ff et, ex
c e!len t cond Ph 446 9700
22 3 6

36 :c23 ... 009

G RAVE LY Trac tor wil h 50 1n
m ower
Goo d c ond •T ton
S35 0 Phone 367 7634
221111

Atr cond , steel belled t1res,
19 1?7 mtl es , automa t 1c,
vmyl top Ex pec l t he best

12) If

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

For Sale

1974 PONTIAC
FIREBIRD

REALTOR

9x12 M ATC H IN G all w ool GO O D c l ean lump and slok e
ru gs a nd pads ca rp eltng l or
c oal
Car t w ,nt(' r s
R ro
s1arrs a nd ha ll O n e U l l
Gr a n d e Ph 1 15 5 115
cub1c r e f r1g JJ6 1159
728 l
245 II

7

...- . ..

446-1066

The WISEMAN Agency

HOLSTEIN Baby Ca lv es
Male o r Fe ma l e all.:iges 10 L I ME STONE for dr, ... eway s
Polled H er ef o&lt;d cows w
Ca r l W rnter s
Phone 245
calves Ph 379 2184
"' II 'i '
178 I
/45 If

I

1970FORO L TD P S PB a1r
55 000 ac t u al m .tes Sce to
bet e ... e
1350 Su zuk1 of
Gall polrs
226 j

7"-~----- ------

LIG HT ho usek.eepr ng
Park Cen tral Hot el

WELL KEPT ca rp e ts Sh ow 1974 GREMLIN X S2 300 7
lhe r esu tl s o f regu lar B lu e
AKC
R eg
German
Lus tr e spo t c tean,ng R en t
She pherd pups 8 WkS Old
ch. c tr,c
s h am p ooer
$1
R eas onabl e Ph 388 9081
Ce ntral Supp ly
afle r 4 pm
2186
'125 6

1967 D I AMO ND 318 10 spd
$ 1 750 1968 Dor se y tra ler
&lt;tO It
9 IT spr ea d Ph 669
&lt;1723
224 6

I IPrp o t

1972 GREMLIN , 28,000 m il es,
good shape 245 5064
227 3

QUAIL CREEK

l: f..!lUh' Y

Ill Vll l yl

V..

I 0~ t I

Help Wanted

HOUSE fur rent , 5 rm s
L ocat ed on V rnt on Ave W ill
be available m 1d d l e of
October
Prefer
older
cou pl e $130 , plus secur1 ty
depos1t Wilt con s1de r lease
R ef req Wnte
Bill Day
3824 Cumbe rland Parkway
Vrrgrnra B each Va 23452 or
ca ll 804 34 0 3979
228 6

STARCRAFT
fl.. IOirJd own s
1'&lt;1' G.II&lt;Jx~ ~1 119
&lt;. tar
m,l&lt;;ter ~~ /'J'l
XL delu xf'
S l uc,
C&lt;lrll P
Con l e y
'&gt; larlr 11! ~ &lt;JI&lt; ~ Rl 6} N P I
P l"l&lt;;&lt;l" I

I

102 GARF I ELD Ave
2 Bk
trailer
n ew ca rp et
n ew
l 1v1nQ roo m t u rn
na t ural
gas furna c e co upl e only
n eed rel e&lt;ence
$125 per
mon th
225 If

M A N to do ex terr or pa nt ,ng or
othe r work
Ca l l 388 8865
227 3

f

l

MU 't'I T 5E L L
O NE O W N ER
17 00 0 m l e::.
197 4 O l d s
Culla"-S
~ up r ernc
go od
cond
\3900 Ca ll IJ641 13
bPI Ore 5 p rl1
228 6

RUSSELL WOOD
REALTOR

Real ESt..te For Sale

For Sale

I Rf iLER ~

367-7250

\111 1 t

BABYS IT TING m my home
for Childr en und er sc hool
a ge lots of e xp &lt;146 1946
'2263

'J ) ')I f

709 I f

Jhlonl nq

p1

t

728 3

II'J

I ! L 1 'i
M OI~ILE::
Home
'&gt;&lt; rv C.l
'&gt; k r11nq
ro o t
oo1 IIHI f.loJ IJO S n wn nqs
c~n cr ors cenH. nt work
1 ree
estrndiL&lt;&gt; C'l l l ? l 'i 9111 1 or
7 !&gt;91J / ,1 11cr l)Opm

f

!f1(1)

Wanted To Do
!'t

lo r 1 rrl

Goo d

I&lt;

NI CE --, PR Mobil! hom f' n r&gt;a r
HMC &lt;Hi lii i S on ly Ph !1(,

446 441 5

p,lp.- r nq

r c, p ,H

l&gt;o

I 5? I I

n

/ I'&lt;

/\PT tor l('ilSC 3:?8
? nd f,vf'
o verto okrn q c t v pa r k 1 U R
ltvrng
rrn
kil c tlcn
"" lh
range
rc fr q
a nct dmmq
area ba tll 1\v &lt;til&lt;tbl ~ Oct 1
SlJS p e r
n1onth
y(:ar -:.
l e as e Coi l PJ s tl6 IHIQ o r

,.,~II

II I

19! 0 fOI-II NO $1 lUlJ
cond 1!18 8798

ljll(&gt;(f

ns6

For lease

l Q N Y ".

f-.~ (&gt; 1

APT at 63 1 rourth
U t rl1l es p ad and r et

12~!:l

f I 'I

M OB ILE HOM E SE RVICES
\'\OB IL E HOM E OWNERS
Save on your fu e l bill by
und cr prnntng All types of
r eparr tr e down !. co mpl ete
serviCe
Fo s t e r
Mob rt e
Hom e s~rVIC C 4&lt;16 2781 or
Elm er SkHimor e 446 3419
2:2~ 12

HOU ~ E

FOR MaxtmUill Secunt-,. u se
An c ho r!&gt;

1I

~03 t

77 111

Down

C.r~tl

Soup or

chilt

Tte

'\ t j 'I

I I

11th

2lb l

'\L,( 'N

For Sale

Auto Sales

Real Estate for Sale

621

Thtrd

Avenue Behmd th1s homt:
[ must sell with the front

MASSIE

1 GARAGE APARTMENT
2 bedrooms w1th hardwood
floors. modern kitchen and

Realty, 32 State St.

balh w1th large front room •
ca rpeted, 2 car garage, live
1n one and rent the other
Contact
Larry
Boyer.
Admtn1strator
of
the
estate
Phone 446 4223

Tel. 614 446-1998
NEAR

ROONEY

Beaut1ful 7 rm home , all
elec , all carpet, 1112 baths,
plenty storage rm 11 has a
2 car gar plus small barn
and storage bldg Located
on a 2 A fenced lot, plenty
yoJng ptnes and pond
SIO£ked Wlfh f1Sh ASk1ng

Shown by appt only

L-

-

Realty lnc.

