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10- The Daily.Sert: .... l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday,'Oct. 8, 1976

Three injured in auto wreck
Three persons were injured
•n a traffic accident at 7:45
a.m. Thunday attbe junCtion
of Rt. 32S and 3:i in Raccoon
'l'wp.
. •
Ta-.en to the .\lolzer
Medical Center iD a SEOEMll
ambulance were Judy C.
mvely, 21, Bidwell, Erruna L.
Holtz, 41, Wellston, and Rlta
Gehring, 31, Wellston , a
passenger in the Holtz car ..

MEIGS TltEATRE
CLOSED FOR

. VACATION
WATCH FOR

OPENING DATE

According to the Gallla Meigs P~ State Highway
the Holtz car turned !ell Into
the path of car operated by
Judy C. Hively. There was
heavy damage. Holtz was
charged wlth failure to yield
the- right of way.
Betty L. Crump, 28, Rt. I,
Gallipolis, was cited for
failure to yield following an
accident at 7: 20 p.m. on
Georges Creek Rd.
The patrol said the Crump
car pulled into the path of a
vehjcle operated .by MichaeL
· D. Bane, 11, Rt. 2, Gallipolis.
A single car accident oc·
curred on Rt. 32:i, two miles
north of Rt. 35 where Gregory
C. Koffman , 21 , Gallipolis,
lost control of his car which
ran off the right side of the
higlllvay then overturned.
Mabel. E. Maynard, 50,
Utile Hocking, was charge!~_
wlth failure to yield the right

FISCAL.

or way following a ml.tllap·on
Rt. 7, three tenIIlii or a mile
north of township road 289.
The patrol said Maynard's
car p)l!led from the right
striking a vehicle operated by
Orville C. Bibbee, 63,
Coolv!Ue.
Roger A. Rossi , 31 ,
Cheshire, was charged with
failure to yield following an
accident at 10:20 p.m. on Rt.

1.

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Named as respondents
.. were the Cleveland Electric
Illuminating Co. (CEI) and
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. in the complaint
brought by a coalition of
groups collectively named

Air show opens
with breakfast

pomeroy
natio.na
bank

the bank of
the century
· established 1872

4PPEAR

· McARTHUR - McArthur's
aMual air show will be
staged Sunday at the Vinton
County Airport.
A breakfast will be served
at 7:30 a.m. and barbecued
chicken dinners al ; r a.m.
The air show will be held
from I to 4:30p.m. and during
these hours the field will be
closed to traffic.
Among the featured per·
formers in the show will be
personnel from the King's
Island air show, Sanford
Bond, John Lynch, three girl
parachute jumpers who work ·
. as a team, · besides other
· parachute jumpers. There
also will be gilders and
balloons featured during the ·
event.
The airport is located seven
mlles north · of McArthur on
Route 93.

FIRST TIME A
"INN PLACE"

QUINTESSENCE II

(Continued from page 1)
crowd while a recording of
his theme song ''Wby Not the ,
Best" was played over a
loudspeaker system.
Carter received a mixed
reception when he addressed
a women's group in Los
Angeles. He won long
appii.use when he said: "The
Civil Rights Act not only
liberated blacks, it liberated
whites, and when the Equal
Rights Amendment is passed, .
it will not . only liberate
women, it will also liberate
men."
·

Pleasant Valley llospltal
DISCHARGES - l\lrs.
Virginia Watson, Galli~llo:
Marie
Harris,
Poir
Pleasant; Mrs._ Jame&gt;
Johnson, Middleport; Mrs.
William Roush, New Haven;
Mrs. Leonard Stems, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. James
Beaver, Gallipolis; Elmer
Henson, Buffalo ; James
Sturgeon, West Columbia;
Mks.
Denvek
Grady,
daughter, Robertsblirg;
Ronald Stein, Jr., Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Nelson
DeVault, Leon; Charles
Young, Point Pleasant;
Thelma Tbevener~ G&amp;Uipolis;
Mrs. Melvin Freeman,
Cheshire; and Mr~. Floyd
Carson, Middleport.

ASK TOWED
A marriage license ~as
been issued to Daniel l •I
Holler Medical Center
Richards, 19, Rt. ·.
(Diacharges, Oct. 7)
Pomeroy, and Tammy Lynn
Judy Blazer, Hoom llond,
Knittel, 16, Pomeroy.
c.mmett Bunch, Ben Casey,
James Cochran, Sr., Rue Ann
MARRIAGES ENDED
Cox, Arbules Dalton, Mn.
The marriage of Dorothea Clark Davis and son, Patty
L. Davis, Middleport and Davis, Murven Deweese,
Harold Michael Davis, Andrea Dillard, Goldie
Middleport
has
been Downey, Claud Dray, R\Lisell
.diSsolved In Meigs County Gregory, Nora Harrel, Sarah
Common Pleas Court. The Harrison, Jean Head, Sophia
court has granted divorced to Henry, Elza Kallner, Hope
Bfrdle Fields from Lawrence Keller, Sandra Miller, G!Ua
Fields, and to Patty Doerfer Mooney, Marilyn Moore,
from Henry Doerfer.
John Moriarty, Mrs. Gary
Owens and daughter, Einl!y
Peyton, Tamarl Plants,
LODGE 10 MEET
Elmma
Ravencraft, Joseph
RACINE - A regular
Rife,
Inez
Saults, Woodrow
meeting of Racine Masonic
Saunders,
Nancy Sheets,
Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, will be
Henry
Sherman,
Roy Sorrell,
held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. A
Rosa
Stollings,
John
Terrell,
special program is planned to
Mabel
Tha'lton,
, Mrs.
honor past masters and
Raymond
Thomas
and
.· James J . Harbage, past
daughter,
Mrs.
Alva
Viers
grand master, will be
speaker. All Master Masons and son, Anderson Vltitoe,
Lucllle Watson, Charles
are invited.
Williams, Michael Wingfield,
Carolyn Woodruff.
(Bir1hl, Ocl. 7)
Mr. and Mn. Harry Scott,
son, Ravenswood, W. Va;;
Mr. and Mn. John Fulker·
son, son, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Spradling, son,
Point Pleasant, W. Va.; Mr.
and Mn. Robert Parsons,
son, Racine.

Frigidaire
laundry
·Pair

NEfti
HALF

Wash one pieceor up to
an 18-lb load in this .
Frigidaire Heavy Duly '
Washer. Matching Dryer
oilers a 2-posltlon Fabrics
s.eleclor, Timed and
No Heat cycles.

· THE MEIGS INN

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SYRACUSE ·
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YOUNG NUMISMATIST David Brown, 15, Reedsv!Ue, Ohio, waited In line at
the cafeteria in study during the American Numismatic Association senlinar held
in Colcrado.Springs, Colo. recently. Brown won an all-espense paid scholarship to
ljle ANA seminar for hla winning !~word easay on "Why I am a Collector." Fortyfour youtha ranging In age from 12 \o 17 won scholarships In a special Bicentennial
year program funded by Franklin Mint Corporation. David ill the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Brown.
·

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.BOmiNG COMPANY

-NEGLEt'T and re•'dents' ABUSE.

Open dumping or solid waste materia l
is unlawful. yet ci\lzens continue to dump
refrigerutors. sofas, chairs and discarded ·
building material beside the collL'Clion
boxes.
This abuse iflvites rats and · other
rodents as well as the county's population
of stray dogs to feed off this garbage. The
result is a situa tion endangering Meigs
County residents' health. J ust because
garbage has. been removed from an lndlvldual's home to a less noticeable area,
doe.s not mea n that the m.aterlal is no
longer a health problem. llat populations
caMot be reduced as long as there ls a
constant fooll supply.
Meigs Cou n(y 's trash dloposa l
problem is not center.'&lt;i entlrely around
the collectiimboxes. Every towqship In the
co unty has its own supply of llleg•l
durnf&gt;lng areas .
A new Ohio EPA tcgulatlon con·

cernlng Solld Waste disposal requires thst
stringent enforcement programs be
initiated and persons not complying with
the low be prosecuted.
Any dumping site in eurtent use will .
have. to ·com ply with these new ·
regulatlons. Landowners aUowlng ' this
itlegol dumping to continue will be held
responsible for removal.
There ls only ONE legol landflll slte In
the county. This site is located on Route l43
Just above the Route 7 bypass. This landflll
ls county owned and paid for through
residents' taxes.
Meigs County l• fortunate that It lu" a
well run lundflll fully adequate to lllL'Ill
loca l needs for ri Solid Wasie Disposal
facility.
The Meigs County Commissioners
have autOOrized the Health Department to
An nounce that anyone bring ing
refrigerators and sofas to the County
(Continued on page 2)

Yo,;r lTavitt!d Guest
Re11ching More

~ntin~

tmts·

Cloudy and cool today
highs In the high SOs. Chane~
of rain sllght. Continued
clondy tonight and Monday,
sUghtly warmer, highs in the
low 60s.
·

'f'hHII J2,()()Q
'f'11 Ill j /if'.~

.Devoted To The Grellter Middle Ohi;) V11lley

;•

PRICE 25 CENTS

MIODLEPORHOMEROY

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. ·-~r·~·p_.fl~•,.,.;;... ~....,...,_....; .......,~,,..,..,,_.jJ ...~
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wine Qub will
he organized

Homes tour set

Mn. Paul HIIIIOD, ByraCUie;
The Meigs County Ex•. Moore, Pomeroy; Mi. IDd . ~ taklni tile tour can·
tension Office Is organizing a Mrs. Walter Crooks and Mr. urt at 1111 or tile el8llt

county-wide 4-H Swine Club
under the guidance of Mrs_
lflnnle Thornton, advisor.
There wlll be .an
organlzatlonal meeting
Monday evening, October 11
at 7:30 p.m. at the County.
Extension Olflce ln the
basement ·of the County
Home Building on Mulberry
Heights in Pomeroy.
All boys and girls between
the ages of 9 and 19, as of
January 1,1971, are Invited to
join. Those who want to join
bot callnOt attend the meeting
' Monday evening, call 9923196. .

(Cwtlnued from page I).

and Mrs. Carl Horky In
· Middleport and Mr. and Mn.
Fred Crow, Mr. and Mn.
James Guinther and Mr. and

bom• and tlctetl at " •ch
will be aftlllhle at lach of
tile
1be IDIPI above
llbow the .locaUona of th~
ham• Included 011 the tour.

born•.

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' Orientation meeting noted · ..,

Southeast Ohio Junior
Miss, Inc., Ia remlndlliC blgb
school aenlor glrla of Milp
and surrounding countlel of
Ohio tbat the orientation
meeting for all cionlellanll
for tile 1971 Southeast Oblo
Junior Miss Sclri!larabip
Program Ia Sunday, Oct. 1• at
the Meigs IM, Pomeroy.
Cal:bgorles for the Junior
Miss
Program
are:
Scholastic achievement 15
FOURGIVEN HELP
pet., judges conference II
Four calls were answered pet., creative and per!OI'IIIII!i
Thursday night. and Friday arts (talent) 20 pet., polle and
morning by the Middleport appearance (evsnlng aown
Etnergency Unit: at 6:20
p.m., to 574 Laurel St., lor
TRICK·TREAT SET
Michael Sellers, 15, taken to a
RUTLAND - Rutland
doctor by private car; at 6:46, Mayor Eugene Thomp1oil
to Riverview Place for Nellie announced today trick . or
Eblln, taken to Holzer treat night In the viDage Will
Medical Center; to Cheshire be held Tbunday, Oct. ·21
at 10:08 p.m. for Earl Rich· from 6 tO 1 p,m. for chlldren
man, taken to Pleasant 12 years and under. The lllren
Valley Hospital,_and at 4:33 will sound to begin and ,end
a.m. Friday to Bradbury for the 1evenlng's actlvitlea.
Alice Johnson, having clif· Local fire department will
flculty breathing, taken to assist in handling traffic and
Veterans Memorial Hospital. watching the youngsters.

routine) 15 pet.,

and

youtll
fltnela (ipOrts we~r routine);
· 15 pet.
"
All bllh lchoollllllor glrll
interlllted in entertnc but
unable to altead tbe meellni
. are to wrlle 1be Soutbeul·
Oblo Junior Mila Scbolanblp ·
Procram, P. 0. lloJ: 104;
Pomeroy, Oblo 46'711.
REVIVAI.' PLANNED ~
PO.RTLAND - Revival
aervtcea will be held at ~
Reorpnlied Church of~
of Latter Da Sahits Sunda .
lhroucll Oct.~~ with aervl~
at 7:30 each evsnlng. Samuel
Zonker, patriarch, Akrolj;
Will be speaker. The publlc·w
invited
•

MARCUMCOMING ''
HYSELL RUN - Revlv.r
· Mrvlcet will be held at tbe
il1sell Run Free Metbodlii·

Church SUnday through Oct~ ·
17 with the Rev, Gene Maff
cum, · Mt. Vernon, I~d e
lpl8klnc at the 7:30 aervt~.
each evenJnc. He will ~~·
preaent vocar~eledlons. 1111
public Ill invited. ·
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-OPEN FRIDAY tiL' 8 P.M.
Save all over the
at the

GALLIPOLIS - Two juveniles aged 14
and 15 were arrested Saturday by city
police officers on two counts 01 breaking
and entering and one charge or
unauthorized use of a motor vehicle.
According to investigating officers, the
youths allegedly bro~e into t~e OhloValley
Laundry on State St. and the Working .
Man's Friend Service Station oil Eastern
Ave .
.
Missing at the Laundry Building were
old coins and two policemen's shirts . A
transistor radio valued at $25 was taken
from the service station.
The youths were arrested In Jackson
after wrecking a 1975 Chevrolet Malibu
owried by Julius Preston, Jr., 125 State St,
The car· was taken from his residence
Frlday night .
According to officers, some o( tiie ·old.
coins taken from Ohio 'Valley Lsunary
were found in ·the wrecked car.
Oillcers here also Investigated· the
· OLDFASHIONEDbean soup was prepared in huge ketUesby Hal Evans,.Bob
thefi
of a CB radio taken from a car owned
Layne, ROger Williams and Cap Evans during Fridsy's activities of the fall
by Nolan Thornton which was parked at
festival aii!Ob Evans Farms.
.
the comer of Second Ave. and Grape St .
(See page l·D for pictures by Keith Wilson)
Robert Maithew, Lower River Rd. said
he was allegedly attacked by three persons
Friday night when he went _to his oar to get
a raincoat during the Athens-Gallipolis
football game.
. ,
· .
Meanwhile, Gallia County sheriff's
deputies Friday night investigated the
theft of a bac~hoard and cervical collar
taken from a Vinton County SEOEMS
ambulance parked at the Hoizer Medical
'
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GALLIPOLIS- Routine business was Inc. rate from $S to 13.20 per cubic foot for Center.
acted upon here Friday during the fh:st short terril emergency gas.
MEETING CHANGED
meeting for newly appointed Gallla County
Increases in medical insutance were
POMEROY - A meet"'g of the
School Superintendeni Thomas E. Hair· approved as follows : Employee rille from
Meigs
County
Commissioners
ston. ·
$2.24 to $:!.60; ,Dependent rate from $5.44 to
scheduled lor Mond~y · wUI be held
The Gallla County Local Board of $5.6S and ·total family rate from fl.68 to
Instead on Tuesday due to the Monday
Education approved a · resolution $9.25 per month.
holiday when tbe courthouse wUI close
authorizing Supt. Hairston and board clerk
By a 3-2 vote, the board granted Uoyd
lor tbe observan&lt;e of Colninbus Day.
Mrs. Naomi Beman to explore ·the L. DaMer; industrial arts Instructor at
Howard Frank, county auditor, who Is
posaib!Utles of Investing available Inactive Kyger Creek a six day leave of-absence
officially clerk by law of the board
monies to secure additional income lor the without pay. Voting no were Bruce Stout
made tbe announcement.
district as interest.
and James C. Mitchell. Asimilar vote was
Alao,
of the couoty will be
Supt. Hairston recommended and taken on an outstanding bill submitted
closed OD Monday ill observance or the
approval was given that a written progress from the Holiday Inn at Kanauga for the
hollday.
report for each school be sbmltted by Nov. North Central Evaluation team which last
I. School progress reports are required by spring evaluated Kyger Creek Hlgh
Section 3313.94 of the Ohio Revlaed Code. School. Stout and .Mitchell opposed lhst
The reslgoatlon of Mrs. Bonnie motion.
~ Campbell, English Instructor at Kyger
They also opposed travel mileage for
' Creek High School \vas accepted. The Hilary P. Grlffflths,lunchroom manager,
board also affirmed the transfer .of to attend a . conference .sponsored by
Rebecca Gibson from il regular teaching standard Food on Saturday, Oct. 9 end
position to the Title I program.
Sunday; ·Oct. 10.
·
ThO board granted James R. Harris, .
Action on the employment of two
Gallla County School Psychologist, pe~· ./~!;Li!Odl~a the district and two teachers
mission to study 50-70 district schOOirylnS'delay until a special meeting. Supt.
children (ages four to seven) (J~ _;,H~ttst
id at agenda Preparation 'time,
cooperation with Dr. Richard Hoffn'IM . I(, n~ed
information and-or qualified
Miami University.
·,
; '· · ' a~ndidates were unavailable.
In other matters, the hoard apgroved
. ..-~
an increase in the Columbia Gas of Ohio,
. (Conunued on page 2)

New superintendent .in
first meeting of board

banu

l

Elberfelds in P·om

IN THE SHADOW OF THE GENERAL wlll document'
the Impact of the~ mlUion Gen,. James M. Gavin power

plant on rural southeastern Ohlo. The 3tknlnute film will
air Friday, October 22, at 9:30 p.m. on PBS stallons
WOUB-TV 20 and WOUC TV &amp;4.

Gavin Plant impact ·explor~d
.
•
zn TV documentary Oct. 22
.

.

.

CHESHIRE - "It's not going to srop worker!, pumping an estimated 125 to $30
here," said Mrs. Mildred Scott, a store million into a regional economy depressed
owner in Cheshire. Mrs. Scott is ialking for hall a century. Yet area realdents are
about the impact which America's search suspicious of coal·based prosperity whlcti
for energy is having on her community. has ended abruptly in the past.
"In the Shadow of the General," airing ·
Som·&gt;feel the blessipg of an Improved
Friday, oct: 22 at 9:30p.m. on WOUB-TV economy must be measured against t,he
20, documents the issues raised by c'On- plant's Impact, which reaches beyond
struction of a .'9'0 million po\ver familiar concerns about air and ·water
generating facility in southeastern Ohio. pollution, to problems of economic
Experts say coal may be the a~swer to development and regional' planning. Coal,
our current energy problem. Coal is ' heap it is said, is the dirtiest or all power
and abundant. But It is also expensive to sources.
'
transport and power companies are
The hall·hour'film lntercuts scenes of
building generating plants Closer to the . highly mechanized underground mining
mines. In 1971 American Electric Power and power plant operations with
selected the small community of c;heshire statements of concern expressed by Inas the site for their new General James M. dividuals who are Involved ln, or affected
Gavin Plant.
. by, the facillty. Among those Interviewed
The new deep mines which fuel the plant are power company officiala, workers, a
may eventuaUy employ over 2.000 retiredocoal mln'!l', a United Mine Work!"s

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CPeanut Brigade to

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.GALLIPOLIS - · The Ga1Ua CoiUity' Hlllorlcal Society will spon1or a
receptloo ot 81. Peter'• Epilcopal Church at 3 p.m., following the Hlltorlcal
Society'• regular mOIIIhly meeting whleh starts atl:30 p.m. Sunday, October 17
marklag tile IMih birtllday of GaDipclla,
·
· · Ii was &lt;11 IIIII date In 1790 tllat the Freacb 500 debarked at the Palt Froot
and eslablllbed lbe~~~~elva In tbe Ill log cabl111 (located w'bere the City Park
now Is) wblcb bad been built at tbe dlrecUoa of General Pot•m by Major John
Barnhlm and bll e0111pany of 10 mea.
.
W. G. Sibley wt'Oie In ''The French 500'' that, "Ere the early dusk of the
seuoa, tbe eablal were bupected, the 11ore1 earrled up from tbe '""'tar a
daaclllll)laee ~leeled aDd Wormal iovltatlons lasued to all -men, ·womea,
and children '-lor tbe lint aeml..,eekly French ban ever given In the Northweal Territory."
Sibley goes &lt;11, "By seve~ o'dock the aeraping of the bows laauguraled the
.. Boclal courtesies allll gallantrtea for which Gallipolli. has. ever since been
Tile public lllavlted to attend bolh the Hllwr.ical Soctety'a regular monthly
meeting In celebraU011 of tbe !88th aDDiversary of the foundlllg of Galllpolia .

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visit in Pomeroy

POMEROY -' The Peanut Brigade, a
group or 30 supporters of Presldentlal
Candidate Jimmy C&amp;rter, will ·atop In
Pomeroy Thursday mornllig.
.
. . Regional C&lt;H;oordln8wr Pete Lallch
said the bus-load of campalgnen will
make the Pomeroy vlalt as part of a week·
long tour of Ohio. They wlll spend their
time canvassing, leafleting and aalltlng
the local campaign In other. ways.
The Peanut. Brigade, from Georgia and
other Southern ststes, ls giving up their .
vacaUon lime to campaign lor Carter,
Da1ld Gerard, Middleport, will be
directing this project al!ll wiU meet the
Peanut Brigade when It 'iiiives, guiding
them throughout their stsy.

Public invited to ·reception marking
186th anniversary of city's founding
.

representative, community leaders,
politicians, local residents and a physicist
who specializes ln energy research.
Each Individual offers a different perspective when Confronted with questiona
which are still unanswered: Will the coal
boom means a return of good times? Who
will beneflt from economic develOpment!
Can rural communities provide the ser·
vices which mull\ accompany growth?
What environmental compromlaei must
be made to meet the demands lor energyi
As the energy ,search continues, many
communiUes throughout the nation'• eoal
fields will soon -be faced with the same
que!illons.
"In the Shadow of the General" Is a
film production oiWOUB TV, Athens, Ohio
and ls funded by grimts from the Oblo ETV
Network, the Centralo Educetlonal Net•
work anct the Corporation lor Public
Broadcasting . Producer·director ls
Gregory Hill; clnemawgrapher, Barry
Mowat and executive producer, David
urorr.

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Elberfelds In Pom
112t/l Anniversary
" ·sale!
CONTINUES '

arrested

faiDOUI."

• ROYAL CROWN

POMEROY - Unless imm ed i~tQ for maintaining \lle areas in • manner In
improvements are fortb coming,'lree trash · compliance with Meigs County Heulth
collection boxes placed about Meigs DeP'Irtment and Qhio f:PA Solid Waste
county will be removed eurly In Novem· Disposal codes. This has not bocn done.
ber.
The County Commjssioner~ were
The · Meigs County Oepartment or . informed nf the need for stricter main·
Health said Saturday that neglect and tenance control abnost n 'year ago. They
abuse of the collection boxes -persistS and were aga in in!ornu~d or this ne~ d on Oc·
·the situation will be tolerated no longer. Iober 4, 1976. At that time, the County
The Health Department !.~Sued th~ Commissioners were given 30 days to
following statement, published in Its en' come up with and enact a plan lor long
tirety, to clarify its position on the matter: ·term solid waste disposal for code enGarbageJPrbage, and more garbage. fo rcement and coml!,liance by a .
~ every,one already knows, ,Meigs County. representative or the Meigs County Health
t.1Ji,;,~,a sellous and· continuing problem or Department.
\ iCcbmulating trash around the free
If no definite plan is . enat1ed by
j;ollection boxes placed throughout the November 3, 1976, the Meigs County Board
county.
or Health will have no choice but to order
I These boxes were paid for through a the removal of all collection boxes and the
grant from Ohio Valley Health Services, program terminated.
Inc., with the understanding· that the
This situation, which is a health
County Commission ers through the haza!'ll, did not begin overnight. It har
wwnshlp tr.ustees were Ia be responsible been n result. of County_ government

Weather

~

SATURDAY STORE HOURS 9:30 AM TO 5 PM

Middleport

. '

•

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Mechanic Street Ware...la anCI
the .Home FurnlshlnglAnnex.:

~

...

&lt;V

ltoN:

Make Your Reservations Early and Enjoy the Music
Quintesl'ience II
0

."'
I

-Hospital News

Carter

Health hazard cited in
trash collection boxes

"'

.

measW'eS.

•

.•.
·-

.
.
.
anti-Issues campaign
" Vote Yes for Lower state's utility companies
"with money paid by conUtilities."
Paul Richards, a media smners."
The complaint asks the
spokesman lor the Public
Utilltes Commission, sald the PUCO to stop the utilities
request would have to be flied from contributing "hundreds
as a fornuil r omplalnt and of tbowiands of dollars" to the
under Ia.w the utUltles would .campaign aixl that the costs
be giveh .!15. days to ansl\'er. of the ad•ertising be
"Then it would have to be deducted from consumers'
at least four weeks before lt bills.
.' -""'•
can be heard because we
have to publish notice in state
papers for three C(li!Secutive
weeks," said Richards." So
Veterans Memorial Hospital
we are talking about at least
Admissions- None.
45 days.
Norma
Discharges ~ spokesman for the
Baker, Walter Miller, Samuel
supporters charged the Wamsley, Ernestine Werry,
opposition campaign was Debra Spires,
Louise
being bankrolled by t~e Zickafoose, Ira Zickafoose.

:

~

••t

PUCO asked to stop
CLEVELAND (UP!) The
Public
Utilities
Commission of Ohio wa s
by ·
asked
Thursday
supporter s of four sta te
issues on the November
ballot to stop a publicity
campaign against the

pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

...

. Sl'. CLAIR, MICH.-DIAMOND CRYSTAL Salt Co., the
nation's third largest salt producer, announced Thursday a 9
per cent boost in salt prices, effective Dec. I.
CQmpany President Charles D. Cronenworth said the
increase was mandated by h~r costs for labor, coostructlon,
energy and environmental-control. Diamond Crystal'slast salt
price increase was _ elfectiv~ Dec. I, !97S,

.

..

•••

(Cwllnued fr(lll ..ge I)
1
Eastern Europe was not under .&amp;met dCIJiinatlon, calllng'lt
"the most serious mlatake of bla career" and an
"unPardonable gaffe ."
·
But in the llr~ publiBbed comment from EMtern Europe,
the Polish Commwlist party newspaper praised Ford lor the
comment made Wednesday night in a debate with Demcratlc
ptesidentilil contender Jimmy Carter.
·

Officers said his car struck
a veliicle driven by Leland L:
Nor man, 39, . Pomeroy.
NEW. YORK - SEN. I!UllERT H. Hl.IMPHREY was
Norman claimed minor In· reported "awake aixl alert" ·and seemingly "very cheerful"
juries but was not lm· · Thursday night, following the removal of his cancerous
mediately treated.
bladder .
An accident ·occurred at
The fomJer vice president spent six hours on the operating
I :Oii a.m . today on Rt. 140 table at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center Tbunday,
where Keith A. Mavo. 17. Rt.. His doctors said the surgery apparently was succesaful. Dr.
2, Gallipolis traveling west, Edgar Berman, the physician who regularly attends Humphlost control or his car whfch rey, told a news conference that he waa "tremendou.sly
•ran off the right side of the relieved that the senator ... has come through thiS procedure
highway striking ·· a fence. extremely well.11
Ther.e was
mod erate
"!tactually went off withouta hitch," Berman said, "and I
damage.
just hope the convalescence comes out as well." .

~

Got droopy dollars'!
Tone up with the power pair.
A Sa vings Account to earn high interest.
A Checking Acco unt to organize spending.
Give yourself a lift.

News •• in Briefs

,

I

APPROXIMATELY 200 campers, mostly outo()f&lt;ltate
vlsltots attending the annual ll&lt;lb Evans Farm Festival at
Rlo Grande, were stranded at the Gallla County Junior
Fairgrounds late Friday"lght and early Saturday as a result .
of another flash flood in that vicinity. Fairground caretaker
Jim Sayre said th" water subodded Arollnd 10 a,m. Saturday,

...

'

.
O~ICE TO CLOBE
'

and additional campers arrived yesterdsy afternoon' 'tor
weekend activities. The picture above was taken after the
water had gone down nearly two feet around ~p .m . Saturday
near the bridge crossing Chickamauga Creek which joins the
fairgrounds and campgrounds near the caretaker's traUk
Nobody was Injured.

'

POMEROY . - The office of · Motor
Vehicle Registrar in Pomeroy will' be
closed Monday in observance of columbul
Day.
.

�.,
'

-

2.A-TheSunday Tl!Tles-Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 10. 1976

f

aA.-The SundsyTimes-Sentlnel, Sunday, Oct..IO, I976

THIS IS THE WAY
IT WAS. • •

Waugh appointed

auxiliary police

English is beautiful,
but Oh !,

.r

',.

so

BID
- GAUJI'OIJS- W. H. L1ni1eY wu the -I"'IMIIDIII bl
.

.

II)' Jl'rut

the 111th eentw'y. He WM the ~ •octiJo!cler
in the lint raUroad to serve our city. 'lbll nUroad - tint
koown aa the (:alllpolle-McArthur Railway; later, u the Olao
and W. N. Rallway; lliWlaler u the HockinC Valley, and now
u the c. and 0.
AI one time LancJey wu worth bl ac:eaa ol FIUO,tltiO.
(!allipolilln

RIO GRANDE - Marlin
Wedemeyer of the Village of
Rio Grande appointed Ralph
Wang!! •. an
auxiliary
potieeman to assist Marshall
Robert Shaw at . council's
recent meeting . Waugh is a
resident of· Rio Grande and
has been lj.ctive in law en·
forcement lor several years.
The fire contract was
renewed with Perry Town·
ship and council agreed to tile
purchase of some equipment
~or the Volunte~r Fire Dept.
It was also decJiled to open
a free pick up service to the
residents of Rio Gri&gt;l;lde lor
the disposal of leaves during
the autumn season. Ally ~lo

Grande Vlllage resident
wishing to dispose of leaves
are to place the leaves in
plastic leaf bags which are
securely fasteued and place
them at the curb on Monday
and Thursday of each week.
Mayor Wedemeyer
reported to council that due to
state legislation it will be
necessary to Increase court
costs.
Attending the council
meeting were Councilmen
Franklin Petrie, Joseph
Griffin, Charles Withee, Don
Call, Curtis Ramey, Clerk
Linda
Mlller,
Mayor
Wedemeyer, Atty. Bennett
and the Perry Twp. Trustees.

...

Two bands at
GALLIPOLIS - Despite
falling rain, both Athens and
Gallipolis bands perfom1ed

Six injured
in wreck .
on Rt. 588

game ~

at halfHme and after
Friday's football game on
Memorial Field.
, Both bands participated in
festivals Saturday
Gallipolis was in Lexington,
Ohio while the Bulldog
marching band took part in
the annual festival at Ohio ·
University.
The post-game show
featured numbers and
·routine§ the two bands were
scheduled
to
present
Saturday.
The !llue Devil band, under
the direction of Rodney
· Tolliver, presented the theme
song from rock . opera,
" Tommy" to open thei r
halftime show.
This was fo-llowe d by,
"Haven't Got Time for the
Pain," and "Oid Days." ·
The next number featured
the GAHS 'majorettes w~o
performed with fire batons
(with the grid lights turned
off) to the theme song from
the Bob Newhart Show.
The Gallla ns conclu ded
with •'•saturday in the Park,"
and "Sky High" and "JazZ·
man."

.
CUITING THE RIBBON-

Many of the candidates
running in the November election officially ope11ed the
Mason County Republlcan Headquarters Saturday
morning wiU1 a ribbon cutting ceremony. ·Candidates
shown cutting the ribbon, left to right, are Buck Sturgeon,

· Samuels

: . Area Deaths

•

!

fined seven

explained

-·- to Rotarians

r---·-_.;;;;.,_____
1
I
I
I
I
1'
I
I

'Dateline
Gallia

is less, In the long run, for preventive
measures to Insure a healthy environment
than to try 'to correct ·situations already ·
created by continual neglect.
The MCHD has been investigating this
solid waste disposal situation and feels
that one answer would be licensed prival~
trash haulers to service the rural areas
where pick-up service is not available.
Anyone interested In future licensing
as a hauler of solid waste is asked to
contact the Meigs County Health ..
Department.
The cooperation of all Meigs County
residents Is needed to correct this
deplorab,le situation.
POMEROY ~liNES'
s,turday Afternoon

League
Veterans Memorial Hospital Henderson; and Dale Deem, •
Won LeisI
ADMITTED - Richard Gallipolis, ·:·
Nile oWls
JO
2
Winebrenner, · Syracus~;
PLEASANT VAtLFJi·7 ::: Suoer Sfars
22 10
Rood Runners
22 . 10
Callie Matheny, )i:wlngton; - 'DISCHARGES', - Carson· Gufler
Busters
·to
22
Charle_s Warth, Hartford;:: Stone, West· Columbia; Mrs. "'"Bowling Stone~
· 6 26
DemariS Ash, Syracuse; Lela Paul Darnell, son, Pomeroy; Red Barons
6 26
Robjllson, Racme.
Mrs. Johnnie . Tucker
High Series- Roger Riebel
DISCHARGED .- Jestie Grimms' Landing; Mrs. Keith 41 ~,:~~!~!1011 k:~r R;ebel
Molden, Pat~y Spires, Gary ·DeWitt, son, Henderson;. 157; Cliff Kennedy 156.
·Eil1s.
Glady' SJ1llthson, Point
Team Series~ Super Sfars.
20
"pieasant; ' Dale ' Deem,
~~am Ga me _ soper Sfars
l;'lcasantValleyHospltal
Galllpolls; Mrs. Richard 755.
, DISCHARGES - Carson Frankiln, daughte,~ P~!nt
stone, West Columbia; .Mrs. ·Pleasant; ..a'nd Mts.1 '1.8rry ~..:..
John · Tucker, Grimms Sargent, son, Leon. •
Sunday Mi•td ~eague
Landing; Gladys S!JlithSon,
FESTIVAL CANCELLED
Pick 'N Shovel
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Richard
GALLIPOLIS
Satur· daug hter , p on
11
w~
Franklin,
day's band festival at
lem Sf. Mkt.
36 1 1
Pleasant ; Mrs. Larry LeJington, Ohio was can· Sa
Farmers Bank
30 18
sargent, son, Leon; Mrs. celled, due to bad weather. ·Seldom ResI Ceramics 18 10
raul Darr.ell, son, .PomerQy; The event has been Ed 's Crossr...,ds Gro. 26 22
14 34
Mrs. Keitl~ DeWitt, son, rescheduled In November. Team t
'Teo m S
to 36

,,

school nays. English is the
language spoken in the school
system since the post
Spanish-American War days
when a ~rowln~ number o!
American teachers came to
the Islands. The Philippines
also boast 76 dialects and the
national : Ia ng Ula g e ,
·"Filopirio."
.
Mrs. Simon chuckled when •
she related a unique method
for learning English: for each
mistake, students were fined
a nickel, "in order for us to
become
proficient in
English."
After · such
schoormg she, "learned to
speak English better than our
national language."
Wearing a colorful sari of
purple and gold, Lakshmi
Priyanath, from sout,hern
.In&lt;lia, spoke about her
country 's cross-cultura l
influences. The national
language is Hindi, even
though the government
recog nizes 14 different
languages. There are over 37&gt;
dialects which make com·
municalion e•lremely dif·
flc ult.
Recalling that the "British
were mpsters," Lakshmi
credited them for the
widespread pr~sent usage of
English. She learned it as an

M.

ea
·· I s

at

+++

candidates seeking varioua poets In the Nov. 2general electlon.
On Sunday, Oct. 31, the TlJnea..&amp;intliiel pla111to run resulta of
the questionnaires in an eDort to place llinne pertinent
lnfonnaUon before Gallla's record 12,117 reglatered voters.
· Deadline respccise Ill' each candidate Is 12 noon Wednesday,
Oct. 'l/,
.
"· CLAUDE Mlller, a fellOw Klwanlan ani close friend ol the
late Dr. Uoyd Carr, P'Ofeaaor of biology, Rio Grande College,
said Dr. Carr was "a man of good Wlllandgoodhumor." Mlller
added, :'He was an intellect who appreciated Ill ~Ia ol Ufe ,
and learning. He was an Inspiration to many sfudenta ln hla
career at Rio Grande. Many appllcanll perhapa will be found
who can 1111 his position, but very few, If any, could ever 1111 hla"·
unique place at Rio Grande College."

+++

TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the ·rues ol the DIUY•

Tribune ani weekly Gallla Times ... Fooner dean ana·
!l'esldent W111lam A. l.e!ril. '19, better known as "Mr. Rio
Grande College," claimed after lltneu ... Clty Manager J. Roy
Bartlett buyslli'sl,aack of bulba fnm Uons President F. H. •
(Mac) McGraw. Initial Uona sale grossed ,1,492 during four·
day event .. , Molly Vanco crowned GAHS ~queen. '
Athelll Upaell GaWpolla . IN as Blue Devlla l011e flnit ,
conference game,

nglish involved learning the
ual word meaning, .such as

n·apartment being a flat, an
levator a lifl. She rend a
real deal in ~:nglish mnl

.

even today she can, .. r~n rt

..

:;.:,:~,_
.l
--~--

AMONG TIIOSE TAKING part in a recent English
penel diScussion at Rio Grande College were, left to right,
Saiprasad Naimpally, Mrs. B, S. Priyanath and Mrs.
Gabriele Sattler. Not pictured - Mrs. Mel Simon.
.
~ \,-population Is illiterate. the case of Gabriele Sattler.
Within the 14 languages,
Born in Berlin, eduCDted..(n
culture flourishes with each . Austria and Germ'any, with a
group's own .set of writers background of rich mixtures
and poets."
of learning methods, she
A surprisingly low 35 per encountered English · in a
cent speak Hindi in the home. nun 's boarding school.
Prof. Nairi:lpally credits the English was first introduce4
European influence ·or to her as she and other prereading over television teens were instructed to
watching as ·being helpful in "stand-up" by the teacher.
his learning English.
When the children were
He
also
observed, baffled by the English
"Everything I learned in command, it was repeated
school, I learned In English." and ·accomp~nied by the
Learning a language once upward motion of hands.
poses difficult problems, ,but 11 Ah, stand-up!" .each child
learning it three limes merits repeated with delight and a
special recognition. Such · is great sense. of pride as they

better thun- i can tnlf " At
. home, the Snttler$ try to keep
"High. German'' lis a conversational lunguage. The
ltask has not beco cosy as In
'the case of the daughter who,
after the first day of nursery
school, refused lo speak
German and teamed English
in two monthS.

most moving

H

philosuphy about life. ·Holding
np a ple&lt;'e of cloth of mnny
colors und designs, she told
the audience of the beauty
fo und ill variety , that there is
beauty to be found in everyUring, if we only accept it. •
Time ran out for the panel
di scussion:
yet many
linger('{) on to aok individu11 t
questions .•Rve ryo ue went
mn.ty wfth H nl'W f&lt;'llling
nb&lt;&gt;nt his lifo nnd · whol it
lllt'{l:Ht to lw t:t n Arncric'nn ..
for tnlmy it wus H rm·c and
welcomed ex perience of

nullonal p1·tdc .

COLO\Y ·
*

Now _tlte

•

l'lu •rlfl't'

TONIG HTTHRU
. iU E'SDA Y
Sho w Beg iris at8 p.m. ,1 •

children are having a d ifficult
tin1e learning Germa n. Mr&gt;.

Salller remarked that har
children are learning ttwl
there is 11 diffcn:ot world
outside of tbeir own uml !hut
English and tbc Americnn

MEIG.STHEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION

~ 1 1,.- &gt; ~ .. • •• '

,I

WATCH FOR

r ll()li!J( lr() \1 · 'til (,[ AI/U(( 'l.lr(( I

1'1! •liV~'"IN 1" II I11N •( ,,lr/11 ll{l 'o/1 •J(II/N 1'1/HI.// ~ •
•. U
·~.'J ... / .'J,O.I(•JI'~It)MAI/1 &gt;

---··-

I 111J( ~ /!!Il l ' ••• •-'1'

1 ,,,

;:;,tiAIT&lt;I'&gt; •·•- ·~·•••· 11/!•,! AI/11",1'

.... ..... ... - ... ......
·~·

··~

OPENING DATE

J e::::s::::i·~:: Phili~programfunded

CAR TOON

•• ••

.

. NOW THRU
WED., OCTOBER
.
. .13TH

T~e

Oht~

.

SUNDAY THRU

TURD AY ONLl'

CITIZEN BAND
RADIO RECEIVER

-

Sold
. Unassemblad

.20" EVEL KNIEVEL

MX STYLING
BICYCLE

Listen in on CB without
the expense of a transceiver.
Receives all 23 Channels.
Clips onto auto sunvisor.

$7488
REG. '84.88

•

......

c/Z\ Home Sentry

'

.

...

.:.......,·~·
.

SMOkEAIARM

~ eHOT

DOG

! Regular Size)

Small Drink
of Your Choice

~TOGOORfAT"ERE ·99~ .
No Subt.
No Coupons · No Limit' .

~
'r~

II liro breh
lilt

in '''"

•

$12·88
EACH

"LIL SPORT" TM •
BASKE'IB4LL GAME
sPECIAL aUY I

If firt broko ,

out In your

flem• _ttJIIilhl. . ,u,

hr~m•

'

Plosl;c globe sep01o1cs into
hol ves f or osy plant lend-

i ng . Comes wi th

ha nd~

so me ho ur glctss sta nd
36" h ig h ov e ro ll .

4 QUART
POTTING SOIL 89~

new

isposable
diapers
For today 's dries t baby

For Elsy Pickup Cali 446-Z
Your Order Will Be Wa~ing

-r~

·Home~
from
SMOKE'ALARM

that can halp you
save your tarnl t{s l iwe s.

•

~~en

t.~ odcl6203

UT!RY
2nd &amp; Olive

Gallipolis, 0.

--

DAYTIME $239 I .
BOX

NO lAIN CHlCKS

H h011Sclio., power ta11s ·

MOOCI Ball
• S~51e nts lAst and

• Soonds luud 85cltJ at;llm lor
~a r ~ wmnrnuol ltrc

BOX OF 24

An• PACICIDtiUII
FOillt- lVIII

• Batl m ~ Oll!ldtril-sountls
alarm 101 ea( ~ war ~1 n(l ot trr e
l ~mitv .

111 e

tlnll tllllan

!110

·!!~Ips

d r ~ l bult on

JC11tlte riS k ot needless

tii!UM! rliO!e than "one un~ rc·
dutf Sth15 n s ~. aYen fu1 llle1

• H et~ s 1educe ir s ~. ot ~ed ~s
traQfffl lll()' e than Di\1: uM JC
tn i5 r!Sk even lurther

..REGUlAR '49.95

REGUlAR ~9.95 .

~

SAVE •10.00

SAVE '7,95 ·

OUR LOW PRICE

OUR LOW PRICE

$3200 $3995

. • l'f fire broke out in your
;e~rout.

5ize) . Treoft heki~ s l

· The earl¥ warning system
lh11l can help you
sa~e your l11mltr"s l ives.

· Cord plugs Ito Mt conlln·
ltvC Cl):lYCnO'Ce (lUI ·
1et - nl1cator light ;hows DDr-m

~nJ t an• l~

pole is over 5' tall ,
with weighted base
ond decora ted bock·
board. Come1 with
soh foam "basket·
b oll" . (6V• " dio .

SMOKE ALARM from

U~S tv

~ LICes

Your futvr a boslo: ~tboll stor
.will love this! Adlu ~ toblo

General Electric

Tho ea rly wnrning system

• S;· ~ l mns lust

CHARGE
Ill

tu11;1ht,

a Home Sentry"
WJ

General Electric

on

.

_!,:

your l1mi/y
out in limf?

out in tim&amp;'!

1~

...

would yrHt f!BI

fOIJf fllmi/r

iUNCH TIME GOODIE. · ·

rp¥~". 13~;.~.,::X~~i; one

'r·

~F

W.Uid '""got

·OCTOBER 10 THRU 16

three montM 17.50; motor .

''r"e

•2.67

..