5T RT 218 - 2n1Ce Mobile
homes on 2 23 A lot Both
are 10' x 55
both are m
good
co nd1f10n
un
derp 1nned and carpeted
Potenj1al In come S250 per
mo Prrce S16 000

446 3434
~EALTORS

NEW LISTING- Lovely
bedf'"m ranch , all electrrc
bath w 1th sh ower
tully
carpeted,
kil c hen
gas
range ,
refr1geralor
d 1sposa1
large family
r oom wtth a beaul1ful
fireplace, large garage and
ce llar house Located on
21' ? acres on n tce land c lose
to Chesh 1re

GEORGES CR. RD
Good 6 rm
house
all
carpet , plenty k1f ca b , 2
baths . F A Nal gas heat
storage bldg and b1g lot
Pr~ce S25 SOO
BULlSKIN RD E)(tra
n1ce , 6 rms
and bath
cou ntry home , has been
comp letel y redone 1nS1de ,
w1th panel1ng , carpet, 2
f1reptaces. and elec heal
Located on a 3 A wooded
tot Pn ce d •n the teens

LOW DOWN PAYMENTGood 6 rm house and bath ,
garage large level lot Pay
only $1,000 down
and
S120 57 per month

PATRIOT - 7 rm frame 2
story home wrth base fur
heat , cen atr bath. ca rpet
over H W floors , 25' n1ce
kit
cabinets , has barn
gar , and '!::&gt; A tot Pnce
S18.000

LOVELY OlDER HOME
-Take a look at t h1s lovely
2 story home on a niCe
shaded lot , has 4 bedrooms ,
Jl 12 baths , new furnace ,
new roof, needs some work
.nstde but would make a
nice fam1ly home , loc at ed
a1 Cenlerv llle

KLICKER RD 80 A 4
rm house Prr ce $12 , 500

CLOSE TO GSI
Af
trac11ve 2 bedroom ranch
W1th large k•tchen, fully
carpeted ufll1ty rm , good
buy for $16,500

NEAR LECTA - Farm, 42
A Tob base 20 A clea[1
and l1llabte Good &lt;I b19
rms , bath , base and fur
heal Barn 38! )( 48' Bldgs
not old and m good con
dtfiOn Askmg S27 ,000

1112 ACRES - Lovely ranc h
wrth 3 bedrooms , n1ce bath ,
all elecfrtc , large garagedetached from the house ,
good buy for only S21 900

STEWART R D 18 A
some bot tom, to b base and
barn
Pr1ce
S18 , 000
W1thout house and 1 A
$4,500

l ACRES Very niCe
place rn the co untry , 3
bedrooms
bath
n1ce
kllchen chn.ng, wrth range
refr1gerator, washer and
dryer , county water 1 barn
and a small burld•ng , land
1$ clear and n1ce lo cate d
close to Evergreen Good
buy for $13 ,500

VICTORY RO - 45 A Wlfh
' 73 model Mob il e home. b rg
barn , lob base and --good
fences Only.$13,500 Wrfh 2
Mobile "'ames $17 ,500

ANY Y R 446- 1998

CONSULTANT

C&lt;j&lt;.ar Ba1rd
John Fuller
.loug Wether holt
152 Second Ave
GallipoliS , 0

CENTENARY Nrce ~
rm house w1th bath, base ,
athc storagE', new cerpet,
F A fur and F P Ideal for
relrred
coup le
or
newlyweds Askrng $17 ,000

$21,000

---~--~--i

OHIO RIVER

$36,500

SWAN CR
9 years
old ,
4
b tg
rms ,
ba t h and att
gar
Has
a store bldg
barn and
sto rage bldg Tob base and
3 A
level land
Pnce

-

'

WE BUY, SELL, TRAOf
EVLntnq ~ (~ It

John r: ullcr 446 4ll7
l • r John!&gt;on 1S6 6740
Do utt W r lh( r topll 146 "1 4

'

40 MORE TO CHOOSE FROM

FOR RENT
101 Gar f 1e ld Avenue t wo b edroom tr ailer ne w c .vpe l
ne w ltvmg room f u r n1lur e natural ga s fu rnace co up l e
on l y , need f'" e fe r e n ce $12 5 00 a month

SMALL DOWN PAYMENTS, UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY
BANK &amp;
FINANCI

EVENINGS
RUSSELL WOOD ~44 6 4618
N I CE

ouse In City
J BR bnck , full basement.
eKcellent locatiOn , back ol
house faces Galhpolts Golf
Cour se Newly decorated
Ph 446 952l or 446 1443

.,
'

t"l. R homf' 1n co un try
m des
fr o m
'own
C om p lete ly
r emodele d
m s •d e a nd o ut \\ llh rura l
,...ater a nd &lt;tppr ox 1 acres
o l lA nd Ca ll uny 1 111e ?56
I 116
196 II
!

R'

222 If
POMEROY E s tabl ished
bus l nessoppo r tun rly S150M
gross S23 M
net Ow ner
ret 1r1ng Call l or detail s
POMEROY I n vest m en t
opportunrty 40 x 80 br1c k
bus1n ess
bldg
corne r
lo ca t ro n good tena n ts good
return Call Jay Shepard
today
LOTS Bl dg lots - Mobile
home tots We go t them We
build yo ur plans or ours
ACREAGE We got 1t A ll
pr iCe
ranges
good
local ron s
NEAR MINES
14 ACRE S level la nd Creek 3
BR mobrle home 2 BR block
home Lot of fr ont age on
You ca n
K eysto ne Road
make money he r e
See
to day
VINTON
Bus1ness
opportunrty
Pnc e of a
home will buy thr s good
bus•ness 1nclud1ng r ea l
estate and equ1pment Call
Jay Sheppard tor de1cHi s

SALE NOW GOING ON .
NOW
OR
NEVER

SAVE

BEAT THE PRICE
INCREASE NOW

Broker s Budden
Auct•one ers
RANCHO COMPANY
AddiSOn 367 0300
Gall1po11s. 446 0001

WANTS
PROPER TV
WtTH US

YOUR
SOLD LIST

SAVE

SAVE

ON 1975 MODEL DODGE CARS &amp;TRUCKS

GREEN SCHOOLS
THREE or f our b e droo m
h ome on Rf
141
Lrvrng
room family room k.ttch en
drn1ng room
New c arp el
Fenced lot Low S20 s

NEAL REALTY

•

Also up to $300
Factory
Cash
Rebates on variclus
models.

NO REASONABLE
OFFER REFUSED

SO COME PREPARED TO BUY OR TRADE

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

Ofl•ce Ph &lt;146 1694
Ev en1ng s
CharlesM N ea l446 1546
J MIChael N ea I 446 1503
Sa m N eal,446 7358
FOR SALE by owner m pr1m e
res,dent,al
area
near
downtown
and
r1v er
Redecorated , car peted , 2
f rreptaces, paneled den
huge k1tchen w dishwasher
and new cabrnets 4 huge
bedrooms, new furnace ,
utility rooms , patlo, pond ,
large lot Call after srJr: or
any t1 me weekends
4&lt;16
0726
222 7
Ux40 CABIN two bedroom
lrv1ng room , bath and k 1t
chen ,
f u lly
rnsu l a fe d ,
paneled and c arpe te d Ph
67 5 4079
227 2

Real Estate For Sale
ATTN HOME BUYERS
OV ER 500 Hom e pl a n s to
choose from
you r tot or
ou r s. We sav e you 1 me and
money
up to $2 000 tax
c r ed rt Rancho Co Add son
367 0300 Ga llrp oi1S 4 16 000 1
199 l f

Services Offered
ROOF tNG and g utt e r o l all
kmd s hot a sp h alt We fi x
t he f l at o n es. Ph on e 367 0'&gt;9 1
Pau l W alk er
216 26

Services Offered
SANDY A ND BEAVER In
surance Co
has o ff er ed
serv1ces fo r F 1re In suran ce
cove ra ge 1n Gall1a Cou n ty
for almosl
a ce n t ury
Fa rms
hom es
and per
sona l prope rt y coverage s
are a va il able to mee t rn
d r v1dua l n ee d s
Conta ct
L ew's H ughes you r ne1gh
bar an d agent
228 6
C U STOM R E M O DE LtNG 20
years e)( per1 enc e 388 BJOS
N ew dry wall ce t11n g w11 h
swrrl or te)(t ur e d estgns
O th e r dry w all repa1r \/1nyl
wallpapen ng
new b ath s
n ew k.l! c hen s ~\ny thrng 1n
r emod e l 1ng o r repa1r
11 II

GE N E R AL Contra clo r Ro om
add 1l10ns ho u se raz ,ng and
levelrng atum rnum o r v1 nyt
2 YEAR old br 1c k l1ke new on
s rd1n g
c arpen try o t all
Debby Dr 10 large rooms, 3
krnds
roo f 1ng
3 67 0591
baths , double garage, w tow
Paul Walker
AlBERT EJ-iMAN
carpel t hrough out, centr al
Wate r D eltvery Se r vrc e
216 26
a1r , $55 900 by appomtment
Pat rrol Star Gall rpol,s
446 7569
P h 37 9 2 133
224 12 BACK HOE: work se p l rc tank
243 II
and 'warer lrn es 1n sta ll ed c
-- U M 1ller Rto Grande , Ph
KOTALIC LANDSC APING
245 S5J5
~
APPRO X 2 m ile Sout h of Rro
RIO GRANOE , OHIO
204
26
Gri:lnde o n St 325 n 1ce 5 - --- COMP LETE PROGRESSIVE
----room s w1th bath, an 2 rms
LAND SCAP ING
roR
1 HE
o es t
,n
ar 'S HRUB S
u pstatrs part crally fmrshed
TREES , ROCK
c
h
,
te
clu
;
al
des•gn
and
pl
ans
New roof and pam t tob , 27
UA RDEN S
ALL
for new ho mes
sm-.att
acres appro)(
t 2 m lie o f
GUARA NTEED Pa t iO and
commercral build ngs apts
road frontage OM St 325 Call
POOl tandsc ap1ng
S l one
or r emode l 1ng
c all B d l
245 5023 o r co n t act Charles
sa nd
to o l
sh r ubb&lt;&gt; r y
W
alker
Thurma
n
Ohm
1
W
Bloss , Ml
Z1on Rd
t r 1mm1ng
Dump
tru cK
OR'l 7 t9B
serv1ces 245 9131
Ja c k son Oh 286 2526 o r 286
198 ' I
2184
187 If

-------------

---

Serv1ces Offered

Services Offered

FU RNIT URE
UPHOL ST ERIN G
p rompt
serv1ce r ea so nabl e rates
We 1nV1IC YOU IO VIS I OUr
modern Shop lo c at ed at
Mas.on Co Far rqround CT&amp; T
a r eal or ca ll f o r f ree
est,mates
Mowre y &lt;;
Upholster,ng
• Po1nt
P l easant 67 'i 415J
/19 t f
D ALE
Sanders
D etr vcry /56 6667

•'· a ter
2 I 1 rt

(P H OE &lt;
l nd do;or v..orK
\ ('plrC t,l n ". o; nn d krlch ln d s
"'BM !lB6'i or l8e 8&lt;'10
1 \0 t f

Cl',LL Roqer "'.d1 te t or p1U I Il0
.ng i\n d rep a rrs Ph 156 I /3'1
or 1~6 61\ 1
5) I f
, ERMITE PEST CONTROL
rnspt'C.IIOII
(nil J..\6
32-1 5
f'./,e rrrl l
0 Dell
Operator by Ex term • ne~t
Te r m1 1e Serv rce 10 Be lm ont
De
26! tl

~ REE

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY Pa1n 1rn q
res od ent,al and co mm Pr cr al
1nter or and ex te r ,or f\c1rns
and r oot s a1r1 ess sprav rnQ
fr ee
est,m&lt;lte
P n nl
anywhe re 2'i 6 1119

DOZ E~

w o rk excav ating,
land
c l e ar1ng,
ponds.
basements
l andscap ing
Call 446 005 1
163 "tt

AD DI S Portab l e weld1ng end
cu lt.ng se r v 1ce Ph 256 6312
225 10
----- --~-- ----

P' ' OLJl\LE
E1ectr •ca1
&amp;
lnsula l ,ng
10.1 Cedar St ,
Gaii1 P"I S Ph 4~6 2716
126 tt
C /!. R PAI NT Center, Inc
Ben tarn n Mo ore paints
s1nce 18B3
Wall P!lJ).~
Qua lif ie d
pa 1n ter
8SJ ,
Second Ph J4 6 9458

130t!
I'O RUER Garage Builders
1 rf'E' rS ii!lli\te !. 756 6J 7?
119 it
II ORDE R S GARAG E Door
..,l' rV 1CP
Comm e-rc1a l and
rt s den 11,11
spec, a l rzrng 10
opcri\ Tor s Local
?56 647?
189 I I
PORT..3.BLE TOILET
I
Rt::NTAl,
CO N Sl f.&lt;,...,CT I O N
OuldOor
Evf'nts Pl1 Galll p('IIS 446
1 ..A"' Russe ll s Plumbmg &amp;
ll r al ltHl
1"lt1

I

1

�I
',

•

- ------- - - - - -- -- - ---- - -----

1

Area Deaths

II

ALDORA M . GARNES
GI), LLIPOLI S
Mr s .
Aldora M er edith Garn es, 61 ,
R t. 1, Or i ent. di ed en r oute to
the . ho s p i tal
T hur sday
evenin g .
She was a native of Jack son
County , of the Centerpoin t
comm un i ty , the daughter of
the late Hezek iah and Ina
Farri s Hu tc hin son .
She marr ied Lawr ence
Thoma s Garn es Mar c h 24 ,
1932 . Born to this uni on and
sur v 1v tn g
ar e :
Harold
Ga r n es , Columbu s ; Mr s
Charl es (Lynn) Ragland ,
Jack s on ; Mr s . Claren c e
(Fran cena) Ross and Mrs .

Ri chard (Cheryl) Byrd. both

..

;

•••••

'
:

.. ..

of Columbu s, and Kermit
Garn es, San Francisco,
Calif . , and se ven grand children : fi v e si s ter s and two
brother s, Mrs
Mary E
Howard . Bidwell ; Mrs. Leslie
( Lenora ) Howard , Gallipolis ;
Mr s. Ha ze l Bru ce, Or ient ;
Mrs . Ethel Wa tson , Ja c k son :
Mr s
We l don
(Amanda )
Kee ls. Oak Hill: J ohn E .
Hutc hinson, Oak HilL and
W i ll i am
L . H u t c hin s on ,
Black fork .
She wa s one of 17 children .
One
un c le
survives ,
Charles Farris , Columbus .
Funera l servi ces will be
held at 1 p.m . Monday at the
Cor 1nth Missionary Baptist
Chur c h, Centerpoint, under
dir ec tion of M c Coy .Moore
Funeral Home, Rev . Elbert
D.
M c Ghee
off ic iat i ng
Fri ends may ca ll between 6·9
Su n day evening . M c Coy ·
Mo ore F uneral Home , V i nton
officiating .