Voile~ '

,
r.oar t2hi001· 51·~~~~0nl~l
Men 's Htgh Series- Roger ilt~:;hf1 r'r f,'f.oo~}\'f
Carpenfer ,416, Dave Lee -103, monilia 13.10 1 lltroe months
Chorles Searles :m.
17 .50
. Wiwneo's R'tgh Series unn..i Prolli
Ann Morris 463 Kolhie ~" lorna'llontr ta uctu.llve y
.. VI kt •u
ft nd Shl 0
on tilled to tho vii lor
~ 1' c ~••se 0
r Y • P,uDilcetJon -of Ill' news
Harris 355.
~lspatchn crtdllld · HI lite ·
Men's High Game - Dave ' . nowstJ11per an~ 1110 lite toc:al
Lee 160, Roger Carpenter 157, . news ubttshtd oretn ,., .
Shorf Runell 154.
.

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~vnd&amp;j

MIDDLEPORT - ' Ac· Publtshll'iLt~·po~~e
dl~n t
Lane Da,niels • , 825 DAILY
TR \'IIUNE
cor.,.....
o
Third Avo
:, Gotllpot\&amp;,
presiding overseer of the Ohto 45631,
·
PubiiiiiH ev.-y "'"kdoy
Ioca I congrega tl on of ' · ovenfno
••••;
· Soturdoy .
Jehovah ' ! Witnesses, second Cto11 • ote Pard
· al!angemel)ts are unde'1fay 01 r~'l! 1 1ttltv?r ~h
to share In an international , 111 court st. omiroy,O.
45769.e...
Pubt~lrlovory wuk.
protest of the banning of the . day
I · ol&lt;cepf SoturChrlstlan tiroup In Argen- dey . En tor 11 MCond cto11
moiling moltltl' 11 Pomeroy,
Una.
Ohio Postotltco.
.
Plans were announced
By co,.tor dolly· ond
Sundoy 75c per wHI&lt; . Motor
today for local members to route sus ~ monllt.
take part in l'll'lting letters of
SUBSCR IPTt1~Natl5
protest
to
Argentine
T.ho . GtttiiHIIll" · tiolty
TrfDIOit In Oftlo !llld Will
P res ld ent J orge R a fae 1 Vtroln"
onu·- 112.00; at•
,Vlilela, wbo ordered the aect monllls 111.!10; "'"' monfhs
31, 17.00. EIIIWMrt uuo ~"
Proacrlipllon as of A•m•ot
...yeor ; tl• -mO!IIItt • 111.50;

I

I ,

Sundly Dnes&amp;nlilel
PubiJshf'd evwr y

MO'JO.
CROSS
HANDLEBARS

~}:-1)

Pro\est letters

,• .

hysic:s, math, and sc1enre.

devt)lopcd

, '·"''

+++

1976

,.

Mrs. Sattler also st udied nt
e Berlitz l•lnguaRe School.
Her third cont nct wit h

Home

Ambleside
Gardens,-1 nc.

'

by

~·r ... ~.

From tbe wann memories
of childhood and the
bleakness of wa r torn
Europe, Mrs. Pikkoj a has

.STARTS NOW

LAST week, we mailed quellllonnalres to 10 GaUia County

will he written •

~

.

YOUR
SPRIKG
GARDEN

A PUBLIC meeting has been scheduled Ill' 7:30 pm.
Thursday, Oct. 14, at Grace United Methodist Church to start
the ball rolling. We hope several new faces will be on hand.·

.

hn 1f n

She gradua ted lr om a
"business college" alUtough
her program locludro 1!11111)'
on~busin;ess courses. such as

hard

as.od&lt;ltc l:ngug g• and
struggled with word an&lt;l
sentence structure just as
any student would ..
Smiling', she commented,
"My children speak like
Americans." Yet like any
_parent ,. s~e .. admitted,
"Sometimes I have a hard
lime understanding them."
To prove that children
know no language barrier,
Mrs. Epilog interjected that
her children, alter playing
with Mrs. Priyanalh's,
"Speak southeastern Ohio
English with an Indian ac·
cent."
Also from India was Rio
Grande College electronics
professor, Saiprasad
Naimpally. A native of
Bombay, he joked, "Students
complain about my accent,
but there is no need to change
it."
ProL Nalmpa lly speaks
English with a crisp British
accent, although he admits to
talking unusually fast. He
learned to speak English in a
Catholic school. Facing no
problem in lea rning the
language, he became a
master of grammar and
spelling.
"In India.'' he recalled,
"about 80 per cent of the

A

way i5 just a Ilny part of n
larger existence.
Vll •nn Pikkoja from·
L•-tuvia , l~s t onia, gave
$tudcnts a tltini-history lesson
on llcr co untry's past.
l.&lt;&gt;cated atthe gnU of F'inland
and established in 1270,
Estonia hn~ often been called
tht• testing gro und lor Vikmgnu-tnhood.
Vtlma r e\ltcwcd
her
rountry 's pu st , snytng, " ll
ha s seen more flags than you
have studi ed." Yet all
politica l stru!lllle has only
added to the c h oracl~ r of lhe
·people.
~rs. Pi~koj a , 11 Vlt'(inl of
World Wor l!, bravely w~ lked
a(TOss l~ urQ pe to cscupe the
Cornm unists. Sill' rCI'nlloo the
beauty of li ving in the lund or
the utl dni Mht sun where·
childrcn le• nl(:d rich folklore
ut their mot her's kneo.

''

By llobart Wilaon Jr.

.

very

in about

pines was Lydia Simon, .a
·
petite brunette with laughing
iRONTON - Continuation requirements. No set fee is
brown eyes. Mrs. Simon 0 f "M Is I H
"
charged for the hom ecame to tbe United States 16 ea a orne , a ser·
vice for homebound persons delivered meals; however,
cyears ago with 8 superior 60 or over in this area, is participants in the program
•Command of Bnglish that assured through 1978, Cor- are given the opportunity to
,dated back to her elementary poration for . Otrio Ap- - make donations according to
palachian
Development their ability to pay. Food
(COAO) senior Nutrition stamps· may be donated in
Program .Dtrector \'darilyn lieu of cash.
Grant announced Thursday . • The Meals . at Home
Notification of a grant Program was launched In
award of $125,000 from the February with the initial
.. ·-·community Services Ad· allocation of $149,000 from
ministration (CSA) for the CSA which gave each site the
Meals at Home Program has capability to deliver 16 meals
been received by COAD daily to elderly shut-ins.
which will administer the According to Mrs. Grant,
project.
.
co unties which negotiate
The
grant
will.
provide
Title XX contracts will be
TULIPS20c ea.
matching
funds
which
the
27.
able
to increase the number
HYACINTHS40c ea.
Appalachian counties served of meals delivered to 24.
NARCISSI40c ea .
by ·COAD can combine with
Mrs. Grant reported that 20
PAPERWHITE
Title XX Social Services counties in ·the ·COAD area ·
NARCISSI SOc ea.
monies at their disposal to currenlly, have included
· · CROCU,S lOc ea.- contract for hot meals to be nutrition service for the
IRIS JOe ea .
delivered each weekday noon elderly in their Title XX
to senior citizens who are ill plans. Two of these have
ANEMONES lOc ea.
or
permanently disabled.
completed hegotiations with
- GALANTHUS 10c
The
Meals
·
at
Home
COAO for home delivered
ea .
Program
utilizes
the
kitchen
meals at this time. Counties
MIXED TULIPS
faciUties
and
personnel
of
the
served
by COAD incl)Uie
Sl.SO BAG OF 10
GOAD
Senior
Nutrition
Gallia
and
Meigs.
BULBS
Program, a congregate !Deal
program currently serving
persons 60 or oider at 34 sites
The eveniilg stars are Mars
in 26 counties, operated and Venus.
,
·
locally by Community Action
Those born on this day are
Agencies.
• under llle sign. of Ubra.
American actresses Jean
Rt. 35 West
'Identical menus.are served Arthur and Riia Hayworth •
Gallipoiis, Ohio ·
in both programs and are were born Oct. 17 - Miss
446-4848
planned' ·. by a dietician to Arthur in 1908 and Miss
We'll grow on you!
provide one.-third of an older Hayworth in 1919.
person's dally dietary
On this day in history:

:..~~---

+++

- Granted Sophia Campbell per·
mission to attend slate FHA meeting, Oct.
15.
- Paid bills totaling $35,026.
- Heard brief administrative report
from Hairston.· · ·
·
:
• -Certified Betty Rees as a bus driver.
, - Approved the sale of five used
school buses to the Abundant Baptist
Church at Proctorville and three buses to
the Second Baptist Church at Ravenswood
at atotal cost of $5,768.

. HOSPITAL NEWS

.

CITY Manager Richart T. (DICk) MUla would like to see '
aome clUzens (new 'young blood aa they BBY) other than thoae
SUZY SAMEULS
who parUeipote In gavernmentalactivltles and thoae who are
already
loaded dawn with numerous meetlnga to volunteer
the 1976 edition .of "Who's
their
eDorts
Ill' future study groups in the Old French City.
Who Among High School
'
+++
Students."
"YOU go to a lot of meetlnp, and you see the same crowd
She was a delegate In June 1 h mee~ "MUla said last Wednesday night during the
to Buckeye Girls' State at ' ~r september aesslon r1. the Galllpolla City Qmunllslon.
Cap1tal Umversity from the
+++
Lewis Manley . American
ONE obaerver pointed out Galllpolls baa a lot of untappe4
Leg10n . Auxiliary with talenloutthere. These are the people who can help Investigate
sponsorship from lbe Far· community problems and make recomrnendatlona to the
mers Bank and Savmgs Co. commlaslon. We all must be concerned wftb our cunmunlty
Forth~ past eight years she andwemustbewlllingtoputourmixleyl!'hereoiD'moulhaare
has been a student of the Mid· once a course of action has been' approv~ by elected officials.
Porn School of Dance. Sbe
. +++
attends lhe N.aomi Baptist
WE would like to wish Rev. James Frazier good luck 1n hla
Church in Pomeroy and .her · efforts to ~rganlze a citizeDB group on Jaw enfonlelllenl
hobb~es Include readmg, !l'Oblems In Galllpolls. Rev. Frazier met with city commlulon
pamtmg and traveling.
Wednesday and told of his concern of increased crlmlnal acta
In this community.

(Continued from page_I )
Landfill will be allowed to dump these
Items' free of charge.
The MCHD sial! is very concerned.
about the misuse and abuse of the County
Solid Waste disposal facilities provided as
a free service. They are also cohcerned
that the County landflll is not being used to
its lull potential because of citizens'
ignorance of the law and the health
hazards they are creating for everyone.
As many county residents are aware,
the Meigs County Health Department has
had a major staff change. The new staff
members are committed to preventive
measures in the area of · envirqnmental
health to insure a healthful living situation
for all residents. The cost to.the taxpayer

instructor
Christine
Epling
for
l)er class
in English
grammar and for qther
students and faculty .. )VhQ
elected to share' this unique

'

Health -hazard

Judge Buck

Ed Note : Tl)e English
language is like a beautiful ·
woman; it's beautiful to hear,
exciting to look at, but oh, 8(,
hard to underst~nd!
Students of Rio Grande
College-Community College
were given the opportunity to
discover just how complex
their native tongue is when a
'panel of five foreign born
visitors met on Rio Grande
campus Friday, Sept. 24 to
discuss the English language.
The panel was organized by

'Something to think about:
·
. .· ,
What was !be lliJile of the flnt GaWpolla Volunteer FireCon\pany?

New superintendent
(Continued from page I )
The board in other business, added
Judith Sheets and MarG.. Ellcessor as
substitute teachers.
·
- Authoti!ed Supt. Hairston to
prepare a policy regarding organizations
solicitin~ ~tudents to sell their wares.
- Discussed tuitiQn students . and
rates.
- Renewed the lease for the bus
garage at Cadmus at the rate of $45 per
mouth.

.kRs. vtiMA PIKKOJA,
NARVIA, Estonia, gave
Rio Grande College
students a mini-history
lesson on ber country's
pasl She Is director of
Meigs County's Bo~k·
mobUe service.

The answer to last week's questlQII:
For many years I haw been a fond adJnlrer of Samuel F.
· VintOn. Not only was Vinton a capable lawyer, he wu an
oul.ltandlng congreuman.It wu he who orlilnated the Idea of
establlshlng the U: S. Dept. of Jnterill'. He fought Ill' this bill
and saw lt carried through In bOth the Houae and Senate.
Vinton was of the Whig polltical party. ~Oat folD around
here do not know It, but Sam VInton wu .recognized u the
leader of !be Wblga. President John Quincy Adami often spoke
of the leadenblp of Vinton. For many yean after IU death
- bolh·Seilators and Conll'esamen SPOke often ol hl8 abiUtlel,
For hla oUtstanding work during~ the Merlcan War Vinton
wis commlaaloned a general In the annles, although he
actually nevet was a leader on the battlefields.
In later rell!'B Vinton' ahd -several cases before the U. S,
&amp;iprellle Court and was often opposed by Daniel ~ebater and
Heni'y Clay.
.

" Y'

,--------------------------1

is issued

county assessor; James HoiHday, circuit judge; Jim Hall,
sheriff; Mel Clark, c0unty commlssloner; Jim Craddock,
magistrate, Barry Casto, proi!OCUting attorney; . Ernie
Watterson, hollSil of delegates and MUes E)lllng,
magistrate.

Meigs High's ~uzy
is national semi~finalist

GALLIPOLIS - Six per.·
sons were Injured in a
coiUslon at9 :1&gt; p.m. Friday
on Rt. ii88, al6ob McCormick
Rd.
The ·Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said an
auto driven by Max Haffelt,
35, Rt. 1, Crown City, slid on
wet pavement from Bob
McConnick Rd. into Rt. &gt;68
where his car was struck by a
pick·up truck operated by
Frank M~yse , 44, Rt. I,
Galllpolls.
Mayse and .Haffelt com·
plalned of minor injuries as
did four passengers in
Mayse's truck, Alma Mayse,
II, Rt . 1, Gallipolis; ~ ugene
Mulllns, Brenda Mullins and
BWy Mullins, all of Thurman.
There was moderate damage
to both vehicles.
,
Mayse was cited to .
Municipal Court lor OWl
while Hatfelt was charged
with failure to yield the right
of way.
Myron Wiseman, 21, Rt I,
Cheshire, was charged With
driving left of center
following a headon collision
at 6 p.m. Friday on Little
Kyger Rd. six tenths of a mile
north of Rt. 7.
The patrol said Wl•eman's
e@r struck a vehicle operated
by Clinton Abshire, 34, Rt. I,
Ches hire . There · was
moderate ·damage.
Ted staton, 22, Rt. I,
I
Bidwell, was cited lor failure I
to yield the right of way
Wl ~~ii&gt;.M BUR~ESON
JI~MtE ROBERTS
HEMET, Ca lli . - William
POMEROY - Word has
following an accident at 6
Arthur BurleSon, 68. a been recei ved her e of the
p.m. Friilay on Rt. 160 at Rt. res
ident of this ci ty and
of Jim m ie Rober ts,
554. The patrol said Staton's formerly of Gallia County , · death
Welcome , Md ., ~ru es d ay in
car pulled west Into the path di ed Thursday af his home. Mar yl and
·
of an auto operated-by Roger Burleson. a native of Gallla
Survivors include his w1 fe,
County was the son of the late
Peggy ; two · son s, on e
Burke, 29, Rl. I, Bidwell.
James M . and F ranees Green daugh ter . parents, Mr . and
David Neutzllng, 23, Burleson . .
Mrs. J . P. Roberts, Pomeroy ;
He Is survived bv his wife, nine sis ter s, two bro ther s and
Mason, was injured in an
accident Friday morning in Vernl na Davis Burleson : fo ur severa l nieces and ncph ~? W s.
T. F. Burleson, Rt . Friends may calt at Green's
Salem Twp. Meigs County. brothers,
t,
Ga ll ipo lis ;
Blaine
neral Home, Sulton , W.
Neutzling,. traveling south, Burleson, Grove City ; Bruce Fu
Va . today. Graveside ser
lost control of his ca r which Burleson of Maryland, and vices wi ll be condu cted at
ran off the left side of the Paul Burleson, ClnclnnatL Rose Hill Cem etery , Su tt on,
sisters, Mrs . Christopher W. Va . Monday .
highway , struck an em- tour
Straus, Cinci nnati ; Mrs .
bankment, and overturned. Nora Corbin, Defrolt ; Mrs.
There was severe damage. Alva Morgan and Mrs . Bob
Powell of Yale, Mich. There
A deer was kllled in an are
also . several nieces and
accident at · 12 :10 a.m. nephews.
Saturday on Centerpoint Rd. , Funeral services are pendfive lentha of a mile west of · ing. Burial will be in
Rt . 325. The animal ran into Hurricane, W. Va.
the path of a car operated by
Charles Chambers, :&gt;.'l, Rt. 2,,
Pairiot.
POMEROY
Seven
defendants were fined and
four others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Friday.
. Fined by Judge Robert E.
Buck were Vernon M. Otto,
Racine, $10 and costs,
MIDDLEPORT _ John speeding; Leroy B. Gut·
GALLIPOLIS - Carol A.
Mulvaney
and .Bob Mollet, berlet, Marietta, SIS and
Ohlinger, 45, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
costs, speeding; Ruth A.
was charged ~ with failure to using narrative and s lides, Graham, Rt. 1, Rutland, $12
yield following an accident at provided a ,graphic review of . and costs, speeding; Carlotta
'4:23 p.m. Fr.lday on Eastern what has and Is happening to c. Reed, Rt. 1, Reedsvllle, $13
Ave. and Sml\hers St.
costs of me,dtcal care when and l'Osts, speeding ; Mark
City pollee officers said the · the Mlddleport·P~meroy . Waller, Rt. a, Pomeroy, $15
Ohlinger ~ar pulled into the Rota_ry Club met . Friday and costs, left of center;
,path of a vehicle operated by evemng following dUIIIer at Donald Blankenship, Rt. 2,
Randy A. Nlcewander, 25, Heath United Methodist Albany, $50 and costs, four,
Point Pleasant. Thore was Church. .
.
days confinement, loaning
moderate dsmage. ·
They were mtroduced by operator's license; Wetzel
Donald ,G. McBride, 31, a~t1ng . President Rob,ert Phillips, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, $!50
Bidwell,. was charged with Buck. Questions were an· and costs, three days con·
having no opeutor's license swered following thetr finernent, driving while In·
following an accident on presentation. .
-t xicaled '$100andcosts four
S«ond Ave. City police said The speakers, representing d0ays co~finemevt iidense
McSrlde backed his car Into a Central Blue Cross and Blue suspended six months, placed
wiper , display case at the Shield of Ohto, said there ~re on six months prohutlon, no
Shell Service Station,
· many persons and agenc1~s operator's licen~e.
,
A final accident oecllrred. working to control the raptd . Forfeiting bonds were
on Fourth Ave. and Grape St. !'lse ot hosptlal and medical G rge D Lemley Cheshire
~
e o ·reckless 'operation;
· •
where a car wlled frQm the co..
s genera llbt
y, u " no bodY $107.50,
Gallla Roller Mills the wrong is doing any more than Blue Charles Ehlen bach' Saline·
way. In order to avoid a Cross."
. $27.50, speeding;
·' Jack
ville,
Th e bi r lhd ay of c1ub R.
headon collision, ' Asa K.
Wells, Long Bottom,
Johnson, 18, Rt. 2, Crown secretary John Werner was $36.50, speeding; John L.
City, swerved his .car which observed. Ladles of the Lewis: wayne, w. Va ., $ _, ,
34 5
struck a uUiily pole.
church served a steak dinner. · illegal hunting.

Citation

.... -:r•

POME ROY
Su·ty pursuing them," stated L. C. 'sponsored
four
year
Samuels, a senior at Meigs McMillan. NMSC vice achievement scholarshipsHigh School, is one of I,&gt;OO pres1dent who is responsible will be announced on March·
semi.finali sts in· the 131J! for the general management 11, 1977. College sponsored
a n n ua I
N a t i o n a I of the achievement proRram . four year achievement
Achievement Schola rs hi p McM illan
that by scholarship winners will be
Program for OutstAndin g tdent1 fy ing and publicly announced through mid·
Negro Students.
recognizi ng the' academic June, 1977.
The announcement came a c com p 1i s h men t s of
At Meigs High School, Miss
today from the Nati on a l motivated bla ck youth, the Samuels is enrolled in a
Merit Schola rs hip Cor· !tope is that their educational college preparatory course.
poration which administers opportunities will increase so She is an honor student and
the program.
that they will be better planS to pursue a career in
Miss Samuels, daughter of · pr epared
to assume mu.•ic education. A member
Marv Alice Sa mu els of professional and leadership of the Meigs High School
Pomeroy, was among more roles i.n the future.
marchipg '. and symphonic
than 5&gt;,000 black students
To advance in the com- bands. directed by Dwight
who requested consideration petiti on,
Achievement Goins, she plays. the 'trom·
in the 1917 Ac hiev ement Program semi-finalists must bone and the ,tuba. She
~ogram ai the time they qualify as finalists by rece~ved the 197&gt;.Qutstanding
took the- 1975 Pre llmlna1·y m e e t I n g a d di llon a I band member award.
Scholastic Aptitude Test . requirements. Semi-finalists
lbis past summer Miss
National Merit Scholarship mu st be end orsed and Samuels toured Europe with
Qualifying Test.
recommended lor scholar- the 1976 United States
ARREST MADE
Black students with the ship consideration by their Collegiate Wind Band
CLEVELAND (UPI)
James A. Taraba, 28, highest scores in the tests in high school principals, supply, directed by A. G. Wright,
Clevelarld, was arrested U. S.' geographic regions, biographical and academic director of bands at Purdue
Saturday for violation of the each composed of .several information, and confirm University. The band had
are
named their test sc ores on the concerts in France, Swit·
federal extorion statute, states,
accordi ng . to the Fill. Achievement Program Semi· qualifying test with scores zerland , Italy, Austria,
Taraba , said Charles R. finalists and the number in a fr om a second el(aminalion. Germany , · Holland and
McKinnon, special agent in region is proportionate to the -About 1,200 semi-finalists are England.
MissSamuelshasservedas
charge of the local FBI office, percent of the total U. S. · expected to become finalists
Negro
popul
ation.
and
will
compete
for
some
550
vice
presictent of the French
had authored several obscene
"One
of
the
achievement
achievement
scholarships
tq
.
Club
at Meigs High,has been
·and threatening letters which
program's
purposes
Is
to
be
awarded
next
spring.
on
the
Student Council, in the
were sent through the U. S.
Winners of the two types of pep club, and is a member of
Mail to vario ~s fema les In the encourage promising black
Clevela nd and Cleveland students to set hi gh awards - one-time national . ,the National Honor Society. ·
educationaland career goals a c hievem e nt $1 , 0 0 0 She has had her biography
Heights area .
and to utilize their talents in scholarships and corporate- accepted lor publication In

Medical
. costs

For lhoee who may be lnterelted:
·
In 1832 w~ 10ld locally f(lr 12~ centa per g.ollon. A 30
gallon barrel cos.t $3.75. · ·
'
·
. Many yean aco our city bad ovar 20 uloonl, two
wholesale liqull' firms, and a brewery.
AI one time Simon Nash wu the only teacller it the
original Gallla Academy on S«ond Aw. .
·
On July I, 1tltlt the G•!Upolla Furniture Co. purcbaled the
Gatewood BBwmDI of Galllpolla.
In1tltlt the linn ol Graham, Clark, and Riggs of Cay Twp .
!!hipped IIOUth by boata': 75,tJtiO buabelo ol coal, ll,tJtiO barrell of
apples, and 20,tltl0 bulhela ol 'potatoes.
It baa been said that the recently dismantled home of
Mabel Thtmaaat the corner of Firll Aw.andPineSt. was the
oldest brick hollll! In town. It wu built in the early 1110i1&amp; by a
man li8IDed Ruby who at one time operated a mill where the
!'ark Central .Hotel Ia. He was the 8Rndfather of J. Will
Clen~enln, now deceased.

•

I

mastered the ~: n~lisb phrase.
.~T h is c.;t ci t ement, ''
laughed Gabriele, "wore off

home tonight, would you
get your family out in time?

...

IAIIMIIIICMD
OOIWlU._

REGULAR '8.44

JUMBO PLUSH
ANIMAL 'ASSORTMENT
• MURPHY

CLEAR PLASTIC

•

PLANT STAND
SPECIAL
PURCHASE

·'. $599
REG. '7.99

O. • 'I'HE FRIENDLY

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE - DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS STORE

A

'

�.,
'

-

2.A-TheSunday Tl!Tles-Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 10. 1976

f

aA.-The SundsyTimes-Sentlnel, Sunday, Oct..IO, I976

THIS IS THE WAY
IT WAS. • •

Waugh appointed

auxiliary police

English is beautiful,
but Oh !,

.r

',.

so

BID
- GAUJI'OIJS- W. H. L1ni1eY wu the -I"'IMIIDIII bl
.

.

II)' Jl'rut

the 111th eentw'y. He WM the ~ •octiJo!cler
in the lint raUroad to serve our city. 'lbll nUroad - tint
koown aa the (:alllpolle-McArthur Railway; later, u the Olao
and W. N. Rallway; lliWlaler u the HockinC Valley, and now
u the c. and 0.
AI one time LancJey wu worth bl ac:eaa ol FIUO,tltiO.
(!allipolilln

RIO GRANDE - Marlin
Wedemeyer of the Village of
Rio Grande appointed Ralph
Wang!! •. an
auxiliary
potieeman to assist Marshall
Robert Shaw at . council's
recent meeting . Waugh is a
resident of· Rio Grande and
has been lj.ctive in law en·
forcement lor several years.
The fire contract was
renewed with Perry Town·
ship and council agreed to tile
purchase of some equipment
~or the Volunte~r Fire Dept.
It was also decJiled to open
a free pick up service to the
residents of Rio Gri&gt;l;lde lor
the disposal of leaves during
the autumn season. Ally ~lo

Grande Vlllage resident
wishing to dispose of leaves
are to place the leaves in
plastic leaf bags which are
securely fasteued and place
them at the curb on Monday
and Thursday of each week.
Mayor Wedemeyer
reported to council that due to
state legislation it will be
necessary to Increase court
costs.
Attending the council
meeting were Councilmen
Franklin Petrie, Joseph
Griffin, Charles Withee, Don
Call, Curtis Ramey, Clerk
Linda
Mlller,
Mayor
Wedemeyer, Atty. Bennett
and the Perry Twp. Trustees.

...

Two bands at
GALLIPOLIS - Despite
falling rain, both Athens and
Gallipolis bands perfom1ed

Six injured
in wreck .
on Rt. 588

game ~

at halfHme and after
Friday's football game on
Memorial Field.
, Both bands participated in
festivals Saturday
Gallipolis was in Lexington,
Ohio while the Bulldog
marching band took part in
the annual festival at Ohio ·
University.
The post-game show
featured numbers and
·routine§ the two bands were
scheduled
to
present
Saturday.
The !llue Devil band, under
the direction of Rodney
· Tolliver, presented the theme
song from rock . opera,
" Tommy" to open thei r
halftime show.
This was fo-llowe d by,
"Haven't Got Time for the
Pain," and "Oid Days." ·
The next number featured
the GAHS 'majorettes w~o
performed with fire batons
(with the grid lights turned
off) to the theme song from
the Bob Newhart Show.
The Gallla ns conclu ded
with •'•saturday in the Park,"
and "Sky High" and "JazZ·
man."

.
CUITING THE RIBBON-

Many of the candidates
running in the November election officially ope11ed the
Mason County Republlcan Headquarters Saturday
morning wiU1 a ribbon cutting ceremony. ·Candidates
shown cutting the ribbon, left to right, are Buck Sturgeon,

· Samuels

: . Area Deaths

•

!

fined seven

explained

-·- to Rotarians

r---·-_.;;;;.,_____
1
I
I
I
I
1'
I
I

'Dateline
Gallia

is less, In the long run, for preventive
measures to Insure a healthy environment
than to try 'to correct ·situations already ·
created by continual neglect.
The MCHD has been investigating this
solid waste disposal situation and feels
that one answer would be licensed prival~
trash haulers to service the rural areas
where pick-up service is not available.
Anyone interested In future licensing
as a hauler of solid waste is asked to
contact the Meigs County Health ..
Department.
The cooperation of all Meigs County
residents Is needed to correct this
deplorab,le situation.
POMEROY ~liNES'
s,turday Afternoon

League
Veterans Memorial Hospital Henderson; and Dale Deem, •
Won LeisI
ADMITTED - Richard Gallipolis, ·:·
Nile oWls
JO
2
Winebrenner, · Syracus~;
PLEASANT VAtLFJi·7 ::: Suoer Sfars
22 10
Rood Runners
22 . 10
Callie Matheny, )i:wlngton; - 'DISCHARGES', - Carson· Gufler
Busters
·to
22
Charle_s Warth, Hartford;:: Stone, West· Columbia; Mrs. "'"Bowling Stone~
· 6 26
DemariS Ash, Syracuse; Lela Paul Darnell, son, Pomeroy; Red Barons
6 26
Robjllson, Racme.
Mrs. Johnnie . Tucker
High Series- Roger Riebel
DISCHARGED .- Jestie Grimms' Landing; Mrs. Keith 41 ~,:~~!~!1011 k:~r R;ebel
Molden, Pat~y Spires, Gary ·DeWitt, son, Henderson;. 157; Cliff Kennedy 156.
·Eil1s.
Glady' SJ1llthson, Point
Team Series~ Super Sfars.
20
"pieasant; ' Dale ' Deem,
~~am Ga me _ soper Sfars
l;'lcasantValleyHospltal
Galllpolls; Mrs. Richard 755.
, DISCHARGES - Carson Frankiln, daughte,~ P~!nt
stone, West Columbia; .Mrs. ·Pleasant; ..a'nd Mts.1 '1.8rry ~..:..
John · Tucker, Grimms Sargent, son, Leon. •
Sunday Mi•td ~eague
Landing; Gladys S!JlithSon,
FESTIVAL CANCELLED
Pick 'N Shovel
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Richard
GALLIPOLIS
Satur· daug hter , p on
11
w~
Franklin,
day's band festival at
lem Sf. Mkt.
36 1 1
Pleasant ; Mrs. Larry LeJington, Ohio was can· Sa
Farmers Bank
30 18
sargent, son, Leon; Mrs. celled, due to bad weather. ·Seldom ResI Ceramics 18 10
raul Darr.ell, son, .PomerQy; The event has been Ed 's Crossr...,ds Gro. 26 22
14 34
Mrs. Keitl~ DeWitt, son, rescheduled In November. Team t
'Teo m S
to 36

,,

school nays. English is the
language spoken in the school
system since the post
Spanish-American War days
when a ~rowln~ number o!
American teachers came to
the Islands. The Philippines
also boast 76 dialects and the
national : Ia ng Ula g e ,
·"Filopirio."
.
Mrs. Simon chuckled when •
she related a unique method
for learning English: for each
mistake, students were fined
a nickel, "in order for us to
become
proficient in
English."
After · such
schoormg she, "learned to
speak English better than our
national language."
Wearing a colorful sari of
purple and gold, Lakshmi
Priyanath, from sout,hern
.In&lt;lia, spoke about her
country 's cross-cultura l
influences. The national
language is Hindi, even
though the government
recog nizes 14 different
languages. There are over 37&gt;
dialects which make com·
municalion e•lremely dif·
flc ult.
Recalling that the "British
were mpsters," Lakshmi
credited them for the
widespread pr~sent usage of
English. She learned it as an

M.

ea
·· I s

at

+++

candidates seeking varioua poets In the Nov. 2general electlon.
On Sunday, Oct. 31, the TlJnea..&amp;intliiel pla111to run resulta of
the questionnaires in an eDort to place llinne pertinent
lnfonnaUon before Gallla's record 12,117 reglatered voters.
· Deadline respccise Ill' each candidate Is 12 noon Wednesday,
Oct. 'l/,
.
"· CLAUDE Mlller, a fellOw Klwanlan ani close friend ol the
late Dr. Uoyd Carr, P'Ofeaaor of biology, Rio Grande College,
said Dr. Carr was "a man of good Wlllandgoodhumor." Mlller
added, :'He was an intellect who appreciated Ill ~Ia ol Ufe ,
and learning. He was an Inspiration to many sfudenta ln hla
career at Rio Grande. Many appllcanll perhapa will be found
who can 1111 his position, but very few, If any, could ever 1111 hla"·
unique place at Rio Grande College."

+++

TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the ·rues ol the DIUY•

Tribune ani weekly Gallla Times ... Fooner dean ana·
!l'esldent W111lam A. l.e!ril. '19, better known as "Mr. Rio
Grande College," claimed after lltneu ... Clty Manager J. Roy
Bartlett buyslli'sl,aack of bulba fnm Uons President F. H. •
(Mac) McGraw. Initial Uona sale grossed ,1,492 during four·
day event .. , Molly Vanco crowned GAHS ~queen. '
Athelll Upaell GaWpolla . IN as Blue Devlla l011e flnit ,
conference game,

nglish involved learning the
ual word meaning, .such as

n·apartment being a flat, an
levator a lifl. She rend a
real deal in ~:nglish mnl

.

even today she can, .. r~n rt

..

:;.:,:~,_
.l
--~--

AMONG TIIOSE TAKING part in a recent English
penel diScussion at Rio Grande College were, left to right,
Saiprasad Naimpally, Mrs. B, S. Priyanath and Mrs.
Gabriele Sattler. Not pictured - Mrs. Mel Simon.
.
~ \,-population Is illiterate. the case of Gabriele Sattler.
Within the 14 languages,
Born in Berlin, eduCDted..(n
culture flourishes with each . Austria and Germ'any, with a
group's own .set of writers background of rich mixtures
and poets."
of learning methods, she
A surprisingly low 35 per encountered English · in a
cent speak Hindi in the home. nun 's boarding school.
Prof. Nairi:lpally credits the English was first introduce4
European influence ·or to her as she and other prereading over television teens were instructed to
watching as ·being helpful in "stand-up" by the teacher.
his learning English.
When the children were
He
also
observed, baffled by the English
"Everything I learned in command, it was repeated
school, I learned In English." and ·accomp~nied by the
Learning a language once upward motion of hands.
poses difficult problems, ,but 11 Ah, stand-up!" .each child
learning it three limes merits repeated with delight and a
special recognition. Such · is great sense. of pride as they

better thun- i can tnlf " At
. home, the Snttler$ try to keep
"High. German'' lis a conversational lunguage. The
ltask has not beco cosy as In
'the case of the daughter who,
after the first day of nursery
school, refused lo speak
German and teamed English
in two monthS.

most moving

H

philosuphy about life. ·Holding
np a ple&lt;'e of cloth of mnny
colors und designs, she told
the audience of the beauty
fo und ill variety , that there is
beauty to be found in everyUring, if we only accept it. •
Time ran out for the panel
di scussion:
yet many
linger('{) on to aok individu11 t
questions .•Rve ryo ue went
mn.ty wfth H nl'W f&lt;'llling
nb&lt;&gt;nt his lifo nnd · whol it
lllt'{l:Ht to lw t:t n Arncric'nn ..
for tnlmy it wus H rm·c and
welcomed ex perience of

nullonal p1·tdc .

COLO\Y ·
*

Now _tlte

•

l'lu •rlfl't'

TONIG HTTHRU
. iU E'SDA Y
Sho w Beg iris at8 p.m. ,1 •

children are having a d ifficult
tin1e learning Germa n. Mr&gt;.

Salller remarked that har
children are learning ttwl
there is 11 diffcn:ot world
outside of tbeir own uml !hut
English and tbc Americnn

MEIG.STHEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION

~ 1 1,.- &gt; ~ .. • •• '

,I

WATCH FOR

r ll()li!J( lr() \1 · 'til (,[ AI/U(( 'l.lr(( I

1'1! •liV~'"IN 1" II I11N •( ,,lr/11 ll{l 'o/1 •J(II/N 1'1/HI.// ~ •
•. U
·~.'J ... / .'J,O.I(•JI'~It)MAI/1 &gt;

---··-

I 111J( ~ /!!Il l ' ••• •-'1'

1 ,,,

;:;,tiAIT&lt;I'&gt; •·•- ·~·•••· 11/!•,! AI/11",1'

.... ..... ... - ... ......
·~·

··~

OPENING DATE

J e::::s::::i·~:: Phili~programfunded

CAR TOON

•• ••

.

. NOW THRU
WED., OCTOBER
.
. .13TH

T~e

Oht~

.

SUNDAY THRU

TURD AY ONLl'

CITIZEN BAND
RADIO RECEIVER

-

Sold
. Unassemblad

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MX STYLING
BICYCLE

Listen in on CB without
the expense of a transceiver.
Receives all 23 Channels.
Clips onto auto sunvisor.

$7488
REG. '84.88

•

......

c/Z\ Home Sentry

'

.

...

.:.......,·~·
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SMOkEAIARM

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DOG

! Regular Size)

Small Drink
of Your Choice

~TOGOORfAT"ERE ·99~ .
No Subt.
No Coupons · No Limit' .

~
'r~

II liro breh
lilt

in '''"

•

$12·88
EACH

"LIL SPORT" TM •
BASKE'IB4LL GAME
sPECIAL aUY I

If firt broko ,

out In your

flem• _ttJIIilhl. . ,u,

hr~m•

'

Plosl;c globe sep01o1cs into
hol ves f or osy plant lend-

i ng . Comes wi th

ha nd~

so me ho ur glctss sta nd
36" h ig h ov e ro ll .

4 QUART
POTTING SOIL 89~

new

isposable
diapers
For today 's dries t baby

For Elsy Pickup Cali 446-Z
Your Order Will Be Wa~ing

-r~

·Home~
from
SMOKE'ALARM

that can halp you
save your tarnl t{s l iwe s.

•

~~en

t.~ odcl6203

UT!RY
2nd &amp; Olive

Gallipolis, 0.

--

DAYTIME $239 I .
BOX

NO lAIN CHlCKS

H h011Sclio., power ta11s ·

MOOCI Ball
• S~51e nts lAst and

• Soonds luud 85cltJ at;llm lor
~a r ~ wmnrnuol ltrc

BOX OF 24

An• PACICIDtiUII
FOillt- lVIII

• Batl m ~ Oll!ldtril-sountls
alarm 101 ea( ~ war ~1 n(l ot trr e
l ~mitv .

111 e

tlnll tllllan

!110

·!!~Ips

d r ~ l bult on

JC11tlte riS k ot needless

tii!UM! rliO!e than "one un~ rc·
dutf Sth15 n s ~. aYen fu1 llle1

• H et~ s 1educe ir s ~. ot ~ed ~s
traQfffl lll()' e than Di\1: uM JC
tn i5 r!Sk even lurther

..REGUlAR '49.95

REGUlAR ~9.95 .

~

SAVE •10.00

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OUR LOW PRICE

OUR LOW PRICE

$3200 $3995

. • l'f fire broke out in your
;e~rout.

5ize) . Treoft heki~ s l

· The earl¥ warning system
lh11l can help you
sa~e your l11mltr"s l ives.

· Cord plugs Ito Mt conlln·
ltvC Cl):lYCnO'Ce (lUI ·
1et - nl1cator light ;hows DDr-m

~nJ t an• l~

pole is over 5' tall ,
with weighted base
ond decora ted bock·
board. Come1 with
soh foam "basket·
b oll" . (6V• " dio .

SMOKE ALARM from

U~S tv

~ LICes

Your futvr a boslo: ~tboll stor
.will love this! Adlu ~ toblo

General Electric

Tho ea rly wnrning system

• S;· ~ l mns lust

CHARGE
Ill

tu11;1ht,

a Home Sentry"
WJ

General Electric

on

.

_!,:

your l1mi/y
out in limf?

out in tim&amp;'!

1~

...

would yrHt f!BI

fOIJf fllmi/r

iUNCH TIME GOODIE. · ·

rp¥~". 13~;.~.,::X~~i; one

'r·

~F

W.Uid '""got

·OCTOBER 10 THRU 16

three montM 17.50; motor .

''r"e

•2.67

..

Voile~ '

,
r.oar t2hi001· 51·~~~~0nl~l
Men 's Htgh Series- Roger ilt~:;hf1 r'r f,'f.oo~}\'f
Carpenfer ,416, Dave Lee -103, monilia 13.10 1 lltroe months
Chorles Searles :m.
17 .50
. Wiwneo's R'tgh Series unn..i Prolli
Ann Morris 463 Kolhie ~" lorna'llontr ta uctu.llve y
.. VI kt •u
ft nd Shl 0
on tilled to tho vii lor
~ 1' c ~••se 0
r Y • P,uDilcetJon -of Ill' news
Harris 355.
~lspatchn crtdllld · HI lite ·
Men's High Game - Dave ' . nowstJ11per an~ 1110 lite toc:al
Lee 160, Roger Carpenter 157, . news ubttshtd oretn ,., .
Shorf Runell 154.
.

SAVE

AC CORDED MODEL 8203

eFRENCH FRIES

·

Tierra Casa
TERRARIUM

DC MODEL 8201

~vnd&amp;j

MIDDLEPORT - ' Ac· Publtshll'iLt~·po~~e
dl~n t
Lane Da,niels • , 825 DAILY
TR \'IIUNE
cor.,.....
o
Third Avo
:, Gotllpot\&amp;,
presiding overseer of the Ohto 45631,
·
PubiiiiiH ev.-y "'"kdoy
Ioca I congrega tl on of ' · ovenfno
••••;
· Soturdoy .
Jehovah ' ! Witnesses, second Cto11 • ote Pard
· al!angemel)ts are unde'1fay 01 r~'l! 1 1ttltv?r ~h
to share In an international , 111 court st. omiroy,O.
45769.e...
Pubt~lrlovory wuk.
protest of the banning of the . day
I · ol&lt;cepf SoturChrlstlan tiroup In Argen- dey . En tor 11 MCond cto11
moiling moltltl' 11 Pomeroy,
Una.
Ohio Postotltco.
.
Plans were announced
By co,.tor dolly· ond
Sundoy 75c per wHI&lt; . Motor
today for local members to route sus ~ monllt.
take part in l'll'lting letters of
SUBSCR IPTt1~Natl5
protest
to
Argentine
T.ho . GtttiiHIIll" · tiolty
TrfDIOit In Oftlo !llld Will
P res ld ent J orge R a fae 1 Vtroln"
onu·- 112.00; at•
,Vlilela, wbo ordered the aect monllls 111.!10; "'"' monfhs
31, 17.00. EIIIWMrt uuo ~"
Proacrlipllon as of A•m•ot
...yeor ; tl• -mO!IIItt • 111.50;

I

I ,

Sundly Dnes&amp;nlilel
PubiJshf'd evwr y

MO'JO.
CROSS
HANDLEBARS

~}:-1)

Pro\est letters

,• .

hysic:s, math, and sc1enre.

devt)lopcd

, '·"''

+++

1976

,.

Mrs. Sattler also st udied nt
e Berlitz l•lnguaRe School.
Her third cont nct wit h

Home

Ambleside
Gardens,-1 nc.

'

by

~·r ... ~.

From tbe wann memories
of childhood and the
bleakness of wa r torn
Europe, Mrs. Pikkoj a has

.STARTS NOW

LAST week, we mailed quellllonnalres to 10 GaUia County

will he written •

~

.