-~

)

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THE DAYS OF BUTTONS AND BOWS? The buttons may or may not have been on the
shoes, but tbe bows in the hair are obvious in thi s old picture belonging toM'" . E thel Ha wk .
Mrs. Hawk wonders if anyone can identify the persons in the picture or the occasion of its
being taken. It was among the effect.s of her late mother , Mrs. Sylvia Badgley . Middle por t.

WILLIAMS WELLS
WI LKESVILLE - Wi lliam
Homer Wells , 68 , died
unexpectedly a t his Wilkes ·
ville residence on Thursday
ev ening . Mr . Wells was bor n

May 1, 1901. in Wilkesville,
the son of the late Bundy S.

the Saints' Church letter
·'
. I'

RACINE - The Women's
Department of the Sainls
Church here met at the Steam
Boat Inn Thursday evening
for social and business talk.
Attending
were
this

reporter , Jane Johnson
Go ld a Gillilan , incoming
leader for next year , Lucy
Taylor, Freda Middleswart,
Myrtle Proffitt, Beul a h
Roush, Ilah Roush , and Linda

'

OLD PHOTOS COPIED
have additional
PiCtures professionally
made of your OTd
treasured phOtographs
For Limite d
Time On ly

I.

'4.44

Reg. $7 3x4 Silvertone
If pictu.res are timeworn , additional charges f or
. , restoration a r e a l so speciall y pri ced . You r orig inal wi l l
be returned unharmed. Br ing you r s mto Ta wn ey
Portrait Stud io this week .

TAWNEY STUDIO
422 Second Ave.

Ga llipoli s

and Be ssie Goddard Wells .
He was a retired school
tea c her during his career
hav i ng taught at the Rutland
Elementary School and at
one t ime was pr incipal of the
Wilkesville High School
Surviving are a si ster , Mrs .
Laura
Ke c k ,
Route
6,
Newark , severa l nieces and
nephews and several cousins
He was preceded in dea th by
two brothers and a sister
besides his parents.
Mrs . Well s was affiliated
with
the
Wilkesville
Presbyterian Church . He was
a J2nd degree Mason and a
member of th e Orphans
Friends Mason1c Lodge 275 at
Wilkesville . He was a veteran
of World War II having
served
with
the
army
medical corps . He was a
member of American Legion
Post 476 at Wilkesville .
Funeral serv ices will be

Evun s.
A Few weeks ago little Chris
Adams, baby son of Roger
and Nancy, was blessed at a
morning service . He is better
now and the tamily is back
home on Racine Rd .
Clarence
and
Ruth
Bradford are horne from
nearly a month's visit with
daughter Brenda and family
1n Arizona .
Jim Cleland, youth leader
and in charge of getting the
young folk to Camp Bountiful
and back, and taking along
some vegetables to the kit·
chen, has come up with an
idea : To organize a Garden
Club and call it " Bountiful
Garden Club" in support of
our chw·ch Camp Bountiful
near Jackson. The motto
will be "Grow something
extra for God, 11 and each
m ember will plant an extra
row or two of vegetables for
the Camp .
At t ending the meeting
Mo nda y evenin g to form a
steering c ommittee were
Jim , this reporter, Freda
Middleswart , Ilah Roush,
Lucy Taylor, and Ida Holter.
The club will meet monthly.
Women's Dept. will con.
sider serving sandwic hes and
soup at the church on election

held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
Wil kesvi l le

WITH ALUMINUM STORM WINDOWS
FROM

VALLEY LUMBER

day in November. The voting
precinct is in rear of church.
The Bulldin g Committee,
Tom Diddle, Tom Stobart and
Russell Radcliffe, met with
the branch leader , Bill
Roush, to plan remodeling
and rebui lding part of the
rostrum and baptismal font .
Our love, sympathy and
prayers go out to the Bill
Middleswart fam ily who lost
their only son, Greg, in a
motorcycle accident a few
weeks ago. - Goldie Clen·
den in.

Available

In
Mill or
White Finish
Blindstop

or

lNertap

E~RUDED

Prowl e r pr oo f
con
ceal ed hardware with
Po siti\l e Ae1 i0n Lo c ks .
Marine Gl azing . Ef .
lorll e s s
lilt · ac t JOn
des1gn
for
easy
clea ning
Sel f .s toring
lo r easy operat ion and
clea ning .
F u ll
w ea ther st ripping
Ove rlap screen Cus tom
mad e to fit your win
do w Si zes lhroug h 101
un i ted inches Sizes over
10 1 un i ted inches also
a\la llable .

ALUMINUM

ALL NYLON
HARDWARE

MILL
FINISH
WHITE
FINISH
992-2709

Littl e, 59 , Columb us , tor .
m erly of Middlepor t , d ied
Fr iday at Merc y Hospita l
followi ng a l i nger i ng i llness .
He IS su rv ived by his
moth er ,
Be rtha
Littl e,
Columbu s. a br other . Wa yne.
Columbu s ; a s ister , Neva
Laird , Akr on ; three sons,
Milton . Jr ., .Jerry a nd
Emerson
lee,
a II
of
Bellef onta ine , and thr ee
daughter s, Lea Jane, Janice
and Manna, all of Belle ·
fontain e. He wa s pr eceded in
death by his fatllPr , Strode
Little ; a sister , Opal Whi t
lat c h M c Dan ie l , an d two
bro thers , Golden and Ke n

dell.
Fun er al se rvi ces w il l be
held at 3 p m . Monday at th e
Woodyard Fun eral Hom e, S.
H1gh St , Columbus . Friend s
may cal l at the fun eral hom e
from 2 to 4 p .m . Sunday .
Buria l w1ll be in Co lumbus .

GURNEY HYSELL
M IN ERSV I LLE - Fu neral
ser v1 ces ,f or Gurney Hysell
were held Aug . 30 at the
Ew ing Fune r al Home with
thP. Rev
Freeland Norris
offi c iating .
T hoc;e cal l mg at the funeral
home or attending th e ser
v ices from a di stan ce were
Paul Hamm, Lancaster , Mr.
and M r s. Robert Hamm ,
Slruther s ; Mr . and Mrs .
Delmar
Hamm ,
South
Webster ;
Mrs .
Beu l ah
Baugh , South Point; Mr . and
Mrs . Oscar Garrell, Mr . and
Mrs. Harry Garrell, Ravens
wood ; Mr s . Mary Michael ,
Mrs . Es ther Fife, Mr . and
Mrs . Ralph Sizemore, and
Mrs .
Charles
Fra zi er ,
Huntington ; Mike Seller s,
Point P leasant.
Burial was i n the family
plot
rn
Ravenswood
Cemetery at Ravenswood , W.
Va . Pallbearers w ere Virgil
Ha mm ,
Robert
Hamm ,
Roger Le ifhe i t, Gary Michael
and Donnie Frecker .

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Sarah
Wells, Long Bottom; Alex
Fraser, Middleport; Ross
Morris, New Haven; Frank
Casto, Pomeroy; Christine
Branham, Pomeroy;
Woodrow Call , Jr ., Pomeroy ;
Greg Dunning, Racine .
DISCHARGED - James
Smith , Kenneth See, Oma
Smith, Beulah Richman .

DWI school in Athens for
three days , driving while
intoxicated; Joseph White,
Minersv ille, $14 and cosls,
speeding; George Rager,
Middleport, Donald Nash,
Pome ro y , and
Charles
Lambert, Rutland, $10 and
costs each, stop sign
violation; Jerry Hamilton,
Circleville, $9 and costs,
speedin g; Lawrence Wilson,
Hemlock Grove, $150 and
costs, three days con.
finement ,
six
months
probation, driving whil e
intoxicated .
Forfeiting bonds were
Friskey J.
Bowersock,
Parkersburg, Billy Hill, Sr. ,
Rt. 1, Racine, Charles L.
Waters, Huntington, Michael
Adkins , Minersville , David D.
Parsons, Syracuse, James
Ray Davis, Hurricane, W.
Va., Paul David Watters,
Huntington, and Charlotte E.
Wri ght, Galloway, $27.50
each, speeding; Charles W.
Morton, Pittsburgh, $42.50,
speeding.

$19.95
,

View from the Statehouse
Hy Rep. Ronald James
COI .U MBUS - There has
been a grea t deal of press
play given to the Governor 's
four bend proposals which
will appet~r on the November
ballot. However, the other
a ccompanying five proposals
have not rece ived s imilar
tr~ tment and for the mos t
part, the voting public is only
ve:tg uely a ware of them .
Genera l
While
th e
Assembly is in recess, and
there is little to r eport as far
as new legislative activity, I
thought I would rev1ew these
neglected Jlroposal s, The firs t
will be an overvi ew of Issue 7.
/\m e nded Hou s e J oin t
Resolution 16, or Ballot Issue
7, has been referr ed to as the
Bingo iss ue . If a ccepted by
the public, Iss ue 7 would
amend Artic le XV , Sec . 6 of
the Ohio Cons titution to
provide an ex ception to the
c onstitutional prohib1tion
against lotteries ; that exception being for Bingo
conducted by c haritable
organization For charitable
purposes .
This would be an enabling
amendment only , •nd would

-------JlDt·--lDCIOCIOIIOI--..OoaoooolOC-&gt;otOIOOOOCIIOCIOCIIOO:OOOIIOOGOCIOC~
.,
~
I \
' ,

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merely give the Oh io General
Assembly the authori ty to
legi s late in th e ar ea of
charitable· bingo.
Proponen ts or this issue
state that there is a definite
ne ed for a co ns tit uti onal
am endmen t, since th e Ohio

Cons titution clearly pr ohibi ts
lotteri es, but lea ves it to Ohi o
O'iminal law to establish
criminal pe nalties.
A surge or open public
g ambling , princ ip a ll y in
Akron and other par ts of

Summit Cou nty pr ompt ed
law enforcement officials and

the legislature to reconsider
th e Con s tituti onal
an d
c riminal law in that area .

Whil e th e Co nsti tut ion
clearly prohibits all lotteries
(other than the state lotte ry I,
the crimma l code appeared to
cloud the legal question. The
Ohio O'iminal Code declares
most gambling activities as
criminal activity, but does
not exempt g ambltn g in
which the net proceeds go for
charitable purpo ses . Thi s
posed an other question : how
much of the proceeds mus t go
to charity.
Companion legi slation to

HUNTINGTON
A
schedule for a series of public
meetings throughout this
region dealing with new
federal
regulation s
on
dredged or fill material on
nearly every stream has been

EASED OFF ROAD
POMEROY
Meigs
County
deputy
SheriFf
Robert Beegle reported a
single car accident Friday at
10:30 p.m. on Easterday
Road in Sutton · Township.
Gary M. Johnson, Racine,
traveling east, was blinded
by an oncoming car and he
went ofF the right against a
tree . The driver was not
mjured and no citation was
issued . There was no damage
to the c ar.
CROCS ON LIST
WASHINGTON ( UP! )
The Interior Department has
added
the
American
crocodile and five other
animals to the endangered
species list.

announced by th e Arm y
Corps of Engineers.
The open meetings will be
conducted
by
Corps
representatives, a ccording to
Col. Scott B. Smith , Hun·
tington Distric t Engin ee r ,
under authority of the
regulation published in the
Federal Register las t July 25
that implements Section 404
of Public Law 92-500, the
Federal Water Pollution
Control Act Amendmenls of
1972.
A federal court directed the
Corps to expand its authority
under Section 404 to protect
the quality of waters of the
United States against harm·
ful discharge.
The series of meetings will
provide the public with the
opportunity to comment and
suggest possible changes in
the regulation by Oct. 23. The
evening meetings will be held
in Virginia, Galax, Oct. I, a nd
Grundy, Oct. 2; in Kentucky,
Pikeville, Oct. I; in West
Virginia, Logan and Summersville, Sept. 29; Princeton, Sept. 30; Williamson,

measure was to amend the
code to close up a loophole by
changing the definition of
gambling for charity and to
put thi s form of gambling
un der the auspices of the
In tern al Revenue Code. This
bill passed the House, but has
been begged down in Senate
Committee .. Furthe r action
appears do ubtf ul be for e
November.
The ques tion s r evo lving
around the Bingo for charity
iss ue cannot be re s olved

without proper consti tuti onal
a uthority. Issue 7 on the
Novem ber ball ot would
me rely give th e legislature
the authonty to legislate in
the area of charitable bingo.
Whethe r or no t Ohio 's
govermng bod y will receive
thi s authority will be the
voters deci sion . It is your
decision to make . Talk it over
w1th your neighber s and be
sure to go to th e polls in
November to express your
des ires.

Oct. 2; Parkersburg, Oct. 6;
Cha r les ton . Oct. 7 ; and
Huntington , Oct. 8, and in
Ohio, New Philadelphia, Oct.
6; Zanesville , Oct . 7;
Columbus ,
Oct.
8;
Chillicothe, Oct. 9; Athens,
Oct. 14, and Port.smouth, Oct.
15.
Because of manpower and
workload imitations , the
Corps is adaptin g to the new
requirement in three phases.
Phase I will extend the
existing permit procedures to
include navigable waters of
the United States to their
headwaters and "wetlands"
adjacent to those navigable
waters.

Phase II will expand the
permit regulation
into
primary tributaries , natural
lakes greater than five
surface acres and adjacent
" wetlands."
Phase lii will extend the
Corps' authority into other
waters of the United States
generally up to the headwaters or a point where the
streamflow is less than five
cubic feet per second .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

ON ANY
IN STOCK

Whirlpoo
NO-FROST

aide in dorm;

REFRIGERATOR-FREEZERS

joins CLASP

MARlETIA - Marietta .
College senior Jo Ellen Diehl
of Pomeroy, has become
involved in two service activities at the Southeastern
Ohio Liberal Arls College.
Miss Diehl has been
selected as a Student
Resident
Assistant
in
Fayerweather
Hall,
a
women's do=itory of, 6~5
students.
·
She has a lso been chosen as
a member of the Community '
Leadership Apprentice
See me about Slate Farm· ~
Service Program , (CLASP).
auto matic inflat1on
CLASP concerns itself with
coverage lh at can increase
with I he va lue of your home. placing MC students on
community related agencies
CARROL K. SNOWDEN and boards. CLASP affiliates
24 State Street
are selected by the college
Gallipolis
after consultatio n with
Phone 446-4290 ·r
faculty-staff
student
Home 446-4518
Like a pod
~.~~."::".' resource · persons and the
studenls recommended for
netchbor,
.Jiil...
such affiliations.
Stare Fann
&lt;!§r.atl
is tbereo
INSII • • N ( f
Miss Diehl is a 1972
graduate of Meigs High
STATE FARM FIRE
She is the daughter of
School.
AND CASUALTY COMPANY
Mr. and Mrs . James Diehl,
Home Olftee· B,loomn"'glon Uhnois
Mulberr,v Heights .
P·7449 .