YOUR
SPRIKG
GARDEN

A PUBLIC meeting has been scheduled Ill' 7:30 pm.
Thursday, Oct. 14, at Grace United Methodist Church to start
the ball rolling. We hope several new faces will be on hand.·

.

hn 1f n

She gradua ted lr om a
"business college" alUtough
her program locludro 1!11111)'
on~busin;ess courses. such as

hard

as.od&lt;ltc l:ngug g• and
struggled with word an&lt;l
sentence structure just as
any student would ..
Smiling', she commented,
"My children speak like
Americans." Yet like any
_parent ,. s~e .. admitted,
"Sometimes I have a hard
lime understanding them."
To prove that children
know no language barrier,
Mrs. Epilog interjected that
her children, alter playing
with Mrs. Priyanalh's,
"Speak southeastern Ohio
English with an Indian ac·
cent."
Also from India was Rio
Grande College electronics
professor, Saiprasad
Naimpally. A native of
Bombay, he joked, "Students
complain about my accent,
but there is no need to change
it."
ProL Nalmpa lly speaks
English with a crisp British
accent, although he admits to
talking unusually fast. He
learned to speak English in a
Catholic school. Facing no
problem in lea rning the
language, he became a
master of grammar and
spelling.
"In India.'' he recalled,
"about 80 per cent of the

A

way i5 just a Ilny part of n
larger existence.
Vll •nn Pikkoja from·
L•-tuvia , l~s t onia, gave
$tudcnts a tltini-history lesson
on llcr co untry's past.
l.&lt;&gt;cated atthe gnU of F'inland
and established in 1270,
Estonia hn~ often been called
tht• testing gro und lor Vikmgnu-tnhood.
Vtlma r e\ltcwcd
her
rountry 's pu st , snytng, " ll
ha s seen more flags than you
have studi ed." Yet all
politica l stru!lllle has only
added to the c h oracl~ r of lhe
·people.
~rs. Pi~koj a , 11 Vlt'(inl of
World Wor l!, bravely w~ lked
a(TOss l~ urQ pe to cscupe the
Cornm unists. Sill' rCI'nlloo the
beauty of li ving in the lund or
the utl dni Mht sun where·
childrcn le• nl(:d rich folklore
ut their mot her's kneo.

''

By llobart Wilaon Jr.

.

very

in about

pines was Lydia Simon, .a
·
petite brunette with laughing
iRONTON - Continuation requirements. No set fee is
brown eyes. Mrs. Simon 0 f "M Is I H
"
charged for the hom ecame to tbe United States 16 ea a orne , a ser·
vice for homebound persons delivered meals; however,
cyears ago with 8 superior 60 or over in this area, is participants in the program
•Command of Bnglish that assured through 1978, Cor- are given the opportunity to
,dated back to her elementary poration for . Otrio Ap- - make donations according to
palachian
Development their ability to pay. Food
(COAO) senior Nutrition stamps· may be donated in
Program .Dtrector \'darilyn lieu of cash.
Grant announced Thursday . • The Meals . at Home
Notification of a grant Program was launched In
award of $125,000 from the February with the initial
.. ·-·community Services Ad· allocation of $149,000 from
ministration (CSA) for the CSA which gave each site the
Meals at Home Program has capability to deliver 16 meals
been received by COAD daily to elderly shut-ins.
which will administer the According to Mrs. Grant,
project.
.
co unties which negotiate
The
grant
will.
provide
Title XX contracts will be
TULIPS20c ea.
matching
funds
which
the
27.
able
to increase the number
HYACINTHS40c ea.
Appalachian counties served of meals delivered to 24.
NARCISSI40c ea .
by ·COAD can combine with
Mrs. Grant reported that 20
PAPERWHITE
Title XX Social Services counties in ·the ·COAD area ·
NARCISSI SOc ea.
monies at their disposal to currenlly, have included
· · CROCU,S lOc ea.- contract for hot meals to be nutrition service for the
IRIS JOe ea .
delivered each weekday noon elderly in their Title XX
to senior citizens who are ill plans. Two of these have
ANEMONES lOc ea.
or
permanently disabled.
completed hegotiations with
- GALANTHUS 10c
The
Meals
·
at
Home
COAO for home delivered
ea .
Program
utilizes
the
kitchen
meals at this time. Counties
MIXED TULIPS
faciUties
and
personnel
of
the
served
by COAD incl)Uie
Sl.SO BAG OF 10
GOAD
Senior
Nutrition
Gallia
and
Meigs.
BULBS
Program, a congregate !Deal
program currently serving
persons 60 or oider at 34 sites
The eveniilg stars are Mars
in 26 counties, operated and Venus.
,
·
locally by Community Action
Those born on this day are
Agencies.
• under llle sign. of Ubra.
American actresses Jean
Rt. 35 West
'Identical menus.are served Arthur and Riia Hayworth •
Gallipoiis, Ohio ·
in both programs and are were born Oct. 17 - Miss
446-4848
planned' ·. by a dietician to Arthur in 1908 and Miss
We'll grow on you!
provide one.-third of an older Hayworth in 1919.
person's dally dietary
On this day in history:

:..~~---

+++

- Granted Sophia Campbell per·
mission to attend slate FHA meeting, Oct.
15.
- Paid bills totaling $35,026.
- Heard brief administrative report
from Hairston.· · ·
·
:
• -Certified Betty Rees as a bus driver.
, - Approved the sale of five used
school buses to the Abundant Baptist
Church at Proctorville and three buses to
the Second Baptist Church at Ravenswood
at atotal cost of $5,768.

. HOSPITAL NEWS

.

CITY Manager Richart T. (DICk) MUla would like to see '
aome clUzens (new 'young blood aa they BBY) other than thoae
SUZY SAMEULS
who parUeipote In gavernmentalactivltles and thoae who are
already
loaded dawn with numerous meetlnga to volunteer
the 1976 edition .of "Who's
their
eDorts
Ill' future study groups in the Old French City.
Who Among High School
'
+++
Students."
"YOU go to a lot of meetlnp, and you see the same crowd
She was a delegate In June 1 h mee~ "MUla said last Wednesday night during the
to Buckeye Girls' State at ' ~r september aesslon r1. the Galllpolla City Qmunllslon.
Cap1tal Umversity from the
+++
Lewis Manley . American
ONE obaerver pointed out Galllpolls baa a lot of untappe4
Leg10n . Auxiliary with talenloutthere. These are the people who can help Investigate
sponsorship from lbe Far· community problems and make recomrnendatlona to the
mers Bank and Savmgs Co. commlaslon. We all must be concerned wftb our cunmunlty
Forth~ past eight years she andwemustbewlllingtoputourmixleyl!'hereoiD'moulhaare
has been a student of the Mid· once a course of action has been' approv~ by elected officials.
Porn School of Dance. Sbe
. +++
attends lhe N.aomi Baptist
WE would like to wish Rev. James Frazier good luck 1n hla
Church in Pomeroy and .her · efforts to ~rganlze a citizeDB group on Jaw enfonlelllenl
hobb~es Include readmg, !l'Oblems In Galllpolls. Rev. Frazier met with city commlulon
pamtmg and traveling.
Wednesday and told of his concern of increased crlmlnal acta
In this community.

(Continued from page_I )
Landfill will be allowed to dump these
Items' free of charge.
The MCHD sial! is very concerned.
about the misuse and abuse of the County
Solid Waste disposal facilities provided as
a free service. They are also cohcerned
that the County landflll is not being used to
its lull potential because of citizens'
ignorance of the law and the health
hazards they are creating for everyone.
As many county residents are aware,
the Meigs County Health Department has
had a major staff change. The new staff
members are committed to preventive
measures in the area of · envirqnmental
health to insure a healthful living situation
for all residents. The cost to.the taxpayer

instructor
Christine
Epling
for
l)er class
in English
grammar and for qther
students and faculty .. )VhQ
elected to share' this unique

'

Health -hazard

Judge Buck

Ed Note : Tl)e English
language is like a beautiful ·
woman; it's beautiful to hear,
exciting to look at, but oh, 8(,
hard to underst~nd!
Students of Rio Grande
College-Community College
were given the opportunity to
discover just how complex
their native tongue is when a
'panel of five foreign born
visitors met on Rio Grande
campus Friday, Sept. 24 to
discuss the English language.
The panel was organized by

'Something to think about:
·
. .· ,
What was !be lliJile of the flnt GaWpolla Volunteer FireCon\pany?

New superintendent
(Continued from page I )
The board in other business, added
Judith Sheets and MarG.. Ellcessor as
substitute teachers.
·
- Authoti!ed Supt. Hairston to
prepare a policy regarding organizations
solicitin~ ~tudents to sell their wares.
- Discussed tuitiQn students . and
rates.
- Renewed the lease for the bus
garage at Cadmus at the rate of $45 per
mouth.

.kRs. vtiMA PIKKOJA,
NARVIA, Estonia, gave
Rio Grande College
students a mini-history
lesson on ber country's
pasl She Is director of
Meigs County's Bo~k·
mobUe service.

The answer to last week's questlQII:
For many years I haw been a fond adJnlrer of Samuel F.
· VintOn. Not only was Vinton a capable lawyer, he wu an
oul.ltandlng congreuman.It wu he who orlilnated the Idea of
establlshlng the U: S. Dept. of Jnterill'. He fought Ill' this bill
and saw lt carried through In bOth the Houae and Senate.
Vinton was of the Whig polltical party. ~Oat folD around
here do not know It, but Sam VInton wu .recognized u the
leader of !be Wblga. President John Quincy Adami often spoke
of the leadenblp of Vinton. For many yean after IU death
- bolh·Seilators and Conll'esamen SPOke often ol hl8 abiUtlel,
For hla oUtstanding work during~ the Merlcan War Vinton
wis commlaaloned a general In the annles, although he
actually nevet was a leader on the battlefields.
In later rell!'B Vinton' ahd -several cases before the U. S,
&amp;iprellle Court and was often opposed by Daniel ~ebater and
Heni'y Clay.
.

" Y'

,--------------------------1

is issued

county assessor; James HoiHday, circuit judge; Jim Hall,
sheriff; Mel Clark, c0unty commlssloner; Jim Craddock,
magistrate, Barry Casto, proi!OCUting attorney; . Ernie
Watterson, hollSil of delegates and MUes E)lllng,
magistrate.

Meigs High's ~uzy
is national semi~finalist

GALLIPOLIS - Six per.·
sons were Injured in a
coiUslon at9 :1&gt; p.m. Friday
on Rt. ii88, al6ob McCormick
Rd.
The ·Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said an
auto driven by Max Haffelt,
35, Rt. 1, Crown City, slid on
wet pavement from Bob
McConnick Rd. into Rt. &gt;68
where his car was struck by a
pick·up truck operated by
Frank M~yse , 44, Rt. I,
Galllpolls.
Mayse and .Haffelt com·
plalned of minor injuries as
did four passengers in
Mayse's truck, Alma Mayse,
II, Rt . 1, Gallipolis; ~ ugene
Mulllns, Brenda Mullins and
BWy Mullins, all of Thurman.
There was moderate damage
to both vehicles.
,
Mayse was cited to .
Municipal Court lor OWl
while Hatfelt was charged
with failure to yield the right
of way.
Myron Wiseman, 21, Rt I,
Cheshire, was charged With
driving left of center
following a headon collision
at 6 p.m. Friday on Little
Kyger Rd. six tenths of a mile
north of Rt. 7.
The patrol said Wl•eman's
e@r struck a vehicle operated
by Clinton Abshire, 34, Rt. I,
Ches hire . There · was
moderate ·damage.
Ted staton, 22, Rt. I,
I
Bidwell, was cited lor failure I
to yield the right of way
Wl ~~ii&gt;.M BUR~ESON
JI~MtE ROBERTS
HEMET, Ca lli . - William
POMEROY - Word has
following an accident at 6
Arthur BurleSon, 68. a been recei ved her e of the
p.m. Friilay on Rt. 160 at Rt. res
ident of this ci ty and
of Jim m ie Rober ts,
554. The patrol said Staton's formerly of Gallia County , · death
Welcome , Md ., ~ru es d ay in
car pulled west Into the path di ed Thursday af his home. Mar yl and
·
of an auto operated-by Roger Burleson. a native of Gallla
Survivors include his w1 fe,
County was the son of the late
Peggy ; two · son s, on e
Burke, 29, Rl. I, Bidwell.
James M . and F ranees Green daugh ter . parents, Mr . and
David Neutzllng, 23, Burleson . .
Mrs. J . P. Roberts, Pomeroy ;
He Is survived bv his wife, nine sis ter s, two bro ther s and
Mason, was injured in an
accident Friday morning in Vernl na Davis Burleson : fo ur severa l nieces and ncph ~? W s.
T. F. Burleson, Rt . Friends may calt at Green's
Salem Twp. Meigs County. brothers,
t,
Ga ll ipo lis ;
Blaine
neral Home, Sulton , W.
Neutzling,. traveling south, Burleson, Grove City ; Bruce Fu
Va . today. Graveside ser
lost control of his ca r which Burleson of Maryland, and vices wi ll be condu cted at
ran off the left side of the Paul Burleson, ClnclnnatL Rose Hill Cem etery , Su tt on,
sisters, Mrs . Christopher W. Va . Monday .
highway , struck an em- tour
Straus, Cinci nnati ; Mrs .
bankment, and overturned. Nora Corbin, Defrolt ; Mrs.
There was severe damage. Alva Morgan and Mrs . Bob
Powell of Yale, Mich. There
A deer was kllled in an are
also . several nieces and
accident at · 12 :10 a.m. nephews.
Saturday on Centerpoint Rd. , Funeral services are pendfive lentha of a mile west of · ing. Burial will be in
Rt . 325. The animal ran into Hurricane, W. Va.
the path of a car operated by
Charles Chambers, :&gt;.'l, Rt. 2,,
Pairiot.
POMEROY
Seven
defendants were fined and
four others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Friday.
. Fined by Judge Robert E.
Buck were Vernon M. Otto,
Racine, $10 and costs,
MIDDLEPORT _ John speeding; Leroy B. Gut·
GALLIPOLIS - Carol A.
Mulvaney
and .Bob Mollet, berlet, Marietta, SIS and
Ohlinger, 45, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
costs, speeding; Ruth A.
was charged ~ with failure to using narrative and s lides, Graham, Rt. 1, Rutland, $12
yield following an accident at provided a ,graphic review of . and costs, speeding; Carlotta
'4:23 p.m. Fr.lday on Eastern what has and Is happening to c. Reed, Rt. 1, Reedsvllle, $13
Ave. and Sml\hers St.
costs of me,dtcal care when and l'Osts, speeding ; Mark
City pollee officers said the · the Mlddleport·P~meroy . Waller, Rt. a, Pomeroy, $15
Ohlinger ~ar pulled into the Rota_ry Club met . Friday and costs, left of center;
,path of a vehicle operated by evemng following dUIIIer at Donald Blankenship, Rt. 2,
Randy A. Nlcewander, 25, Heath United Methodist Albany, $50 and costs, four,
Point Pleasant. Thore was Church. .
.
days confinement, loaning
moderate dsmage. ·
They were mtroduced by operator's license; Wetzel
Donald ,G. McBride, 31, a~t1ng . President Rob,ert Phillips, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, $!50
Bidwell,. was charged with Buck. Questions were an· and costs, three days con·
having no opeutor's license swered following thetr finernent, driving while In·
following an accident on presentation. .
-t xicaled '$100andcosts four
S«ond Ave. City police said The speakers, representing d0ays co~finemevt iidense
McSrlde backed his car Into a Central Blue Cross and Blue suspended six months, placed
wiper , display case at the Shield of Ohto, said there ~re on six months prohutlon, no
Shell Service Station,
· many persons and agenc1~s operator's licen~e.
,
A final accident oecllrred. working to control the raptd . Forfeiting bonds were
on Fourth Ave. and Grape St. !'lse ot hosptlal and medical G rge D Lemley Cheshire
~
e o ·reckless 'operation;
· •
where a car wlled frQm the co..
s genera llbt
y, u " no bodY $107.50,
Gallla Roller Mills the wrong is doing any more than Blue Charles Ehlen bach' Saline·
way. In order to avoid a Cross."
. $27.50, speeding;
·' Jack
ville,
Th e bi r lhd ay of c1ub R.
headon collision, ' Asa K.
Wells, Long Bottom,
Johnson, 18, Rt. 2, Crown secretary John Werner was $36.50, speeding; John L.
City, swerved his .car which observed. Ladles of the Lewis: wayne, w. Va ., $ _, ,
34 5
struck a uUiily pole.
church served a steak dinner. · illegal hunting.

Citation

.... -:r•

POME ROY
Su·ty pursuing them," stated L. C. 'sponsored
four
year
Samuels, a senior at Meigs McMillan. NMSC vice achievement scholarshipsHigh School, is one of I,&gt;OO pres1dent who is responsible will be announced on March·
semi.finali sts in· the 131J! for the general management 11, 1977. College sponsored
a n n ua I
N a t i o n a I of the achievement proRram . four year achievement
Achievement Schola rs hi p McM illan
that by scholarship winners will be
Program for OutstAndin g tdent1 fy ing and publicly announced through mid·
Negro Students.
recognizi ng the' academic June, 1977.
The announcement came a c com p 1i s h men t s of
At Meigs High School, Miss
today from the Nati on a l motivated bla ck youth, the Samuels is enrolled in a
Merit Schola rs hip Cor· !tope is that their educational college preparatory course.
poration which administers opportunities will increase so She is an honor student and
the program.
that they will be better planS to pursue a career in
Miss Samuels, daughter of · pr epared
to assume mu.•ic education. A member
Marv Alice Sa mu els of professional and leadership of the Meigs High School
Pomeroy, was among more roles i.n the future.
marchipg '. and symphonic
than 5&gt;,000 black students
To advance in the com- bands. directed by Dwight
who requested consideration petiti on,
Achievement Goins, she plays. the 'trom·
in the 1917 Ac hiev ement Program semi-finalists must bone and the ,tuba. She
~ogram ai the time they qualify as finalists by rece~ved the 197&gt;.Qutstanding
took the- 1975 Pre llmlna1·y m e e t I n g a d di llon a I band member award.
Scholastic Aptitude Test . requirements. Semi-finalists
lbis past summer Miss
National Merit Scholarship mu st be end orsed and Samuels toured Europe with
Qualifying Test.
recommended lor scholar- the 1976 United States
ARREST MADE
Black students with the ship consideration by their Collegiate Wind Band
CLEVELAND (UPI)
James A. Taraba, 28, highest scores in the tests in high school principals, supply, directed by A. G. Wright,
Clevelarld, was arrested U. S.' geographic regions, biographical and academic director of bands at Purdue
Saturday for violation of the each composed of .several information, and confirm University. The band had
are
named their test sc ores on the concerts in France, Swit·
federal extorion statute, states,
accordi ng . to the Fill. Achievement Program Semi· qualifying test with scores zerland , Italy, Austria,
Taraba , said Charles R. finalists and the number in a fr om a second el(aminalion. Germany , · Holland and
McKinnon, special agent in region is proportionate to the -About 1,200 semi-finalists are England.
MissSamuelshasservedas
charge of the local FBI office, percent of the total U. S. · expected to become finalists
Negro
popul
ation.
and
will
compete
for
some
550
vice
presictent of the French
had authored several obscene
"One
of
the
achievement
achievement
scholarships
tq
.
Club
at Meigs High,has been
·and threatening letters which
program's
purposes
Is
to
be
awarded
next
spring.
on
the
Student Council, in the
were sent through the U. S.
Winners of the two types of pep club, and is a member of
Mail to vario ~s fema les In the encourage promising black
Clevela nd and Cleveland students to set hi gh awards - one-time national . ,the National Honor Society. ·
educationaland career goals a c hievem e nt $1 , 0 0 0 She has had her biography
Heights area .
and to utilize their talents in scholarships and corporate- accepted lor publication In

Medical
. costs

For lhoee who may be lnterelted:
·
In 1832 w~ 10ld locally f(lr 12~ centa per g.ollon. A 30
gallon barrel cos.t $3.75. · ·
'
·
. Many yean aco our city bad ovar 20 uloonl, two
wholesale liqull' firms, and a brewery.
AI one time Simon Nash wu the only teacller it the
original Gallla Academy on S«ond Aw. .
·
On July I, 1tltlt the G•!Upolla Furniture Co. purcbaled the
Gatewood BBwmDI of Galllpolla.
In1tltlt the linn ol Graham, Clark, and Riggs of Cay Twp .
!!hipped IIOUth by boata': 75,tJtiO buabelo ol coal, ll,tJtiO barrell of
apples, and 20,tltl0 bulhela ol 'potatoes.
It baa been said that the recently dismantled home of
Mabel Thtmaaat the corner of Firll Aw.andPineSt. was the
oldest brick hollll! In town. It wu built in the early 1110i1&amp; by a
man li8IDed Ruby who at one time operated a mill where the
!'ark Central .Hotel Ia. He was the 8Rndfather of J. Will
Clen~enln, now deceased.

•

I

mastered the ~: n~lisb phrase.
.~T h is c.;t ci t ement, ''
laughed Gabriele, "wore off

home tonight, would you
get your family out in time?

...

IAIIMIIIICMD
OOIWlU._

REGULAR '8.44

JUMBO PLUSH
ANIMAL 'ASSORTMENT
• MURPHY

CLEAR PLASTIC

•

PLANT STAND
SPECIAL
PURCHASE

·'. $599
REG. '7.99

O. • 'I'HE FRIENDLY

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE - DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS STORE

A

'

�·;

Rhode~ takes .Medicaid money from education
By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS iUPJ) Warning it could create a
hard.sljip on Ohio's public
schools and colleges, Gov.
James A. Rhodes has
instituted an additional I per
cent reduction in stale
spending to help finwJCe a
supplemental appropriation
. for the slati!'s . Medicaid
program.
The governor ordered the
spending cut Friday, shorlly
after signing the Medicaid
appropriation and blaming
majority Democrals in the

Silv~r

Fox

sets new

air record

which wolild have given tile
•
General Assembly for million Medicaid measure Medicaid bill, He said failure million.
Anotlrer $2 million feature legislature greater ovenlihl
making it "faulty " and late, sent to him · by the to cut spending would "in all
Democrats, irked that Democratic lawmakers, and probability" result in a · eliminated by the governor of the Welfare Department;
was a requirement that by reviewing Ita rules,
Rhodes item-vetoed 16 be uSed his line-item veto deficit by next June.
provisiohs in the bill, power 16times to eliminate a
" Thls
reduction
is "prior authorization" be directing Its spending and
Including a number of variety
of
proposed necessary · to prevent obtained for services to building Its budget for lfT7-7t
legislative controls over legislative controls over tire ·expenditures and incurred Medicaid recipients. Rhodes friJm-JCratch. .
He said llOJile of tile CQit
welfare spending, promised Welfare Department.
obligations 4tom exceeding said it would have required
to iry to override some of the
McKenna said certain available revenue receipts 142 · exira persons in ltte cootairunent provialonl and
vetoes wlren they, reconvene facets of the Medicaid and balances," Rhodes wrote department and that the Medicaid safeguards whicb
paperwork would have cost Ire knocked out had already
Nov. 9.
'
program, such as paying for in an execullveorder.
been initiated by the
Slgningofthe&gt;ledicald bill over-the-c ounter drugs,
" It is distasteM to be more than the services.
Rlroges a!Bo vetoed sections department.
after .a six-m9nth struggle would be curtailed but that . forced into the jlosition of
be,tween the governor and the · major servt'ces would be making this cut: .But Ill
legislature ·melllls :
provided.
.
preserve the fillcal integrity
- The ~ate Depariment of
RhOdes said the alli&gt;ropria- of the state, it is "net-essary.
Public :Weilare, using cost tions bill was only a "partial .' The only otber way to meet
containment procedures, will answer," blamed the Demo- the obligations made by the :
By Whitman and Travelo
be able to earn vital federal crats for stalling it and said General Assembly in the
certification of 'the state the accompanying I per cent Medicaid program would be :
These Homes Qualify Erection
:
Medicaid program by Nov . spendin g cut could hurt to impose exireme hardship
15.
public schools and colleges. on the bedfast, the aged, and :
in the City ol Gallipolis
:
- Most Medicaid services . "This cut , · which was the defenseless who are the
will continue to . be "mandated by the majority's recipients of Medicaid. This I
underwritten by the state for faully solution to the will not do."
the rest of the fillcai year, Medicaid crillis, will mean
In his item vetoes, Rhodes
although Raymond F. financial difficulty ahead for refused to give the legislature
McKenna, deputy director of some schools, fee increases the power to pass on higher or
public welfare, said .there are at some state colleges and tower Medicaid benefits.
.
'
still questions about the universities, and Some
He also vetQed a $1.50 profit
availability of 18 million in reductions in state services," allowance payment to nuriog
the
$148
million said Rhodes.
homes and varying other
appropriation.
"Students receiving fee in- allowances for equipment, in-e Jim Staats or Joe bties
t
- Aid . to Dependen,t creases, school officials and terest and related expenses,
:
Phone
446-9340
Gallipolis.
Oillo
t
Children and other welfare • other Ohioans who are · saying it would have cost $11
benefits threatened with a affected by this l per cent cut
reducti~n by the Rhodes sholild complain directly and
administration for several lou&lt;!Jy to majority Democrats
months, will contiml'e at in the · Ohio . General
WOMEN'S &amp; CHILQREN'S
current rates.
Assembly,"
satd
the
- The state will be able to governor. "This problem is
avert a cash shortage next the result of
their
.Several Styles
month by lakingadvantage of insensitivity."
a feature in tlie Medicaid bill
Democrats retorted that
allowing the use of seven Rhodes "took the money and .
WOMEN'S
To Choose
special purpose rotary funds ran," adding they woulct try
for general government to override some of his vetoes·
VALUES TO 119.99
From
operations.
.
next month.
-State spending, except
The governor said the bill
for the · Welfare and Mental was underfunded, required
CHILDREN'S
Retardation departments, too much bureaucracy ,
will be under a 3 per cent assumed $5o million tn
VALUES '14.99
curtaibnent counting the 2 "impossible to achieve" cost·
per cent imposed last year. cutting by the Welfare
.11
-Schools and colleges ma y Department and placed too
,.. · -r
"
have to trim their own many restrictions on the
- budgets and universities may departmenb.
·
'
institute a student fee
Rhodes said the new l per
·
Silver Bridge Plaza .
increase.
ceni' reduction would offset
··
Mon. lhur Sat. 101119
The governor ·eliminated $40 million in. new welfar~
.
SHOES
Sunday· 1 til5
$13 million from · the $161 spending authority in the
SILVER BRIDGE P

r•··~"·········•··~····~·

:

MODULAR HOMES -

USBON, Portugal( UP!) Balloonist Ed Yost smashed a
63-year-old endurance record
saturday but was reported
ready to give up his effort to
become the first man ever to
solo across the Allanlic
Ocean in a balloon.
Yost switched on his emergency VHF radio saturday to
tell Trans World Airlines
flight 001 from Lisbon en
route to , New. York he was
preparing to ditch , probably
on Sunday, according to a
report by · Shannon Radio in
Ireland. '
The balloonist said he
would be out of ballast
Sunday and planned to drop
from an altitude of 5,300 feet
to 700 feet in order to trail an
anchor for rescue by a
passing ship.
At 11:15 a.m. EDT, Yost's
location was reported Ill be 42
degrees north latitude, 25
degrees west 'longitude, the
radio said. This would put
him roughly 250 miles north
of the Portuguese Azores
islands and treading in a
sou. theasterly direction.
Yost, in his two-ton "Silver
Fox" helium ballon, had
passed the 87./lour endurance
record set In 1913 by
Qermany's H. Kaulen at 9:10
a.m. EDT saturday.

. STILL CHUGGING AWAY after thousandB of miles,
th,e 50-year-old steam locomotive pulling the American
· Freed001 train during its Bicentennial goodwill tour of the
' United States, has proved. skeptics wrong. Last year,
many felt that becailse of the great age of the 4~on
engine, It would not last more than a few months. Now
appearing along the East Coast, it will eventually visit all
the continental states ,

,---------------------------,
1
Letlers of oplnlon are welcomed. J'bey should be 1
1 less than 300wordB long (or be subject to reductloa by I
I the editor) and must be slgoed with the ilgoee's ad- I
I dress. Names may be withheld upon publication, I
J
However, on request, names will be disclosed. Letten J
1 should be In good taste, addressing ilsues, not per- , 1
1 sonalltles.
1
I
£1
!
I
g~
1
·I
I
I
I

• • •

'

'

•

lill#t
.' •·········
.

·

1·

•
•

I
I
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I

Senior Citizen's program valued
I am a 67 year old widow and too disabled to participate in
the many activities at the Senior citizens Center any more but
.r;l've been tlrere often enough to see that any ~elp given them is
~\lle eded and appreciated. That is why I hope tire voters of this
~:community will _pass the .2 (2-10) mill levy in the comin~
•:November election- Mrs. Mary Rusk James, 539 Tht;d
~·Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

,,

·'~

- ~·
~! Water

....,

service appreciated
Langsville, Ohio
Sept. 25, '76

Deco~t~ns

. Supplies

Check ou~ Sale Table
for Gift Bargains

MITCHELL OFFICE SUPPLY
&amp; GIFT SHOP
Gall/poll•, Ohio

~··························J

Sunday Only!

NATURE SHOES
'14!0

FO[I(J; PITT
'tw.. ·

Yost has a four Ill fivemonth supply of water, three
months supply of canned
fruits, vegetables and meat.
The gondola of his two-ton
balloon has been modified
Into a catamaran-type
sailboat in the event of a
dunking.

i

IN SHAGS, PLUSHES, .TWIST, SCULPTURES
.
'

CERAMIC TILE .

(PLAINS. COLORS,
DESIGNS)
··-

CABINETS

· BY SCHEf!EICH, SHENANDOAH, CAROLINA OAK

· FORMICA TOPS

'

Gallipolis Floor.Covering
"

1m.

-

DR. LAMB

Sitting causes leg problems

•

••
79

89·
DINNERS .4

',

SLICED
BACON

I

~ ·$}99

I ·

I

'

WESSON OIL
•

PEPSl
16 ••· 811 , _

With Cash Saver Coupon

age
•
~

39

48 oz.

'. $13.9

I

1·I · Quaker Maid
II
11
II
11
1

I

$299Gallon .

ANTI-

FREEZE

Li.mit 2 Please ·

9 am • 8 pm Mooday • Saturday

r;

•
'

I

your problem.
HERO SYNDICATED
NEW YORK (UP!) Intrepid Hero, a 4-year-old
colt with career earnings of
$405,300, has llee1l" syndicated
for $2,160,000, it was announced Saturday ~Y Ogden
Mills Phipps.
. There ·are 36 shares at
$60,000 each, with Phipps
retaining three shares. The
syndication is being managed
by Leslie Combs II of
Spendthrift Farm, Lexington,
Ky.

PITT RO!\fl'S
. PITTSBURGH (UP!) Second - ranked Pittsburgh
1 relied on its defense Saturday
to preserve a 27-6 victory
· over LOuisville after quarterback Matt Cavanaugh
bro~e his left leg In the first
hall, leaving the Panther
offen~e floundering.

-----~~~'!!--:;r.!!!'!.~L~ L---2!!!.~!.::~~!'!.~'1-.:.J

,

@ohio Bell'
I'

2

.

' PORK CHOPS

Lb.

R.-··---:,COUPON ·-----..,·,..-·--·-· · COUPON----.,

'

•

•"'

. PARKAY
MARGA RINE

'$2"

'

'

2 8

129

'

'

can't relu, however," said
Seyess, "We have to prune .
tlle vines, fix the holding
wires, replenish dead vines and" - the chore his
American wife likes besl·•"vislt our clients, the threestar restaurants, around
France.'!

SEEK OL YIIU'ICS
France
(UP! ). -:- •Tire · NeighborlOg
Winter Sports Resorts of
Courcheve'l, Merlbel and
Vallee De Belleville made It
official Saturday - they are
jointly applying to play host
to the 1984 Winter Olympics.
George Abadie, Prefect of
the Alpine R~glon of French
Savoy, said the three re110rts,
which boast a total 100,000
hotel beds as Europe's
biggest ski center, would
shortly s~bmlt a joint report
on thefi' facilities to the
French Olympic Committee.
C H~MBERY ,

" RETAINS TITLE
COPENHAGEN (UP!)
here" murk an area the slze World Boling Council light
heavyweight champion John
of two football fieldB.
But the grapes are planted Conteh of England suc·
so Ill close together, with cessfully defended his title
·every speck of earth used, Saturduy night with a I~
that Seysses gets 35,000 round unanimous decision
bottles of wine a year (selling over challenger Alvaro LOpez
at around 35 francs or $7:50) of Stockton, Calli.
while Potel averqses 60,000.
Potel and Seysses, both 35,
GEORGIA UPSET
are examples of the new
OXFORD, Miss. (UP!) variety ol wine growers. Quarterback 'flm Ellis ran
Neither inherited the land. five yardB for one touchdown
.Both chose the profession. and passed 36 · yards for
Seysses was a marketing another to spark Mississippi
major at the University of to a come-rrom-behlt\d 21-17
Paris. The son of a wealthy ·upset of 4th-ranked Georgia
biscuit manufacturer, he got Saturday.
interested In wine and
scouted around lor a farm to
buy, as did Pole!, son of a
PALM SPRINGS, Ca lli ,
vegetable farmer in the Paris
(UP!
) - Chris Evert, the
area. ·
U.S.
Open and Wimbledon
Both growers supply
champion,
has been seeded
France's great three-star
first
in
the
$200,000 C&lt;llgate
restauran ts, from Tour
Inaugural
women's .
d'Argent and La Grande
professional
lenni~
Velour in Paris to the
IDumament
Oct.
17-24.
gourmet palaces pf chefs
Billie Jean King was
Paul Bocuse and. the
seeded
second while Marllna
Troisgr.ols brothers near
Lyon. They export the rest, Navralllova was seeded third
about 65 per cent of their and VIrginia Wade fourth ln
crop. Threequarters of their the field of 18.
First prize here will be
exports go Ill Europe, the rest
$45,000
while the winning
to North America .
doubles
tewn
will get $16,000.
"Now that tlle wln·e Is In, we

•

' .

g"'

' $

Fancy Pac

Alaska) completed from a residence oi .bu siness phone without
operator assistarice. TheYalso applY 90 calls placed with an
operat or hnm a r€sidence or business phone wher~ dial-direct
, facilities are not available. Ftrrdial-direct rates to Hawaii, check
· your Operillor. Dial-direct rates do not app1y to person-tO-person.,
coin, hotel-guest, credit card or collect calls. or to calls charged
to a not her number. because an operator must assist on suCh calls.

wines must be
named for the vineyard,
village and-or the region
where I~ grapes are grown.
Seysses makes both Morey
St . Denis and GevreyChambertln wines, and
Patel's labels say either
Pommard or Volnay, as both
own a few acres In one village
and a few In another, the
usual French patchwork
farm custom ,
The grapes from the
different vineyardB ownea by
one grower have to be kept
separate by law , Even though
one vineyard ill a minute's
walk from another, the wine
from each tastes quite
different because of the !lOll
and exposure to the sun,
TI1e village areail of pale
green, yellow and rose vineyardB that give their nwnes
to world fwnous wines are
astonishingly small,
Tite slsns in_the vineyardB
that
say
"GevrayChwnbertln begins here':·and
"GevrayChambertin e~ds

Works:

I~!U!~5!2!!f~N!,!B!EL~O~W~- ~--"!'-,:1-[8:;:'::.·.:3:.9=-C~;...--1

Dial-direct rates apply on all Interstate calls (excluding

Frenc~

Cash-Saver

'1.

a faraway relative or fri,md. It costs so
little ta say so much. $2.57 or less. So visit
someone you love. Tonight. By ·phone.

be drunk .

r

Here's How

48.0Z. WESSON OIL

Take ten minutes to.stay in touch.

MANY COLORS TO CHOOSE PROM

.' .

REAUNE,France (UP! ) - chap18li7;8tion, which Is legal blossomed over the grapes
Manuel Garcia, a worller in- for adding 2 'aesrees of and they were married,
, . IIJ Tem Tiede
good Jerry stumbled on 10 a able to define the Issues, has the vineyards of Burgundy, alcohol to Bourgogne wines).
"It's a nice life," said &lt;!JlrkWltb tbe Ford Compalgo lal'8er opportunity.
put oo blue swinuning \funks.
Over most of France tire halred Rosalind, .now 27,
yet
to
convin&lt;i!
Americana
,'(NEA) ~ A Fnllct) -yilt
Then of courae came the
He climbed up a ladder to the exceptional sunshine brought · carrying her baby, Jeremy ,
)/flee ob!emd that "tbe lodl, ~lion of Spiro Agoew In that ploolty II of I kind with top of a wine vat and leaped excitement· to the grape
I, while she watched the
bold 1eaderahlp. So given a
-~ lbow 111 tbelr power, and
Richard Nixon wanted choi&lt;i! between two va111e into what milbt be one of the areas. Beaujolais wine is pickers, this year New
abete our preaumptlons, to replace him with Jobn
more ffld more voters best wine crops .France has Jredicted by growers Ill be Zealand and English youths
Meine tbey could not make Connally of TellS, but he men,
seem
to
lean to.lhe one they known in more than a dozen better than last year and . plus some French students.
looil 111M have JMde tbem feared a confrontation with a
years.
Otampagne to be fruitier and
"We're very excited about
!mow
beat:
Ford.
fortunate."
Congress already made
·
Grinning
broadly,
Garcia,
more alcoholic . Alsatian this year's wine. Usually
Well,
how
fortunate.
for
Mr.
He llll&amp;bt have been hoatlle by ._Watergate
even if his promoters a Spanish inunigranl, thrust wines are said to be superb. . wine grapes ·are more bitter
nterrlllg to Gtrald Ford, wbo revelations. What to do? Pick Ford,
his legs:into the grapes to let
A spokesman for ihe Bur: . than .table grapes but this
may or may not be a fool, but a nice, safe nobody. Enter feel he . Is not 10 lucky as .in air to aid the fermentation. gundy Wine Growers.' year OW'S are sweet."
'Who II certainly one of tbe · Repre.t!'!lltallve Ford. And 10 ev~nta perceive. Artually,bis : Bits of the juice that after 10 Association In · Beaune
France's winegrowers
staff thlnlla the President Is
'll!ckllllll of men.
months .later, the Bods who ·snakeblt,. a political Joe years of aging will grace cautiously said, " It will be usually harvest in OCtober.
Surely the fellow Is watch over drunks and small
crystal glasses in luxurious great year. Without quite so But by the end of September
pMected by the heavens. He children put the man from- Btfsplk. They say the recent Paris or Geneva or New York much drought, it would have the rapidly matured grapes
spat
of
stories
linking
Ford
to
Ia a routine man of few Grand Rapids on the throne.
restaurants clung to the been exceptional."
had · been cut, the pickers
"tJienta, wbo has a procllvlty_ The latea might have ended con8reaatonal UlegaHtles ill, bushy . black hair on · his
"This wine has body, it has snipping close to the vine with
to
quote
one
officer,
"The
!;or doiDg tbe wronc thiDg or the alliance with a Ford In the
chunky leiS.
a robe," said grower Potel in garden llcl!isors. Here each
nothing at all. And yet he . presidency. But ·a month ago wont lhln8 to happen to a
Two
Doors
down
in
a
damp
the rapturous vocabulary of picker filled plastic dishpanInevitably mani1es to II wu clear they had not. Mr. presidential candidate in this cellar bulging with oak wine erperts. When the wine size tubs, then emptied those
century," Aides feel the
'muddle throll8h.
Ford went to the Republican rwnors may hall the ac- barrels, Gerard Potel, has a "robe" the redness Into a plastic container
. · Thil hal been true from the National Convention as the
Ford momentum, JrOprietor of La Pousse d'Or clings Ill the glass, meaning a strapped to the back of one
heliN!Inl of hia pubUc life. second Choice of a majority of celerating
worker wlro walked up and
perhapa even dopm for good vineyard, which makes fine brilliant color.
Twtnty•llbt yean 110 he the delegates, Ronald hia
Volnay
and
Pommard
wines,
The
usual
quiet
village
of
down
the vine rows. He In ·
November chance~ .
. wu a middle-aged attorney Reagan being the emotional
sipped
the
freshly
pressed
Volnay
South
of
Beaune
tum
dumped
his 99 pound
There Is some subl!tance to
-of no· note, apparently favorite. Yet Ford won In
juice and whooped, "This has where Potel grows wine was load into a truck which took
these
fears.
Rem~berlng
destined to Uve out hia life as spite of himself. ije waa no
got to be probably the best tense with excitement. the fruit to metal val.'! in the
··one of the 'names on a· ligal Inspiration, but very h!lpplly · Watergate, the media Is wine since 19&amp;1 - the last Women were washing the winery next to the grower's
likely this time to rush · to
' llhlngle, But the Bodo were he was president, and 110 he judgment before rather than time we had a drought. "
· grapestalnofftheworkmen's home.
gracious. Miclllsan Sen. blur.dered through again, .
A
history-making
drought
rubber workclothes in
Potel, Seysses and other
after the elections. In which
' ;vthur Vandenberg became
And now , It seems to be case the Ford fortune may dried up most of Europe this ancient stone vats just as top' wine growers have
• upaet with the Incumbent happening once more In this
past summer, bringing Burgundians have done for ' seedin g an d pressing
yet go 110ur.
"Republican congr.easman campaign for the White
disaster
to French farmers - centuries.
machines and those plastic
But don 'I count on it.
·.from the Graild Rapids area; House for the nell four years. Gerald Ford .Is 110metrow ~xcept those growing grapes.
North of Beaune in the containers strapped to the
. anci casually tapped Ford as The President has everything charmed. And II is quite
The daily hot sun dried village of Morey St. Denis, workers'
backs have
the I U - r , Fortuitously, going against him but the evident as he goes out now some vines, Pole! explained, winegrower Jacques Seysses replaced the charming
•1ben, Jerry Ford fell into one gods. His stock with the
but nonetheless brought thick looked anxiousiy at an iron
then to remind the skins to the small Pinot Nolr weather vane atop )lis 300- wooden or woven ones of yore
'1lf tbe llfelll House seats in people II low, hia position In · and
for sanitary reasons. But feet
citlienshe Is Utelr execullve.
:.America.
the polls II second place, and Thil tactic alone is worth grapes grown on the gentle yearold stone farmhouse still are used in the first
·': II II lair to IIBY he waan't a hia party ill outnumbered by miiUons of voles. The bullet- slopes of the Bourgogne before he sped in a truck to pressing and·mixing because
"l'eqlarkable representative. the oppoalllon 110me three to proof limousine, the official (Burgundy) region. Thick his vineyardS.
"you can
feel
the
"I am practically the last to temperature
•For Instance be never one. And yet he's gaining seal, the Air Force .officer skins mean a strong color and
of
the
ptotect the fruit. .
harvest. I waited for another fermentation and mix better
aulb!lred a meaningful piece · every day.
doss' him with the code
The eXtra sunshine . a,Jso two days of sun, a terrible
:Of legislation. : And yet by Typically he II gaining in a who
feet,"
Seysses
book for '. nu.clear war. produced an unusually high risk, it could have rained \' with
''Cbance be made the rlshl curloua way. He is standing "Ladies and gentlemen, the
explalned. f. worker also uses
·friends. Therefore In 1965, on a record that is, at besi President of the United amount of sugar in the said Seysses. ''Our tests iJn a gadget like a toilet plunger
. he Is occasionally
. '
grapes,
which
under the grapes show 92 to 95 per to break the crust that forms
•when Republican lawmakers dull, and
States! "
ferments lion turns into ·cent sugar, meaning 13-14 per on top of the fermenting
decided to replace Charles haranguing the voters with
Lucky? Good fortune, said alcohoL Thus this year the cent alcohol" (In France
Jfallec~ as House minority what can only be described as
another French essayist, is wine wlll not have to be most wines have II per cent). grapes.
:leader, Ford became the a monotone shout. But his always· on the slde of the
After going through
spiked with cane sugar to
"We know already it will be pressing and seeding
~f,;&lt;&gt;llenalve candidate. opponent Is doing even worse. larger battaHons,
produce more alcoh.ol (a ~ a good wine, just by looking machines, ,the juice Is
fortune smiled. And Jimmy Carter is yet to be
:
pr a cI i ce
c a I I e d at the color and checking for pumped through lubes to
sugar."
barrels in the moldy 13thLike other growers, century wine cellars beneath
Seysses hires temporary , the growers' beige stone 17th
labor for the harvest· century farmhouses .
including young foreigners
After all of the sugar has
fascinated by the mystique of turned to alcohol, a process
French wine.
lasting two or three months,
Five years ago one of burgundy · wine Is run by
Seysses' pickers was tubes into other barrels in a
'
Rosalind Boswell of San
: By La..rence E. Lamb, M.D. would be a new life for me. proper seating. .
send a long, stamped, self- Francisco, just graduated lower, cooler cellar to sit for
, DEAR DR. LAMB- lam a
DEAR READER - I doubt
Your overweight problem addressed envelope with 50 from the University of from six months to a year.
cwoinan 51 yean of age and it is • deficiency in your diet. may contrlbote to the con- cents for "it. Just sepd your Califocnia at Berkeley, LOve Then it is bottled to wait 10. at
least three years before it can
;Ita ve a -little high blood ... And apparently you do not dillon. I ·would suggest that 'letter to me in care of this
·pressure but have 11 under have varicose vein problems, · you pay particular attention · newspaper, P. 0 . Box 1551,
~trol. My big problem ill Your history suggesta that it to your seat and make sure i\ Radio City Station, New
:fny legs
is related to your sitting. This fits you 110 that the pressure is York, NY 10019.
~ I 'sit
day' sewing at a is an important ~int for directly on your pelvic bones
DEAR DR. LAMB - I
=tactocy. · The calves of my many--people.
~
with little or no pressure on would appreciate any in- ·
:legs swell terribly. I have When you sit with presaure the muscular part of your formation you could gi_ve me
:been to a number of doctors. aga\"st the back of _the thighs thighs, Also get up regularly on hypoglycemia. Is It
lfo one knows what It Is, Also, . and sometimes , w1th added . and stretch your legs, Anyone possible that a person would
·the hamstrings above my pressure at the edge of the who has to sll long periods of feel worse when flrst going on
:1mees hurt. )lfy legs are very seat of the chair, you press lime would be wise to follow a hypoglycemia diet?
:tight at night. I lie down 10 hard on the veins".that drain the same advice.
DEAR READER - Yes,
:IJlinutes and all the swelling the legs. The pressure can
I am sending you The you can feel worse. Par')eaves. What could 11 be? I cause faulty emptying of the Health Letter number 5-8, tlcularly If you really don't
"tion't drink milk. Am 1 low on veins. It bas been known to Varicose Veins, as it may have hypoglycemia . The
'alclumorvitamlnCorlron? result in clots forming in the have some pointers in It that diagnosis is made far too
;r am overweight.
veins, for example, after long will help you. Others wlro often in people who really
:;' If yo.u could help ·me It airplane flights with im- want this information can have other problems, including anxiety, instead of
hypoglycemia. I am afraid
the diagnosis I~ often used as
a wastebasket to label aU
110rts of ill defined complaints
that appear to have no ready
explanation.
The diagnosis should never
' be made unless it can be
demo~strated that typical
symptoms occur at the same
For each fuii $1:-oo purchase.
time that a low blood glucose
you will receive one Cashvcalue is documented. LOw
SUPER MARKETS
Here coupon. When the strip
blood sugar levels witliout
is filled, you may purchase ·
symptoms
during testing is
the money saving specials.
not a satisfactory -basis for
Limit one item at adver-tised
the' diagnosis . Symptoms,
. '
price with each . filled Cashwhich could be caused by
State Rt. 7
Here
Saver
Stri
'
other
things, without the low
Gallipolis, Ohio
blood glucose reading caMol
3.5 QZ .
be used alone for a diagnosis.
Betty Crocker
Many hypoglycemia diets
For
"'
are low carbohydrate diets.
CAKE MIX
Gal.
The sharp reduction of
~----..;~;..,;;_...jl-~------------t carbohydrate intake to ex26601
Mrs. Smith
Golden Isle
tremely low levels in normal
Mac. &amp; Cheese
people leadB to loss of salt,
water and chemical im0
.
7'1• oz.
balance and. may cause a
26 oz.
per110n to feel tired, faint, or
have a headache. If you don't
have hypoglycemia and that
is the diet you have been
39 ·
given - a so called high
protein diet - that may be

-PUM,
- P.KIN
. .