Am . H.J .R. 16, H.B. 46, was
al so wtroduced during the
lllth Ge neral Assembly. The
int e nt of thi s le gis lative

Corps to air new rulings

19.5 cu . ft. capacity
Big 5.74c u . ft. freezer
Textured steel doors
Porcelain ena meled meat
keeper, crispers, liner
Adju s tabl e, split cantilever
shelves
'
Adjustable door shelves
Power saving heater control
switch
Ac tivat ed charcoal air filter
Factory installed rollers
Ml LLION·MAGNET* doorf

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

e

r.,;;... ..

OHIO

I

-

Miss Diehl is

"Is your home
insurect for
what it's
worth, or
just fOr what
it cost you ••?"

··VALLEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
MIDDLEPORT

the

POMEROY
One
defendant was bound over to
the grand jury, 12 were fined,
and nine Forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Friday .
Bound over to the grand
jury by Judge Robert E. Buck
was Marvin Cremeans, RD,
Coolville , under $2,500 bond,
on charges or felonious
assault.
Fined were Rickie L. Gill,
Little Hocking, $13 and costs,
speedi ng; Floyd Martin,
Belpre , and Tho mas E .
Savory , Stow, $11 and cost.s
each, speeding ; Charl es
Burns, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, $150
and cosls, three days confinement, driving while intoxicated ; Marvin Craig,
Pomeroy
and
Clinton
Donovan, Alexanderia, Va .,
$150 and costs each, attend

HEAT IN·COLD OUT!

HEU-ARC
WELDED ·CORNERS
HEAT-TREATED

of

MILTON LITTLE
MIDDLEPORT - Milton

Court lifts nine bonds

.I

•

Chape l

Wall&lt;er Fun eral Home w ith
t he Rev . Thoma s M ont .
gomery offi c iat ing . Burial
wiil be in the Wilk esvil le
Ce me te(y . Mason ic rit e s
wer e condu c ted at th e c hapel
Sat urday . ·e vening at 7: 30.

G

ON SALE NOW AT THE .
MEC:HANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

.ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'.

More than 100 American Phillips, Coltqnbus ; the Rev.
Legion Auxiliary members, Henry Key, pastor . of the
relatives and friends at- Mount
Moriah
Baptist
tended a reception Sunday at Church ; Mrs . Erma Powers,
the Legion hall in Middleport a former Eighth District
honorin·g Mrs . Florence president; Pam Powers, the
Richards , newly installed ' Eighth District Junior
Eighth District president of American Legion Auxiliary
the
American
Legion president, and Mrs. Mary
Auxiliary . Mrs . Richards will Martin , chapeau passe of
supervise activities of
Eight and Forty , Meigs
unils in a seven--county area. County Salon 712, in the
Middleport Mayor Fred receiving line .
Hoffman
joined
Mrs .
Numerous gifts were
Richards, her husband, presented to Mrs . Richards at
Arnold ; daughters, Mrs . the reception hosted by
Janice Smith, Columbus, and Racine Unit 602, Pomeroy
Mrs. Ann Angel, Middleport ; Unit 39, Middleport Units 128
her sister, Mrs. Kathryn and 263, and the Meig s

za

.. e

·.

'•

Pow er s,
r eg i s ler~d
th e
gu ests.
Pres iding a \ the gift table
were Mrs . Ernes t B owles,
Mrs. Vir gil Rous h and Mrs .
Myrtle Walker . Mrs . Camp.
be ll Ha rper and Mrs. Grace
Pr a tt han dl ed the coffee
se rv ic e . and Mi ss E rma
Smith a nd Mr s. Zue leli a
Smith poured th e punch .
Other members of the hos t
units ass1s ted in the kitchen
Corsa ges were t he gifl' of
Osby Martin and a nora!
a rrangement was se nt Lo
Mr s . Ri c hard s b y the
1\manda Pos t.
(Continued on page 12 l

FBI looks for more bomb·s
WASHINGTON (UP! ) The FBI has found seven
homemade bombs and
continued searching for more
today in connection with an
alleged plot to extort $45.5
million from seven of the
nation's major oil companies.
Agents detonated three
bombs Saturday night and

early Sunday from the under·
ground tanks of Gulf , Exxon
and Amoco stations in the
Pittsburg h area, an FBI
spokesman said .
"We had a highly voliWe
situation there," said Vincent
E. Ruehl, special agent in
charge of the Pittsb urgh
office .
·

Two
suspec t s
were
arrested Saturday and
charged with conspiring to
extort the money under the
threat of bombing attacks.
The .FBI identified them as
Paul D. Methven, 32, a
Virginia Beach, Va ., car·
penter and Larry Shaffer, 34,
unemployed and or Chicago.

An FBI spokesman said
Sunday that further arrests
were not anticipated .
Methven and Shaffer were
a ccused of setting three
bombs that went off. The
explosions caused min or
damage and did not result in
any injuries .
Two bombs detonated at a

Phillips Service Station and
the Pierce Oil Co. , beth in
Ommblee, Ga., Sept. II, the
F.BI said . The third bemb
exploded at a n oil company
Facility in Carteret, N.J .,
Sept. 9.
The FBI did not disclose
where the four other located
(Continued on pa ge 12 )

MRS. FLORENCE RICHARDS, fron t righ t, the new E1ghth District president of the
1\merican Legion Auxiliary , was honored Sunday wi th a reception a t the Middleport
American Leg ion Hall . She is pictured here r ece iving congratulat ions from Mr s. Lula
Hampton, president of the Lewis Manl ey Post Auxiliary of wh ich Mrs. Ri chards is a
member . Mrs. Carrie Neutzling, Pomeroy, left . back row , was ge ner al cha irworrwn for th e
recept ion and in the rec eiving lin e with Mrs . Ric hards were the Rev . Henry Key, Columbus
pastor of the Mount Moriah Ba ptist Church, Miss Pam Powers , Ei ghtll Dist rict pres id ent ,
Junior American Legion Auxiliary, and Ma ry Martin , Meigs Coun ty Salon 710, Eight a nd
Fort y, cha peau passe .

•

•

Columbus Texaco station

enttne

tank held homemade bomb
(X)LUMBUS, ohio (UP!)- Police, acting on a tip
from the FBI, drained the storage tanks of a Texaco
service station Sunday night and found a pipe bomb
similar to three others found in Pittsburgh during the
weekend .
Hundreds of persons were forced to evacuate their
homes around the service station while police drained
the station's tanks and filled them with water to
eliminate the gasoline fumes prior to a search.
Police Sgt. Frank Phillips said a pipe bomb
between 16 and 18 inches long was found when the
gasoline tank was drained.
The unexploded bomb was found after a suspect
under arrest for allegedly attempting to extort $45.5
million from seven major oil companies told the FBI
that a bomb had been ·p lanted at the Columbus gas
station as well as the Pittsburgh locations, Phillips
said.