•

person ·as often as you'd like, visit by phone
as often as you'd like. When you dial direct,
without operator heip, after 5 P.M., a
10-minute call to any state outside Ohio,
except Alaska or Hawaii, costs $2.57 or
less, plus tax., Prices are even lower after
11 P.M. and on weekends.• And lQ-minutes
is lots of time to enjoy a relaxing visit with

CARPET

,,

The luckiest a candidate

HOMO

"Whenmyddldrencalf,
·JimowtheyTetbinkiDg
about me.''
If you can't visit your family in

PH. 446-1995

,Dro-ught brings great. year for vineyards

Gateway

(SUNNY flOORS, NO WAX)

Expert Installation.

TOM TIEDE

;il

.•

ARMSTRONG

,,

'

''

the distance mark of 1,893
miles traveled in 1914 by
another German, H. Berliner.
Yosl lifted his silver and
black helium balloon off
Tuesday from a grassy field
in Milbridge, Maine.

(SHINYL VINYL NO WAX FLOOR)

Estimates.

. .

Besides the endurance

A·ND SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE
CONGOLEUM·

Free

•a90·
ro

'------------.~----~----~-'·'·

COME IN

749-3RD

.

+

Yost 's wife, Charmian,
flew to LOndon Thursday
night so she could be within
· short traveling distance of his
landing point.
Yost spent his own moneyabout $100,000 far the whole
project- desi gning and
building the helium balloon in
·his shop near Tea, S.D., a tiny
community south of his home
in Sioux Falls.
He is the holder of at least
20 balloon patents and has
worked with NASA and the
military on countless
scientific projects with
names like Skyhook, Gopher;
Juniper.

and Party

i

.i MOBILE HOMES INC. i:

mark, Yost hoped to break

Dear Sir:
We want to express our appreciation for the Rural Water
we have been fortunate to have in our area.
Just recently we were experiencirig problems with our
water well in our home. Tire relief of water problems was
solved whenever we need the Leading Creek Con.
Dildrlci water lap. We appreciate it! - Name withlreld on
request.

HALLMARK
HALLOWEEN
-CARDS

..1-

For

.

,~
--

1

iA-1beSuaday TimeHlenUnel, Sunday, Oct. 10, 19'16

4A-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 10, 1976

,I

-

' 26801

SAVE '30°

SAVE '35°0

Large-capacity
3~cycle washer

Largt;-capacity
·5-cycle washer

Was
$278-95

248

8

Large capac\IYmcans you can walh
more clothes ·in ft~w ur load A than
with our stnn•lard-capacit y rno•ld.
:~ cycles inciUIIe permanent prc8s. J
wat er levels h elp !!U\'C water nrnl
· 1lc tcrl'cnt on s•ualler luudiS. 3 wa JS h /
rin se te mperature ro miJination l! .

[•cula· Vam: agitator. 1-sJ)ccd.

Prices incluile delivery
and normal hookup.
Ask for Joe Thompson

$3~:.~5: 82939~

95
f&gt;6731

'

'
.) cy~lt·s in ~ lt·1 d r . pcr.mancnt. pre1111~t

K:enmore1~ dry4~ r ·\

mou·hes either

Onlr

i'~ lrt· tnr.

wa~her

. (!Ius pn\·wu.;dl ••nd prc•80ttk.. 4 w~:~t e t
l evi: l ~, 1'\'1.' 11 • ·.~ lra·lo'f fur rca11y
sinal! lo.a1 l!S • .1 wa111i / rinsc temperar
ture c'omhinnti o11 s. Bleach and fah~
ric soflcm~ r rlispertSf'r8, of£-ha1anc~
Kwitch wi1h ~ il(rual , ~cl r..clc n ninf( liui
fi Iter, l't·ntu-Swi rl agitator. 2 Bpce•IB.

'214.95
.
,

.

.

Faliri1· Ma Sjt t' l' r:n d 11 j!. III'U·

wotk, automatit•all y ,. J., It ~
tlryrr off wlll'n luad i11 fin·
i&amp;hcd . Ernl-ul·t·) t·l,. Aij!.n!tl .

Gu,

dr}cr .,,

$244 .95

Seal"ll has a credit plan to ouil .

most every netnl

Ktmmore dryers require chh er gall or
t·lcclri1:1il c· ohncclon~ which nrc• nol ill·
dui:lc•l ~n the prl1•c Mll(~ll.

·· Ask For Wig. Davis

·.

.

Saiis{action Guarant'eed or Your Mdncy Back

Convenient! Shop Sears
Catalog by Phorie
446-2770
•
24 Hour Phone Service .,..
,.-••-.-.0-,-.-uc--•-.-"-"-'co.

Sears

,•

Silv•r Bridge Plaza '
Gallipolis, Ohio,

�·;

Rhode~ takes .Medicaid money from education
By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS iUPJ) Warning it could create a
hard.sljip on Ohio's public
schools and colleges, Gov.
James A. Rhodes has
instituted an additional I per
cent reduction in stale
spending to help finwJCe a
supplemental appropriation
. for the slati!'s . Medicaid
program.
The governor ordered the
spending cut Friday, shorlly
after signing the Medicaid
appropriation and blaming
majority Democrals in the

Silv~r

Fox

sets new

air record

which wolild have given tile
•
General Assembly for million Medicaid measure Medicaid bill, He said failure million.
Anotlrer $2 million feature legislature greater ovenlihl
making it "faulty " and late, sent to him · by the to cut spending would "in all
Democrats, irked that Democratic lawmakers, and probability" result in a · eliminated by the governor of the Welfare Department;
was a requirement that by reviewing Ita rules,
Rhodes item-vetoed 16 be uSed his line-item veto deficit by next June.
provisiohs in the bill, power 16times to eliminate a
" Thls
reduction
is "prior authorization" be directing Its spending and
Including a number of variety
of
proposed necessary · to prevent obtained for services to building Its budget for lfT7-7t
legislative controls over legislative controls over tire ·expenditures and incurred Medicaid recipients. Rhodes friJm-JCratch. .
He said llOJile of tile CQit
welfare spending, promised Welfare Department.
obligations 4tom exceeding said it would have required
to iry to override some of the
McKenna said certain available revenue receipts 142 · exira persons in ltte cootairunent provialonl and
vetoes wlren they, reconvene facets of the Medicaid and balances," Rhodes wrote department and that the Medicaid safeguards whicb
paperwork would have cost Ire knocked out had already
Nov. 9.
'
program, such as paying for in an execullveorder.
been initiated by the
Slgningofthe&gt;ledicald bill over-the-c ounter drugs,
" It is distasteM to be more than the services.
Rlroges a!Bo vetoed sections department.
after .a six-m9nth struggle would be curtailed but that . forced into the jlosition of
be,tween the governor and the · major servt'ces would be making this cut: .But Ill
legislature ·melllls :
provided.
.
preserve the fillcal integrity
- The ~ate Depariment of
RhOdes said the alli&gt;ropria- of the state, it is "net-essary.
Public :Weilare, using cost tions bill was only a "partial .' The only otber way to meet
containment procedures, will answer," blamed the Demo- the obligations made by the :
By Whitman and Travelo
be able to earn vital federal crats for stalling it and said General Assembly in the
certification of 'the state the accompanying I per cent Medicaid program would be :
These Homes Qualify Erection
:
Medicaid program by Nov . spendin g cut could hurt to impose exireme hardship
15.
public schools and colleges. on the bedfast, the aged, and :
in the City ol Gallipolis
:
- Most Medicaid services . "This cut , · which was the defenseless who are the
will continue to . be "mandated by the majority's recipients of Medicaid. This I
underwritten by the state for faully solution to the will not do."
the rest of the fillcai year, Medicaid crillis, will mean
In his item vetoes, Rhodes
although Raymond F. financial difficulty ahead for refused to give the legislature
McKenna, deputy director of some schools, fee increases the power to pass on higher or
public welfare, said .there are at some state colleges and tower Medicaid benefits.
.
'
still questions about the universities, and Some
He also vetQed a $1.50 profit
availability of 18 million in reductions in state services," allowance payment to nuriog
the
$148
million said Rhodes.
homes and varying other
appropriation.
"Students receiving fee in- allowances for equipment, in-e Jim Staats or Joe bties
t
- Aid . to Dependen,t creases, school officials and terest and related expenses,
:
Phone
446-9340
Gallipolis.
Oillo
t
Children and other welfare • other Ohioans who are · saying it would have cost $11
benefits threatened with a affected by this l per cent cut
reducti~n by the Rhodes sholild complain directly and
administration for several lou&lt;!Jy to majority Democrats
months, will contiml'e at in the · Ohio . General
WOMEN'S &amp; CHILQREN'S
current rates.
Assembly,"
satd
the
- The state will be able to governor. "This problem is
avert a cash shortage next the result of
their
.Several Styles
month by lakingadvantage of insensitivity."
a feature in tlie Medicaid bill
Democrats retorted that
allowing the use of seven Rhodes "took the money and .
WOMEN'S
To Choose
special purpose rotary funds ran," adding they woulct try
for general government to override some of his vetoes·
VALUES TO 119.99
From
operations.
.
next month.
-State spending, except
The governor said the bill
for the · Welfare and Mental was underfunded, required
CHILDREN'S
Retardation departments, too much bureaucracy ,
will be under a 3 per cent assumed $5o million tn
VALUES '14.99
curtaibnent counting the 2 "impossible to achieve" cost·
per cent imposed last year. cutting by the Welfare
.11
-Schools and colleges ma y Department and placed too
,.. · -r
"
have to trim their own many restrictions on the
- budgets and universities may departmenb.
·
'
institute a student fee
Rhodes said the new l per
·
Silver Bridge Plaza .
increase.
ceni' reduction would offset
··
Mon. lhur Sat. 101119
The governor ·eliminated $40 million in. new welfar~
.
SHOES
Sunday· 1 til5
$13 million from · the $161 spending authority in the
SILVER BRIDGE P

r•··~"·········•··~····~·

:

MODULAR HOMES -

USBON, Portugal( UP!) Balloonist Ed Yost smashed a
63-year-old endurance record
saturday but was reported
ready to give up his effort to
become the first man ever to
solo across the Allanlic
Ocean in a balloon.
Yost switched on his emergency VHF radio saturday to
tell Trans World Airlines
flight 001 from Lisbon en
route to , New. York he was
preparing to ditch , probably
on Sunday, according to a
report by · Shannon Radio in
Ireland. '
The balloonist said he
would be out of ballast
Sunday and planned to drop
from an altitude of 5,300 feet
to 700 feet in order to trail an
anchor for rescue by a
passing ship.
At 11:15 a.m. EDT, Yost's
location was reported Ill be 42
degrees north latitude, 25
degrees west 'longitude, the
radio said. This would put
him roughly 250 miles north
of the Portuguese Azores
islands and treading in a
sou. theasterly direction.
Yost, in his two-ton "Silver
Fox" helium ballon, had
passed the 87./lour endurance
record set In 1913 by
Qermany's H. Kaulen at 9:10
a.m. EDT saturday.

. STILL CHUGGING AWAY after thousandB of miles,
th,e 50-year-old steam locomotive pulling the American
· Freed001 train during its Bicentennial goodwill tour of the
' United States, has proved. skeptics wrong. Last year,
many felt that becailse of the great age of the 4~on
engine, It would not last more than a few months. Now
appearing along the East Coast, it will eventually visit all
the continental states ,

,---------------------------,
1
Letlers of oplnlon are welcomed. J'bey should be 1
1 less than 300wordB long (or be subject to reductloa by I
I the editor) and must be slgoed with the ilgoee's ad- I
I dress. Names may be withheld upon publication, I
J
However, on request, names will be disclosed. Letten J
1 should be In good taste, addressing ilsues, not per- , 1
1 sonalltles.
1
I
£1
!
I
g~
1
·I
I
I
I

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lill#t
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Senior Citizen's program valued
I am a 67 year old widow and too disabled to participate in
the many activities at the Senior citizens Center any more but
.r;l've been tlrere often enough to see that any ~elp given them is
~\lle eded and appreciated. That is why I hope tire voters of this
~:community will _pass the .2 (2-10) mill levy in the comin~
•:November election- Mrs. Mary Rusk James, 539 Tht;d
~·Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

,,

·'~

- ~·
~! Water

....,

service appreciated
Langsville, Ohio
Sept. 25, '76

Deco~t~ns

. Supplies

Check ou~ Sale Table
for Gift Bargains

MITCHELL OFFICE SUPPLY
&amp; GIFT SHOP
Gall/poll•, Ohio

~··························J

Sunday Only!

NATURE SHOES
'14!0

FO[I(J; PITT
'tw.. ·

Yost has a four Ill fivemonth supply of water, three
months supply of canned
fruits, vegetables and meat.
The gondola of his two-ton
balloon has been modified
Into a catamaran-type
sailboat in the event of a
dunking.

i

IN SHAGS, PLUSHES, .TWIST, SCULPTURES
.
'

CERAMIC TILE .

(PLAINS. COLORS,
DESIGNS)
··-

CABINETS

· BY SCHEf!EICH, SHENANDOAH, CAROLINA OAK

· FORMICA TOPS

'

Gallipolis Floor.Covering
"

1m.

-

DR. LAMB

Sitting causes leg problems

•

••
79

89·
DINNERS .4

',

SLICED
BACON

I

~ ·$}99

I ·

I

'

WESSON OIL
•

PEPSl
16 ••· 811 , _

With Cash Saver Coupon

age
•
~

39

48 oz.

'. $13.9

I

1·I · Quaker Maid
II
11
II
11
1

I

$299Gallon .

ANTI-

FREEZE

Li.mit 2 Please ·

9 am • 8 pm Mooday • Saturday

r;

•
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I

your problem.
HERO SYNDICATED
NEW YORK (UP!) Intrepid Hero, a 4-year-old
colt with career earnings of
$405,300, has llee1l" syndicated
for $2,160,000, it was announced Saturday ~Y Ogden
Mills Phipps.
. There ·are 36 shares at
$60,000 each, with Phipps
retaining three shares. The
syndication is being managed
by Leslie Combs II of
Spendthrift Farm, Lexington,
Ky.

PITT RO!\fl'S
. PITTSBURGH (UP!) Second - ranked Pittsburgh
1 relied on its defense Saturday
to preserve a 27-6 victory
· over LOuisville after quarterback Matt Cavanaugh
bro~e his left leg In the first
hall, leaving the Panther
offen~e floundering.

-----~~~'!!--:;r.!!!'!.~L~ L---2!!!.~!.::~~!'!.~'1-.:.J

,

@ohio Bell'
I'

2

.

' PORK CHOPS

Lb.

R.-··---:,COUPON ·-----..,·,..-·--·-· · COUPON----.,

'

•

•"'

. PARKAY
MARGA RINE

'$2"

'

'

2 8

129

'

'

can't relu, however," said
Seyess, "We have to prune .
tlle vines, fix the holding
wires, replenish dead vines and" - the chore his
American wife likes besl·•"vislt our clients, the threestar restaurants, around
France.'!

SEEK OL YIIU'ICS
France
(UP! ). -:- •Tire · NeighborlOg
Winter Sports Resorts of
Courcheve'l, Merlbel and
Vallee De Belleville made It
official Saturday - they are
jointly applying to play host
to the 1984 Winter Olympics.
George Abadie, Prefect of
the Alpine R~glon of French
Savoy, said the three re110rts,
which boast a total 100,000
hotel beds as Europe's
biggest ski center, would
shortly s~bmlt a joint report
on thefi' facilities to the
French Olympic Committee.
C H~MBERY ,

" RETAINS TITLE
COPENHAGEN (UP!)
here" murk an area the slze World Boling Council light
heavyweight champion John
of two football fieldB.
But the grapes are planted Conteh of England suc·
so Ill close together, with cessfully defended his title
·every speck of earth used, Saturduy night with a I~
that Seysses gets 35,000 round unanimous decision
bottles of wine a year (selling over challenger Alvaro LOpez
at around 35 francs or $7:50) of Stockton, Calli.
while Potel averqses 60,000.
Potel and Seysses, both 35,
GEORGIA UPSET
are examples of the new
OXFORD, Miss. (UP!) variety ol wine growers. Quarterback 'flm Ellis ran
Neither inherited the land. five yardB for one touchdown
.Both chose the profession. and passed 36 · yards for
Seysses was a marketing another to spark Mississippi
major at the University of to a come-rrom-behlt\d 21-17
Paris. The son of a wealthy ·upset of 4th-ranked Georgia
biscuit manufacturer, he got Saturday.
interested In wine and
scouted around lor a farm to
buy, as did Pole!, son of a
PALM SPRINGS, Ca lli ,
vegetable farmer in the Paris
(UP!
) - Chris Evert, the
area. ·
U.S.
Open and Wimbledon
Both growers supply
champion,
has been seeded
France's great three-star
first
in
the
$200,000 C&lt;llgate
restauran ts, from Tour
Inaugural
women's .
d'Argent and La Grande
professional
lenni~
Velour in Paris to the
IDumament
Oct.
17-24.
gourmet palaces pf chefs
Billie Jean King was
Paul Bocuse and. the
seeded
second while Marllna
Troisgr.ols brothers near
Lyon. They export the rest, Navralllova was seeded third
about 65 per cent of their and VIrginia Wade fourth ln
crop. Threequarters of their the field of 18.
First prize here will be
exports go Ill Europe, the rest
$45,000
while the winning
to North America .
doubles
tewn
will get $16,000.
"Now that tlle wln·e Is In, we

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' $

Fancy Pac

Alaska) completed from a residence oi .bu siness phone without
operator assistarice. TheYalso applY 90 calls placed with an
operat or hnm a r€sidence or business phone wher~ dial-direct
, facilities are not available. Ftrrdial-direct rates to Hawaii, check
· your Operillor. Dial-direct rates do not app1y to person-tO-person.,
coin, hotel-guest, credit card or collect calls. or to calls charged
to a not her number. because an operator must assist on suCh calls.

wines must be
named for the vineyard,
village and-or the region
where I~ grapes are grown.
Seysses makes both Morey
St . Denis and GevreyChambertln wines, and
Patel's labels say either
Pommard or Volnay, as both
own a few acres In one village
and a few In another, the
usual French patchwork
farm custom ,
The grapes from the
different vineyardB ownea by
one grower have to be kept
separate by law , Even though
one vineyard ill a minute's
walk from another, the wine
from each tastes quite
different because of the !lOll
and exposure to the sun,
TI1e village areail of pale
green, yellow and rose vineyardB that give their nwnes
to world fwnous wines are
astonishingly small,
Tite slsns in_the vineyardB
that
say
"GevrayChwnbertln begins here':·and
"GevrayChambertin e~ds

Works:

I~!U!~5!2!!f~N!,!B!EL~O~W~- ~--"!'-,:1-[8:;:'::.·.:3:.9=-C~;...--1

Dial-direct rates apply on all Interstate calls (excluding

Frenc~

Cash-Saver

'1.

a faraway relative or fri,md. It costs so
little ta say so much. $2.57 or less. So visit
someone you love. Tonight. By ·phone.

be drunk .

r

Here's How

48.0Z. WESSON OIL

Take ten minutes to.stay in touch.

MANY COLORS TO CHOOSE PROM

.' .

REAUNE,France (UP! ) - chap18li7;8tion, which Is legal blossomed over the grapes
Manuel Garcia, a worller in- for adding 2 'aesrees of and they were married,
, . IIJ Tem Tiede
good Jerry stumbled on 10 a able to define the Issues, has the vineyards of Burgundy, alcohol to Bourgogne wines).
"It's a nice life," said &lt;!JlrkWltb tbe Ford Compalgo lal'8er opportunity.
put oo blue swinuning \funks.
Over most of France tire halred Rosalind, .now 27,
yet
to
convin&lt;i!
Americana
,'(NEA) ~ A Fnllct) -yilt
Then of courae came the
He climbed up a ladder to the exceptional sunshine brought · carrying her baby, Jeremy ,
)/flee ob!emd that "tbe lodl, ~lion of Spiro Agoew In that ploolty II of I kind with top of a wine vat and leaped excitement· to the grape
I, while she watched the
bold 1eaderahlp. So given a
-~ lbow 111 tbelr power, and
Richard Nixon wanted choi&lt;i! between two va111e into what milbt be one of the areas. Beaujolais wine is pickers, this year New
abete our preaumptlons, to replace him with Jobn
more ffld more voters best wine crops .France has Jredicted by growers Ill be Zealand and English youths
Meine tbey could not make Connally of TellS, but he men,
seem
to
lean to.lhe one they known in more than a dozen better than last year and . plus some French students.
looil 111M have JMde tbem feared a confrontation with a
years.
Otampagne to be fruitier and
"We're very excited about
!mow
beat:
Ford.
fortunate."
Congress already made
·
Grinning
broadly,
Garcia,
more alcoholic . Alsatian this year's wine. Usually
Well,
how
fortunate.
for
Mr.
He llll&amp;bt have been hoatlle by ._Watergate
even if his promoters a Spanish inunigranl, thrust wines are said to be superb. . wine grapes ·are more bitter
nterrlllg to Gtrald Ford, wbo revelations. What to do? Pick Ford,
his legs:into the grapes to let
A spokesman for ihe Bur: . than .table grapes but this
may or may not be a fool, but a nice, safe nobody. Enter feel he . Is not 10 lucky as .in air to aid the fermentation. gundy Wine Growers.' year OW'S are sweet."
'Who II certainly one of tbe · Repre.t!'!lltallve Ford. And 10 ev~nta perceive. Artually,bis : Bits of the juice that after 10 Association In · Beaune
France's winegrowers
staff thlnlla the President Is
'll!ckllllll of men.
months .later, the Bods who ·snakeblt,. a political Joe years of aging will grace cautiously said, " It will be usually harvest in OCtober.
Surely the fellow Is watch over drunks and small
crystal glasses in luxurious great year. Without quite so But by the end of September
pMected by the heavens. He children put the man from- Btfsplk. They say the recent Paris or Geneva or New York much drought, it would have the rapidly matured grapes
spat
of
stories
linking
Ford
to
Ia a routine man of few Grand Rapids on the throne.
restaurants clung to the been exceptional."
had · been cut, the pickers
"tJienta, wbo has a procllvlty_ The latea might have ended con8reaatonal UlegaHtles ill, bushy . black hair on · his
"This wine has body, it has snipping close to the vine with
to
quote
one
officer,
"The
!;or doiDg tbe wronc thiDg or the alliance with a Ford In the
chunky leiS.
a robe," said grower Potel in garden llcl!isors. Here each
nothing at all. And yet he . presidency. But ·a month ago wont lhln8 to happen to a
Two
Doors
down
in
a
damp
the rapturous vocabulary of picker filled plastic dishpanInevitably mani1es to II wu clear they had not. Mr. presidential candidate in this cellar bulging with oak wine erperts. When the wine size tubs, then emptied those
century," Aides feel the
'muddle throll8h.
Ford went to the Republican rwnors may hall the ac- barrels, Gerard Potel, has a "robe" the redness Into a plastic container
. · Thil hal been true from the National Convention as the
Ford momentum, JrOprietor of La Pousse d'Or clings Ill the glass, meaning a strapped to the back of one
heliN!Inl of hia pubUc life. second Choice of a majority of celerating
worker wlro walked up and
perhapa even dopm for good vineyard, which makes fine brilliant color.
Twtnty•llbt yean 110 he the delegates, Ronald hia
Volnay
and
Pommard
wines,
The
usual
quiet
village
of
down
the vine rows. He In ·
November chance~ .
. wu a middle-aged attorney Reagan being the emotional
sipped
the
freshly
pressed
Volnay
South
of
Beaune
tum
dumped
his 99 pound
There Is some subl!tance to
-of no· note, apparently favorite. Yet Ford won In
juice and whooped, "This has where Potel grows wine was load into a truck which took
these
fears.
Rem~berlng
destined to Uve out hia life as spite of himself. ije waa no
got to be probably the best tense with excitement. the fruit to metal val.'! in the
··one of the 'names on a· ligal Inspiration, but very h!lpplly · Watergate, the media Is wine since 19&amp;1 - the last Women were washing the winery next to the grower's
likely this time to rush · to
' llhlngle, But the Bodo were he was president, and 110 he judgment before rather than time we had a drought. "
· grapestalnofftheworkmen's home.
gracious. Miclllsan Sen. blur.dered through again, .
A
history-making
drought
rubber workclothes in
Potel, Seysses and other
after the elections. In which
' ;vthur Vandenberg became
And now , It seems to be case the Ford fortune may dried up most of Europe this ancient stone vats just as top' wine growers have
• upaet with the Incumbent happening once more In this
past summer, bringing Burgundians have done for ' seedin g an d pressing
yet go 110ur.
"Republican congr.easman campaign for the White
disaster
to French farmers - centuries.
machines and those plastic
But don 'I count on it.
·.from the Graild Rapids area; House for the nell four years. Gerald Ford .Is 110metrow ~xcept those growing grapes.
North of Beaune in the containers strapped to the
. anci casually tapped Ford as The President has everything charmed. And II is quite
The daily hot sun dried village of Morey St. Denis, workers'
backs have
the I U - r , Fortuitously, going against him but the evident as he goes out now some vines, Pole! explained, winegrower Jacques Seysses replaced the charming
•1ben, Jerry Ford fell into one gods. His stock with the
but nonetheless brought thick looked anxiousiy at an iron
then to remind the skins to the small Pinot Nolr weather vane atop )lis 300- wooden or woven ones of yore
'1lf tbe llfelll House seats in people II low, hia position In · and
for sanitary reasons. But feet
citlienshe Is Utelr execullve.
:.America.
the polls II second place, and Thil tactic alone is worth grapes grown on the gentle yearold stone farmhouse still are used in the first
·': II II lair to IIBY he waan't a hia party ill outnumbered by miiUons of voles. The bullet- slopes of the Bourgogne before he sped in a truck to pressing and·mixing because
"l'eqlarkable representative. the oppoalllon 110me three to proof limousine, the official (Burgundy) region. Thick his vineyardS.
"you can
feel
the
"I am practically the last to temperature
•For Instance be never one. And yet he's gaining seal, the Air Force .officer skins mean a strong color and
of
the
ptotect the fruit. .
harvest. I waited for another fermentation and mix better
aulb!lred a meaningful piece · every day.
doss' him with the code
The eXtra sunshine . a,Jso two days of sun, a terrible
:Of legislation. : And yet by Typically he II gaining in a who
feet,"
Seysses
book for '. nu.clear war. produced an unusually high risk, it could have rained \' with
''Cbance be made the rlshl curloua way. He is standing "Ladies and gentlemen, the
explalned. f. worker also uses
·friends. Therefore In 1965, on a record that is, at besi President of the United amount of sugar in the said Seysses. ''Our tests iJn a gadget like a toilet plunger
. he Is occasionally
. '
grapes,
which
under the grapes show 92 to 95 per to break the crust that forms
•when Republican lawmakers dull, and
States! "
ferments lion turns into ·cent sugar, meaning 13-14 per on top of the fermenting
decided to replace Charles haranguing the voters with
Lucky? Good fortune, said alcohoL Thus this year the cent alcohol" (In France
Jfallec~ as House minority what can only be described as
another French essayist, is wine wlll not have to be most wines have II per cent). grapes.
:leader, Ford became the a monotone shout. But his always· on the slde of the
After going through
spiked with cane sugar to
"We know already it will be pressing and seeding
~f,;&lt;&gt;llenalve candidate. opponent Is doing even worse. larger battaHons,
produce more alcoh.ol (a ~ a good wine, just by looking machines, ,the juice Is
fortune smiled. And Jimmy Carter is yet to be
:
pr a cI i ce
c a I I e d at the color and checking for pumped through lubes to
sugar."
barrels in the moldy 13thLike other growers, century wine cellars beneath
Seysses hires temporary , the growers' beige stone 17th
labor for the harvest· century farmhouses .
including young foreigners
After all of the sugar has
fascinated by the mystique of turned to alcohol, a process
French wine.
lasting two or three months,
Five years ago one of burgundy · wine Is run by
Seysses' pickers was tubes into other barrels in a
'
Rosalind Boswell of San
: By La..rence E. Lamb, M.D. would be a new life for me. proper seating. .
send a long, stamped, self- Francisco, just graduated lower, cooler cellar to sit for
, DEAR DR. LAMB- lam a
DEAR READER - I doubt
Your overweight problem addressed envelope with 50 from the University of from six months to a year.
cwoinan 51 yean of age and it is • deficiency in your diet. may contrlbote to the con- cents for "it. Just sepd your Califocnia at Berkeley, LOve Then it is bottled to wait 10. at
least three years before it can
;Ita ve a -little high blood ... And apparently you do not dillon. I ·would suggest that 'letter to me in care of this
·pressure but have 11 under have varicose vein problems, · you pay particular attention · newspaper, P. 0 . Box 1551,
~trol. My big problem ill Your history suggesta that it to your seat and make sure i\ Radio City Station, New
:fny legs
is related to your sitting. This fits you 110 that the pressure is York, NY 10019.
~ I 'sit
day' sewing at a is an important ~int for directly on your pelvic bones
DEAR DR. LAMB - I
=tactocy. · The calves of my many--people.
~
with little or no pressure on would appreciate any in- ·
:legs swell terribly. I have When you sit with presaure the muscular part of your formation you could gi_ve me
:been to a number of doctors. aga\"st the back of _the thighs thighs, Also get up regularly on hypoglycemia. Is It
lfo one knows what It Is, Also, . and sometimes , w1th added . and stretch your legs, Anyone possible that a person would
·the hamstrings above my pressure at the edge of the who has to sll long periods of feel worse when flrst going on
:1mees hurt. )lfy legs are very seat of the chair, you press lime would be wise to follow a hypoglycemia diet?
:tight at night. I lie down 10 hard on the veins".that drain the same advice.
DEAR READER - Yes,
:IJlinutes and all the swelling the legs. The pressure can
I am sending you The you can feel worse. Par')eaves. What could 11 be? I cause faulty emptying of the Health Letter number 5-8, tlcularly If you really don't
"tion't drink milk. Am 1 low on veins. It bas been known to Varicose Veins, as it may have hypoglycemia . The
'alclumorvitamlnCorlron? result in clots forming in the have some pointers in It that diagnosis is made far too
;r am overweight.
veins, for example, after long will help you. Others wlro often in people who really
:;' If yo.u could help ·me It airplane flights with im- want this information can have other problems, including anxiety, instead of
hypoglycemia. I am afraid
the diagnosis I~ often used as
a wastebasket to label aU
110rts of ill defined complaints
that appear to have no ready
explanation.
The diagnosis should never
' be made unless it can be
demo~strated that typical
symptoms occur at the same
For each fuii $1:-oo purchase.
time that a low blood glucose
you will receive one Cashvcalue is documented. LOw
SUPER MARKETS
Here coupon. When the strip
blood sugar levels witliout
is filled, you may purchase ·
symptoms
during testing is
the money saving specials.
not a satisfactory -basis for
Limit one item at adver-tised
the' diagnosis . Symptoms,
. '
price with each . filled Cashwhich could be caused by
State Rt. 7
Here
Saver
Stri
'
other
things, without the low
Gallipolis, Ohio
blood glucose reading caMol
3.5 QZ .
be used alone for a diagnosis.
Betty Crocker
Many hypoglycemia diets
For
"'
are low carbohydrate diets.
CAKE MIX
Gal.
The sharp reduction of
~----..;~;..,;;_...jl-~------------t carbohydrate intake to ex26601
Mrs. Smith
Golden Isle
tremely low levels in normal
Mac. &amp; Cheese
people leadB to loss of salt,
water and chemical im0
.
7'1• oz.
balance and. may cause a
26 oz.
per110n to feel tired, faint, or
have a headache. If you don't
have hypoglycemia and that
is the diet you have been
39 ·
given - a so called high
protein diet - that may be

-PUM,
- P.KIN
. .

•

person ·as often as you'd like, visit by phone
as often as you'd like. When you dial direct,
without operator heip, after 5 P.M., a
10-minute call to any state outside Ohio,
except Alaska or Hawaii, costs $2.57 or
less, plus tax., Prices are even lower after
11 P.M. and on weekends.• And lQ-minutes
is lots of time to enjoy a relaxing visit with

CARPET

,,

The luckiest a candidate

HOMO

"Whenmyddldrencalf,
·JimowtheyTetbinkiDg
about me.''
If you can't visit your family in

PH. 446-1995

,Dro-ught brings great. year for vineyards

Gateway

(SUNNY flOORS, NO WAX)

Expert Installation.

TOM TIEDE

;il

.•

ARMSTRONG

,,

'

''

the distance mark of 1,893
miles traveled in 1914 by
another German, H. Berliner.
Yosl lifted his silver and
black helium balloon off
Tuesday from a grassy field
in Milbridge, Maine.

(SHINYL VINYL NO WAX FLOOR)

Estimates.

. .

Besides the endurance

A·ND SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE
CONGOLEUM·

Free

•a90·
ro

'------------.~----~----~-'·'·

COME IN

749-3RD

.

+

Yost 's wife, Charmian,
flew to LOndon Thursday
night so she could be within
· short traveling distance of his
landing point.
Yost spent his own moneyabout $100,000 far the whole
project- desi gning and
building the helium balloon in
·his shop near Tea, S.D., a tiny
community south of his home
in Sioux Falls.
He is the holder of at least
20 balloon patents and has
worked with NASA and the
military on countless
scientific projects with
names like Skyhook, Gopher;
Juniper.

and Party

i

.i MOBILE HOMES INC. i:

mark, Yost hoped to break

Dear Sir:
We want to express our appreciation for the Rural Water
we have been fortunate to have in our area.
Just recently we were experiencirig problems with our
water well in our home. Tire relief of water problems was
solved whenever we need the Leading Creek Con.
Dildrlci water lap. We appreciate it! - Name withlreld on
request.

HALLMARK
HALLOWEEN
-CARDS

..1-

For

.

,~
--

1

iA-1beSuaday TimeHlenUnel, Sunday, Oct. 10, 19'16

4A-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 10, 1976

,I

-

' 26801

SAVE '30°

SAVE '35°0

Large-capacity
3~cycle washer

Largt;-capacity
·5-cycle washer

Was
$278-95

248

8

Large capac\IYmcans you can walh
more clothes ·in ft~w ur load A than
with our stnn•lard-capacit y rno•ld.
:~ cycles inciUIIe permanent prc8s. J
wat er levels h elp !!U\'C water nrnl
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6A- TheSwulayTimes-Sentinel,Sunday, Oct. 10,1976

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7A-'Ibe~y Tim~nllnel, Sunday, Oct. IO, l976

Money.going fast, but there's; plenty in Carter war chest

Trouble ·showing up in·Ford campaign

0

million to $9 million media
campaign is just starting.
Carter officials say it has
been more expensive for their
candidate because Ford has
stayed close to home, preferring tD appear presidential,
while Carter and Walter
Mo ndale burn up about
$100,000 per week stumping
Ule nation.
"They didn 't start spendirtg
in this campai gn until almost
a month later than we did,"
said Carter treasuoer Robert
Upshutz.
''They have .9tillzed a lot of
government resources such
as White House staff , and
research people who really
are government employes.
They can save a certain
amount of mooey that way .

ATLAN1'A (UPI) - Jimmy
Carter
has
outspent
President Ford by more than
3 to 1 so far. Will he be
strapped for cash in the
crucial closing days'
No, says his treasurer.
Fupds wJll be marshaled in.
such a way that no important
campaign advantage will he
mlsl!ed because of a money
shortage.
As of Sept. 30; .Carter had
spent about $12.6 million of
his $21.8 million federal
subsidy. Almost half had
gone to advertl!)lng-much
for ads tha.t were not tD
appear for some time.
The Ford eampaign, as of
Sept. 30, had spent about $3.5
million of its $21.8 million
federal allotment. Its $7

Sincere•••

"But we illink we can
manage our funds effectively
enough so th ~t there will be
no major discrepancy
betwO.:n what llley can spend
and we can spend on things
tha·l might make a
difference:"
Ford political dlrecto•
stua rt Spencer said the Ford
commitlee plans to go all out

in all depariments of the
campaig n in the coming
weeks.
While . the Repub lican
Natlona.l 'Committee is
confident of raisi ng the
addiUonai $3.2 million it is
pennltted by law to spend on
its candidate, there is some
doubt in the Carter camp that
the Democratic National

Committee will raise its full .
$3.2 million.
·
So far , $1.4 million has been
pulled in by .the DNC and
Lipshutz said he is
"reasonably optimistic" Ulat
the full $3.2 millioo will be
lorthc(l!ling.
Arecent DNC fundrailler at
Carter's home in Plains
netted about $350,000 and

Students going to conference
Two lop science students, Ohio State University MerJoy Dillinger and Melinda shon ' Auditorium. John
Spence r, were chosen to Distel, a science teacher at
represent Gallia Academy's Ga llia Academy, will acstudent body in the lith company them.
annua l Youth and Science
"YouUl and Science In
Conference Saturday at The Search of Truth" is this
year's conference theme,
says County Extension Agent
Bud Carter . Students · at·
tending will hear talks on
'\'Future Availability of Land,
Water, Fuel, }'eriilizer and
Food" by Dr. Roy M. Kollman , dean, College of
Agriculture and Home
Economics, and "The Dream
of A Perfect World" by Dr.
Thomas S. ·Haggai, whose
appearance will be through
the · courtesy of General
Motors.
In the afternoon, they will
see exhibits and demonstrations on the search for
truth in science, Carter adds.
The search is on to meet the
·growing energy and food
shortage facing the nation
and world today. Thai's the
. challenge bdore· Gallia
Pa1 d by Candidate
Academy's science students
who will attend the con-

ference along with some 1,500
other youUJ from all parts of
the state.
Youth and Science Day is
sponsored annually by Ule
College of Agriculture and
Home Economics and Ule
Ohio Agricultural Council.
,The Council is represented by
agencies, a'lSOciations and
institutions ·in Ohio. Hosts
include
local
civic
organizations, lndustrles,;and
agri-businesses, many ·of
which are members of the
·Ohio . Agricultural Council.
This trip for loeal yout!l is
being sponsored by Gallla
Roller Mills, Don Brown,
manager.

James
Roush
County ~ommi~sioner

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NEW HAVEN, W. Va . .The annual meeting of the
, WANTS FORD
Bend Area Medical Center,
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Inc. has been set for October President Ford should go to
21 at 7:30 p.m at Ule New Cleveland and explain to its
Ha ven Un ited Methodist many ethnic residents his
Church, it was announced I comment during Wednesday
Saturday.
night's debate that the Soviet
Purpose of the meeting is to Union does not . dominate
elect members of the board of Eastern Europe, Sen. Robert
directors, receive reports on Taft, Jr., R-Ohio, said.
recruitment of physicians,
the status of the proposed
clinic, an4 for other business
that rnay come up.
Gary Fltz, director of the
West Virginia Health System
Agency, will discuss possible
grants for operation of Ule
clinic. The public is invited to
attend.

Joh~son

SAYS FORD HIDING
CLEVELAND (UPI )
Jimmy Carter said Saturday
that President Ford is hiding
from the American people in
the White House even more
than Richard Nixon ·did
during the Watergate
scandal. Stepping up his
effort to "smoke Ford out of
the Rose Garden an onto the ·
campaign trail ,", Cart.,.
called on the President to
hold a fonnal news conference to explain a number ·
of issues , including his
personal finances.

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coAuMBUS - The Ohio
ODNR is assigned the
Department of Natural responsibility of preparing
Resources (ODNR ) will comprehensive plans for the
conduct a public ·meeting in development, . use and
Chillicothe, Friday, Oct. 15, protection of Ohio's water
concerning the development · resources. Work is done in
......__..., of the Central Ohio Water close cooperation with the
Plan.
Ohio EPA and various parThe pl~n will be for the ticipating federal agencies.
region encompassing the Detailed plpns for each of the
drainage basin.s of the Scioto 'state's five water planning
and Hocking rivers, · Ohio districts will make up the
Brush Creek and its statewide water plan.
tributaries, am:t-'Raccoon
The N'orthivest and NorthCreek and its tributaries.
east water plans were
Meeting 'on Oct. IS will be completed in 1967 and 1972
the Central Ohio Water Plan respectively, and the SouUlAdvisory Council, compOsed west water plan is now being
of more than 60 members published.
,(G from the area, representing . Work on ,the Central Ohio
I'
federal , state and local plan was suspended in 1972
governments; utilities ; when major changes were
·business and development made in federal water
groups; conservation groups; policies and programs. Work
~ a n d · a g r i c u I t u r a I on the plan is resuming now
organizations.
that the changes have been
Natural Resources completed. ODNR hopes to
Director Robert Teater will have the Central Ohio Water
act as chairman of the Plan ready for publishing by
meeting, to begin at 1 p.m. at Ule end of this year.
the Holiday Inn on Business
The re{ion affected by the
~ Route 23 in the northern part . .llentral Ohio Water Plan
of Chillicothe.
·
includes all or parts of the
Various alternative water following counties: Hardirt,
resources plans for corn- Marion, Morrow, Union,
in the region will he Logan, Delaware, Cham'~ munities
considered at the ~ meeting . paign, Madison, Franklin,
Richard Anderson, Fairfield, Perry, Pike,
Associate Director of Battelle Fayette, Pickaway, Hocking,
Memorial Institute's Energy Athens, Morgan, Clinton,
Program, will be the featured Highland, Ross, Vinton,
speaker. He will discuss Meigs, Adams, Scioto,
water issues from Central Jackson, Lawrence and
Ohio.
Gallia. ·

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waving to the crowda.
"I feel fine," Coonally said Oklahoma football game.
The
President
was
Ford was greeted by Gov.
of lbe motorcade. "I never
felt that Dallas was any Dolph Briscoe, a Democrat welcomed ·by hundreds of
different than any other .who strongly supports Jimmy hand~ettered greeting algns,
American city. It just Carter's candidacy,.and boUl . but Ule crowds were sparse.
happened tD be the locale of entered the open limousine Along the main parade route
an evU mind. I was deHghted for Ule trip down Commerce Ule onlookers were never
llned up more than about
tD see the warm, wooderlul Street.
Coonally, who heads Ford's three-deep.
reception he (Ford) got."
Pollee officials had
The red · brick book Texas campaign, . met the
depoaltory loomed to Ford's Pre¢dent at U1e airport and predicted at least 100,000 tD
. left as the presidential was to ·ride . In an 200,000 per110ns would a.ttend
limousine, entering the accOO!pariying parade car. the parade. Officers said
downtown area, passed But engine lrouble forced him later they had no crowd
swiftly _tbrough Ule plaza to join the presidential estimate .bltJhat the turnout
wward the staging area for limousine. He chose a jump was cooslderably less than
UDited l&gt;ress'iutemallonal
In North carolina, the expected to crest at 30 to 31 the Texas State Fair Parade seat Inside the car while anticipated. ·
An ·autumn stonn system worst damage was reported 4 feet Sundsy.
that preceded Ule Texas- Briscoe and Ford stood up
laced with tornadoes at Laurinburg near the SouUl
The Coogaree River w_.
Saturday dwnped up to eight Carolina line. A twister swept · exP.cted to crell at 24 feet ·
Inches of rain along the through at 5:15 a.m., SundayaiColumbla,llvefeet
AtlanUc coast from SouUl demolishing the Stewartsville :above Dood stage;
Carolina Into southiim New Baptist Church, knocking
Residents In low-lying
England, with many rivers over a radio station tower and areas were urged to move
PASADENA, Calif. (UPI) first "rock" might actually aboard Viking 2 indicated the
and streams raging out of heavlly damaging a freight livestock to higher ground - VIking 2, more successful have been lhe Up of a burled soli of its landing ground, the
Ulelr banks.
company.
although there were no in moving a Martian rock the boulder. .
.
UtDpla Plain, Is slmUar tD the
Six tornadoes were
Five other twisters were Immediate evacuation second time around, will
The dirt under Ule rock has Chryse Plain where Viking 1
scoop "protected" soU from presumablybeenshleldedfor· set down and II rich in lfon,
rep«''ed In North Carolina reported across · lbe stale orders.
and authorities said two causing minor.· tD moderate
Forty Natlmal Quardlllnen mder Ule rock Monday for millions of years fr9m strong . magnsiwn, aluminum and
·
people were killed In QaiJlBge.
·
.
were sent to il shopping another experiment in the solar rays Ulat penetrate the silicon.
weathero('elated traffic ac·
Near Charlotte, N.C., centeratLaurenstohelpwiUl search for life on lhe red tlllri atmosphere, protecting
However, no trace of any
ddenll: Tornadoes were also authorities searched for Mrs. security measures in stores planet.
organic chemical elements. organic substance has been
repU-ted In VIrginia and two Betty ·Joyce Keener, 44, who awashinfotR'Incheaofwater.
The results from me of the found.
Saturday sdentlsta at the
other deaths occurred on was trawect In a car that
Gale force winds buffeted Jet Propulsion Laboratory two chemistry experiments
ralnsllck SouUl Carolina plunged into a swollen creek. the Atlantic coast with studied pictures of the
lighways.
Her husband escaped but the Elizabeth
City, N.C., maneuver, succenfully
One twlater ripped through strong current swept the car reporting a gust o1 84 m11ea completed Friday night. Thil
II the second time Viking 2's
Ule downtown area of · away before his wife could per hour.
· Danville, Va., about 6 a.ni. get out.
Strongwlndalmockeddown robot JaboratDry has tried to
EDT, blowing out about 20
More than eight Inches of power lines in the New York move a rock tD uncover soil
store fronll, tearing roofs off raln feU in some areas of metropolitan area, leaving particles uncootaminated by
DALLAS
( UPI )
Strauaaaaid. "He Is obvloualy
bulldings and knocking out South Carolina Friday and aome 30,000 h(l!les without solar rays.
The pictures showed the Democratic National trying tc stDp Ule allde, but he
power.Therewerenoreports SaturdliY and the state ctvll electricity.
of Injuries. '
.
Defense warned major
Flooding was reported successful maneuver of the Chairman Robert Strauss has a long way to go. The
· Another twister hit Grafton flooding could be expected. · along folir rivers in Vlrgi!!la rock, nlck~d "badger" charged saiurday that President Is using Ule White ·
oo Ule opposite end of the The Broad River at Blair, wiUl the crest not expected becailse of Ita llhape, which President Ford has been House. to plillticallze himself
state Ulree and a hal! hours S.C., was already nine feet untll Sunday. Mud and rock was moved several inches to distOI'tlng Jimmy Carter's as much as he can bit he has
later but authll'lties said the . above Its !Hoot Dood stage slides also doaed highways in the left and angled upwards. starements and aald that really had a horrible week.
"Every time he steps out of
Scientists are still not sure every time the President
damage was minor.
Saturday morning and was some areas.
leaves
the
White
House
"he
th~
White House, he
Flash Dood and tornado why Viking faDed tD move the
stumbles."
watches extended lntD the first rock. The scoop-tipped stumbleS."
Strauss, who appeared oo
strauss said Ford Ignored
mld;Atlanllc and souU!em boom arm II stroog enough to
New England atates Saturday push about 35 pounds of the same platform wiUl Ford Jimmy Carter's praille of
evening and lhe storm was earUI, giving tt a IOOiJound a\ Ule opening of the Texas former President Lyndon B.
expected to move Into pullhlng capacity in Mars' Stale Fair, said Ule President Johnson in Ule interview in
had suffered a terrible week. which Carter aald Johnson
norUlern New · Engilind ~r gravity.
'
"He has made two or tbree distorted the truth.
Sunday.
But, It was theorized, the
major gaffes thll week.''
DALLAS
(UP!)
PreSident Ford campaigned
in Tezaa Saturday in the first
prelldenllal parade through
downtown DallaB since the
asaaasinatlon of John F.
Kennedy.
John Connally, who as
gove""'r of Teras was in the
car with Kennedy and was

I "!saw Ulem time and again
rally around a preSident - ·
whoever he might be- when
· he was dealing in the high
S\Bkes of peace and war." '
WiUl LBJ's protege, fanner
Texas
governor John
Connally, .oo tlle speaker's .
platform, Ford said Johnson
• knew how to make "Ule tOugh
.ealls" when he was in office .
. "Although we had our dlf.
ferences, Lyndon Johnson
never distorted Ule truUl
when discussing Ule tDugh
issues affecting America's
strength."
Continuing tlle personal attacks that hav~ d!XIlinated
the campaigning of the
Democratic and Republican
presidential candidates since
their
second , debate
Weqnesday, Ford. told
reporters at one Dallas . stop
that hiS aides have verified
Ulat Carter did call·for a $IS
billion defense - a . point
Carter has denied.
''You just can't believe
him," Ford said. "If you buy
Carter, l(OU buy weakness."
Ford rode iil an gpen-roofed
limousine in tlle Texas State
Fair parade, waving, to a
downtown crowd esliinated
by police.at 50,000 01! a· route
Ulat passed tlle spot where ·
John
Kennedy
was·
assassinated 13 years ago.
Ford opened the fair,
largest , in America, in
colorful noontime ceremonies
after visiting · llvestoe~
exhibits with Connally, head
of his Texas campaign.

seriously wounded in lhe
shooting, rode with Ford in
Ule presidential 'itmousine as
II pasaed the assasstnatloo
site in Dealy Plaza.
Ford, standlllg in Ule open
car, waved tD sparse crowds
along the motorcade route.
Onlookers returned FQI'd'a
waves politely and wiUl sub-

dued cheers.
Security
was
tight
throughout the downtown
area, particularly in and
around the plaza where, on
Nov. 22, 11163, Lee Harvey
Ollwald llhol Kennedy .and
Coonally from Ule sixth Door
of the Texas Schoolbook
DepoilltDry building.

Strauss has Ford
having bad week

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. DETROIT (UP!)- United
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locallssuesthalcoulddelaya
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The 170,000 workers were
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DALLAS
( UPI )
President Ford praised the
honesty and Integrity of
Lyndon Johnson before a
'rexas campaign crowd
Saturday and told reporters
·that Jimmy Carter, by contrast, L~ a man "you just can't
believe."
Opening Ule Texas State
Fair, Ford told thousands of
Texans he ·admires their
patriotism
and
the
"truthfulness" of Johnson.
Earlier Saturday, flying tD
Dallas from Oklahoma, Ford
signed a proclamation
restricting the amount of
foreign beef Ule United States
may import this year. His
action came one day after he
promilled Midwest cattlemen
he would take "affirmative
action" tD deal witb falling
domestic beef prices.
Ford set the beef import
limit at 1.23 billion pounds for
1976, about 17 million pounds
under the Agriculture
Department forecast for beef
imports.
The President's remarks
about Johnson appeared tc be
an.attempt to captalize 111 the
ill-will generated by Carter's
comment, in a magazine
interview, that Johnson had
lied and cheated in. the White
House.
"What always impressed
me the most was the way
Texans put their country
above their political party
when America's fundamental
interests were at stake, Ford
said.

lliB strateglsta bad tried to keep hlm in the White Ho- u
loog as It waa poulble, bit now he will stay almoot plll'pelually
m the road.
In Ule pendulum swin&amp; oflhe campaicn, Carter bad been
forced for a time on Ule dofenoe wiUl the publlcaUon of hla
cootroverslal Playboy magazine interview. He also had tD
backtrack on stateme~ts he made about incume tu l'tlfonn,
which frlahtened middle lmmle groups.
. :· •,
Ford's role now II to mend hla fences and . regain the
miXJlentwn.
· •· . · ..
there are iitroog lndlcatlooa that this campaign Is far from

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WASHINGTON (UPI)- Prelldent ~'ONI's eampalgn, on a forelcn llffalra.
·.
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1111ooth ~~rglng IIJll1lln« for weeka, has suddenly hit a series ri .He made whiiiOIIle view ~ 1 col~ poliUCil boo boo in Ford must "tell Ule truth, the whole truth and nothing but the
~.
Ulat debate when he said that Eutem Europe Is not under truth."
9ame pmdlll thlnt It will be cltfflcult for him to regain the Soviet domlnalkln.
Ford has ,apparently decided that he too should tak! the
lhlt has been lolt before elecUon day .
'i'
He IIYI he meant to uy !bat the United Slates .does not offenae by li'ccuslng Carter ri evading the Issues.
Othera~ee, in this particular campaign, so many up&amp; and "coocede" Soviet domination of Eutem Europe, but Ule trig IBut lbe series of blows has throWII Ule Ford camp into a
doWN and plfes and surpriael for both candidates that no na1 statement ahocked Ule eUlnlc groups whoee votes he needs tluy. The President had been having a 1111100th campaign up to
pollUcal predlcUon II really safe.
badly and hla aUempta to. n:pllin have COIIlJlOUilded lhe last weekend, making headway with his "Pre!ldentlal"
The President's campaign began running intD trGUble a. !X'Obleni.
·
•
.image-working bard at Ule White Houae, siiiJllnl! bills in the
couple of weeks agn with ~ reports that ~ Watergate . ·But moat of all he has given parter an euy opening for . Rose Garden, . ~
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~ (li'OieCU!Dr was inv~atlng al!eged .abuse of cam- attack. .
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P!lllstera also rated hlm the winner of the first debate, in
!Jalcn ll!nd* in hiJ old cmgreulmal dl8trlct, arid. that Ford
Carter, however, has launched• harsh pei'IOIIII attack on which Carter appeared deferential and uncertain.
· lmllelf bad accepted golf outings from lobbyists when he waa Ford's cCIIlpelence and integrity which could boomerang • Ford has been running on hle record of the past two yeiU'll as
in Congreu.
against lhe Georgian.
Pre!)ident.
Fard finally held anlinprCIIlptu news conference to deJiy any
On another Ford sore point, The Wall Street Journalaqd lhe
Hll showcase arguments bave been Ulat . he reylved the
Impropriety In ellber matter. But the Waterg1te prosecutor'a Wuhlngtan Poll have publilbed reports that an audit of economy, restored peace in the world and trust In the White
myaltrlous investigatloos appear tD be continuing under a lid Ford's tuea in 1m-aupplled to lhem by a Carter supporter House in U1e aftermath of Water~ate .
of eecney,
shows thai Ford uaed lilly $5 a week in caab for spending
Heandhl.!aldeshadbeenconfidentUlathismomentwnwaa
'l'llen the Prelldenl'a fortunes took a sharp dip when It was money. The 111111111 IRS audit, lhey say, also shows he spent buDding steadily. He had made dramatic gains In the polls
dlacw.Jlut week thai Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz had more Ulan t1,100 in campaign funds oo a pei'IOIIII vacatioo.in slrice Ule Republican convention In Kansas ·ctty, Mo., in
told an obBcene joke derogatOry of blacks. Butz was forced to 1972and more than $110on clothing the ume year.
August , closing U1e gap to within eight rA' nine points of Carter
,l'llllp after widespread clamor for his llCilp.
Implied are allecaUons that he mlsuaed carnpalgn lunda for in the most recent surveys.
· 1ben, according to the early pos~ebate IIUfVeys, }'ord waa per11011al benefit. The matter still Ia under lnveetigatioo by lhe
He took a 110uthern swing and showed Ulat wiUl conservative
defeated CJ! what he thought would be hiJ own ground-the Watergate prosecutDr.
.
standsonUleissuesofguncontrolanddefense,hecouldarouse
second campaign ~ebate wiUl Jimmy Carter, which dealt wiUl . So Carter, who has P'Offilaed voters he would never lle, has enUlulastic response: He drew large crowds In Louisiana,
t.nssisaiPPI and Alabama.
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Washer Mod el WLW3 700T

vote" efforts and on IIUWOI'I
for congresslooal candidates
If the DNC faU.IIhort. "We'll
utlllze it only " it bec&lt;lmes
available,'~ he oald.
The DNC has spent $1.6
millloo m voter registratioo
that could have gone towards
the campaign, he aald.
Upshutz said Rqlubllcans
are tradltlonallr at a
financial advantage because
"they probably have. better
access to ·quick, •big mooey
· than we do just by Ule nature
of their folloWing and also
because they have an
incumbent president." .
The Federal Electons Commission turned down the ·
Carter campaign's request to
have its transition ptannll!g
team funded separately from ·
Ule campaign. Upshutz said
Ford has government
employes filling · Ulat
planning function for him.

by F9rd in Texas

aired on Oct. 15th

A MONEY-SAVING

said Budget and Finance
Director Richard Harden. "II
we can raille · II (Ule $3.2
million ), we'll certainly use
it. But the campaign is not
going tD come twnbllng down
if we don't. n
•
Upshutz said U1e · party
could spend less on
advertising, on "gel out the

in New Haven ·

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group to meet

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Medical center

Central Ohio
water plan will be

AND

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EDITORS TO MEET
WILLIAMSBURG, Va.
(UP!) - Some 500 editors
ano publishers are expected
to attend the annual meeting
beginning Monday of the
Inter-American Press
As~ciation at which interri tiona! terrorism, Ule U.
S. el ctions and Third World
ef ·' s to increase governemtn control over.the press
will
dominate
the
discussions.

other fund raising events are
planned.
" In the coming 20 to 30
days, we'll raille the mooey
essential to the campaign,"

,.

HOURS.BY APPOINTMENT ONLY.
OFFICE HOURS 7:30 TO 4:30 MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
SATURDAY BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
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1% South on State Rt. 325
Cash Only Basis
Ph. 24S.5085'

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SALE
Was $11.79

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Cupture the cle~nru:c uf ytisteryeur! Two tliff•·rent type~ uf yurn ''"'"'!~) u sulrtl&lt;: lone-nrl.
tmu: df&lt;•ct.. Plush nylon pilo: luo~ Hlllterb
humu·e·huck rc•ili&lt;•n&lt;:e. Jute huck,'

Other carpet styles also on ·
sale . •. Save 13 Pet. to 28 Pet.
Let Charlie Brown Arrange
For Expert Installation
• Shiirpinl(, in•tall»tiou t:xtr·u·
• Sear• has a rredlt plan to oult
-.t
mo"'l every need

••

Convenit!nV tlhcml"olltr~
PIIZI
ba I
rts
I
tau,.., ln the Wli011 structure
s c pa or C!XIlp ete the
~·
.
. "'"'" "' ''"·''"' .Wo-2770, ••••.
c;o.
final aasembly of cars and was not strong enough.
.t
trucks al8o can be opened.
~ •24 Hour'*'hona l!Brvlce ..
In 1967, a national
agreement at Ford was
When You Vote for Gallil
ratified after 47 days, but
County Commissioner on
unsettled local Issues caused
the walkout to drag on for
November 2nd, be Sure to
anuUler 19 days,
Vote for
Another possible hitch to
final seltleme~l of the
contract thai wW serve as the
pattern for 530,000workers at
General Motors, Chrysler
and American Motors Ia ihe
sldlled workers group.
The 26,000 skilled workers
are vol~ aeparalely on the
new agreement and have veto
On the Ballot for the Term
power. A majority of lhem,
Beginning January 2, 1977.
and a ~;~~~jorlty of the 145,000
production ~ken must ap.
prove the agreement or It wlll
have to be renegotiated. ·
The sldlled workerHec·
Jim Saunders is a farmer. He and his wife Ann live
trlcians, tool and dye makers,
on the family farm on the Lower River Road. Jim and
millwrlghll, and equipment
Ann's four children have been educated In the Gallipolis ·
repairmen-were given veto'
power despite Ulelr small
Schools. Becky has completed her education and is a
nwnber becauae Uley have
social worker in ColumbU$. Pam Is i physical education
complained Ule UAW often
teacher in l;shland, Kentucky. Lisa is employed by
does not represent their
interests.
Central Soya in Gallipolis. Matt Is an Agricultural
A small number of the
Mechanics ·student at Buckeye Hills Career Center.
. sldlled workers IU'ged a ''no"
Cast your vote· for James C. Saunders for Qallla
vote
becauae .
they
complained · the contract
cciunty Commissioner, term beginning January ·2, 1977.
language on IIUbcmtractlngYou will be voting for a man who does not favor
VESSEY TALKS TOUGH
farmlng their work out to
additional
unnecessary taxes, a man who recognizes the
SEOUL, South Korea firma oulslde the plant- and
(UPI) - Gen. John W. on skilled trades represen·
need for crime prevention and the protection of your
Ve118eY Jr. talked tough as he
family and property, a man who will expect the
assumed cmunand of U.S.
In 1777, in one of the great
cooperation of the 'other commisslohers to wisely ,Invest
and U.N. forces in SouUl turning polnll of Ule Revolu·
Korea.
the
county funds to asst.re a better Gallia County, ·
timary War, . Brltlah Gen.
Taking command Friday, John
tomorrow.
·
Burgoyne surrendered
Ve~y uld, "To the leaders
his forces to lhe Americans at
and the people of our two Saralolla,
N.Y.
Many ere confused IS 1o
great nat101111, I pledge to
my Identity:
In 1931, bootlegger and
The preceding :Paid tor by the CommlttH to
keep our fll'cetl r111dy and racketeer AI Capone was
Jameo C. S.unden. Cand.
Elect James C. Saunders Commissioner,
for Co. Col)lm. II NOT the
strong In order to deter war, convicted of Income tu
o•Gallla
Co.
Iormor
sheriff
Ann
E. Saunders. Treasurer.
to repel aggression II evasion in a, Otlcago court
deteri'ence faDs and tc crullh and sentenced to ll,YI!m in
the aggre..!or."
prison .

sellled ' and a large number
of key manufacturing plants
also
were
without
agreemenll, !eliding to a
po&amp;libtllty Ule strike could
cooUnue.
"We're .wll'king on thole
others," iald Ben Forcjone,
admlnlalrative asalstanl to
UAW Vice President Ken
Bannon. '.'We've got SOI!!e
key Illes In, but It's hard to
aay If we will gel them all by
Tuesday."
The national agreement
takes care ·of such lasues as
wages and beneflll, while the
plantlevel cootracta handle
such matters as work
conditions, cafeterias,
parking lots, washrooms
and other "housekeeping"
Items peculiar tD a single
plant.
UAW President Leonard
Woodcock admitted there
might be a delay in starting
up the -mbly lines Ulal
have been idle since the
strike started at midnight,
Sept. 14.
Ford baa said It will not call
workers back itt plants with
·local agreemenls untll the
·"key" plants that provide the

.,

i -~ . ~ J . S·t·r;~;r:r;~::~;;:.n
"""""""AND

JAMES C.

SAUNDERS

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6A- TheSwulayTimes-Sentinel,Sunday, Oct. 10,1976

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7A-'Ibe~y Tim~nllnel, Sunday, Oct. IO, l976

Money.going fast, but there's; plenty in Carter war chest

Trouble ·showing up in·Ford campaign

0

million to $9 million media
campaign is just starting.
Carter officials say it has
been more expensive for their
candidate because Ford has
stayed close to home, preferring tD appear presidential,
while Carter and Walter
Mo ndale burn up about
$100,000 per week stumping
Ule nation.
"They didn 't start spendirtg
in this campai gn until almost
a month later than we did,"
said Carter treasuoer Robert
Upshutz.
''They have .9tillzed a lot of
government resources such
as White House staff , and
research people who really
are government employes.
They can save a certain
amount of mooey that way .

ATLAN1'A (UPI) - Jimmy
Carter
has
outspent
President Ford by more than
3 to 1 so far. Will he be
strapped for cash in the
crucial closing days'
No, says his treasurer.
Fupds wJll be marshaled in.
such a way that no important
campaign advantage will he
mlsl!ed because of a money
shortage.
As of Sept. 30; .Carter had
spent about $12.6 million of
his $21.8 million federal
subsidy. Almost half had
gone to advertl!)lng-much
for ads tha.t were not tD
appear for some time.
The Ford eampaign, as of
Sept. 30, had spent about $3.5
million of its $21.8 million
federal allotment. Its $7

Sincere•••

"But we illink we can
manage our funds effectively
enough so th ~t there will be
no major discrepancy
betwO.:n what llley can spend
and we can spend on things
tha·l might make a
difference:"
Ford political dlrecto•
stua rt Spencer said the Ford
commitlee plans to go all out

in all depariments of the
campaig n in the coming
weeks.
While . the Repub lican
Natlona.l 'Committee is
confident of raisi ng the
addiUonai $3.2 million it is
pennltted by law to spend on
its candidate, there is some
doubt in the Carter camp that
the Democratic National

Committee will raise its full .
$3.2 million.
·
So far , $1.4 million has been
pulled in by .the DNC and
Lipshutz said he is
"reasonably optimistic" Ulat
the full $3.2 millioo will be
lorthc(l!ling.
Arecent DNC fundrailler at
Carter's home in Plains
netted about $350,000 and

Students going to conference
Two lop science students, Ohio State University MerJoy Dillinger and Melinda shon ' Auditorium. John
Spence r, were chosen to Distel, a science teacher at
represent Gallia Academy's Ga llia Academy, will acstudent body in the lith company them.
annua l Youth and Science
"YouUl and Science In
Conference Saturday at The Search of Truth" is this
year's conference theme,
says County Extension Agent
Bud Carter . Students · at·
tending will hear talks on
'\'Future Availability of Land,
Water, Fuel, }'eriilizer and
Food" by Dr. Roy M. Kollman , dean, College of
Agriculture and Home
Economics, and "The Dream
of A Perfect World" by Dr.
Thomas S. ·Haggai, whose
appearance will be through
the · courtesy of General
Motors.
In the afternoon, they will
see exhibits and demonstrations on the search for
truth in science, Carter adds.
The search is on to meet the
·growing energy and food
shortage facing the nation
and world today. Thai's the
. challenge bdore· Gallia
Pa1 d by Candidate
Academy's science students
who will attend the con-

ference along with some 1,500
other youUJ from all parts of
the state.
Youth and Science Day is
sponsored annually by Ule
College of Agriculture and
Home Economics and Ule
Ohio Agricultural Council.
,The Council is represented by
agencies, a'lSOciations and
institutions ·in Ohio. Hosts
include
local
civic
organizations, lndustrles,;and
agri-businesses, many ·of
which are members of the
·Ohio . Agricultural Council.
This trip for loeal yout!l is
being sponsored by Gallla
Roller Mills, Don Brown,
manager.

James
Roush
County ~ommi~sioner

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POMEROY
LANDMARK
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NEW HAVEN, W. Va . .The annual meeting of the
, WANTS FORD
Bend Area Medical Center,
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Inc. has been set for October President Ford should go to
21 at 7:30 p.m at Ule New Cleveland and explain to its
Ha ven Un ited Methodist many ethnic residents his
Church, it was announced I comment during Wednesday
Saturday.
night's debate that the Soviet
Purpose of the meeting is to Union does not . dominate
elect members of the board of Eastern Europe, Sen. Robert
directors, receive reports on Taft, Jr., R-Ohio, said.
recruitment of physicians,
the status of the proposed
clinic, an4 for other business
that rnay come up.
Gary Fltz, director of the
West Virginia Health System
Agency, will discuss possible
grants for operation of Ule
clinic. The public is invited to
attend.

Joh~son

SAYS FORD HIDING
CLEVELAND (UPI )
Jimmy Carter said Saturday
that President Ford is hiding
from the American people in
the White House even more
than Richard Nixon ·did
during the Watergate
scandal. Stepping up his
effort to "smoke Ford out of
the Rose Garden an onto the ·
campaign trail ,", Cart.,.
called on the President to
hold a fonnal news conference to explain a number ·
of issues , including his
personal finances.

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coAuMBUS - The Ohio
ODNR is assigned the
Department of Natural responsibility of preparing
Resources (ODNR ) will comprehensive plans for the
conduct a public ·meeting in development, . use and
Chillicothe, Friday, Oct. 15, protection of Ohio's water
concerning the development · resources. Work is done in
......__..., of the Central Ohio Water close cooperation with the
Plan.
Ohio EPA and various parThe pl~n will be for the ticipating federal agencies.
region encompassing the Detailed plpns for each of the
drainage basin.s of the Scioto 'state's five water planning
and Hocking rivers, · Ohio districts will make up the
Brush Creek and its statewide water plan.
tributaries, am:t-'Raccoon
The N'orthivest and NorthCreek and its tributaries.
east water plans were
Meeting 'on Oct. IS will be completed in 1967 and 1972
the Central Ohio Water Plan respectively, and the SouUlAdvisory Council, compOsed west water plan is now being
of more than 60 members published.
,(G from the area, representing . Work on ,the Central Ohio
I'
federal , state and local plan was suspended in 1972
governments; utilities ; when major changes were
·business and development made in federal water
groups; conservation groups; policies and programs. Work
~ a n d · a g r i c u I t u r a I on the plan is resuming now
organizations.
that the changes have been
Natural Resources completed. ODNR hopes to
Director Robert Teater will have the Central Ohio Water
act as chairman of the Plan ready for publishing by
meeting, to begin at 1 p.m. at Ule end of this year.
the Holiday Inn on Business
The re{ion affected by the
~ Route 23 in the northern part . .llentral Ohio Water Plan
of Chillicothe.
·
includes all or parts of the
Various alternative water following counties: Hardirt,
resources plans for corn- Marion, Morrow, Union,
in the region will he Logan, Delaware, Cham'~ munities
considered at the ~ meeting . paign, Madison, Franklin,
Richard Anderson, Fairfield, Perry, Pike,
Associate Director of Battelle Fayette, Pickaway, Hocking,
Memorial Institute's Energy Athens, Morgan, Clinton,
Program, will be the featured Highland, Ross, Vinton,
speaker. He will discuss Meigs, Adams, Scioto,
water issues from Central Jackson, Lawrence and
Ohio.
Gallia. ·

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waving to the crowda.
"I feel fine," Coonally said Oklahoma football game.
The
President
was
Ford was greeted by Gov.
of lbe motorcade. "I never
felt that Dallas was any Dolph Briscoe, a Democrat welcomed ·by hundreds of
different than any other .who strongly supports Jimmy hand~ettered greeting algns,
American city. It just Carter's candidacy,.and boUl . but Ule crowds were sparse.
happened tD be the locale of entered the open limousine Along the main parade route
an evU mind. I was deHghted for Ule trip down Commerce Ule onlookers were never
llned up more than about
tD see the warm, wooderlul Street.
Coonally, who heads Ford's three-deep.
reception he (Ford) got."
Pollee officials had
The red · brick book Texas campaign, . met the
depoaltory loomed to Ford's Pre¢dent at U1e airport and predicted at least 100,000 tD
. left as the presidential was to ·ride . In an 200,000 per110ns would a.ttend
limousine, entering the accOO!pariying parade car. the parade. Officers said
downtown area, passed But engine lrouble forced him later they had no crowd
swiftly _tbrough Ule plaza to join the presidential estimate .bltJhat the turnout
wward the staging area for limousine. He chose a jump was cooslderably less than
UDited l&gt;ress'iutemallonal
In North carolina, the expected to crest at 30 to 31 the Texas State Fair Parade seat Inside the car while anticipated. ·
An ·autumn stonn system worst damage was reported 4 feet Sundsy.
that preceded Ule Texas- Briscoe and Ford stood up
laced with tornadoes at Laurinburg near the SouUl
The Coogaree River w_.
Saturday dwnped up to eight Carolina line. A twister swept · exP.cted to crell at 24 feet ·
Inches of rain along the through at 5:15 a.m., SundayaiColumbla,llvefeet
AtlanUc coast from SouUl demolishing the Stewartsville :above Dood stage;
Carolina Into southiim New Baptist Church, knocking
Residents In low-lying
England, with many rivers over a radio station tower and areas were urged to move
PASADENA, Calif. (UPI) first "rock" might actually aboard Viking 2 indicated the
and streams raging out of heavlly damaging a freight livestock to higher ground - VIking 2, more successful have been lhe Up of a burled soli of its landing ground, the
Ulelr banks.
company.
although there were no in moving a Martian rock the boulder. .
.
UtDpla Plain, Is slmUar tD the
Six tornadoes were
Five other twisters were Immediate evacuation second time around, will
The dirt under Ule rock has Chryse Plain where Viking 1
scoop "protected" soU from presumablybeenshleldedfor· set down and II rich in lfon,
rep«''ed In North Carolina reported across · lbe stale orders.
and authorities said two causing minor.· tD moderate
Forty Natlmal Quardlllnen mder Ule rock Monday for millions of years fr9m strong . magnsiwn, aluminum and
·
people were killed In QaiJlBge.
·
.
were sent to il shopping another experiment in the solar rays Ulat penetrate the silicon.
weathero('elated traffic ac·
Near Charlotte, N.C., centeratLaurenstohelpwiUl search for life on lhe red tlllri atmosphere, protecting
However, no trace of any
ddenll: Tornadoes were also authorities searched for Mrs. security measures in stores planet.
organic chemical elements. organic substance has been
repU-ted In VIrginia and two Betty ·Joyce Keener, 44, who awashinfotR'Incheaofwater.
The results from me of the found.
Saturday sdentlsta at the
other deaths occurred on was trawect In a car that
Gale force winds buffeted Jet Propulsion Laboratory two chemistry experiments
ralnsllck SouUl Carolina plunged into a swollen creek. the Atlantic coast with studied pictures of the
lighways.
Her husband escaped but the Elizabeth
City, N.C., maneuver, succenfully
One twlater ripped through strong current swept the car reporting a gust o1 84 m11ea completed Friday night. Thil
II the second time Viking 2's
Ule downtown area of · away before his wife could per hour.
· Danville, Va., about 6 a.ni. get out.
Strongwlndalmockeddown robot JaboratDry has tried to
EDT, blowing out about 20
More than eight Inches of power lines in the New York move a rock tD uncover soil
store fronll, tearing roofs off raln feU in some areas of metropolitan area, leaving particles uncootaminated by
DALLAS
( UPI )
Strauaaaaid. "He Is obvloualy
bulldings and knocking out South Carolina Friday and aome 30,000 h(l!les without solar rays.
The pictures showed the Democratic National trying tc stDp Ule allde, but he
power.Therewerenoreports SaturdliY and the state ctvll electricity.
of Injuries. '
.
Defense warned major
Flooding was reported successful maneuver of the Chairman Robert Strauss has a long way to go. The
· Another twister hit Grafton flooding could be expected. · along folir rivers in Vlrgi!!la rock, nlck~d "badger" charged saiurday that President Is using Ule White ·
oo Ule opposite end of the The Broad River at Blair, wiUl the crest not expected becailse of Ita llhape, which President Ford has been House. to plillticallze himself
state Ulree and a hal! hours S.C., was already nine feet untll Sunday. Mud and rock was moved several inches to distOI'tlng Jimmy Carter's as much as he can bit he has
later but authll'lties said the . above Its !Hoot Dood stage slides also doaed highways in the left and angled upwards. starements and aald that really had a horrible week.
"Every time he steps out of
Scientists are still not sure every time the President
damage was minor.
Saturday morning and was some areas.
leaves
the
White
House
"he
th~
White House, he
Flash Dood and tornado why Viking faDed tD move the
stumbles."
watches extended lntD the first rock. The scoop-tipped stumbleS."
Strauss, who appeared oo
strauss said Ford Ignored
mld;Atlanllc and souU!em boom arm II stroog enough to
New England atates Saturday push about 35 pounds of the same platform wiUl Ford Jimmy Carter's praille of
evening and lhe storm was earUI, giving tt a IOOiJound a\ Ule opening of the Texas former President Lyndon B.
expected to move Into pullhlng capacity in Mars' Stale Fair, said Ule President Johnson in Ule interview in
had suffered a terrible week. which Carter aald Johnson
norUlern New · Engilind ~r gravity.
'
"He has made two or tbree distorted the truth.
Sunday.
But, It was theorized, the
major gaffes thll week.''
DALLAS
(UP!)
PreSident Ford campaigned
in Tezaa Saturday in the first
prelldenllal parade through
downtown DallaB since the
asaaasinatlon of John F.
Kennedy.
John Connally, who as
gove""'r of Teras was in the
car with Kennedy and was

I "!saw Ulem time and again
rally around a preSident - ·
whoever he might be- when
· he was dealing in the high
S\Bkes of peace and war." '
WiUl LBJ's protege, fanner
Texas
governor John
Connally, .oo tlle speaker's .
platform, Ford said Johnson
• knew how to make "Ule tOugh
.ealls" when he was in office .
. "Although we had our dlf.
ferences, Lyndon Johnson
never distorted Ule truUl
when discussing Ule tDugh
issues affecting America's
strength."
Continuing tlle personal attacks that hav~ d!XIlinated
the campaigning of the
Democratic and Republican
presidential candidates since
their
second , debate
Weqnesday, Ford. told
reporters at one Dallas . stop
that hiS aides have verified
Ulat Carter did call·for a $IS
billion defense - a . point
Carter has denied.
''You just can't believe
him," Ford said. "If you buy
Carter, l(OU buy weakness."
Ford rode iil an gpen-roofed
limousine in tlle Texas State
Fair parade, waving, to a
downtown crowd esliinated
by police.at 50,000 01! a· route
Ulat passed tlle spot where ·
John
Kennedy
was·
assassinated 13 years ago.
Ford opened the fair,
largest , in America, in
colorful noontime ceremonies
after visiting · llvestoe~
exhibits with Connally, head
of his Texas campaign.

seriously wounded in lhe
shooting, rode with Ford in
Ule presidential 'itmousine as
II pasaed the assasstnatloo
site in Dealy Plaza.
Ford, standlllg in Ule open
car, waved tD sparse crowds
along the motorcade route.
Onlookers returned FQI'd'a
waves politely and wiUl sub-

dued cheers.
Security
was
tight
throughout the downtown
area, particularly in and
around the plaza where, on
Nov. 22, 11163, Lee Harvey
Ollwald llhol Kennedy .and
Coonally from Ule sixth Door
of the Texas Schoolbook
DepoilltDry building.

Strauss has Ford
having bad week

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UAW ratification in full swing

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. DETROIT (UP!)- United
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worked through Ule weekend
trying to wrap up unsettled
locallssuesthalcoulddelaya
return to work even If
striking Ford Mot~r Co.
workers rattly a new national
Cllltract.
The 170,000 workers were
attending ratification
meetings to learn 'the details
of the new three-year
cmtract agreement reached
last Tuesday. '!be results of
Ulelr vote wlll .be released
Tuesday at the end of lhe
fourth week of the strike.
By Saturday, .82 of 99
bargaining until llld new
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supplernent the national
agreement. Bu~ only 9 of the
18 assembly plants had

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Many lmpmderableo remain, bll the clilnpaign bas a.new
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( UPI )
President Ford praised the
honesty and Integrity of
Lyndon Johnson before a
'rexas campaign crowd
Saturday and told reporters
·that Jimmy Carter, by contrast, L~ a man "you just can't
believe."
Opening Ule Texas State
Fair, Ford told thousands of
Texans he ·admires their
patriotism
and
the
"truthfulness" of Johnson.
Earlier Saturday, flying tD
Dallas from Oklahoma, Ford
signed a proclamation
restricting the amount of
foreign beef Ule United States
may import this year. His
action came one day after he
promilled Midwest cattlemen
he would take "affirmative
action" tD deal witb falling
domestic beef prices.
Ford set the beef import
limit at 1.23 billion pounds for
1976, about 17 million pounds
under the Agriculture
Department forecast for beef
imports.
The President's remarks
about Johnson appeared tc be
an.attempt to captalize 111 the
ill-will generated by Carter's
comment, in a magazine
interview, that Johnson had
lied and cheated in. the White
House.
"What always impressed
me the most was the way
Texans put their country
above their political party
when America's fundamental
interests were at stake, Ford
said.

lliB strateglsta bad tried to keep hlm in the White Ho- u
loog as It waa poulble, bit now he will stay almoot plll'pelually
m the road.
In Ule pendulum swin&amp; oflhe campaicn, Carter bad been
forced for a time on Ule dofenoe wiUl the publlcaUon of hla
cootroverslal Playboy magazine interview. He also had tD
backtrack on stateme~ts he made about incume tu l'tlfonn,
which frlahtened middle lmmle groups.
. :· •,
Ford's role now II to mend hla fences and . regain the
miXJlentwn.
· •· . · ..
there are iitroog lndlcatlooa that this campaign Is far from

....,...l:uin

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~-

WASHINGTON (UPI)- Prelldent ~'ONI's eampalgn, on a forelcn llffalra.
·.
'
taken tilt gloves olf aad Is telling.campaign audlences 'Ulat
1111ooth ~~rglng IIJll1lln« for weeka, has suddenly hit a series ri .He made whiiiOIIle view ~ 1 col~ poliUCil boo boo in Ford must "tell Ule truth, the whole truth and nothing but the
~.
Ulat debate when he said that Eutem Europe Is not under truth."
9ame pmdlll thlnt It will be cltfflcult for him to regain the Soviet domlnalkln.
Ford has ,apparently decided that he too should tak! the
lhlt has been lolt before elecUon day .
'i'
He IIYI he meant to uy !bat the United Slates .does not offenae by li'ccuslng Carter ri evading the Issues.
Othera~ee, in this particular campaign, so many up&amp; and "coocede" Soviet domination of Eutem Europe, but Ule trig IBut lbe series of blows has throWII Ule Ford camp into a
doWN and plfes and surpriael for both candidates that no na1 statement ahocked Ule eUlnlc groups whoee votes he needs tluy. The President had been having a 1111100th campaign up to
pollUcal predlcUon II really safe.
badly and hla aUempta to. n:pllin have COIIlJlOUilded lhe last weekend, making headway with his "Pre!ldentlal"
The President's campaign began running intD trGUble a. !X'Obleni.
·
•
.image-working bard at Ule White Houae, siiiJllnl! bills in the
couple of weeks agn with ~ reports that ~ Watergate . ·But moat of all he has given parter an euy opening for . Rose Garden, . ~
.. .
.
··
·
~ (li'OieCU!Dr was inv~atlng al!eged .abuse of cam- attack. .
..
P!lllstera also rated hlm the winner of the first debate, in
!Jalcn ll!nd* in hiJ old cmgreulmal dl8trlct, arid. that Ford
Carter, however, has launched• harsh pei'IOIIII attack on which Carter appeared deferential and uncertain.
· lmllelf bad accepted golf outings from lobbyists when he waa Ford's cCIIlpelence and integrity which could boomerang • Ford has been running on hle record of the past two yeiU'll as
in Congreu.
against lhe Georgian.
Pre!)ident.
Fard finally held anlinprCIIlptu news conference to deJiy any
On another Ford sore point, The Wall Street Journalaqd lhe
Hll showcase arguments bave been Ulat . he reylved the
Impropriety In ellber matter. But the Waterg1te prosecutor'a Wuhlngtan Poll have publilbed reports that an audit of economy, restored peace in the world and trust In the White
myaltrlous investigatloos appear tD be continuing under a lid Ford's tuea in 1m-aupplled to lhem by a Carter supporter House in U1e aftermath of Water~ate .
of eecney,
shows thai Ford uaed lilly $5 a week in caab for spending
Heandhl.!aldeshadbeenconfidentUlathismomentwnwaa
'l'llen the Prelldenl'a fortunes took a sharp dip when It was money. The 111111111 IRS audit, lhey say, also shows he spent buDding steadily. He had made dramatic gains In the polls
dlacw.Jlut week thai Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz had more Ulan t1,100 in campaign funds oo a pei'IOIIII vacatioo.in slrice Ule Republican convention In Kansas ·ctty, Mo., in
told an obBcene joke derogatOry of blacks. Butz was forced to 1972and more than $110on clothing the ume year.
August , closing U1e gap to within eight rA' nine points of Carter
,l'llllp after widespread clamor for his llCilp.
Implied are allecaUons that he mlsuaed carnpalgn lunda for in the most recent surveys.
· 1ben, according to the early pos~ebate IIUfVeys, }'ord waa per11011al benefit. The matter still Ia under lnveetigatioo by lhe
He took a 110uthern swing and showed Ulat wiUl conservative
defeated CJ! what he thought would be hiJ own ground-the Watergate prosecutDr.
.
standsonUleissuesofguncontrolanddefense,hecouldarouse
second campaign ~ebate wiUl Jimmy Carter, which dealt wiUl . So Carter, who has P'Offilaed voters he would never lle, has enUlulastic response: He drew large crowds In Louisiana,
t.nssisaiPPI and Alabama.
.

a

0

Washer Mod el WLW3 700T

vote" efforts and on IIUWOI'I
for congresslooal candidates
If the DNC faU.IIhort. "We'll
utlllze it only " it bec&lt;lmes
available,'~ he oald.
The DNC has spent $1.6
millloo m voter registratioo
that could have gone towards
the campaign, he aald.
Upshutz said Rqlubllcans
are tradltlonallr at a
financial advantage because
"they probably have. better
access to ·quick, •big mooey
· than we do just by Ule nature
of their folloWing and also
because they have an
incumbent president." .
The Federal Electons Commission turned down the ·
Carter campaign's request to
have its transition ptannll!g
team funded separately from ·
Ule campaign. Upshutz said
Ford has government
employes filling · Ulat
planning function for him.

by F9rd in Texas

aired on Oct. 15th

A MONEY-SAVING

said Budget and Finance
Director Richard Harden. "II
we can raille · II (Ule $3.2
million ), we'll certainly use
it. But the campaign is not
going tD come twnbllng down
if we don't. n
•
Upshutz said U1e · party
could spend less on
advertising, on "gel out the

in New Haven ·

PREsENr

•·
,. . . .