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Ma.wm Areu
_VO_L_
.X
_X_VI _
I __:_:N..:..:O._l_l7_ _ _
PO_M_ER_O_Y·_M_ID_
DL_EP_O_RT_, _OH_IO_ _ _ _ ___:_
MO_N_DA_Y_,S~EPT_E_M
_B_E_
R ~29_._19_7_
5 -------~PR:..:..:.::
ICE 15'

Pennsylvanians begin coming back

United Press International
Resident.s of Pennsylvania
dug through flood-muddied
rubble to salvage what they
could Sunday.
"The people 's spirit is
amazing," said Police Chief
John Oberdorf of the hard-hit
·i=r==========:==================:=====:=:=========:==:·=·=;=·===·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·===:=~=========·===========:========================~=:=:=:: town or Muncy, Pa . " They've
been through many floods
and they are already fighting
trr get back In business ."
.
· Their spirits got a boost as
Hurricane
Faye spun away
By United Press International
WASHINGTON ....:. PRESIDENT FORD reswnes his from the East Coast, easing
the threat of further rains.
travels this week but will be back at the White House Thursday
The Nationa l Hurricane
for the state visit of Japanese Emperor Hirohito. The
President arranged a meeting today with Dr. Arthur F . Burns, Center reported Sunday that
chairman of the Federal Reserve Board. Burns will be a chief
author of America's response to the higher import oil prices,
set in a meeting in Vienna SatUrday by the oil exporting cartel.
The President's travel will take him to Chicago Tuesday
for a fund raising affair for the Republican Party. The next
day he will visit Omaha, Neb., to attend another in the series of
White House conferences on domestic policy. Ford will
welcome the Japanese e!nperor and Empress Nagako to
Washington on Thursday , and host a state dinner for the royal
couple that evening . Hirohito is the first Japanese monarch to
CLEVELAND ( UP! ) visit to the United States and this trip will be under a tight
Former Ohio Adj . Gen . S.T .
security wrap according to advance notice.
Del Corso told a federal
grand jury that the action of
PONTIAC, MICH. - THE SEARCH OF A 29-acre site
Ohio National Guardsmen
where James R. Hoffa's body may be buried has been called
who shot and killed four Kent
off until authorities get fresh information from ·a tipster who
state University student.s and
claims he witnessed the Teamst.r leader's burial. An inwounded nine others was
vestigator for a Senate subcommittee said Sunday that the "unjt1Stifiable, " it wa s
tipster was being held by underworld gangsters anxious to
reported today.
prove they were not involved in Hoffa's death .
The Cleveland Plain Dealer
The Senate investigator, reporting on a bizarre, indirect
reported in today's edition
collaboration with gangland families, said he was told the
that it had been shown a copy
unidentified tipster would be held captive untll he provides
of Del Corso's secret
specific dues to solve the Hoffa mystery, which began with the
testimonyy to a federal grand
disappearance of the union boss on July 30. Police dug with a
jury here last year.
power shovel for three hours Sunday before calling off tbe
Del Corso also said he did
search, which began Saturday in a 29-acre rural area of woods
not think the guardsmen were
and swamp in Waterford Township, about 35 miles northwest
in danger when they fired at
of Detroit. Squads using a helicopter and a specially trained the group of an\i.war
dog were unable to find any evidence of a grave, which the demonstrators on t he Kent
tipster reportedly said was dug the day before Hoffa's
state campus on May 4, 1970.
disappearance.
"I say it was unjustifiable,
because as I see it, I can't see
WASHINGTON - THE NATION'S INTELLIGENCE
how it can be justified," Del
community'ts not giving the taxpayer his money's worth and Corso told the grand jury·.
its red tape might prevent advance warning of an enemy at· "And to me overall, like I say
tack, according to the chairman of the House intelligence I can't see any justification in
committee. "We a re drowning in information in intelligence it.,,
which we are not absorbing," said Rep. Otis G. Pike, D·N.Y .
Later in the day whi le
He also accused Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger of concluding six hours of tesengineering the administration's refusal to provide\tformation timony, Del Corso said, "I
the committee considers essential to its investigation of intelligence operations. Pike made the comments Sunday in
advance of a meeting today with his Select Committee on
Intelligence to decide whether assistance of the full House will
be requested to obtain testimony and classifed documents
being withheld by the White House and the CIA.

INews . ., .. in Briefsl
~

Faye had turned toward the rampaging creeks and rivers.
open North Atlantic and was
President Ford declared a
"no longer a threat to land 30-county ar ea of Penn areas in North America ." sylvania a major disaster
Weather officials also said area, clearing the way for
Hurricane Gladys, in Atlantic · millions ·of dollars in aid to
waters to the south , was homeowners, farmers and
communities along th e
weakening .
Torrential downpours trig- Susquehanna River, gorged
gered by the remnant.s of by Eloise ' stormy backlash .
The river crested at the
now.&lt;Jead Hurricane Eioise
had sent floodwaters ragrng Conowmgo Dam in Maryland
through a dozen eastern Sunday, gushing billions of
siates, causing hundreds of gallons of rain water into
millions of dollars in damage Chesapeake Bay . Thirty.
and claiming nine lives . three of the 53 flood gates
Thousands of persons were were opened and the water
forced from their homes by level was just 10 feet from the
top of the dam wall at one

Grand jury told secretly
Kent killings unjustified

EGYPTIAN PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT SAYS THE
United states has promised to get Israel to negotiate a peace
settlement with Syria and the Palestinian guerrillas. In a 3hOur speech in Cairo, Sadat said Sunday President Ford also
promised to keep Israel from attacking Syria if tensions rise OQ
the occupied Golan Heights.
"I have got an undertaking from the American President
that I srael~ not attack Syria, that a second disengagement
will be concluded on the Syrian front and that the Palestinians
will participate in a settlement," he said. Sadat told a joint
meeting of Egypt's parliament and only political party the
Soviet Union has been "hitting one ,Vab regime with another"
in an effort to increase its influence in the Middle East.
The president's comment.s appeared to be in answer to
widespread Arab and Soviet charges, that Egypt sold out its
allies by signing the new peace pact wtth Israel. Sadat satd the
(Continued on page 12)

'

.

County Salon 712, Eight a nd and nuts in miniature Uncle
Forty .
Sam hats were served with
Table decorations carried the punch . Lighted candles
out the blue and gold colors of ·floated on top of the pun ch
the Legion. The tables were bowls. Mrs . Carrie Neutzling
covered with gold cloth and had c harge of the reception
an overlay of gold nettin g. and was assis ted by Mrs. Fay
Blue and gold nowers gift of Wildermuth . A patr io ti c
Francis Florists, flanked by motif in red and white was
gold tapers in crys tal can - included with a poppy tree .
delabra with netting and poppy arrangements , and an
nosegays at th e bas e Uncle Sam replica made by
decorated one table . At e ither Mrs. Alice Nease .
side on smaller tables were
Gree~rs were Mrs. Ruth
punch bowls surrounded with Brown and Mrs. Sherman
flowers and netting with Butle r , both members of Unit
miniature lights entwined . 263 ; and Mr s . Charles
Blu e and gold ribbon Saunders, Unit 263 ; Mr s.
sandwiches, fan cy cookies, Robert Hy sell , and Mi ss

I "'

\

•

ca n't for the life of me find
any rea l justification for
shooting there .. ," the Plain
Dealer reported.
Del Corso was also asked if
he felt the lives of the
guardsmen were in danger .
"No , I don't think they were
at all ."
Del Corso co ntinued, "be·
cause certainly som.One 100
feet or even 200 feet away I
don't think creates a danger
to the man 's life unless he has
a gun or something and is
charging him with something
that could threaten his life.
"But certainly a nyone that
far away , there is no
justification to shoot ," said
Del Corso .