..

group to meet

.

~,

0

Medical center

Central Ohio
water plan will be

AND

•

EDITORS TO MEET
WILLIAMSBURG, Va.
(UP!) - Some 500 editors
ano publishers are expected
to attend the annual meeting
beginning Monday of the
Inter-American Press
As~ciation at which interri tiona! terrorism, Ule U.
S. el ctions and Third World
ef ·' s to increase governemtn control over.the press
will
dominate
the
discussions.

other fund raising events are
planned.
" In the coming 20 to 30
days, we'll raille the mooey
essential to the campaign,"

,.

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OFFICE HOURS 7:30 TO 4:30 MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
SATURDAY BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
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Other carpet styles also on ·
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Convenit!nV tlhcml"olltr~
PIIZI
ba I
rts
I
tau,.., ln the Wli011 structure
s c pa or C!XIlp ete the
~·
.
. "'"'" "' ''"·''"' .Wo-2770, ••••.
c;o.
final aasembly of cars and was not strong enough.
.t
trucks al8o can be opened.
~ •24 Hour'*'hona l!Brvlce ..
In 1967, a national
agreement at Ford was
When You Vote for Gallil
ratified after 47 days, but
County Commissioner on
unsettled local Issues caused
the walkout to drag on for
November 2nd, be Sure to
anuUler 19 days,
Vote for
Another possible hitch to
final seltleme~l of the
contract thai wW serve as the
pattern for 530,000workers at
General Motors, Chrysler
and American Motors Ia ihe
sldlled workers group.
The 26,000 skilled workers
are vol~ aeparalely on the
new agreement and have veto
On the Ballot for the Term
power. A majority of lhem,
Beginning January 2, 1977.
and a ~;~~~jorlty of the 145,000
production ~ken must ap.
prove the agreement or It wlll
have to be renegotiated. ·
The sldlled workerHec·
Jim Saunders is a farmer. He and his wife Ann live
trlcians, tool and dye makers,
on the family farm on the Lower River Road. Jim and
millwrlghll, and equipment
Ann's four children have been educated In the Gallipolis ·
repairmen-were given veto'
power despite Ulelr small
Schools. Becky has completed her education and is a
nwnber becauae Uley have
social worker in ColumbU$. Pam Is i physical education
complained Ule UAW often
teacher in l;shland, Kentucky. Lisa is employed by
does not represent their
interests.
Central Soya in Gallipolis. Matt Is an Agricultural
A small number of the
Mechanics ·student at Buckeye Hills Career Center.
. sldlled workers IU'ged a ''no"
Cast your vote· for James C. Saunders for Qallla
vote
becauae .
they
complained · the contract
cciunty Commissioner, term beginning January ·2, 1977.
language on IIUbcmtractlngYou will be voting for a man who does not favor
VESSEY TALKS TOUGH
farmlng their work out to
additional
unnecessary taxes, a man who recognizes the
SEOUL, South Korea firma oulslde the plant- and
(UPI) - Gen. John W. on skilled trades represen·
need for crime prevention and the protection of your
Ve118eY Jr. talked tough as he
family and property, a man who will expect the
assumed cmunand of U.S.
In 1777, in one of the great
cooperation of the 'other commisslohers to wisely ,Invest
and U.N. forces in SouUl turning polnll of Ule Revolu·
Korea.
the
county funds to asst.re a better Gallia County, ·
timary War, . Brltlah Gen.
Taking command Friday, John
tomorrow.
·
Burgoyne surrendered
Ve~y uld, "To the leaders
his forces to lhe Americans at
and the people of our two Saralolla,
N.Y.
Many ere confused IS 1o
great nat101111, I pledge to
my Identity:
In 1931, bootlegger and
The preceding :Paid tor by the CommlttH to
keep our fll'cetl r111dy and racketeer AI Capone was
Jameo C. S.unden. Cand.
Elect James C. Saunders Commissioner,
for Co. Col)lm. II NOT the
strong In order to deter war, convicted of Income tu
o•Gallla
Co.
Iormor
sheriff
Ann
E. Saunders. Treasurer.
to repel aggression II evasion in a, Otlcago court
deteri'ence faDs and tc crullh and sentenced to ll,YI!m in
the aggre..!or."
prison .

sellled ' and a large number
of key manufacturing plants
also
were
without
agreemenll, !eliding to a
po&amp;libtllty Ule strike could
cooUnue.
"We're .wll'king on thole
others," iald Ben Forcjone,
admlnlalrative asalstanl to
UAW Vice President Ken
Bannon. '.'We've got SOI!!e
key Illes In, but It's hard to
aay If we will gel them all by
Tuesday."
The national agreement
takes care ·of such lasues as
wages and beneflll, while the
plantlevel cootracta handle
such matters as work
conditions, cafeterias,
parking lots, washrooms
and other "housekeeping"
Items peculiar tD a single
plant.
UAW President Leonard
Woodcock admitted there
might be a delay in starting
up the -mbly lines Ulal
have been idle since the
strike started at midnight,
Sept. 14.
Ford baa said It will not call
workers back itt plants with
·local agreemenls untll the
·"key" plants that provide the

.,

i -~ . ~ J . S·t·r;~;r:r;~::~;;:.n
"""""""AND

JAMES C.

SAUNDERS

�-,

&amp;A-TheSwwlayTimes-Sentinel,Sunday, Oct.IO, 1976

Heat racing is
being debated

,..... _____ _..-"!_. ________

Woman's World.

'

LEXINGTON, Ky. (UP!)
- The hamea racing world
Ia currenUy deblltlng the
meri!l of heat racing after
troller Steve Lobell went jni.Q
llhock am nearly dled alter
rllllllng lour heats In wtnntng
tile Hlmbletm!an Stakes last
Dllllth.
Paul "Biff" · Lowry,
pnllldent of the Red Mile
track here, I!Cene of Friday's
Kentucky Futurity - whtch
hu been run In four heats the
pallt two years - feels no
rash decisions should be
made about heat racing,
"! peraonaUy don't haVe
any Orm oplnloo one way or
another," Lowry said. "But I
· am enough of a lradltionalist
that I don't want to 9el' it
changed overnight.
"I do tlllnk It bears aome
study and dlacusslon with all
11egments of the lnd\)BitY
Kettlna together to review the
altllatlon," Lowry said. "U,
alter a cooling oif pettod and
une profound study, and if
· the majority decides It is Ume
for a change, I am wllllng Ill
go along."
But Lowry sa.id "We are
going t.q stick with the system
as 18," for the Futurity,
harness racing's oldest
states and one of the
tradlUonal races still run In
heats.
Steve Lobell is scheduled to
run In the t100,000 Futurity In
seeking to become trotting's
eeventh triple crown. winner
after victories In the first two
legs of the crown - the
Yookera Futurity and tbe
Hlmbletmlan.
Steve Lobell's drivertrainer Billy Haughton was
critical of the heat setup after
nearly lollng his horse In the
Hambletmlan.
"If a thoroughbfed had to
do what this horse did,. he
wouldn't ealfor a week," said
Haughton, a veteran driver
stUI oeeklng his first
Kentucky Futurity win.
"ldidn't want to go the last
heat, but according to the
stake rulea we wouldn't get
any first mQIIey II we didn't
' run," Haughton said.
Lowry aald the same rules,
adopted by tbe United States
Trotting · Aoaociatlon, will .
apply In the Futurity.
Under heat racing, the first
horae to capture two beats
wins the race. If different
horses win the first three ·
heats, the three winners meet
In a fourth heat -• raceolf.
There Is aenerally 45 mlntues
to Qlle hour ·between heats,
"which, ' unless · It is- an
un11811BIIy hot day, sl)ould be

long enough," Lowry said.
But Haught.Qn contends
I.Qday's trotters and pacers
are not trained I.Q go but one
or two heats and a lour-heat
event :•tsJtes I.Qo much out of
them" . .
Lowry said In the early part
of the eentur.y harnesa races
would go up Ill six heats and a
century ago 12.-heat races
were not uncommon.
"They would go all day long
and n« have a winner when it
took three heats," Lowry
said. "They would have Ill
stop becau~~e of darkness and
continue the next day:"
· Lowry said even if .. a
declBion were reachea Ill
change the Futurity, It could
not come befoce 1900.
"We are required by the
rules tb run under the
condiUons !l"evaUlng wlien
the horses originally were entered," Lowry satd. "In the
Futurity, you must enter the
dam, prior to the horse's
birth, so that the I976 dams of
horses to race in I979 will be
entered. We are obligated to
race the Futurity under those
rules through 1979.
"Personally, l wouldn't like
a one-heat winner," Lowry
said. "Especially In a trotting
race, where the horses are so
delicately balanced and
gaited, that if someone is
bumped or Interfered with
they go off stride and blow
any chance of winning a
classic race.
"In heat races, if that
happens, they still have a
second and possibly third
heat to overcome the
disadvantage," Lowry said.
"Also, the postpositiOn has so
much to do with the success
In a large field In harness
racing. If the luck of the draw
is unkind in the first heat, you
can turn in an outstanding
race and only finish third, but
you earn a better postUon for
the second heat.
"I have often seen a hocse
win his way Into a better post
position and win the race,"
Lowry said.
"My only suggestion is for
the industry as a whole to sit
down and review theproblem,
discuss it rationally, work out
a solution and let the
majority rule," be said. "But
we must keep in mind two
grolljls. The owners who pay
the bills must have a· strong
voice in the uiUmate decision.
And we also must ·keep. In
mlndthatthefans - whopoy
everybody's bill In the long.
run - should get what they
want."

Sarah Carsey Charlene Hoeflich
992-2156
446-2342
.. L~~!~~~~:~.:~a~:__.w~~~~roy-Middkpo_ft

Photography

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Heck's Reg.
25•

Heclr's Reg. To $9.99

5 DAY
'

DEODORANT

Cosmetics Dept.

~·

'

Housewares .

HECK'S

SA CHAR
Heck's Re.g. •1.19

.

Cosmetics

-

Mr. and Mrs. Mark T. Wootton

Claire Markley is
September bride

Thea Court
entertainerJ

will

1legistration is due

Robin banese Carney ·

Ruby·Call feted

on 80th birthday

Mayo-Bunch wed

Heck's Reg. '1.75.

Heck's Reg, •2.99
Cosmetic

GALLIPOLIS -:- The
French Art Colony exhibit In
November at Rlverby will be
a photog"l'phy show, open to
both members and nonmembers lor participation .
To enter from one to six
pictures, members of the
French Art Colony may
participate with no fee. Nonlljembers must pay an entry
fee of $5. There is no age
limit.
Dilnensions of the pictures
before framing or matting
must be not less than five
inches high or wide and not
greater than 15 inches. An{
pictures entered must be
matted or framed and fixed
for hanging.
Five categories for entry
have been established. They
inciude nature, (animal,
vegetable, mineral); action
(sports, industry, work,
play); humor and humanity,
(kids, folks, pets) ; black and
white; miscellaneOus (none
of the above).
A blue ribbon will b'e
awarded to the best in each of
the five categories. Work
done by professionals Will be
judged separately from the
non-professional or amateur
· entries.
Pictures must be brought to
Riverby, ready for hanging
during the week of Oct. 18. All
pictures
be retu~. and
any who enter will have them
back in case they want to use .
their display photographs for
Cl)ristmas gifts.
To be a pad of the
November photography
exhibit at Riverby, contact
Susan Clarke at 446-4646 or
John Earl Brown at 38U444.
Send your name, t~lephone
number, along with your
status
(whether
a.
professional or an amteur
photographer), and the
number of pictures· you ln·
tend to enter to Rlverby
Photo Show, Box 472,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

· Mark Twain discussed
at Emanof( club program

STEP
.SAVER
$}39

REOUW &amp; SUPER

..;

POMEROY - 1'he holidaY
bazaar to be held Nov. 4 was
discussed at length during the
Thursday nlghi meeiing of .
tbe Catholic Women's Club of
Sacred Hea~ Church. .
First preparations will
begin Oct. II at 9 a.m. wben
. anyone who can help is asked
to come to the church to start
taking Inventory and washing
dishes which will be used at
that time.
Christmas candies which
are for aale at $2 each ·were
shOWn. Mrs. Susan Blaker
conducted , the meeting
opening it with prayer and
the pledge to the flag in the
absence of the Rev . Fr. Paul
Welton. Officers reports were
given and a thank-you note
was read from Mrs .. Loretta .
Saelens for a .planter se.nt on .
her blrihday. Reported ill
were Margaret Gans, Mrs.
Charles McCla in, Mrs.
Elizabeth Hepp , Mrs. B.
Girolami and Richard
Freeman who is confined to
University Hospital.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Rita Hanun, Mrs.
Helen Handley, Mrs. Janet
Duffy and Mrs. Mildred
Wells. The traveling prize
was won by Mrs. Elsie
Southerland.

Plans made

320Z.

MODESS

aa~
Heck's Reg. •1 ;oa

17

..

Housewares Dept.

~· Clothing

DeJ)t.

with Florence Willis

Hod'r Reg. $74.88

'7''·

,. YI.ON -UI:LftD 1--·H-ar.dw.a.re.o.e...pt••·- -

· SizES

.$5gaa

Goods

'3.99

SIZES

4X SCOPE

scheduled
.,

Bazaar
planned

GALI,IPOL!S - - "Tlte honor. She wore a fiowered
marriage of Claire Elizabeth print knit gown with an
Markley and Mark Tice empire wai.st and a v-ohapad
Wootton was solemnized on neckline. She wore a wide
Saturday, Sept. II , at 2 p. m. brim straw hat and carried a
at St. Peter's Episcopal : basket of mint green and
POMEROY
Ladles of '-Church In Gallipolis.
while daisies, tangerine
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - The Rev . and Mrs.
Thea Court were entertained
The bride is the daughter of carnations and baby's
Willard F. Carney of Charleston, W. Va. are anriO\ffich\g
recently by the Twin City Dr. John · C. Markley, breath. Misay Davia, niece of
the forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Robin
Shrlnettes at the Meigs Inn, Gallipolis, and Eleanor p. the bride, served aa fiower
Danese, to Dennis James Satterfield, son of the Rev . and
GAWPOLIS '- Fourieen Purloined Letter," the
Markley, Columbus. Mr. giri. She wore a gown and
Mrs. James Satterfield. of Minersville.· The open church . Pomeroy.
members of !he Engllah Club "Masque of the Red Death"
Mrs. Iris Kelton opened the
wedding"ls
pinnned
for
fall
In the Prayer and Faith · dinner meeting with prayer. Wootton Is the son of Mr. and carried a basket of fiowerl
gathered at the home of Mrs. and others. ·However, he is
Mrs. Verne
Wootton, similar to those of ihc matron
Wesleyan Church on York Ave., Charleston, W. Va. Miss
The
high
·
priestess
of
Thea
Florence Willis Tuesday at 7 best known for his beautiful
of honor.
Columbus.
Carney graduated from the Mountain State Chrlatian
Court,
Lady
Patty
Buell,
was
p.m. with Mrs. Rosebud poetry, parts of which Mrs.
Attendants were Mi11
The
double
ring
ceremony
SchoQIIn Culloden, W.. Va. Her fiance, a graduate of
by
Mrs.
Jean
introduced
Baker, co-hostess. ,
Ellioit read aloud and .eX·
Elizabeth
Boster, Miss Donna
was
performed
by
the
)lev.
Southern High School, is serving with the Air Force at
Moore who presented her Albert H. MacKenzie, Crabtree, Mrs. G. Michael
RAiD call was answered .by tilalped the various poetic
Lackinnd Air Force Base In Texas.
with a corsage made by Vera minister of St. Peter's CoDes and Miss Sally Bets.
each one giving a new or devices which made his
Van Meter and a ceramic Episcopal Church. Mrs. Anne They wore mint green knit
uqusual . word they had poetry especially suitable lor
clock made by Mrs. Moore. Fischer provided the organ ~owns with an empire waist
learned since the last such reading. She finished
Each of those attending the music while solos were SlliiR and a v-&lt;~haped neckline. The
l)leetlng. Following the with two of his most famous
dinner received a ceramic by Dr. Richard Chociej and dresses were made ·liy Mrs.
business meeting, Ruth and often quoted poems,
Mullineaux, substituting for '"The Raven" and "Arutabel
angel as a favor. , .
Dr. John Markley, father of Tim Betz. The atte~dants
Mrs. Buell introduced the the pride. For his daughter's wore hats and carried
the abaent Zelma Northcutt, 'Lee.11
officers of Thea Court. with wedding Dr. · Markley sang baskets of flowers identical to
lntroducOll Jennie Elliott who
Following the program,
e.ach one explaining her 11 0ne Hand. One Heart 11 and those of !he matron of honor.
presented the program for refreshments were aerved by
• duties as an officer. Present "IfWeOnly Have Love." Dr.
the evening.
the hostesses. The November
Dr. Michael Wootton,
were Dcirothy Balr, associate Choolej sang "Psalm I28" . brother of the groom, aerved
Mrs. Elliott discussed the meetin&amp; wlli he with Mrs.
prlncesi; B. Ann Conner, For the processional, Mrs. as beat man. Uahera wera
life and works of Edgar Allen Mabel Wau;; h with Mrs.
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Ruby an · Mrs. Marahel HBtfelt, inner g..rd; Rhoda Joan Fischer played "Trumpet David Olshine, Richard
Poe, one .of the best and Florence V.~&lt;kllne as coCall was guest of honor at a Mf. and Mrs. James · Hively Agnew, past high priestess_ Aire" and the wedding march Halin, WUIIam J. Davis, and
earliest American .crlitcs. hostess. Mrs. Florence Willis
dinner party In observ~nce of and their two sons and and recorder; Frieda Jay, from· "The SpUnd of Music." J.D. Markley, brother of the
She noted that he was also a will be responsible _lor the
her 80th birthday Sept. 26 at daughter, Noah Dale Houck, past high priestess, and Mary
leader in the short story field program on · the " life and
Vases of white gladioli bride.
the home of her daughter, Liz Betty Skidmore, Mr. · and Alice· Wharton, second were on each side of the altar, \ Immediately following the
of .writing. He was a works of another early
Fisher, Teens Run Rd.
forerunner of the .modern Amerlca'"n writer,
Mrs. Bill Saunders, Robert . ceremonial lady. ,
while white pew bows ceremony, a reception,
Mrs. Call, still quite ·active, Hazlett.
.detective story with his "The Washington Irving.
Twin City Shrlnettes at- marked sections reserved for prepared and served by tile
has three ~hildren and four
Mary Agnes Nelson, Mf. tending were Mrs. Moore, the family.
Episcopal Church Women,
grandcll)ldren.
and Mrs. Dowie Williams, president; Lora Byers, vice
The bride, given in was held outside In the
After dinner. she cut her Mr. and Mrs. Bay Beaver, president; Barbara Dugan, marriage by her lather, wore church yard. The cake, made
large birthday cake which ' Marie Beaver, Mr. and Mrs. secretary; Cora )leegle, a white gown of quiana with by Mrs. ~ver Walker, was
was Inscribed "Happy· 80th Gene Beiler, Mr. and Mrs. . treasurer; Emma K. Clat· cap sleeves of· guipure lace topped with fiowers matching
G A L L I ·P 0 L I S
Gallipolis.
Birthday Mom,"
and Carl Beaver and dau8hter worthy, Clara Adams, that also trimmed the empire those of the attendants. The
Rl!glstration for the sixth
Friday morning's 9 o'clock
acknowledged the many gifts Janet, Garnet Johnson, Clara Shirley Beegle, Iris Kelton, waist. Sunburst gathers fiowers cascaded down the
annual antique seminar, session will be an " lnshe reeeived.
Gilmore, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Gertrude Mitchell, •and detalled the high neck bodice front of the cake. Mrs. An·
"'l.onaored by the French Art troduction to Antiques";
Enjoying the dinner pariy Holley and children Sissy and guests, Twlla Childa, Kathryn and matching guipure . lace drew Burnett and Ml11
Colony on Friday · and following lunch, the afternoon
wereMr. and Mrs. Joe Call, Kevin, Bill Griffith and sons Hysell, UU!an Mqore and bordered a.sho)er oval yoke of Valerie Sheets served the
SUNDAY DEADLINE
Saturday, Oct. 15 and 16 ·at program .at I o'clock will _. The deadline ior weddiDK Tammy and Tommy, Miss Sobby and Timmy and Dixie Dugan. Mrs. Moore had English net. Lace edged the cake.· Mrs. Michael Wootton
Riverby, must be made with · focus on "Antique Fur- and engagement no• Carol Call, Mr. and Mrs. Paul daugnter Carla Ann, Burdell a reading.
hem and attached chapel and Mrs. Richard Choclej,
Mrs. Jennie Lou Hudson by niture," its restoration and
tlces
and
society Skidmore, Mr. and Mrs. Phil Forth; alll~al; Mr. and Mrs.
train.
The fingertip veil, sister of the groom, served
Tuesday, Oct. 12.
refinishing. Participants may
news Items for the · Foster, Inez McGuire and Pete Beckett, Iva Mae Rider,
made
by
the bride, was of the punch and c:oHee. Mrs.
Cost for the,. two day bring two items to discuss at
Lyla
Beth Hazel Bond, Milton, w. Va.;
SUBday Tlmea-Sentlnel tB daughter,
white
tricot
edged with Tim Betz retlstered the
seminar is $5 each day;- and the morning session, and
12 noon on the Thursday McGuire, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Beaver
~ ulpure lace. She carried a guesta.
this registration covers a chair, small table, drawer,
preceding publication. James Alva Caldwell and son and son Mike, Pprt Clinton:
The nn· Mn. Wootton, a
MIDDLEPORT - Plans IJouquetof white daisiea, mint
lunch. Mrs. Hudson may "be frame, etc., lor the afternoon
Information may be tumed Jerry, Lyia B. Waugh, Mr.
graduate
•, of Marshall
green
carnations
and
baby's
were made for the Area Incontacted by calling 446-2837 meeting.
in or mailed to the office of
University,
ll employed by
breath.
A
small
•.
white
prayer
spiration Day to be hel&lt;i here ·
or send checks to her at 518
The $object lor Saturday, • the Gallipolis . Daily.
book
belonging
to
Mrs.
Albert
The
Nationwide
lnaurance
Nov. 13 by the TOPS Club at
Third Ave. In Gallipolis.
also starting at 9 a.m., will be _1Tribune or Pomeroy Daily H.
MacKenzie,
was
fitted
Into
Co.
In
Columbua:-Tbe
fir9om
.
'
tbe Tuesday night meeting
'SesslOIIB will open each "Antiques of the Victorian
Sentinel. Engagement and
is
·attending
Ohio
Stile
the
bouquet.
held at the Legion hall In
mornlng at 9 a.m. and con- Era," when household furweddin"g forms
are
University
In
Columbua.
Mrs.
William
J.
Davis
stoed
Middleport.
elude at 3 p.m. The seminar nlahlngs were similar to those
Meigs Chapter o70 will boat with her sister as matron of
win be conducted by Mrs. in which Riverby was available upon request.
chapters
from Marietta,
orva Walker Heissenbuttel, a originally furnished as well
Ludlow,
Lower Salem,
nationally recognized antique as many other Gallipolis
GALLIPOLIS Ten together The Complete
.
Newport
.
and
Beverly. A
dathority, lecturer and homes.
memllers and one guest at- Humorous Sketches and
DANCE
PLANNED
dinner
will
be
served
by the
columnist from Washington, . Chairwoman for the an·
tended . the Thursday Tales of Mark Twain. In
POMEROY
The
Belles
Pomeroy
American
Legion
D. C., and a native of tique se111inar is Mrs. Bess
meeting of the Emanon Club writing a novel Twain comand Beaus Square Dance at the home of 'Mrs. Rita ments on how he writes, ·''I Auxiliary at 12:30, with the
BIDWELL- The marriage ported by three champagne
·
Grace.
Club will sponsor a dance at Frazier. .
of Miss Joyce Bunch, glasaes. Asslating at the
never deliberately sat down meeting to stari at I p.m.
Plans were also made for a daughter of Mrs. Florence reception we•e Mrs. Marget
the Royal Oak Recreation
Mrs. Elsie Lusk presided and create a character in my
Center, Wednesday, 8 to 11 over the meeting, and the life. I began to write in- garage sale at !he home of Figgins and Artis Bunch, to Ftaiill, Merle Howard and
p.m. Frankie Lane, a minutes were approved and cidents out of real life. One Mrs. Gerald Rought on Stanley Mayo, son of Mr. and i\l~rget Bunch.
,,
national-&lt; caJier
froiiJ .read . Several iterps of of the persons l wrill. about -Monday and Tuesday at her Mrs. Hollis Mayo, took place
Relattvea and a few close
· MIDDLEPORT - October Blake, Barbara and Brenda California, will be present. . business were discussed, hegins to ,talk this way and 158 Lincoln "Hlll address . Sept. 24, at 7 p. m. at the frienda attended tbe ~
activities were planned Chappelear, Sheri Drehel, All western square dancers after which Mrs. Reva one another, and pretty soon Members with rummage are Figgins residence !:ere with Uon and ceremony.
dUring the Tuesday night Deena Nease, Carolyn, Jamie are invited to be guests for Mullins introduced the I .f. d that these creatures of to telephone 992-4937 and all Rev. Eddie Bufllno!lon ofThe new Mr. and · Mrs.
members are urged to aaaiat·. ficiating.
meeting of the Bradford and Vlnda Biggs, and Penny the dance.
Mayo preHntly realde at
speaker of the evening, Mrs. th" imagination have
Teens of the Church of Christ ' Kirby. ·
Ruth Mullineaux, who developed Into characters, , Meetings of the club are · The bride, siven In Fourih Ave. Mrs. Mayo, a
-, held at the home of Bill and
presented the autobiography and have a distinct personall· held regularly at 6:30 on marriage by her father, wore 1975 graduate of Gallla
Tuesdays at the hall in
carolyn Biggs.
of . Mark Twain. Samuel ty . . Th~e are not 'made', Middleport. Visitor~ 11r~ a silk taffeta gown fashioned Academy,Jia employed at the
' Last night the youth had a
6 '
6
Clemens, , better known as they just grow naturally out
with a long iraln.of white lace Gallia County-' Sheriff' a
welcome
at
the
meeting.
liiyride, on Oct. 15 there will
and
carried a bouquet of O..,arlment. Mr. Mayo II a
of
the
subject."
Fisher
read
·"What
are
tile
Mark
·
Twain,
was
born
In
EAST • . LETART
~ a "fifth quarter" party ai
After the program, the Information on the program white carnations tipped In 19'io'graduate of North Gallla
"Ministry In tht World We Deeper Meaning of Global Florida, Mo., and spent most
the parsonage following the live In" was the program Ministry? "
of his life In Hannibal. Most hostess served coffee and can be secured from 99U937. mint green with baby's High School and is lllllployed
football game, and on Oct. 30 topic at the Tuesday night
breath.
.at Southern Ohio Coal Co.
Mrs. Sue Ann Beegle of his books were simply coo..·. J.
ii" halloween party will be meeting of. the East Letart · pre~ide(l at the meeting with ~utoblographies; -but he had
Serving as maid of honor
BACK HOME
held. It was also noted that on United Methodist Women.
was B~ S. Lee. She was
the Lord's Praye• being a habit that grew with the
POMEROY
Mrs. attired in a .piilk crepe dress
Oct. 14 at the Kentucky · ' Under the leadership of given In unlson. Mrs. Fisher years of forgetting, or changKathleen Clonch of In- with matching chiffon cape.
!lJrlallan College, '!he group Mrs ..Julia Norris, the IQ'OUP and Mr~. Eileen Roush gave lng, anything he did not like.
dianapolis, Ind., has returned She also carried white carSON BORN- ,
"Truth" will perform. Also explored the necessity of the secretary and treasurer
It was a myth-making proFESTIVAL SET
to her home after spending nations tipped In pink.
MIDDLEPORT- Mtlo,nd
diicu8aed was a ~wlmmtng church for becoming Involved reports. Birthdays were C!',!S, port of -hiS strange
PORTLAND - A fall the past four weeks visiting
party at Rio Grande and a in the · world today and observed and the nominating make-up. No artist ever
John Dotson, best man, Mrs. ·Ronald Logan,
fe&amp;Uvai will be •held at her mother, Mrs. Margaret
Y®ih revival ·scheduled {or working with people In need committee preaenfed a s.late made more of his boyhood
wore
a gray tuxedo matching _dleport, are Announcing the
Portland Elemeatary McKenzie, Union Ave.
birih of a son, K"'ln Patrick,
Nov, I9 to 21.
the
groom's.
everywhere while respecting of officers for the 19'16-77 than did .Samuel Clemens. , Sehool Oct. II witb aerv'· ~
Oct.
3 at the Holzer Medical
· Mike Wayland presided ·the freedom of other people year.
The
reception
was
held
His formal eliucatlon ended
to begiD aU p.m. and 111e
center.
1'he baby weighed 10
with Cherie Ughtfoot and and cultur~. Scripture was
lnunedlately foUowlng !he
Others attending besides early at the death of his
le&amp;Uva.l at 6:30 with I•"'~•"
'
REUNION
PLANNED
pounda,
IO' ounees. Mr. and .
Vicki Pickens giving reporta. iaken from, Mark 10, 35-45, those named were Mrs . . father, and he then became
ceremony. The table was
aad a country store,.
Mn.
Logan
have another aon, POMEROY
A
reunion
of
Wayland also · had the and Mrs. Doria Adama had Mildred Donahue, Mrs. Focie an apprentice newspaper·
decorated with tbe traditional
The memJ lneludes 100p,
the
Minersville
Old
Friends
Darin,
age
2. Gr.....,.rents
deVotions, and prayer was prayer.
bride and groom cake. n,
Hayman, Mrs. j':ula Wolfe, man. Later he worked as a
chllt, sandwiChes. cakes
will
be
held
on
Sunday,
Oct.
are
Mr.
and
Mrs. William
offered by Jack Perry. · Mrs. liazei Fox read Mrs. Ferne Hayman, Mrs. pilot on the Mississippi
groom's sister, Mrs. Allee
and pica, Mule wUoabo be
17,
2 p.m. at tbe Shriners Garnes, presented the bride Ault, Middleport, and Mr.
Following the meeting an "Where is This World In the Mary Roush, Mrs. Margaret River, in the sliver mines of
provided. The ev~nt Ia
and Mrs. Howard Logan,
auCtion game was held and Church and What is its Role Gloeckner, Miss Kathryn Nevada, as a newspaper
being •poilliored by lbe Park at Racine. There will be and groom with a tw&lt;&gt;-liered
a
potluck
dinner.
Information
relreidunenta served to those Now?"; Mrs. Mabel Shields Philson and Miss JoSephine reporier, ·and then finally
.cake, decorated with pink Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs.
PTO.
on the reunion is available roBes and mint green trim. Charlea Sinile, Sprlngflild,
na,ned and Gerri Ughtfoot, read "Why Care About Mowery. Mrs. Hayman and author and lecturer. Charles
·from Mrs. Roy Reuter or
C4l"oJ Morris, Jeff Wayland, Others?" and Jllrs. Marlene Mrs. Adams served refresh- Neider, perhapo the foremost
The unique feature of the and WUbur Logan, Pomeroy
Mrs.
Cecelia
Mitch.
Df'ld, Sylv a and Chuckle
meqts.
Twain scholar, edited ,and put
cake was the top tier . s· ·~ · · are great-grandparents.
'

·English Club meets

.IDfiiLD

Heck's Reg. '17.99

Heck's Reg.

Sturdy n_ylon shell repeh bolh wind and
water. Quilted fot' extra wormth wifhovt
weigh!. 11eovr duty zipper ffy front, 2 patch
pockots, """'!IIi "'I. h;dden hood, p;le ond
quilttd lin.d.

88

Sporting Goods

'1079

..

·JACKEtS

'" " TO WED - Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wiseman are
.: announcing tlie engagement and ap!l"oaching marrlnge ·of
tbeir daughter, Lori, to Dan Waugh, son of Mr. and Mrs.
···A. L. Waugh of Wellston. Miss Wiseman Is a senior at Ohio
· State University majoring in accounting. Her fiance,
_ employed at the Buckeye Union · Insurance Co. in
. • ~umbus, plans to enter his father's Insurance business
In .Wellston in the spring.,Mrs. Zelma Northcutt and Mr.
- and Mrs. Ernest Wiseman of Gallipolis are grandparents
·of tbe !ride-to-be, and Waugh Is the grandson of Mrs.
. Kathryn Potts, Wellston. The Wlsemans are Inviting their
.. frier$ to tbe open church wedding and reception Dec. 18,
• 6:30 p. m. at Grace . United Methodist Church. Pastor
James Frazier and Pastor James Waugh, brother of the
groom to he, will perform the ceremony.

Heck's Reg. •38.59

CROQUET
SET

Hardware De11t.

Lori Wiseman

BB .PISTOL

n·~·-•r.
'

exhibit

--------------~
C~OSMAN

DOU.LAI

Black leaders
demand power
Twa black Rhodesian Immediately react to the
leaders Saturday demanded demands by Mugabe and
a "total and brunedlate" Nkomo. However, one
handover of power to blacks government source called
and presentl!d a list of other them "rather ridiculous" and
demanda they hinted would said they were under study.
have .to be met before they
Under the plan negOtiated
· would attend the Geneva by Secretary of State Henry
conference on Rhodesia. One Kissinger with the white
called. lor a postponement of mltlorily Rhodesian regime
the C«&lt;ference.
of Prime Minister tan Smith,
JOihua Nlromo, leader of _ the Geneva conference will
the moderate Internal wing of form an Interim black-white
·the African National Council, government to rule Rhodesia ·
and Robert Mugabe of the WJtll full black rule within
• more miUtant Zimbabwe two years.
Mrlcan National Union
The two black leaders said
illued a lltatement In Dar Es their participation In "the
Salaam, Tllnzania, that they conference was "cootingent
would llnlte lorcea at the upon the fuiiHIIment of a
conference, scheduled to number of factors" and listed
begin Oct. 2111n Geneva.
sb: demanda that Rhodesian
Mugabe aald Geneva was government sources later
111 "acceptable" site for the tenned "ridlculoua."
cmfers~ce but that the Oct.
But the two men declined to
:IG date eet foc, it to begin is say precisely whether they
''much too 10011." He said the wOuld refuse to attend the
date ol tile cmference would conference unless their dehave to be put hack "at leaat manda were first met.
two weeb."
.
The demands listed by
He uld he had n~ been Nkomo
and
Mugabe
cansulled IJy Britain about Included:
the date. ·
-Release. of political
The two black leaders alao prtaonersand others detained
aald they would not accept under Rhodesia's emergency
Rbodelian Prime Mlntater laws.
Ian Smith aa a full delegate at
- Abolition of "protected
the conference and vowed to villages" In which Rhodesia
cantlnue tbe prrilla border keepa a military presence to
war against the white preve~tnatimalist guerrilla
regime.
.
infUtraUm.
"The theme · of the
-AbolifJm of reatdctions
conference ahall be the on all poliUcal activities In
traer ol poW.r
the Rhodelia, where Mugabe's
colk1nll pow.-, which is the organlzatloo is ooe of several
United Kingdom, to the . banned groupe;
people ri 1Jmbabwe" .- as
-Theliftlngofthe"stateri
Rhqdtlia Is known to emergency," which gives au"blacks--a atatement said.
thorlties broad decree
"~cb a transfer of power ·' pow~s.
must -be
total and
-Suspension of all political
Immediate," the joint trials and the release of aU
lllatemenl aald.
guerrillas sentenced to death.
rn Selllbury, the Rhodeelan
- Unimpeded. return to
IJ)VIoi IWMil, which haa we!- Rhodesia of all memben of
bmed the Brltblt-tpOnaOred "!he liberation movemeni."
c:onl..-ence,
did
not

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

Teens discuss ,activities

.

•
·
as
aat
.
enna
h
UM
. Wh

MECHANICS
CREEPER .·
-· nECk'S .RIG•. ..

......

.•, ..

. Automotive Dept• .

*

••

•

' I

�-,

&amp;A-TheSwwlayTimes-Sentinel,Sunday, Oct.IO, 1976

Heat racing is
being debated

,..... _____ _..-"!_. ________

Woman's World.

'

LEXINGTON, Ky. (UP!)
- The hamea racing world
Ia currenUy deblltlng the
meri!l of heat racing after
troller Steve Lobell went jni.Q
llhock am nearly dled alter
rllllllng lour heats In wtnntng
tile Hlmbletm!an Stakes last
Dllllth.
Paul "Biff" · Lowry,
pnllldent of the Red Mile
track here, I!Cene of Friday's
Kentucky Futurity - whtch
hu been run In four heats the
pallt two years - feels no
rash decisions should be
made about heat racing,
"! peraonaUy don't haVe
any Orm oplnloo one way or
another," Lowry said. "But I
· am enough of a lradltionalist
that I don't want to 9el' it
changed overnight.
"I do tlllnk It bears aome
study and dlacusslon with all
11egments of the lnd\)BitY
Kettlna together to review the
altllatlon," Lowry said. "U,
alter a cooling oif pettod and
une profound study, and if
· the majority decides It is Ume
for a change, I am wllllng Ill
go along."
But Lowry sa.id "We are
going t.q stick with the system
as 18," for the Futurity,
harness racing's oldest
states and one of the
tradlUonal races still run In
heats.
Steve Lobell is scheduled to
run In the t100,000 Futurity In
seeking to become trotting's
eeventh triple crown. winner
after victories In the first two
legs of the crown - the
Yookera Futurity and tbe
Hlmbletmlan.
Steve Lobell's drivertrainer Billy Haughton was
critical of the heat setup after
nearly lollng his horse In the
Hambletmlan.
"If a thoroughbfed had to
do what this horse did,. he
wouldn't ealfor a week," said
Haughton, a veteran driver
stUI oeeklng his first
Kentucky Futurity win.
"ldidn't want to go the last
heat, but according to the
stake rulea we wouldn't get
any first mQIIey II we didn't
' run," Haughton said.
Lowry aald the same rules,
adopted by tbe United States
Trotting · Aoaociatlon, will .
apply In the Futurity.
Under heat racing, the first
horae to capture two beats
wins the race. If different
horses win the first three ·
heats, the three winners meet
In a fourth heat -• raceolf.
There Is aenerally 45 mlntues
to Qlle hour ·between heats,
"which, ' unless · It is- an
un11811BIIy hot day, sl)ould be

long enough," Lowry said.
But Haught.Qn contends
I.Qday's trotters and pacers
are not trained I.Q go but one
or two heats and a lour-heat
event :•tsJtes I.Qo much out of
them" . .
Lowry said In the early part
of the eentur.y harnesa races
would go up Ill six heats and a
century ago 12.-heat races
were not uncommon.
"They would go all day long
and n« have a winner when it
took three heats," Lowry
said. "They would have Ill
stop becau~~e of darkness and
continue the next day:"
· Lowry said even if .. a
declBion were reachea Ill
change the Futurity, It could
not come befoce 1900.
"We are required by the
rules tb run under the
condiUons !l"evaUlng wlien
the horses originally were entered," Lowry satd. "In the
Futurity, you must enter the
dam, prior to the horse's
birth, so that the I976 dams of
horses to race in I979 will be
entered. We are obligated to
race the Futurity under those
rules through 1979.
"Personally, l wouldn't like
a one-heat winner," Lowry
said. "Especially In a trotting
race, where the horses are so
delicately balanced and
gaited, that if someone is
bumped or Interfered with
they go off stride and blow
any chance of winning a
classic race.
"In heat races, if that
happens, they still have a
second and possibly third
heat to overcome the
disadvantage," Lowry said.
"Also, the postpositiOn has so
much to do with the success
In a large field In harness
racing. If the luck of the draw
is unkind in the first heat, you
can turn in an outstanding
race and only finish third, but
you earn a better postUon for
the second heat.
"I have often seen a hocse
win his way Into a better post
position and win the race,"
Lowry said.
"My only suggestion is for
the industry as a whole to sit
down and review theproblem,
discuss it rationally, work out
a solution and let the
majority rule," be said. "But
we must keep in mind two
grolljls. The owners who pay
the bills must have a· strong
voice in the uiUmate decision.
And we also must ·keep. In
mlndthatthefans - whopoy
everybody's bill In the long.
run - should get what they
want."

Sarah Carsey Charlene Hoeflich
992-2156
446-2342
.. L~~!~~~~:~.:~a~:__.w~~~~roy-Middkpo_ft

Photography

trom

..

.,

OCTOBER lOTH AND UTH

IN EFFEC£ SUNDAY .
LEAF RAKE

1CH.I.

CHARCOAL
BRIQUETS
1tld'S
IIG. , , , ...
$~.39. .

llED DEVIL

ANTIQUE
KITS

'2''

Heck'• Reg. •3.99

•24

JOHNSON'S
CENTURY
1001
REEL

$899
Heck's Reg. .. ·

Sporting
Goods

. ·~2.99

CONVERSE
COACH• TENNIS

SHOES
Heck's Reg.
'11.99

8-11

4-l

SIOin DII'T.

COLEMAN
'

PROPANE .

'
Sporting
Goods

·LANTERN

~~?J j

.$}488
5114 "

Heclc's Reg. '19.99
Goodi

· ·

PAN &amp; ROLLER

JERGENS
'
BATH SIZE .

SET

SOAP

'2''

Heck's Reg.
25•

Heclr's Reg. To $9.99

5 DAY
'

DEODORANT

Cosmetics Dept.

~·

'

Housewares .

HECK'S

SA CHAR
Heck's Re.g. •1.19

.

Cosmetics

-

Mr. and Mrs. Mark T. Wootton

Claire Markley is
September bride

Thea Court
entertainerJ

will

1legistration is due

Robin banese Carney ·

Ruby·Call feted

on 80th birthday

Mayo-Bunch wed

Heck's Reg. '1.75.

Heck's Reg, •2.99
Cosmetic

GALLIPOLIS -:- The
French Art Colony exhibit In
November at Rlverby will be
a photog"l'phy show, open to
both members and nonmembers lor participation .
To enter from one to six
pictures, members of the
French Art Colony may
participate with no fee. Nonlljembers must pay an entry
fee of $5. There is no age
limit.
Dilnensions of the pictures
before framing or matting
must be not less than five
inches high or wide and not
greater than 15 inches. An{
pictures entered must be
matted or framed and fixed
for hanging.
Five categories for entry
have been established. They
inciude nature, (animal,
vegetable, mineral); action
(sports, industry, work,
play); humor and humanity,
(kids, folks, pets) ; black and
white; miscellaneOus (none
of the above).
A blue ribbon will b'e
awarded to the best in each of
the five categories. Work
done by professionals Will be
judged separately from the
non-professional or amateur
· entries.
Pictures must be brought to
Riverby, ready for hanging
during the week of Oct. 18. All
pictures
be retu~. and
any who enter will have them
back in case they want to use .
their display photographs for
Cl)ristmas gifts.
To be a pad of the
November photography
exhibit at Riverby, contact
Susan Clarke at 446-4646 or
John Earl Brown at 38U444.
Send your name, t~lephone
number, along with your
status
(whether
a.
professional or an amteur
photographer), and the
number of pictures· you ln·
tend to enter to Rlverby
Photo Show, Box 472,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

· Mark Twain discussed
at Emanof( club program

STEP
.SAVER
$}39

REOUW &amp; SUPER

..;

POMEROY - 1'he holidaY
bazaar to be held Nov. 4 was
discussed at length during the
Thursday nlghi meeiing of .
tbe Catholic Women's Club of
Sacred Hea~ Church. .
First preparations will
begin Oct. II at 9 a.m. wben
. anyone who can help is asked
to come to the church to start
taking Inventory and washing
dishes which will be used at
that time.
Christmas candies which
are for aale at $2 each ·were
shOWn. Mrs. Susan Blaker
conducted , the meeting
opening it with prayer and
the pledge to the flag in the
absence of the Rev . Fr. Paul
Welton. Officers reports were
given and a thank-you note
was read from Mrs .. Loretta .
Saelens for a .planter se.nt on .
her blrihday. Reported ill
were Margaret Gans, Mrs.
Charles McCla in, Mrs.
Elizabeth Hepp , Mrs. B.
Girolami and Richard
Freeman who is confined to
University Hospital.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Rita Hanun, Mrs.
Helen Handley, Mrs. Janet
Duffy and Mrs. Mildred
Wells. The traveling prize
was won by Mrs. Elsie
Southerland.

Plans made

320Z.

MODESS

aa~
Heck's Reg. •1 ;oa

17

..

Housewares Dept.

~· Clothing

DeJ)t.

with Florence Willis

Hod'r Reg. $74.88

'7''·

,. YI.ON -UI:LftD 1--·H-ar.dw.a.re.o.e...pt••·- -

· SizES

.$5gaa

Goods

'3.99

SIZES

4X SCOPE

scheduled
.,

Bazaar
planned

GALI,IPOL!S - - "Tlte honor. She wore a fiowered
marriage of Claire Elizabeth print knit gown with an
Markley and Mark Tice empire wai.st and a v-ohapad
Wootton was solemnized on neckline. She wore a wide
Saturday, Sept. II , at 2 p. m. brim straw hat and carried a
at St. Peter's Episcopal : basket of mint green and
POMEROY
Ladles of '-Church In Gallipolis.
while daisies, tangerine
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - The Rev . and Mrs.
Thea Court were entertained
The bride is the daughter of carnations and baby's
Willard F. Carney of Charleston, W. Va. are anriO\ffich\g
recently by the Twin City Dr. John · C. Markley, breath. Misay Davia, niece of
the forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Robin
Shrlnettes at the Meigs Inn, Gallipolis, and Eleanor p. the bride, served aa fiower
Danese, to Dennis James Satterfield, son of the Rev . and
GAWPOLIS '- Fourieen Purloined Letter," the
Markley, Columbus. Mr. giri. She wore a gown and
Mrs. James Satterfield. of Minersville.· The open church . Pomeroy.
members of !he Engllah Club "Masque of the Red Death"
Mrs. Iris Kelton opened the
wedding"ls
pinnned
for
fall
In the Prayer and Faith · dinner meeting with prayer. Wootton Is the son of Mr. and carried a basket of fiowerl
gathered at the home of Mrs. and others. ·However, he is
Mrs. Verne
Wootton, similar to those of ihc matron
Wesleyan Church on York Ave., Charleston, W. Va. Miss
The
high
·
priestess
of
Thea
Florence Willis Tuesday at 7 best known for his beautiful
of honor.
Columbus.
Carney graduated from the Mountain State Chrlatian
Court,
Lady
Patty
Buell,
was
p.m. with Mrs. Rosebud poetry, parts of which Mrs.
Attendants were Mi11
The
double
ring
ceremony
SchoQIIn Culloden, W.. Va. Her fiance, a graduate of
by
Mrs.
Jean
introduced
Baker, co-hostess. ,
Ellioit read aloud and .eX·
Elizabeth
Boster, Miss Donna
was
performed
by
the
)lev.
Southern High School, is serving with the Air Force at
Moore who presented her Albert H. MacKenzie, Crabtree, Mrs. G. Michael
RAiD call was answered .by tilalped the various poetic
Lackinnd Air Force Base In Texas.
with a corsage made by Vera minister of St. Peter's CoDes and Miss Sally Bets.
each one giving a new or devices which made his
Van Meter and a ceramic Episcopal Church. Mrs. Anne They wore mint green knit
uqusual . word they had poetry especially suitable lor
clock made by Mrs. Moore. Fischer provided the organ ~owns with an empire waist
learned since the last such reading. She finished
Each of those attending the music while solos were SlliiR and a v-&lt;~haped neckline. The
l)leetlng. Following the with two of his most famous
dinner received a ceramic by Dr. Richard Chociej and dresses were made ·liy Mrs.
business meeting, Ruth and often quoted poems,
Mullineaux, substituting for '"The Raven" and "Arutabel
angel as a favor. , .
Dr. John Markley, father of Tim Betz. The atte~dants
Mrs. Buell introduced the the pride. For his daughter's wore hats and carried
the abaent Zelma Northcutt, 'Lee.11
officers of Thea Court. with wedding Dr. · Markley sang baskets of flowers identical to
lntroducOll Jennie Elliott who
Following the program,
e.ach one explaining her 11 0ne Hand. One Heart 11 and those of !he matron of honor.
presented the program for refreshments were aerved by
• duties as an officer. Present "IfWeOnly Have Love." Dr.
the evening.
the hostesses. The November
Dr. Michael Wootton,
were Dcirothy Balr, associate Choolej sang "Psalm I28" . brother of the groom, aerved
Mrs. Elliott discussed the meetin&amp; wlli he with Mrs.
prlncesi; B. Ann Conner, For the processional, Mrs. as beat man. Uahera wera
life and works of Edgar Allen Mabel Wau;; h with Mrs.
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Ruby an · Mrs. Marahel HBtfelt, inner g..rd; Rhoda Joan Fischer played "Trumpet David Olshine, Richard
Poe, one .of the best and Florence V.~&lt;kllne as coCall was guest of honor at a Mf. and Mrs. James · Hively Agnew, past high priestess_ Aire" and the wedding march Halin, WUIIam J. Davis, and
earliest American .crlitcs. hostess. Mrs. Florence Willis
dinner party In observ~nce of and their two sons and and recorder; Frieda Jay, from· "The SpUnd of Music." J.D. Markley, brother of the
She noted that he was also a will be responsible _lor the
her 80th birthday Sept. 26 at daughter, Noah Dale Houck, past high priestess, and Mary
leader in the short story field program on · the " life and
Vases of white gladioli bride.
the home of her daughter, Liz Betty Skidmore, Mr. · and Alice· Wharton, second were on each side of the altar, \ Immediately following the
of .writing. He was a works of another early
Fisher, Teens Run Rd.
forerunner of the .modern Amerlca'"n writer,
Mrs. Bill Saunders, Robert . ceremonial lady. ,
while white pew bows ceremony, a reception,
Mrs. Call, still quite ·active, Hazlett.
.detective story with his "The Washington Irving.
Twin City Shrlnettes at- marked sections reserved for prepared and served by tile
has three ~hildren and four
Mary Agnes Nelson, Mf. tending were Mrs. Moore, the family.
Episcopal Church Women,
grandcll)ldren.
and Mrs. Dowie Williams, president; Lora Byers, vice
The bride, given in was held outside In the
After dinner. she cut her Mr. and Mrs. Bay Beaver, president; Barbara Dugan, marriage by her lather, wore church yard. The cake, made
large birthday cake which ' Marie Beaver, Mr. and Mrs. secretary; Cora )leegle, a white gown of quiana with by Mrs. ~ver Walker, was
was Inscribed "Happy· 80th Gene Beiler, Mr. and Mrs. . treasurer; Emma K. Clat· cap sleeves of· guipure lace topped with fiowers matching
G A L L I ·P 0 L I S
Gallipolis.
Birthday Mom,"
and Carl Beaver and dau8hter worthy, Clara Adams, that also trimmed the empire those of the attendants. The
Rl!glstration for the sixth
Friday morning's 9 o'clock
acknowledged the many gifts Janet, Garnet Johnson, Clara Shirley Beegle, Iris Kelton, waist. Sunburst gathers fiowers cascaded down the
annual antique seminar, session will be an " lnshe reeeived.
Gilmore, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Gertrude Mitchell, •and detalled the high neck bodice front of the cake. Mrs. An·
"'l.onaored by the French Art troduction to Antiques";
Enjoying the dinner pariy Holley and children Sissy and guests, Twlla Childa, Kathryn and matching guipure . lace drew Burnett and Ml11
Colony on Friday · and following lunch, the afternoon
wereMr. and Mrs. Joe Call, Kevin, Bill Griffith and sons Hysell, UU!an Mqore and bordered a.sho)er oval yoke of Valerie Sheets served the
SUNDAY DEADLINE
Saturday, Oct. 15 and 16 ·at program .at I o'clock will _. The deadline ior weddiDK Tammy and Tommy, Miss Sobby and Timmy and Dixie Dugan. Mrs. Moore had English net. Lace edged the cake.· Mrs. Michael Wootton
Riverby, must be made with · focus on "Antique Fur- and engagement no• Carol Call, Mr. and Mrs. Paul daugnter Carla Ann, Burdell a reading.
hem and attached chapel and Mrs. Richard Choclej,
Mrs. Jennie Lou Hudson by niture," its restoration and
tlces
and
society Skidmore, Mr. and Mrs. Phil Forth; alll~al; Mr. and Mrs.
train.
The fingertip veil, sister of the groom, served
Tuesday, Oct. 12.
refinishing. Participants may
news Items for the · Foster, Inez McGuire and Pete Beckett, Iva Mae Rider,
made
by
the bride, was of the punch and c:oHee. Mrs.
Cost for the,. two day bring two items to discuss at
Lyla
Beth Hazel Bond, Milton, w. Va.;
SUBday Tlmea-Sentlnel tB daughter,
white
tricot
edged with Tim Betz retlstered the
seminar is $5 each day;- and the morning session, and
12 noon on the Thursday McGuire, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Beaver
~ ulpure lace. She carried a guesta.
this registration covers a chair, small table, drawer,
preceding publication. James Alva Caldwell and son and son Mike, Pprt Clinton:
The nn· Mn. Wootton, a
MIDDLEPORT - Plans IJouquetof white daisiea, mint
lunch. Mrs. Hudson may "be frame, etc., lor the afternoon
Information may be tumed Jerry, Lyia B. Waugh, Mr.
graduate
•, of Marshall
green
carnations
and
baby's
were made for the Area Incontacted by calling 446-2837 meeting.
in or mailed to the office of
University,
ll employed by
breath.
A
small
•.
white
prayer
spiration Day to be hel&lt;i here ·
or send checks to her at 518
The $object lor Saturday, • the Gallipolis . Daily.
book
belonging
to
Mrs.
Albert
The
Nationwide
lnaurance
Nov. 13 by the TOPS Club at
Third Ave. In Gallipolis.
also starting at 9 a.m., will be _1Tribune or Pomeroy Daily H.
MacKenzie,
was
fitted
Into
Co.
In
Columbua:-Tbe
fir9om
.
'
tbe Tuesday night meeting
'SesslOIIB will open each "Antiques of the Victorian
Sentinel. Engagement and
is
·attending
Ohio
Stile
the
bouquet.
held at the Legion hall In
mornlng at 9 a.m. and con- Era," when household furweddin"g forms
are
University
In
Columbua.
Mrs.
William
J.
Davis
stoed
Middleport.
elude at 3 p.m. The seminar nlahlngs were similar to those
Meigs Chapter o70 will boat with her sister as matron of
win be conducted by Mrs. in which Riverby was available upon request.
chapters
from Marietta,
orva Walker Heissenbuttel, a originally furnished as well
Ludlow,
Lower Salem,
nationally recognized antique as many other Gallipolis
GALLIPOLIS Ten together The Complete
.
Newport
.
and
Beverly. A
dathority, lecturer and homes.
memllers and one guest at- Humorous Sketches and
DANCE
PLANNED
dinner
will
be
served
by the
columnist from Washington, . Chairwoman for the an·
tended . the Thursday Tales of Mark Twain. In
POMEROY
The
Belles
Pomeroy
American
Legion
D. C., and a native of tique se111inar is Mrs. Bess
meeting of the Emanon Club writing a novel Twain comand Beaus Square Dance at the home of 'Mrs. Rita ments on how he writes, ·''I Auxiliary at 12:30, with the
BIDWELL- The marriage ported by three champagne
·
Grace.
Club will sponsor a dance at Frazier. .
of Miss Joyce Bunch, glasaes. Asslating at the
never deliberately sat down meeting to stari at I p.m.
Plans were also made for a daughter of Mrs. Florence reception we•e Mrs. Marget
the Royal Oak Recreation
Mrs. Elsie Lusk presided and create a character in my
Center, Wednesday, 8 to 11 over the meeting, and the life. I began to write in- garage sale at !he home of Figgins and Artis Bunch, to Ftaiill, Merle Howard and
p.m. Frankie Lane, a minutes were approved and cidents out of real life. One Mrs. Gerald Rought on Stanley Mayo, son of Mr. and i\l~rget Bunch.
,,
national-&lt; caJier
froiiJ .read . Several iterps of of the persons l wrill. about -Monday and Tuesday at her Mrs. Hollis Mayo, took place
Relattvea and a few close
· MIDDLEPORT - October Blake, Barbara and Brenda California, will be present. . business were discussed, hegins to ,talk this way and 158 Lincoln "Hlll address . Sept. 24, at 7 p. m. at the frienda attended tbe ~
activities were planned Chappelear, Sheri Drehel, All western square dancers after which Mrs. Reva one another, and pretty soon Members with rummage are Figgins residence !:ere with Uon and ceremony.
dUring the Tuesday night Deena Nease, Carolyn, Jamie are invited to be guests for Mullins introduced the I .f. d that these creatures of to telephone 992-4937 and all Rev. Eddie Bufllno!lon ofThe new Mr. and · Mrs.
members are urged to aaaiat·. ficiating.
meeting of the Bradford and Vlnda Biggs, and Penny the dance.
Mayo preHntly realde at
speaker of the evening, Mrs. th" imagination have
Teens of the Church of Christ ' Kirby. ·
Ruth Mullineaux, who developed Into characters, , Meetings of the club are · The bride, siven In Fourih Ave. Mrs. Mayo, a
-, held at the home of Bill and
presented the autobiography and have a distinct personall· held regularly at 6:30 on marriage by her father, wore 1975 graduate of Gallla
Tuesdays at the hall in
carolyn Biggs.
of . Mark Twain. Samuel ty . . Th~e are not 'made', Middleport. Visitor~ 11r~ a silk taffeta gown fashioned Academy,Jia employed at the
' Last night the youth had a
6 '
6
Clemens, , better known as they just grow naturally out
with a long iraln.of white lace Gallia County-' Sheriff' a
welcome
at
the
meeting.
liiyride, on Oct. 15 there will
and
carried a bouquet of O..,arlment. Mr. Mayo II a
of
the
subject."
Fisher
read
·"What
are
tile
Mark
·
Twain,
was
born
In
EAST • . LETART
~ a "fifth quarter" party ai
After the program, the Information on the program white carnations tipped In 19'io'graduate of North Gallla
"Ministry In tht World We Deeper Meaning of Global Florida, Mo., and spent most
the parsonage following the live In" was the program Ministry? "
of his life In Hannibal. Most hostess served coffee and can be secured from 99U937. mint green with baby's High School and is lllllployed
football game, and on Oct. 30 topic at the Tuesday night
breath.
.at Southern Ohio Coal Co.
Mrs. Sue Ann Beegle of his books were simply coo..·. J.
ii" halloween party will be meeting of. the East Letart · pre~ide(l at the meeting with ~utoblographies; -but he had
Serving as maid of honor
BACK HOME
held. It was also noted that on United Methodist Women.
was B~ S. Lee. She was
the Lord's Praye• being a habit that grew with the
POMEROY
Mrs. attired in a .piilk crepe dress
Oct. 14 at the Kentucky · ' Under the leadership of given In unlson. Mrs. Fisher years of forgetting, or changKathleen Clonch of In- with matching chiffon cape.
!lJrlallan College, '!he group Mrs ..Julia Norris, the IQ'OUP and Mr~. Eileen Roush gave lng, anything he did not like.
dianapolis, Ind., has returned She also carried white carSON BORN- ,
"Truth" will perform. Also explored the necessity of the secretary and treasurer
It was a myth-making proFESTIVAL SET
to her home after spending nations tipped In pink.
MIDDLEPORT- Mtlo,nd
diicu8aed was a ~wlmmtng church for becoming Involved reports. Birthdays were C!',!S, port of -hiS strange
PORTLAND - A fall the past four weeks visiting
party at Rio Grande and a in the · world today and observed and the nominating make-up. No artist ever
John Dotson, best man, Mrs. ·Ronald Logan,
fe&amp;Uvai will be •held at her mother, Mrs. Margaret
Y®ih revival ·scheduled {or working with people In need committee preaenfed a s.late made more of his boyhood
wore
a gray tuxedo matching _dleport, are Announcing the
Portland Elemeatary McKenzie, Union Ave.
birih of a son, K"'ln Patrick,
Nov, I9 to 21.
the
groom's.
everywhere while respecting of officers for the 19'16-77 than did .Samuel Clemens. , Sehool Oct. II witb aerv'· ~
Oct.
3 at the Holzer Medical
· Mike Wayland presided ·the freedom of other people year.
The
reception
was
held
His formal eliucatlon ended
to begiD aU p.m. and 111e
center.
1'he baby weighed 10
with Cherie Ughtfoot and and cultur~. Scripture was
lnunedlately foUowlng !he
Others attending besides early at the death of his
le&amp;Uva.l at 6:30 with I•"'~•"
'
REUNION
PLANNED
pounda,
IO' ounees. Mr. and .
Vicki Pickens giving reporta. iaken from, Mark 10, 35-45, those named were Mrs . . father, and he then became
ceremony. The table was
aad a country store,.
Mn.
Logan
have another aon, POMEROY
A
reunion
of
Wayland also · had the and Mrs. Doria Adama had Mildred Donahue, Mrs. Focie an apprentice newspaper·
decorated with tbe traditional
The memJ lneludes 100p,
the
Minersville
Old
Friends
Darin,
age
2. Gr.....,.rents
deVotions, and prayer was prayer.
bride and groom cake. n,
Hayman, Mrs. j':ula Wolfe, man. Later he worked as a
chllt, sandwiChes. cakes
will
be
held
on
Sunday,
Oct.
are
Mr.
and
Mrs. William
offered by Jack Perry. · Mrs. liazei Fox read Mrs. Ferne Hayman, Mrs. pilot on the Mississippi
groom's sister, Mrs. Allee
and pica, Mule wUoabo be
17,
2 p.m. at tbe Shriners Garnes, presented the bride Ault, Middleport, and Mr.
Following the meeting an "Where is This World In the Mary Roush, Mrs. Margaret River, in the sliver mines of
provided. The ev~nt Ia
and Mrs. Howard Logan,
auCtion game was held and Church and What is its Role Gloeckner, Miss Kathryn Nevada, as a newspaper
being •poilliored by lbe Park at Racine. There will be and groom with a tw&lt;&gt;-liered
a
potluck
dinner.
Information
relreidunenta served to those Now?"; Mrs. Mabel Shields Philson and Miss JoSephine reporier, ·and then finally
.cake, decorated with pink Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs.
PTO.
on the reunion is available roBes and mint green trim. Charlea Sinile, Sprlngflild,
na,ned and Gerri Ughtfoot, read "Why Care About Mowery. Mrs. Hayman and author and lecturer. Charles
·from Mrs. Roy Reuter or
C4l"oJ Morris, Jeff Wayland, Others?" and Jllrs. Marlene Mrs. Adams served refresh- Neider, perhapo the foremost
The unique feature of the and WUbur Logan, Pomeroy
Mrs.
Cecelia
Mitch.
Df'ld, Sylv a and Chuckle
meqts.
Twain scholar, edited ,and put
cake was the top tier . s· ·~ · · are great-grandparents.
'

·English Club meets

.IDfiiLD

Heck's Reg. '17.99

Heck's Reg.

Sturdy n_ylon shell repeh bolh wind and
water. Quilted fot' extra wormth wifhovt
weigh!. 11eovr duty zipper ffy front, 2 patch
pockots, """'!IIi "'I. h;dden hood, p;le ond
quilttd lin.d.

88

Sporting Goods

'1079

..

·JACKEtS

'" " TO WED - Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wiseman are
.: announcing tlie engagement and ap!l"oaching marrlnge ·of
tbeir daughter, Lori, to Dan Waugh, son of Mr. and Mrs.
···A. L. Waugh of Wellston. Miss Wiseman Is a senior at Ohio
· State University majoring in accounting. Her fiance,
_ employed at the Buckeye Union · Insurance Co. in
. • ~umbus, plans to enter his father's Insurance business
In .Wellston in the spring.,Mrs. Zelma Northcutt and Mr.
- and Mrs. Ernest Wiseman of Gallipolis are grandparents
·of tbe !ride-to-be, and Waugh Is the grandson of Mrs.
. Kathryn Potts, Wellston. The Wlsemans are Inviting their
.. frier$ to tbe open church wedding and reception Dec. 18,
• 6:30 p. m. at Grace . United Methodist Church. Pastor
James Frazier and Pastor James Waugh, brother of the
groom to he, will perform the ceremony.

Heck's Reg. •38.59

CROQUET
SET

Hardware De11t.

Lori Wiseman

BB .PISTOL

n·~·-•r.
'

exhibit

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C~OSMAN

DOU.LAI

Black leaders
demand power
Twa black Rhodesian Immediately react to the
leaders Saturday demanded demands by Mugabe and
a "total and brunedlate" Nkomo. However, one
handover of power to blacks government source called
and presentl!d a list of other them "rather ridiculous" and
demanda they hinted would said they were under study.
have .to be met before they
Under the plan negOtiated
· would attend the Geneva by Secretary of State Henry
conference on Rhodesia. One Kissinger with the white
called. lor a postponement of mltlorily Rhodesian regime
the C«&lt;ference.
of Prime Minister tan Smith,
JOihua Nlromo, leader of _ the Geneva conference will
the moderate Internal wing of form an Interim black-white
·the African National Council, government to rule Rhodesia ·
and Robert Mugabe of the WJtll full black rule within
• more miUtant Zimbabwe two years.
Mrlcan National Union
The two black leaders said
illued a lltatement In Dar Es their participation In "the
Salaam, Tllnzania, that they conference was "cootingent
would llnlte lorcea at the upon the fuiiHIIment of a
conference, scheduled to number of factors" and listed
begin Oct. 2111n Geneva.
sb: demanda that Rhodesian
Mugabe aald Geneva was government sources later
111 "acceptable" site for the tenned "ridlculoua."
cmfers~ce but that the Oct.
But the two men declined to
:IG date eet foc, it to begin is say precisely whether they
''much too 10011." He said the wOuld refuse to attend the
date ol tile cmference would conference unless their dehave to be put hack "at leaat manda were first met.
two weeb."
.
The demands listed by
He uld he had n~ been Nkomo
and
Mugabe
cansulled IJy Britain about Included:
the date. ·
-Release. of political
The two black leaders alao prtaonersand others detained
aald they would not accept under Rhodesia's emergency
Rbodelian Prime Mlntater laws.
Ian Smith aa a full delegate at
- Abolition of "protected
the conference and vowed to villages" In which Rhodesia
cantlnue tbe prrilla border keepa a military presence to
war against the white preve~tnatimalist guerrilla
regime.
.
infUtraUm.
"The theme · of the
-AbolifJm of reatdctions
conference ahall be the on all poliUcal activities In
traer ol poW.r
the Rhodelia, where Mugabe's
colk1nll pow.-, which is the organlzatloo is ooe of several
United Kingdom, to the . banned groupe;
people ri 1Jmbabwe" .- as
-Theliftlngofthe"stateri
Rhqdtlia Is known to emergency," which gives au"blacks--a atatement said.
thorlties broad decree
"~cb a transfer of power ·' pow~s.
must -be
total and
-Suspension of all political
Immediate," the joint trials and the release of aU
lllatemenl aald.
guerrillas sentenced to death.
rn Selllbury, the Rhodeelan
- Unimpeded. return to
IJ)VIoi IWMil, which haa we!- Rhodesia of all memben of
bmed the Brltblt-tpOnaOred "!he liberation movemeni."
c:onl..-ence,
did
not

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Teens discuss ,activities

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as
aat
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enna
h
UM
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MECHANICS
CREEPER .·
-· nECk'S .RIG•. ..

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. Automotive Dept• .

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28-NStmday'l'imes-Sentinel. SWldaY, Oct. 10,1976

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Texture

Social
Calendar

•

Dick Roderick, Jim O'Dell, Uncia Halley Oiner, lllarlene
Evans Morgan, Sue Dalley Miller· and Karen Nibert
Wllllams; (third row), Joe Duncan, aicbard Woodyard,
George Corbin, Bill Mayes, Harry Scott, William B.
Thomas, Tom Skinner, Kent Evans, ·Andy Mallins, Gill
Gee, Bill Conley and Jim Elliott. Anyone wanting a
picture should contact David Tawney at Tawney's Studio
· before Oct. 19.

DELAWARE, Ohio (UP!) athletic

::::}.::::::::::7.:::::::::;::::::::::::=:=:·:·:~:~:::~::::::~::;:::::::::::~::;:::::::::::::::::::::::·~' l: de~ s: eue t . ~

director,, holds

ath?ertic~~~cl:~rn:roh~~ ~~~~~c!!s~:~~tsOhi~

::l
::l

cOrner

SUNDAY
ANNUAL HOMECOMING
at carleton Church SWlday.
Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.
followed by .worship service.
llu)&lt;et dinner at noon. Af·
ternoon services at . 2 p.m.
· dbristian singers of Point
Pleasalit ind Gospei '!'ones of
Chester along With other
llin8ero will be featured. _ _
SOUTIIEASTERN omo
Black Lung Aaan. meeting,
Sunday, Jack Ward's
. recreation room with James
F. Kldd, Glouster, president,
to be on hand. Doors open at
12 noon ; all members asked
to attend.
!47TH HOMECOMING of
RuUand Church of Clirlsl,
Sunday begiruiing at 9:30
a.m.; afternoon service 2
p.m. with special singing
from area churches; publlc
invited.

By Goldie CleDdellla
PORTLAND - In September on a Thursda y
ev&amp;ling Mrs. Thomas
(Phyllis ) stobart entertained
the Emma Smith Circle at
her home in Racine.
Attending were Myrtle

workshop:~~

· ri:t~:!CuOMIN;~

By Charlene
Hoeflich •

Sun~·

!llurch,
.m.
basket dinner; alterno
service, 2 p.m. featuring the
Wesleyan University wiii Athletic Conference. He is ::!,
"Praise 'the Lord" singers
retire July I after 36 years at secretary of the National ··
from Kingston, Ohio, and ,
the school.
Association of College
POMEROY- Twenty-thousand mlles in 19 days is a lot of other talent; public invited.
Slrimer, a
coa ch, Directors of Athleti,cs.
territory
to cover in a short time, but that's about what Mr. and
physical education teacher
SONGFEST AT the Cheste
Mrs.
Wayne
Swiaher and son, Charles did.
and sports official as well as
The three returned this week from liong Kong and are still Church ol God, 2 p.m. S
recuperating from jet IJ!g and.general exhaustion of that many featuring the Coy Famlly,
d!iys on the move. Enroute to Hong Kong; they had a 24 hour Waverly; Eternal Youth
lay-over at Okinawa due tD a typhoon in Hong Kong. Side trips Singers, Wellston; Gospel
during their stay there were to ultra.ffiodern Siugapore, . Tones Quartet, CheBter; Roy ,
Bangkok, the capita) of Thailand, and Malaysia with Its rubber Dickens and Family,
Waverly . Public Invited.
plantations and factories.
Evangelistic services at 7:30
TUESDAY Jennifer Sheets begJM"iier ApPalachian Music p.m. SWlday with Rev. Paul
program in the Columbus schools; a project of the Ohio Arts Cay, guest speaker.
You won't feel so new or need that city map much
CoWlCil.
MONDAY
lonaer if you'll arrana~ for a WELCOME WAGON call.
That day she will have three performances and also
As your Hostess, I can gl~e you personal, home-town
SOUTHERN ATilLE TIC ·
answeri to lots ol your new-town questions. Abo1Jts,hoppin1,
conduct a workshop. Her performances will he 45 minutes each Boosters Monday, 7:30 p.m.
slahts-to -see, and other helpful community information.
with music on the auto-harp, dulcimer and banjo as well as a at high school. All interested
Plus a basket of usefu l &amp;ifts for your home.
little storytelling.
_!l"rsona urged to attend.
Put the map away and reach for th e tel ~ phone .
AS ror tne wori!Silop she'D display those lhree instruments
WESTERN BOOT CB Club,
along with a guitar, fiddle and • Jew's harp, give
Monday,
8 p.m. at Roush
demonstrations on their use and even spme instruction.
If.nding,
•
.
Ptt 446.;937
Jennifer says that she has secured several dulcimers to take to
UNITED METllODIST
Columbus'with her for use in the program. She's prepared key
Women, Heath Church,
similar
to what is used with a cho\'(1 organ Middleport, 7:30 p.m.
• - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , sheets
- lor -usesomething
in teaching
the dulcimer.
During October and November she will have programs in Monday at the church, Mrs.
nine different schools, and the·n she'll receive another schedule Beulah Jones to have
devotions; Mrs. Euvetta
for the next two months,
.
Bechtle, program, and Mrs.
WHAT WITH the scarcity of apples this year, we're Mary Rinehart, Mrs, Beulah
surprised that anyone is making apple butter.
Strauss, Mrs. Donna Byer
and Mrs~ Juanita Bachtel,
But the Senior ~tizens will be on Oct. 20.
It will he made the traditional way - in a copper kettle refreshments.
OCT. 14-15-16
over an open lite. The price is $2 a quart and orders are now
DEMO LAY CHAPTER
being taken, Just call !m-7886.
·
special meeting Monday, 7:30
p.ni. at Middleport Masonic
PLEASANT Margaret Sinclair, a.fter suffering a stroke Hall. All members are asked
about two mon\hs ago and spendbig .several weeks at the to atlend.
.)/ SPecial showin;.; of •
Holzer Medical Center, is now at the Maple Heights Nursing
MEIGS JUNIOR High
Home
at Wellston, There she is near her son,.George Durst, School Athletic Boosters
PRISCiu,. A atld JOHN ALDJ:.."N
and his family. Margaret, we're sure, will be delighted to hear meeting, 7:30p.m: Monday at
diamond rinKs, necklaces, earrings
from her many friends here.
'
school in Middleport.
SOUTHERN HIGH Athletic
· and pins.
NUMEROUS new unllorms have been ordered by the Boosters will not meet
.Southern Band Boosters, a necessity sjnce the band has Monday as 'previously anBy Mr. jack Brown,
increased in membership from 39 last year to 81 this year noWlCed but will meet instead
Factory Representative
under the new director, Jesse Br.owning. HoW ahoullhal !
·on Monday, Oct. 18, at 7:30
p.m. at the high scjlool.
BRENDA VAN METER has returned to Florida alter
TliESDAY
SHOW HOURS
visiting here for IOdays with her parents and then going oo to
SPECIAL PROGRAM
Thursday, Oct. 14, 6: 30pm -- 9 pm, Nebraska and Iowa to visit friends. She's employed as a honoring past masters with
r:..: L
'O
JO ·
medical secretary and assistant manager at the Medical Clinic Past Grand Master James J.
n«#!J, . Ct. 151 9:
am - 8
in Lakeland, Fit!. andsheandher brother, Steve, live together. Harbage speaker when
Saturda 11 , . Oct. 16, 9:30 am _5 pm.
Steve, incidentally, is recuperating from Injuries he Racine Masonic Lodge ottn,
'-"
received on his job with W.E.D. Contractors. He fell into a 20- F&amp;AM, · meets in regular
fool · shaft, was hospitalized for a time, but is now out and sess1on, 7:30 -p.m. Tu esday;
ele ct. and ]a•11
J-a- wa111
J
about,
all Master Masons Invited.
ne Christmas gifts
SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday
J
FOUR MIDDLEPORT Clurch of Christ women got their 7:30 p.m. Thelma Dill will
ear.ry.
first experience at the country fair of the Athens Mental Health speak on Til levy. 'Brownie
,_----~-------_.:~---1 Center Thursday.
. .
Troop Jl20 will present
Clyda Allensworth, Martha Childa, Nora Rice and Coleen program. Refreshments by
.
Van M~ter worked in one of the booths. Proceeds from the lair stxth grade room mothers.
which rs annually staged by t1!e hospttal auxiliary goes to buy · WINDING TRAIL Garden
342 Second Ave.
thmgsforthepatlentsnotprovldedforthroughstatefunds.
Cl b 8
Tuesday at the
Gallipolis, Ohio
The Sunday school classes of the Middleport Church hou '
Susie Miller
446·269!
don~ted pies, cakes, cookies~ candies, jelly, pickles, home Ne~eo~icero ~he installed
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;,;,;.;.,_ _ _ _ _ __ , canned goods and crocheted 1terns for the fair.
by Mra. Addalou Lewis. For

Home·town answers
tonew·town
questions.

T~RESA Bl'filml~iqoll.

Special Diamond
jewelry Show

.

F;
r
.
0 c::

;)\\
rz.c _

pm

s.

fi

CLARK 'S JEWELRY STORE'

f':.t

Racine

·SPECIAl.

SILVER TRAY SALE
, Just in time tar · buffe t

entertaining

and gift

giv ing. Great values in
quality sllverplate tray s .. .
all superbly crafted and
ava ilable al this modes!
pclce for a llll)lfed lime

only.

·

3 SIZES

10'!.................'13.50
12lfz'! ...............17.50
.

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15"········ ·· ···· ··•. · 25.00 '

Clark's Jewelry

Sto~·t,=-::::;=----

' 342 2ND AVE.

'!.,---------.-i.-..

PH. ·446-2691

..•ililiii,ll'.liiiiiiiiiiii:;..___

iiiiiiilii-.1

roll call members are 10
display either a specimen or
a spray of mums. The
program by Allee Thompson
will be "Spice Up Your Hall."
EASTERN High School
band boosters . will meet at
7 30
Tuesd
th hi
: p.m.
ay al e gh
school. Parents of all band
·
members are invited,
EASTERN LOCJ\,L Band
Boosters, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
at high school. Parents of all
band members asked· to .
attend.
'MEIGS COUNTY Council
on Aging meeting, 9:30 a.m.
Tuesday it senior citizens
center, Pomerov·,
• Electlnnof
~·
officers. All perscins 55 and
older invited.

By Mn. Francil Morris
' John Amott was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
liiisa Vera Beegle returned
to her home from Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs . William
Woods have .moved from
Jacksonville into the Mayme
Mallory trailer home on Vine
Street. Guests over the .
weekend were Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Woods of Daytoo, Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Woodgerd
and 1\fike of Marietta, Mr.
and Mrs. Jeff HID and son ol
Addison and several local
relatives,
Mr. 'and Mrs .. Rodericlt
Grimm and Mrs. Linda Morris of Athens visited at
Grtmm were supper guests the homes of Mr. and Mrs.
Saturday of Mr. and Mrs. CIU!ord Morris and Mr. and
Walter Shane at Gallipolis Mrs. Francis Morris Sunday
and atteqded a wedding afternoon.
.
shower in honor of·a nephew.
Mrs. Dixie Smith, Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Miller Mrs. Roy Smith, Mr. and
spent a day with' Mrs. Helen Mrs. Ralph Shain and Mr.
Slack at .Letart Falls. ·
and Mrs. Paul Smith were
Mr. and Mrs. Steve guests ol Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Badgley and Kelll of Ervine Satu!'day,
Columbus spent the weekand
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
with his parenta, Mr. and Turley and sons, Kenny and
Mrs. Ralph Badgley,
' Kevin, were overnight guests
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Saturday of his parents, Mr.
WIIllams and son, Shannon. and Mrs. Clarence Turley at
accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Gallipolis.
Cisco Williams of Albany to
Mr. Kenneth Swart of
Cinclruiali to a bllll game on ·Akron is spending a few days
Sunday.
.
with his mother, Mrs. James
,Mr. •nd Mrs. Delbert Swart.
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GALIJPOLIS - The fifth
in a series of workshopll on
the elements of design,
sponsored by the French Art
Colony and instructed by
Sarah Moshier, will be held
on Tuesday evening, Oct. 12,
from 7 untll 10 p.m. at
Rivetby.
'
Emphasis will be on lex·
lure at Tuesday 's workflhop.
The cost for registration Is $4
for French Art Colony
members and $5 lor non·
members. Already cqvereil in
the past two months were
Perspective in August and
Value in September.
The
workshop
for .
November, the sixth in the
series, will be on Compositfon, scheduled Tuesday
evening, Nov. 9.
For registration In·
formation on any workshops
or classes held at the French
Art Colony, contact Mrs.
John Byers at 446-1903. '

Trudy Maria Roach
BETROTHED - Mr. and Mrs. Carl Roach, 311
Wright St., Pomeroy, are annOWlcing the engagement of
their daughter, Trudy Maria, to Mark Roderick 'ltiiUarns,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Williams, .Rt. 4, Pomeroy. The
bride-elect is a sel)ior at Meigs High School. Her fiance, a
1972 graduate of Meigs High School, is employed at the
l'llillpSporn Plant, .New Haven, W. Va. AJune wedding is
being planned.

ProHitt, llah Roush, Beulah
Roush, Lucy Taylor, Golda
Gillilan, Earlene Stobart,
Ruth Bradford, and this
reporter. The study period
was from Rosalind Rinker's
book, "Prayer : Conversing
with God," taught by Locy

Taylor , worship com·
mltteewoman.
We enjoyed visiting
together in Phyllla' bome and
afterward the refreshments
.• lbe and her daughter Klrrunie
serveil. Uttle Tommy helped,
too (he served tbe 11111111).

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"YOU'RE

LOO~ING'

"

1'1\IGHTY
PRETTY

.,

TODI\Y!"
" I'm 5uro: you'•'

~~een told how ·
ffil r¥elo us you
lou lr; in skiru ,

~~-' .B~n.. sotl'!ose
sleeksh, oe'
liQ

...

~l i m

... wull, th i ~
· seem 10 br ing out the real
wOman in ~ O u . YeS, lcmin ini t~
~ui t s yuu w~l l." Cro11-fron t sling In

nevv. c1rnet, or black.
l ·llr1p In rust or blac_k.

conn1e·

guitars,
ijob
Pickett
POMEROY - The Rev ,
(trombone Impersonation ) 'and Mrs. Harold Deeth and
and Rita White, guitar and Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Kelton of
piano.
Grace Episcopal Chur.ch,
Attend\hg were Mr, and Pomeroy, spent.Oct. 2_and 3
Mrs. G'erard Seton, Athens; in Dayton attending the
Mrs. Erma Smith, Conley special value conference of
Cole, Pomeroy Route; Mrs. the Diocese of Southern Ohio.
Clara . Mae Mcintyre,
Rue! Howe was the keynote ·
Minersville Route; Mr. and speaker and chief resour
Mrs. Bob Green, Stephanie, person for the event. Subject •
Mark and Crystal, Gallipolis; of the conference was
Bob Pickell, Darwin; Mr. "Making Growth Changes.l' ·
and Mrs. Denny Spires, Dr. »owe's most recent book,
Dimise, June and Stephen, · "How to Stay YoWlger While :
Story's Run; Mrs. Iva Growing Older" was the ' ..
Stewart, Minersville; Mr. basis for his remarks.
•
and Mrs. Ralph Bales and
The coriference was held at
Rachel, Mrs. Irma Bales, Mr. Bergamo, a religious and •
and Mrs. Joseph White;" educ&amp;tional conference "'
Kyger; Rhonda Bales and center in Dayton. Enroute
George Markin, Radcliff, and home Mr. and Mrs. Kelton •
, Wilkie Holman and Miss had dinner and spent an •
Virginia Grogran, 'Mid· afternoon with Retired Col.
dleport.
Lyston Fultz, Xenia. ·
After supper the group
·eqjoyed ice cream furnished
APPLE
GROVE
by Wilkie Holman. Later in
LEVY ENDORSED
Members of the local United the evening the group moved . PORTLAND - The Port· ••
Methodist Church of Apple Inside where' Inna Bales land PTO recently gave Its ~
Grove held their annual showed home movies of a full endorsement to the TB :
picnic Sunday at. Portland recent church picnic at ·the levy to be voted on in the :
Park.
Pickett farm.
- • November election.
Mrs: Dolly Wolfe gave the
••
' prayer before the dinner.
Games were olaved anrl •
nice time was enjoyed by th~ ·
•
•
follOWing: Mrs. Wolle, Dolly
••
Hili, Alice Balser, Bertha
~LVER
Robinson, Dee and Bob
••
Spencer, Tracy Mearns,
•
Douglas Barnett, Ann ·
Adams.
,
Peggy and Aimee 'Hill;
••
Gene Mankin , Charles and .
•,
Michael Boso, Bess and
Dorsey Parsons, Lucille and
Karen Rllodes, Bill Davidson,
••
Jan, Darrell and Tracy
•
Norris, Joey Roush, Debbie
•
ENTIRE STOCK
Barnett, Brenda and Brian
•
Lawrence, Mike Fleming,
•
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Sharon and Cindy Roush,
Joyce, Carroll, Darla, .
••
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DlaMa, Keith and Kevin
While and John Young.
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MIDDLEPORT . - Mem·
hers of the Pomeroy Seventh·
Day Adventist ChurcJ! and
their families and guests
gathered at the home of Miss
Virginia Grogan here Oct. 3
for a potluck picnic supper on
the lawn . Preceding the
supper, prayer was offered
by Gerard Seton.
·
The group enjoyed playing
ball, horseshoe, Tbne Bomb,
and singing, with music
provided by Denny Spires on
banjo and guitar, Junior
White playing bass, Fran
seton and Bob Green playing

Mon . &amp; Fri. t :)Otlll P·'"·
Tun., WK., S&amp;lt: MIIIS p.m .
Thwndlyt::IGI\112-

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.LADIES FALL
&amp;WINTER COAT

·ATTENTION
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SENIOR CITIZENS!
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10.97

5

Reg. $15.99

Save $5.02

.
Heavy rain drenched the
mountain sections of the
Carolinas, Maryland and
West Virginia Friday nighl
and early Saturday, causing
some flooding in the southern
portion of West Virginia.

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3STATESDRENC~ED

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FREE Personalized checks.
· O.oose from three styles. No Golden
.Buckeye Card Required. Only proof
of age - We will.furnish free checks
to ~yone over 65 years.
eFree O.ecks •No O.arges

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Brazilian Tan Wood Wedge
· with cushion crepe sole and
rawh ide whipped lrim. ·

MAO ON SHOW
!lONG KONG (UP!)
Mao Tse-tung's body will be
placed inal4e a crystal sarcophagus in a memorial hall
in Peking "so lbat the broad
masses of the people will be
able to pay respecia to his
remains," according to lhf
New Chin~ Ne"'S Agency0

Someone Cares•
The Commercia.! and Savings
Bank.Cares ••• ·

•

shoe trimmed in rll\~hid e with
comfy pUH collar.

"WE CARE" '

.COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ·BANK
.

IN.VIR BRIDGE PLA:ZA

11011, FRI, SAT.

I~

SONDAY I to 6

••
••

now.
There's a
"Window
Beautiful" in the upper Court
where John D. 1\ockefeller
us,e&lt;! to go and lneditate. He
asked to buy the window ;
raised the price $1,000 each
year.

Birthday
MIDDLEPORT - The 84th
birthday ol Mrs. Bessie Mae
Quillen;69!Sycamore St. was
observed last Sunday with a
dinner party , Gifts we re
presented to Mrs. Quillen.
Attending were George
Quillen and son, Tom, Mrs.
Evelyn Spencer and Terry
Clark, Pomeroy; Mrs. Viola
Bayles, Middleport; Mrs .
Frank King and son ,
Harrisonville; Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Persinger, Piketon;
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Russell
and · family, Columbus, and
Bill Qulllen, Mason, W. Va.
Friends and neighbors caUed
during the day .