Weather
Skies partly cloudy through
Tuesday, chance of showers
tonight, early Tuesday. Highs
Tuesd~y up·to 75, lows tonight
to 55. Chance of rain 10 per
cent today, 30percent tonight
and early Tuesday, 20 per
cent late Tuesday.

Del Corso also said he
thought the Kent State
University
administration
was "very, very negligent" in
it.s handling of student antiwar demonstrations.
U.S. District Court Judge
Don Young refused to allow
Del Corso's testimony to be
used in a recenl civil trial
here in which Del Corso, Gov .
James A. Rhodes and other
guardsmen were sued for $46
million by parents or the dead
and wounded students .
Arte r
14
weeks
of
testimony, the jury voted 9·
to-3 to exonera te the defendants .
Young said he would not
allow Del Corso's tes timony
to be used in the civil case
because Del Corso was a
defendant.
The Plain Dealer reported
Sunday when it also quoted
secret testimony given the
grand jury, that testimon y by
Rhod es during the c ivil
damage trial , was contradicted in testimony by Del
Corso before the grand jury.

point. The crest marked the
of lhe worst flondil1g to
hi t the Mid·All• ntic sta tes
since Hurri can e Agn es,
which killed 50 persons in
1972.
Pennsylvania was hard est
hit.
A • c ivi I
de fe nse
spoke s man es timat e d
damages at more than $150
million . The flood knocked
out 13 water supply plants
and 16 sewage treatment
plant.s, forcing residents of
small towns to beil their
drinking water .
Some
3, 300 National
Guards men who a ssisted
Saturday m evacuating about
26,000 persons from the ir
homes turned their efforts
toward s the cleanup on
Sunda y.
end

Tentative agreement made
in Boston teacher strike
BOSTON (UP!) - A tentati ve ag reement, apparently ending a week-long str ike by Boston 's
tea chers, was reached today .
Details of the agreement between the teachers and
th e School ~mmittee were not disclosed imml\&lt;liately.
Henry Roblnsun , presiden t of the union , sa id the
agreement would be studied by the union's Executive
Board and then would be submitted to the tea chers for
a vote .
Contract disputes still plagued school districts in
Delaware , Idaho, Indiana , California. Ne w York, Ohio
and elsewhere in Massachusetts. The Boston settlement came as Albert Shanker , presid en t of the
parent American Federation of Teacher s, told the
striking Boston teacher s tha t the liFT would stand
behind them .

Joseph Disease unique
OAKLAND, Calif. I UP!) Descendants of an early Ca lifornian named Anton e Jose;&gt;h
have le arn ed that the incurable degenerative disease
that has killed 48 of the ir
relalives in the past 130 yea rs
is unique to thoir family.
Eighty of the 125 known
surviving members of the
family ranging in age From 18
to 80 gathered in Oakland
during the weekend a nd
heard the neurolo gic al
ailment officially nam ed " the
Joseph Disease. "
They came from California , Nev ada , Oregon and as

Recreation group
meeting tonight
The Middl e po r t Citize ns
Recreat ion Committee w111
meet in th e old cou n c i l
chambe r s tn Middl e port
Vi llage Hall at 7:30 p. m
Monday , Se pt. 29 to plan
future a c tivit1es The publi c
is invited.

far away as Texas to meet
with ge netiCS spec ialists Dr .
William L. Nyhan of the
Uni versit y of California at
San Diego and Dr . Roger
Rosenberg of Southwestern
Texas Univer sity of Da llas.
National
Gene ti c
Th e
Foundation of New York
assisted in setting up the
meeting .
Those who showed up for
the unusual reunion wer e in &lt;1
wid e va riet y of phys ica l
conditions . Some wer e
healthy ; so m e we r e in
wheelc hat rs ; others required
canes.

Ill! wer e exa mined and
many were told th at they had

She riff
Robe r t
Har tenb ac h's Dept , inves tigated
two acciden ts ea r ly Sun day
mornin g within fi ve minute s.
/I t 2:25 am . on SR 7 in
Sa li s bur y tow ns hip be low

Reward offered
for information

': r crn eans sa id hol es wer r
shot in a numb er ol "indov. s. appar entl y v.i th a
pellet gun. Anyone havi n g

THE BIG 'S' MEANS Southern High School ba nd,
which performed l&lt;'riday night at ~U~cine when Wah am a

.

edged out a 3-&lt;l victory. This picture by Katie Crow was ·
go tten at halftime when the issue rema ined in doubt.

'

';

no trace of the dread family
so m e lea rned for
the ftr s t t ime that th ey
already had some of the

disease . Rut

symptoms.

Th e doctors told the Joseph
clan wh at they kne w about
th eir family's uniqu e disease
after a lengthy st udy of
fa mil y medi cal reco rds .
Th ey said th e first s ign
a lwa ys occurred when t he
victim 1s between Lhe a ges of
16 and 42 with death occu rring 10 to 30 years later.
Th ey sa itl t here is n o known
cure and that the only wa y to
det ec t it is by care ful
neurolog ical
e xaminat ion .
1 Continued on page 12 1

Car hit in fog

The :lliddleport Poli ce
Dept. is ofF ering a ~ 100
re\\ ar d ror inf orm a ti on
leading to th e a rres t a n·d
conviction of the per'so n or
per son s wh o dam aged
busin tss
and
scho ol
building v. indows in th e
co mmunity Sunda y ni ght .
Chief or Police J . J .

'

i
'

Reception given Mrs. Richards

Information Is asked ~u
contact Chiel Cremean,.

.'&lt;ltddleport, a vehi cle an ve n
by Cha rles McGra t h, Rt . 1,
Rutland , was stalled with no
lig ht.s showi ng m heavy fo g.
fuln da ll W Br i ~ht , 24, P oint
Pleasant, trav e!tn g south saw
"something" on the road but
was unab le to stop in ti me
McGrat h 's
a nd
s tr uc k
v ehi c l e.
M c Gra t h

wa s t a k en to
Veterans Memoria l Hospi ta l
by the Middlepor t ER squad.
Bnght ha d vistble injuries,
but was not treated . There
wa s sev ere . da ma ge to
Brt ght 's vehi cle an d medium
to McGrath's . The acci dent is
st!ll under mvestig a h on.
At 2· 30 a .m . on SR 7 in
Orange Town ship a deer wa s
killed when it ran in to the
pat h of a car driven by Allan
ll Fos ter , 26 , Ironton ,
LOCAL TEMPS
The
temp e rat ur e
in
JrNmtown Pomeroy at 11
a.m. Monday wa s 59 degrees
undl'r sunny sk 1es .

•

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