SWlday School attendance
on Oct. 3 was 42.' The oHering
was $35.50. Worship services
were held at !0:45 with the
Rev . Richard Thomas
speaking on • 'A Broken Body
Offered to a Broken World"
(a sennon for World Communion Sunday). A special
offering was taken and 'Holy
Communion was olfered .
Attendance at this service
was 30. Rev , Randy
Lavender, who formerly
ministered here and his
family, now of Athens, were

.'

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Brazilian Wedge . So ft Latigo

•,

Whatever church you
belong to, it would he well
worth your lime to visit there
when you are in the vicinity ,
It was bullt in 1831 by the
· Reor~anlzed Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints,
by direct revelation ; as to the
.time, place, length, breadth
and use of it (I Kings, chapter
&amp;) , "in the name of the Lord."
First of ils kind so ,lar as we
know , since ancient Urnes.
It's an Interesting place
with an interesting history.
Folks come from all over the
world to see it.
To us ills not a show place,
except it shows what a
handful of God's creation can
do against all the odds they
suffered and come out with
friends who respect them

'

.

Polished Wood Gr~ i n In ~ rich

3 several families left Racine
and returned Sunday
evening. All reported a
weekend well spent. One of
the highlights of the trip was
attending · services in the-·
·Temple which is used on
,special occ asi ons, though
there's a chapel across the

Alfred
'
Social Notes

20% ·OFF

W!;DNESDAY
WHITE ROSE LODGE,
I :30 p.m. Wednesday at the
American Legion hall,
llllddleport.
POMEROY
MID·
DLEPORT Lions Club,
Wednesday noon at the Meigs
Inn.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, stated
convocation, 7:30 Wednesday
night .' at the Pomeroy
MasonicTemple.At6:30p.m.
stated assembly of the
Bosworth Council 46, royal
and select !)lasters.
MIDDLEPORT
IJT~
ERARY Club, 2 p.m.
Wednesday at the home ol
Mrs. Sibley Slack. ·The book,
"The Indian Affair" will be
reviewed by Mrs. Dwight
Wallace. ROll call will be an
Indian custom. ·

discUssed,
On Friday at f a.m. on Oct.

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COURT STREET AND SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
MEMBER FDIC

Terrie Lee Miller

Anita Kay DeVault

CO UPLE TO WED-Terrie Lee llllller and Thomas
Walker are announcing t)leir engagement and forth·
coming marriage on Sunday, Dec. 26, at ille Asbury
United ~ethodist ·Church, Syracuse. The Rav, Richard E.
Jarvis will officiate. The gracious custom of open church
will be observed and a receptlon will follow in the churdr
social room . Miss Miller is the daughter ol Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Lee Miller, Rt. I, Rutland, and a 1969 graduate of
Meigs High Scllool and a 1970 graduate of Natlonwide
Beauty Academy, ·columbus. She is employed at
Dorothy 's Beauty Salon, Syracuse, Mr. Walker is the son '
of Uie late Raymond apd Ada Patterson Walker,
Gallipolis. He attended Gallipolis schools and Is employed
at Federal Mogul , Gallipolis.

ENGAGED - Mr . and- Mrs. William DeVault, 17
Madison Ave., Gallipolis, announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Anita Kay, to
Jeff Merry, son of Mr. and Mrs. James R. Merry, Rt. I,
Bidwell, Miss DeVault is · a· 1973 graduate of Gallia
Academy. High School, employed at the Commercial and
Savings Bank. Her .fiance, a 1970 graduate of Gallia
Acad~y, is employed with the Rodney &amp;lppll' Co. ,
Rodney. The open church. wedding will take place
.Salurday,' Nov , 6, 6:30,p. m. at t111: Church .uf Chr ist in
Christian Union.

Katie's Korner

K&amp;K MOBILE
HOMES Features

By Kqtie Crow

observed

Picnic
e-njoyed

IN THE
BRIDGE
· PLAZA

•

During the social hour the
IQOg weekend trtp to Kirtland
Temple near Cleveland was

road.

Couples attend
fall conference

Families gather for picnic

.

Mrs. Stobari entertains circle meet

to·~ .

THE GALLIA ACADEMY High School Class of 1961
held its 15 year reunion on Sept. 4 at the Holiday Inn in
Gallipolis. Attending were {first row, !1), Ruth Ann
Luman Hamllton, Judy Jones , Fuller, Jean Conley
Davison,_&amp;Jsan Adrian Winters, Becky Tawney Scott,
Mary CUrnutte 'Winegarden, Pat McGinness Mills, Lois
Simmons Simms, and Donna Cornwell Allen; (second
row), Jerri Piesley Davis, Barbara McKinney Chevalier,
Dottie McMahon Chestnut, Claudia Miller Sabcock,
Charles McGuire, Jack Saunders, Phyllis Pope Brown,
Sally Johnson Orebaugh, DaMie Greene, Ken Sanders,

.

38-The Sunday Tbnes-SenUnel, Sunday, Oct. 10, !976

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POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. CIU r Williams, Syracuse, will ~
both be celebrating their birthdays this month ,
·
Grace will 'he 91 on Oct. 11 anil Cliff wiil be 92 on Oct. 28. &gt;t·
Also celebrating a birthday on Oct. 28 will be Eleanor Robson, lt
county recorder.
~
Certainly hope you all have a "happy birthday ."
lt

* the finest mobile .home5,.

modulars and double ·wides

lt

SPEAKING of birthdays Susie Fisher, Morning Star, was
6! yea rs old on Oct. 5.
'
'
Belated best wishes.

!

in the Tri-County area.

lt

MRS. MARGARET Sinclair, Pome~oy, who has been lt
seriously ill, is now residing at Maple Heights Nursing Home,
East A Street, Wellston, Ohio.
Margaret, I'm sure, would enj oy hearing from her many
friends in the county, .
f . .

COME .IN TODAY AND
SEE THIS HUGE SELECTION

A RICMINDER tliat the Bloodmobile will be at Pomeroy
Elementary School Monday from I to 6 p.m . Vernon Nease,
blood program chairman, reports that all types of blood are
needed.
The quota is 100 units. Help yourself by helping the
program.

OF HOMES

THE CHRONIC lung disease-Black lung treairnent
program at O'Bleness Hospital in Athens, is open to anyone
who has lung disease. The clinic teaches techniques 'that will
help relieve the shortness of breath and chronic cough
associated with lung problems.
.
CUrrently these services are fr ee to anyone who has been a
coal miner for three years .or more. Anyone interested in
obtaining more information about the clinic should call Marcia
Earley or Betsy Neff at 593-5551, extension

EO.

Laurel Oiff
News Notes _

~--------------------------~

KNIT MILL

guests.

Attendance at all services
Attending the District Oct. 3 at the Free Methodist
UMW Workshop meeting at Church was 158.
Nelsonville UM Church on
Mr. and Mrs. Eu gene
Thursday evening, Sept. 30 · Russell of Florida is visting
from here were Nellie his brother and sister·ln·law, '
Parker, June Stearns and Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Helen Wood~.
Russell and attended services
Ernest T~ylor from here Sunday at the local church,
was among those baptized at,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Poulton,
Royal Oak Park last SWlday Canton, spent the weekend
afternoon by Rev. Thomas with Mr: and Mrs. Roy
and Rev, Sydenstrlcker,
Howell.
Ricky Dillinger has been
Mark Stahl , Stockdale,
hospila)ized with a knee Paul Stahl, Columbus, Fritz
Injury the past week at Stahl, New Marshfield, and
0' Bleness Mem'o rial Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Well,
Hospital, Athens. He was llllddleport, recently called
returned home on Sunday. on Mr. and Mrs. Nonnan
Several -from here attended Schaefer .
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Cum·
the aMual Homecoming at
the Hemlock Grove Christian berson,
Ma son ,
Ohio,
Church ·~unday, oct. 3. Rev. recently called on Mrs.
James Quisenberry and Nancy )'lalker.
family of Morehead, Ky.,
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Mathew,
were present. It was an en· Huron, called on Mrs.
joyable occasion with 200 in Mathew's parents, Mr. and ·
attendance.
Mrs. Dick Karr, Saturday .
Mary ,Carr has returned
WMS of the local church
home alter se-.eral days In held ils monthly meeting
Columbus assisting at the Sed Tuesday evening at the home
O'Brien home.
,
of Mrs. James Gilmore.
Dana Swartz o( Columtius·
The local church people
recently vlsltM Mr. and Mrs. are having a · hay ride
Paul Buckley and family and Saturday evening going to
other realtives and friends in Royal Oak Park. All are
welcome.
.the area.
~s. D. Woode recently
called on his sister, carrie
Burson and other relatives
MilLER DOOR OPEN
and friends at the 1Kimes · POMEROY
A
Convalescent Home In represent 'a tive ! rom
Athens.
Congressman Claren ce E.
Miller's office will conduct an
OFFICE CLOSING
open door ' session from 10
POMEROY ' - Farmers a .m.-12 noon in the court·
Home Administration county house in Pomeroy on Oct. 13.
office In Pomeroy will be Anyone having questions
closed , Wednesday and concerning' the Federal
Thursday Oct. 13 and 14 due
Government,
please
stop byto an out of town meetinp.
to discuss them
.

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STORE

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WE DO IT AGAIN- GIVING .YOU
EXCLUSIVE STYLING &amp; DESIGNER FASH~ON
AT MILL PRICES.

II
'1
PRINTS
·

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FROM OUR . NEW DESIGNER COLLECTION 60"
WIDE - VALUES TO •3.95:

SEE OUR FABULOUS COLLECTIO
OF FASHION KNits - .USED BY
AMERiCA'S LEADING DESiGNERS

KNI1 MILL

FREE

.STORE
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
PHONE 446-9199

WllH EACH '10
PUiatASE

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28-NStmday'l'imes-Sentinel. SWldaY, Oct. 10,1976

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Texture

Social
Calendar

•

Dick Roderick, Jim O'Dell, Uncia Halley Oiner, lllarlene
Evans Morgan, Sue Dalley Miller· and Karen Nibert
Wllllams; (third row), Joe Duncan, aicbard Woodyard,
George Corbin, Bill Mayes, Harry Scott, William B.
Thomas, Tom Skinner, Kent Evans, ·Andy Mallins, Gill
Gee, Bill Conley and Jim Elliott. Anyone wanting a
picture should contact David Tawney at Tawney's Studio
· before Oct. 19.

DELAWARE, Ohio (UP!) athletic

::::}.::::::::::7.:::::::::;::::::::::::=:=:·:·:~:~:::~::::::~::;:::::::::::~::;:::::::::::::::::::::::·~' l: de~ s: eue t . ~

director,, holds

ath?ertic~~~cl:~rn:roh~~ ~~~~~c!!s~:~~tsOhi~

::l
::l

cOrner

SUNDAY
ANNUAL HOMECOMING
at carleton Church SWlday.
Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.
followed by .worship service.
llu)&lt;et dinner at noon. Af·
ternoon services at . 2 p.m.
· dbristian singers of Point
Pleasalit ind Gospei '!'ones of
Chester along With other
llin8ero will be featured. _ _
SOUTIIEASTERN omo
Black Lung Aaan. meeting,
Sunday, Jack Ward's
. recreation room with James
F. Kldd, Glouster, president,
to be on hand. Doors open at
12 noon ; all members asked
to attend.
!47TH HOMECOMING of
RuUand Church of Clirlsl,
Sunday begiruiing at 9:30
a.m.; afternoon service 2
p.m. with special singing
from area churches; publlc
invited.

By Goldie CleDdellla
PORTLAND - In September on a Thursda y
ev&amp;ling Mrs. Thomas
(Phyllis ) stobart entertained
the Emma Smith Circle at
her home in Racine.
Attending were Myrtle

workshop:~~

· ri:t~:!CuOMIN;~

By Charlene
Hoeflich •

Sun~·

!llurch,
.m.
basket dinner; alterno
service, 2 p.m. featuring the
Wesleyan University wiii Athletic Conference. He is ::!,
"Praise 'the Lord" singers
retire July I after 36 years at secretary of the National ··
from Kingston, Ohio, and ,
the school.
Association of College
POMEROY- Twenty-thousand mlles in 19 days is a lot of other talent; public invited.
Slrimer, a
coa ch, Directors of Athleti,cs.
territory
to cover in a short time, but that's about what Mr. and
physical education teacher
SONGFEST AT the Cheste
Mrs.
Wayne
Swiaher and son, Charles did.
and sports official as well as
The three returned this week from liong Kong and are still Church ol God, 2 p.m. S
recuperating from jet IJ!g and.general exhaustion of that many featuring the Coy Famlly,
d!iys on the move. Enroute to Hong Kong; they had a 24 hour Waverly; Eternal Youth
lay-over at Okinawa due tD a typhoon in Hong Kong. Side trips Singers, Wellston; Gospel
during their stay there were to ultra.ffiodern Siugapore, . Tones Quartet, CheBter; Roy ,
Bangkok, the capita) of Thailand, and Malaysia with Its rubber Dickens and Family,
Waverly . Public Invited.
plantations and factories.
Evangelistic services at 7:30
TUESDAY Jennifer Sheets begJM"iier ApPalachian Music p.m. SWlday with Rev. Paul
program in the Columbus schools; a project of the Ohio Arts Cay, guest speaker.
You won't feel so new or need that city map much
CoWlCil.
MONDAY
lonaer if you'll arrana~ for a WELCOME WAGON call.
That day she will have three performances and also
As your Hostess, I can gl~e you personal, home-town
SOUTHERN ATilLE TIC ·
answeri to lots ol your new-town questions. Abo1Jts,hoppin1,
conduct a workshop. Her performances will he 45 minutes each Boosters Monday, 7:30 p.m.
slahts-to -see, and other helpful community information.
with music on the auto-harp, dulcimer and banjo as well as a at high school. All interested
Plus a basket of usefu l &amp;ifts for your home.
little storytelling.
_!l"rsona urged to attend.
Put the map away and reach for th e tel ~ phone .
AS ror tne wori!Silop she'D display those lhree instruments
WESTERN BOOT CB Club,
along with a guitar, fiddle and • Jew's harp, give
Monday,
8 p.m. at Roush
demonstrations on their use and even spme instruction.
If.nding,
•
.
Ptt 446.;937
Jennifer says that she has secured several dulcimers to take to
UNITED METllODIST
Columbus'with her for use in the program. She's prepared key
Women, Heath Church,
similar
to what is used with a cho\'(1 organ Middleport, 7:30 p.m.
• - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , sheets
- lor -usesomething
in teaching
the dulcimer.
During October and November she will have programs in Monday at the church, Mrs.
nine different schools, and the·n she'll receive another schedule Beulah Jones to have
devotions; Mrs. Euvetta
for the next two months,
.
Bechtle, program, and Mrs.
WHAT WITH the scarcity of apples this year, we're Mary Rinehart, Mrs, Beulah
surprised that anyone is making apple butter.
Strauss, Mrs. Donna Byer
and Mrs~ Juanita Bachtel,
But the Senior ~tizens will be on Oct. 20.
It will he made the traditional way - in a copper kettle refreshments.
OCT. 14-15-16
over an open lite. The price is $2 a quart and orders are now
DEMO LAY CHAPTER
being taken, Just call !m-7886.
·
special meeting Monday, 7:30
p.ni. at Middleport Masonic
PLEASANT Margaret Sinclair, a.fter suffering a stroke Hall. All members are asked
about two mon\hs ago and spendbig .several weeks at the to atlend.
.)/ SPecial showin;.; of •
Holzer Medical Center, is now at the Maple Heights Nursing
MEIGS JUNIOR High
Home
at Wellston, There she is near her son,.George Durst, School Athletic Boosters
PRISCiu,. A atld JOHN ALDJ:.."N
and his family. Margaret, we're sure, will be delighted to hear meeting, 7:30p.m: Monday at
diamond rinKs, necklaces, earrings
from her many friends here.
'
school in Middleport.
SOUTHERN HIGH Athletic
· and pins.
NUMEROUS new unllorms have been ordered by the Boosters will not meet
.Southern Band Boosters, a necessity sjnce the band has Monday as 'previously anBy Mr. jack Brown,
increased in membership from 39 last year to 81 this year noWlCed but will meet instead
Factory Representative
under the new director, Jesse Br.owning. HoW ahoullhal !
·on Monday, Oct. 18, at 7:30
p.m. at the high scjlool.
BRENDA VAN METER has returned to Florida alter
TliESDAY
SHOW HOURS
visiting here for IOdays with her parents and then going oo to
SPECIAL PROGRAM
Thursday, Oct. 14, 6: 30pm -- 9 pm, Nebraska and Iowa to visit friends. She's employed as a honoring past masters with
r:..: L
'O
JO ·
medical secretary and assistant manager at the Medical Clinic Past Grand Master James J.
n«#!J, . Ct. 151 9:
am - 8
in Lakeland, Fit!. andsheandher brother, Steve, live together. Harbage speaker when
Saturda 11 , . Oct. 16, 9:30 am _5 pm.
Steve, incidentally, is recuperating from Injuries he Racine Masonic Lodge ottn,
'-"
received on his job with W.E.D. Contractors. He fell into a 20- F&amp;AM, · meets in regular
fool · shaft, was hospitalized for a time, but is now out and sess1on, 7:30 -p.m. Tu esday;
ele ct. and ]a•11
J-a- wa111
J
about,
all Master Masons Invited.
ne Christmas gifts
SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday
J
FOUR MIDDLEPORT Clurch of Christ women got their 7:30 p.m. Thelma Dill will
ear.ry.
first experience at the country fair of the Athens Mental Health speak on Til levy. 'Brownie
,_----~-------_.:~---1 Center Thursday.
. .
Troop Jl20 will present
Clyda Allensworth, Martha Childa, Nora Rice and Coleen program. Refreshments by
.
Van M~ter worked in one of the booths. Proceeds from the lair stxth grade room mothers.
which rs annually staged by t1!e hospttal auxiliary goes to buy · WINDING TRAIL Garden
342 Second Ave.
thmgsforthepatlentsnotprovldedforthroughstatefunds.
Cl b 8
Tuesday at the
Gallipolis, Ohio
The Sunday school classes of the Middleport Church hou '
Susie Miller
446·269!
don~ted pies, cakes, cookies~ candies, jelly, pickles, home Ne~eo~icero ~he installed
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;,;,;.;.,_ _ _ _ _ __ , canned goods and crocheted 1terns for the fair.
by Mra. Addalou Lewis. For

Home·town answers
tonew·town
questions.

T~RESA Bl'filml~iqoll.

Special Diamond
jewelry Show

.

F;
r
.
0 c::

;)\\
rz.c _

pm

s.

fi

CLARK 'S JEWELRY STORE'

f':.t

Racine

·SPECIAl.

SILVER TRAY SALE
, Just in time tar · buffe t

entertaining

and gift

giv ing. Great values in
quality sllverplate tray s .. .
all superbly crafted and
ava ilable al this modes!
pclce for a llll)lfed lime

only.

·

3 SIZES

10'!.................'13.50
12lfz'! ...............17.50
.

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15"········ ·· ···· ··•. · 25.00 '

Clark's Jewelry

Sto~·t,=-::::;=----

' 342 2ND AVE.

'!.,---------.-i.-..

PH. ·446-2691

..•ililiii,ll'.liiiiiiiiiiii:;..___

iiiiiiilii-.1

roll call members are 10
display either a specimen or
a spray of mums. The
program by Allee Thompson
will be "Spice Up Your Hall."
EASTERN High School
band boosters . will meet at
7 30
Tuesd
th hi
: p.m.
ay al e gh
school. Parents of all band
·
members are invited,
EASTERN LOCJ\,L Band
Boosters, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
at high school. Parents of all
band members asked· to .
attend.
'MEIGS COUNTY Council
on Aging meeting, 9:30 a.m.
Tuesday it senior citizens
center, Pomerov·,
• Electlnnof
~·
officers. All perscins 55 and
older invited.

By Mn. Francil Morris
' John Amott was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
liiisa Vera Beegle returned
to her home from Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs . William
Woods have .moved from
Jacksonville into the Mayme
Mallory trailer home on Vine
Street. Guests over the .
weekend were Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Woods of Daytoo, Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Woodgerd
and 1\fike of Marietta, Mr.
and Mrs. Jeff HID and son ol
Addison and several local
relatives,
Mr. 'and Mrs .. Rodericlt
Grimm and Mrs. Linda Morris of Athens visited at
Grtmm were supper guests the homes of Mr. and Mrs.
Saturday of Mr. and Mrs. CIU!ord Morris and Mr. and
Walter Shane at Gallipolis Mrs. Francis Morris Sunday
and atteqded a wedding afternoon.
.
shower in honor of·a nephew.
Mrs. Dixie Smith, Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Miller Mrs. Roy Smith, Mr. and
spent a day with' Mrs. Helen Mrs. Ralph Shain and Mr.
Slack at .Letart Falls. ·
and Mrs. Paul Smith were
Mr. and Mrs. Steve guests ol Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Badgley and Kelll of Ervine Satu!'day,
Columbus spent the weekand
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
with his parenta, Mr. and Turley and sons, Kenny and
Mrs. Ralph Badgley,
' Kevin, were overnight guests
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Saturday of his parents, Mr.
WIIllams and son, Shannon. and Mrs. Clarence Turley at
accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Gallipolis.
Cisco Williams of Albany to
Mr. Kenneth Swart of
Cinclruiali to a bllll game on ·Akron is spending a few days
Sunday.
.
with his mother, Mrs. James
,Mr. •nd Mrs. Delbert Swart.
·,
0

slated ·

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GALIJPOLIS - The fifth
in a series of workshopll on
the elements of design,
sponsored by the French Art
Colony and instructed by
Sarah Moshier, will be held
on Tuesday evening, Oct. 12,
from 7 untll 10 p.m. at
Rivetby.
'
Emphasis will be on lex·
lure at Tuesday 's workflhop.
The cost for registration Is $4
for French Art Colony
members and $5 lor non·
members. Already cqvereil in
the past two months were
Perspective in August and
Value in September.
The
workshop
for .
November, the sixth in the
series, will be on Compositfon, scheduled Tuesday
evening, Nov. 9.
For registration In·
formation on any workshops
or classes held at the French
Art Colony, contact Mrs.
John Byers at 446-1903. '

Trudy Maria Roach
BETROTHED - Mr. and Mrs. Carl Roach, 311
Wright St., Pomeroy, are annOWlcing the engagement of
their daughter, Trudy Maria, to Mark Roderick 'ltiiUarns,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Williams, .Rt. 4, Pomeroy. The
bride-elect is a sel)ior at Meigs High School. Her fiance, a
1972 graduate of Meigs High School, is employed at the
l'llillpSporn Plant, .New Haven, W. Va. AJune wedding is
being planned.

ProHitt, llah Roush, Beulah
Roush, Lucy Taylor, Golda
Gillilan, Earlene Stobart,
Ruth Bradford, and this
reporter. The study period
was from Rosalind Rinker's
book, "Prayer : Conversing
with God," taught by Locy

Taylor , worship com·
mltteewoman.
We enjoyed visiting
together in Phyllla' bome and
afterward the refreshments
.• lbe and her daughter Klrrunie
serveil. Uttle Tommy helped,
too (he served tbe 11111111).

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"YOU'RE

LOO~ING'

"

1'1\IGHTY
PRETTY

.,

TODI\Y!"
" I'm 5uro: you'•'

~~een told how ·
ffil r¥elo us you
lou lr; in skiru ,

~~-' .B~n.. sotl'!ose
sleeksh, oe'
liQ

...

~l i m

... wull, th i ~
· seem 10 br ing out the real
wOman in ~ O u . YeS, lcmin ini t~
~ui t s yuu w~l l." Cro11-fron t sling In

nevv. c1rnet, or black.
l ·llr1p In rust or blac_k.

conn1e·

guitars,
ijob
Pickett
POMEROY - The Rev ,
(trombone Impersonation ) 'and Mrs. Harold Deeth and
and Rita White, guitar and Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Kelton of
piano.
Grace Episcopal Chur.ch,
Attend\hg were Mr, and Pomeroy, spent.Oct. 2_and 3
Mrs. G'erard Seton, Athens; in Dayton attending the
Mrs. Erma Smith, Conley special value conference of
Cole, Pomeroy Route; Mrs. the Diocese of Southern Ohio.
Clara . Mae Mcintyre,
Rue! Howe was the keynote ·
Minersville Route; Mr. and speaker and chief resour
Mrs. Bob Green, Stephanie, person for the event. Subject •
Mark and Crystal, Gallipolis; of the conference was
Bob Pickell, Darwin; Mr. "Making Growth Changes.l' ·
and Mrs. Denny Spires, Dr. »owe's most recent book,
Dimise, June and Stephen, · "How to Stay YoWlger While :
Story's Run; Mrs. Iva Growing Older" was the ' ..
Stewart, Minersville; Mr. basis for his remarks.
•
and Mrs. Ralph Bales and
The coriference was held at
Rachel, Mrs. Irma Bales, Mr. Bergamo, a religious and •
and Mrs. Joseph White;" educ&amp;tional conference "'
Kyger; Rhonda Bales and center in Dayton. Enroute
George Markin, Radcliff, and home Mr. and Mrs. Kelton •
, Wilkie Holman and Miss had dinner and spent an •
Virginia Grogran, 'Mid· afternoon with Retired Col.
dleport.
Lyston Fultz, Xenia. ·
After supper the group
·eqjoyed ice cream furnished
APPLE
GROVE
by Wilkie Holman. Later in
LEVY ENDORSED
Members of the local United the evening the group moved . PORTLAND - The Port· ••
Methodist Church of Apple Inside where' Inna Bales land PTO recently gave Its ~
Grove held their annual showed home movies of a full endorsement to the TB :
picnic Sunday at. Portland recent church picnic at ·the levy to be voted on in the :
Park.
Pickett farm.
- • November election.
Mrs: Dolly Wolfe gave the
••
' prayer before the dinner.
Games were olaved anrl •
nice time was enjoyed by th~ ·
•
•
follOWing: Mrs. Wolle, Dolly
••
Hili, Alice Balser, Bertha
~LVER
Robinson, Dee and Bob
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Spencer, Tracy Mearns,
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Douglas Barnett, Ann ·
Adams.
,
Peggy and Aimee 'Hill;
••
Gene Mankin , Charles and .
•,
Michael Boso, Bess and
Dorsey Parsons, Lucille and
Karen Rllodes, Bill Davidson,
••
Jan, Darrell and Tracy
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Norris, Joey Roush, Debbie
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ENTIRE STOCK
Barnett, Brenda and Brian
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Lawrence, Mike Fleming,
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Sharon and Cindy Roush,
Joyce, Carroll, Darla, .
••
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DlaMa, Keith and Kevin
While and John Young.
"
MIDDLEPORT . - Mem·
hers of the Pomeroy Seventh·
Day Adventist ChurcJ! and
their families and guests
gathered at the home of Miss
Virginia Grogan here Oct. 3
for a potluck picnic supper on
the lawn . Preceding the
supper, prayer was offered
by Gerard Seton.
·
The group enjoyed playing
ball, horseshoe, Tbne Bomb,
and singing, with music
provided by Denny Spires on
banjo and guitar, Junior
White playing bass, Fran
seton and Bob Green playing

Mon . &amp; Fri. t :)Otlll P·'"·
Tun., WK., S&amp;lt: MIIIS p.m .
Thwndlyt::IGI\112-

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.LADIES FALL
&amp;WINTER COAT

·ATTENTION
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SENIOR CITIZENS!
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10.97

5

Reg. $15.99

Save $5.02

.
Heavy rain drenched the
mountain sections of the
Carolinas, Maryland and
West Virginia Friday nighl
and early Saturday, causing
some flooding in the southern
portion of West Virginia.

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3STATESDRENC~ED

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FREE Personalized checks.
· O.oose from three styles. No Golden
.Buckeye Card Required. Only proof
of age - We will.furnish free checks
to ~yone over 65 years.
eFree O.ecks •No O.arges

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Brazilian Tan Wood Wedge
· with cushion crepe sole and
rawh ide whipped lrim. ·

MAO ON SHOW
!lONG KONG (UP!)
Mao Tse-tung's body will be
placed inal4e a crystal sarcophagus in a memorial hall
in Peking "so lbat the broad
masses of the people will be
able to pay respecia to his
remains," according to lhf
New Chin~ Ne"'S Agency0

Someone Cares•
The Commercia.! and Savings
Bank.Cares ••• ·

•

shoe trimmed in rll\~hid e with
comfy pUH collar.

"WE CARE" '

.COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ·BANK
.

IN.VIR BRIDGE PLA:ZA

11011, FRI, SAT.

I~

SONDAY I to 6

••
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now.
There's a
"Window
Beautiful" in the upper Court
where John D. 1\ockefeller
us,e&lt;! to go and lneditate. He
asked to buy the window ;
raised the price $1,000 each
year.

Birthday
MIDDLEPORT - The 84th
birthday ol Mrs. Bessie Mae
Quillen;69!Sycamore St. was
observed last Sunday with a
dinner party , Gifts we re
presented to Mrs. Quillen.
Attending were George
Quillen and son, Tom, Mrs.
Evelyn Spencer and Terry
Clark, Pomeroy; Mrs. Viola
Bayles, Middleport; Mrs .
Frank King and son ,
Harrisonville; Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Persinger, Piketon;
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Russell
and · family, Columbus, and
Bill Qulllen, Mason, W. Va.
Friends and neighbors caUed
during the day .

SWlday School attendance
on Oct. 3 was 42.' The oHering
was $35.50. Worship services
were held at !0:45 with the
Rev . Richard Thomas
speaking on • 'A Broken Body
Offered to a Broken World"
(a sennon for World Communion Sunday). A special
offering was taken and 'Holy
Communion was olfered .
Attendance at this service
was 30. Rev , Randy
Lavender, who formerly
ministered here and his
family, now of Athens, were

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Brazilian Wedge . So ft Latigo

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Whatever church you
belong to, it would he well
worth your lime to visit there
when you are in the vicinity ,
It was bullt in 1831 by the
· Reor~anlzed Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints,
by direct revelation ; as to the
.time, place, length, breadth
and use of it (I Kings, chapter
&amp;) , "in the name of the Lord."
First of ils kind so ,lar as we
know , since ancient Urnes.
It's an Interesting place
with an interesting history.
Folks come from all over the
world to see it.
To us ills not a show place,
except it shows what a
handful of God's creation can
do against all the odds they
suffered and come out with
friends who respect them

'

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Polished Wood Gr~ i n In ~ rich

3 several families left Racine
and returned Sunday
evening. All reported a
weekend well spent. One of
the highlights of the trip was
attending · services in the-·
·Temple which is used on
,special occ asi ons, though
there's a chapel across the

Alfred
'
Social Notes

20% ·OFF

W!;DNESDAY
WHITE ROSE LODGE,
I :30 p.m. Wednesday at the
American Legion hall,
llllddleport.
POMEROY
MID·
DLEPORT Lions Club,
Wednesday noon at the Meigs
Inn.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, stated
convocation, 7:30 Wednesday
night .' at the Pomeroy
MasonicTemple.At6:30p.m.
stated assembly of the
Bosworth Council 46, royal
and select !)lasters.
MIDDLEPORT
IJT~
ERARY Club, 2 p.m.
Wednesday at the home ol
Mrs. Sibley Slack. ·The book,
"The Indian Affair" will be
reviewed by Mrs. Dwight
Wallace. ROll call will be an
Indian custom. ·

discUssed,
On Friday at f a.m. on Oct.

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COURT STREET AND SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
MEMBER FDIC

Terrie Lee Miller

Anita Kay DeVault

CO UPLE TO WED-Terrie Lee llllller and Thomas
Walker are announcing t)leir engagement and forth·
coming marriage on Sunday, Dec. 26, at ille Asbury
United ~ethodist ·Church, Syracuse. The Rav, Richard E.
Jarvis will officiate. The gracious custom of open church
will be observed and a receptlon will follow in the churdr
social room . Miss Miller is the daughter ol Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Lee Miller, Rt. I, Rutland, and a 1969 graduate of
Meigs High Scllool and a 1970 graduate of Natlonwide
Beauty Academy, ·columbus. She is employed at
Dorothy 's Beauty Salon, Syracuse, Mr. Walker is the son '
of Uie late Raymond apd Ada Patterson Walker,
Gallipolis. He attended Gallipolis schools and Is employed
at Federal Mogul , Gallipolis.

ENGAGED - Mr . and- Mrs. William DeVault, 17
Madison Ave., Gallipolis, announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Anita Kay, to
Jeff Merry, son of Mr. and Mrs. James R. Merry, Rt. I,
Bidwell, Miss DeVault is · a· 1973 graduate of Gallia
Academy. High School, employed at the Commercial and
Savings Bank. Her .fiance, a 1970 graduate of Gallia
Acad~y, is employed with the Rodney &amp;lppll' Co. ,
Rodney. The open church. wedding will take place
.Salurday,' Nov , 6, 6:30,p. m. at t111: Church .uf Chr ist in
Christian Union.

Katie's Korner

K&amp;K MOBILE
HOMES Features

By Kqtie Crow

observed

Picnic
e-njoyed

IN THE
BRIDGE
· PLAZA

•

During the social hour the
IQOg weekend trtp to Kirtland
Temple near Cleveland was

road.

Couples attend
fall conference

Families gather for picnic

.

Mrs. Stobari entertains circle meet

to·~ .

THE GALLIA ACADEMY High School Class of 1961
held its 15 year reunion on Sept. 4 at the Holiday Inn in
Gallipolis. Attending were {first row, !1), Ruth Ann
Luman Hamllton, Judy Jones , Fuller, Jean Conley
Davison,_&amp;Jsan Adrian Winters, Becky Tawney Scott,
Mary CUrnutte 'Winegarden, Pat McGinness Mills, Lois
Simmons Simms, and Donna Cornwell Allen; (second
row), Jerri Piesley Davis, Barbara McKinney Chevalier,
Dottie McMahon Chestnut, Claudia Miller Sabcock,
Charles McGuire, Jack Saunders, Phyllis Pope Brown,
Sally Johnson Orebaugh, DaMie Greene, Ken Sanders,

.

38-The Sunday Tbnes-SenUnel, Sunday, Oct. 10, !976

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POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. CIU r Williams, Syracuse, will ~
both be celebrating their birthdays this month ,
·
Grace will 'he 91 on Oct. 11 anil Cliff wiil be 92 on Oct. 28. &gt;t·
Also celebrating a birthday on Oct. 28 will be Eleanor Robson, lt
county recorder.
~
Certainly hope you all have a "happy birthday ."
lt

* the finest mobile .home5,.

modulars and double ·wides

lt

SPEAKING of birthdays Susie Fisher, Morning Star, was
6! yea rs old on Oct. 5.
'
'
Belated best wishes.

!

in the Tri-County area.

lt

MRS. MARGARET Sinclair, Pome~oy, who has been lt
seriously ill, is now residing at Maple Heights Nursing Home,
East A Street, Wellston, Ohio.
Margaret, I'm sure, would enj oy hearing from her many
friends in the county, .
f . .

COME .IN TODAY AND
SEE THIS HUGE SELECTION

A RICMINDER tliat the Bloodmobile will be at Pomeroy
Elementary School Monday from I to 6 p.m . Vernon Nease,
blood program chairman, reports that all types of blood are
needed.
The quota is 100 units. Help yourself by helping the
program.

OF HOMES

THE CHRONIC lung disease-Black lung treairnent
program at O'Bleness Hospital in Athens, is open to anyone
who has lung disease. The clinic teaches techniques 'that will
help relieve the shortness of breath and chronic cough
associated with lung problems.
.
CUrrently these services are fr ee to anyone who has been a
coal miner for three years .or more. Anyone interested in
obtaining more information about the clinic should call Marcia
Earley or Betsy Neff at 593-5551, extension

EO.

Laurel Oiff
News Notes _

~--------------------------~

KNIT MILL

guests.

Attendance at all services
Attending the District Oct. 3 at the Free Methodist
UMW Workshop meeting at Church was 158.
Nelsonville UM Church on
Mr. and Mrs. Eu gene
Thursday evening, Sept. 30 · Russell of Florida is visting
from here were Nellie his brother and sister·ln·law, '
Parker, June Stearns and Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Helen Wood~.
Russell and attended services
Ernest T~ylor from here Sunday at the local church,
was among those baptized at,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Poulton,
Royal Oak Park last SWlday Canton, spent the weekend
afternoon by Rev. Thomas with Mr: and Mrs. Roy
and Rev, Sydenstrlcker,
Howell.
Ricky Dillinger has been
Mark Stahl , Stockdale,
hospila)ized with a knee Paul Stahl, Columbus, Fritz
Injury the past week at Stahl, New Marshfield, and
0' Bleness Mem'o rial Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Well,
Hospital, Athens. He was llllddleport, recently called
returned home on Sunday. on Mr. and Mrs. Nonnan
Several -from here attended Schaefer .
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Cum·
the aMual Homecoming at
the Hemlock Grove Christian berson,
Ma son ,
Ohio,
Church ·~unday, oct. 3. Rev. recently called on Mrs.
James Quisenberry and Nancy )'lalker.
family of Morehead, Ky.,
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Mathew,
were present. It was an en· Huron, called on Mrs.
joyable occasion with 200 in Mathew's parents, Mr. and ·
attendance.
Mrs. Dick Karr, Saturday .
Mary ,Carr has returned
WMS of the local church
home alter se-.eral days In held ils monthly meeting
Columbus assisting at the Sed Tuesday evening at the home
O'Brien home.
,
of Mrs. James Gilmore.
Dana Swartz o( Columtius·
The local church people
recently vlsltM Mr. and Mrs. are having a · hay ride
Paul Buckley and family and Saturday evening going to
other realtives and friends in Royal Oak Park. All are
welcome.
.the area.
~s. D. Woode recently
called on his sister, carrie
Burson and other relatives
MilLER DOOR OPEN
and friends at the 1Kimes · POMEROY
A
Convalescent Home In represent 'a tive ! rom
Athens.
Congressman Claren ce E.
Miller's office will conduct an
OFFICE CLOSING
open door ' session from 10
POMEROY ' - Farmers a .m.-12 noon in the court·
Home Administration county house in Pomeroy on Oct. 13.
office In Pomeroy will be Anyone having questions
closed , Wednesday and concerning' the Federal
Thursday Oct. 13 and 14 due
Government,
please
stop byto an out of town meetinp.
to discuss them
.

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STORE

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WE DO IT AGAIN- GIVING .YOU
EXCLUSIVE STYLING &amp; DESIGNER FASH~ON
AT MILL PRICES.

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FROM OUR . NEW DESIGNER COLLECTION 60"
WIDE - VALUES TO •3.95:

SEE OUR FABULOUS COLLECTIO
OF FASHION KNits - .USED BY
AMERiCA'S LEADING DESiGNERS

KNI1 MILL

FREE

.STORE
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
PHONE 446-9199

WllH EACH '10
PUiatASE

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58-The SwldayTiqles-Senttnel,Sunday, Oct. lO~ 1976

Nuptial vows. read in ·july ceremony
GALUPOUs- Elizabeth chapel train. Her matching
headpiece was of fingertip
mantilla of tulle trimmed
4:30 p.m. at St. Louis with a band of silk chiffon
Catholic Church in Gallipolis. alid chiffon and sa lin
-The Rev. A. J. Golublewski flowerets. She carried a col·
officiated at the double ring onial bouquet of talisman
ceremony.
roses, lime green pompons,
The bride is the daughter of greenery and baby's breath
Mrs. Georgia &lt;;ook, 1111 . withacascadeofpeach,lime
Adrian Ave., Gallljlolis and . green and white ribbons .'
Le Grande Martin, . 2145 · Maid of .honor was the
Eastern Ave. , Gallipolis, and bride's sillier; Mary Belle
the groom's'"parents are Mr. Martin of 1111 Adrian' Ave.,
and Mrs. David Altizer of Rt. Gallipolis. Her gown was
2, Patriot.
apricot jersey fashioned in a
A half hour of prenuptial wrap style with a v·neck and
music was presented by butterfly sleeves. The skirt.
organist· Mrs. Lisa Hill. Her was formed · by three
selections
inc I u de d diagonal flounces. Priscilla
"Stronger Than Our Love," Dayton of 1112 .Adrian Ave.,
"A Time lor Us," "All of My Gallipolis, served as
Ufe," "Love is Surrender/' bridesmaid. Her gown . was
"One Love," "For All We styled like tl1at of the maid of
Know,"uToday," "My Sweet honor, but was nile green.
Lady," and · "The Wedding Both women carried wicker
Prayer. "
·
baskets of talisman' roses,
- Four palms and two lli- summer flowers, baby's
..Jlranch spiral candelabra breath and greenery apd
decorated the altar. The side cascades of ribbon to match
altars were decoraled with their gowns. They wore mat·
wicker bas!Ms filled with ching picture hats:
TO MARRY - Mrs. DenzU .Proctor and Delmar
summer flowers, and the
Rick Altizer of Thurman
Hawley, both of Middleport, &amp;Mounce the engagement
communion railing was served as his brother's best
and approaching marriage of their daughter, Rhonda
demrated with greenery. -man. Ushers included Daryl
Hawley, to ThWllls E. Ro118h, son of Mr. and Mr.!. Thomas
Completing the decorations Martin, brother of the bride;
R. RoUBh, Middleport. An open church wedding will take
was a while aisle car· Mark Harrison, Gallipolis
place on Nov.,l9 at the Middleport Church of Christ. The
pet: Given In marriage by and James Walker, Thur·
Rev. George Glaze~_w;..ill=-.:ofl.:;::lc::ia:.::le:.::._ ___,,....--..:........., her father, the . bride man, both cousins of the
II!.
·was
attired
in
a groom.
godn of white .silk chiffon
For her daughter's wed&lt;~!.,~
O"""
p ,n,
fa~hloned
with a large bertha dinu, Mrs. Cook wore ·a t.vn"
6
';Ill .... '
.1(0
. .
~•
sundaY
,..,.
collar which formed a v- pale0 yellow dress with a0
1
-.d
ft.~ vshaped neckline, and but- natural waistline and lll!lt~ #l·~ll' r•ll'l!l" ,
tertly sleeves. The gown was ching jacket. She had white
,.._.. \IIJU'-'~
trimmed with a wrap tie sash carnations linted·green.
accented w1th a large ruffled · Mrs. Altizer chose a
3 01
ts a'''"'
flounce on the skirt and sleeveless gown fashioned

POWELL'

Ann Martin became the bride
of Gary Lee Altizer July· 17,

Store Hours

Nursing homes
at Grace Guild meeting
..

•

8A.M.-10 P.M.
Mon.-Sat.

10 A.M.-10 P.M.

s.. ~day

298 SECOND Sl

•

Prieas Effective
Thru Oct. 16

POMEROY, OHIO

I'

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Rhonda Hawley

,e . .o..
c:::==-="'

0

0

I.,_

~ 0rtab\.e ...l
so1\ anO~~~\co\ \\~"~~~·
p~J"f'~ w sole a\'\0 u

~''"''"'e

$9 .97

~r9o

u

Rodney UMW holds
October meet Tuesday

.

Good

prlc•• sd•Y
tnru _rue ,

.

RODNEY - The October
meeting of . the Rodney
*Use Your MASrER·CHARGE Clltd
U.M.W: was held at the home
!O!UpperRiverRoad • OpenMon.lhruThurs.lOiill81 of Rosalee Pellllie Tuesday at
A(rossfrom S1lver Bri.dge Plaza
Fri. &amp; Sat. lOt0 9-·
7:30p.m. with Annabelle Ball
Gallipolis, OhiO
as co-hostess.
Shoe
The mlettng opened with
the singing of the theme song
"Thank Him." Roll call wsa
answered by 12 members and
two guests by telling their
favorite doll and something
about it.
Secretary and treasurer's
reports were read and ac·
cepted and offering taken.
Twenty-five sick calls were
reported.
!t was · decided' to sell

World •••It's Your Fashion Way

Sears

Christmas paper for $1 and to
order six dozen . calendar
towels to be sold for 11.50
each.
"Songs of Gratitude" was
read by Blanche Miller,
Annabelle Ball introduced
Mrs. FaMie Jones of Cora
who demonstrated 'the con·
structlon of Corn Husk Dolls.
The meeting closed with a
white elephant sale with the
proceeds to go to the church
building fund. ·
Refreshments were served
by the hostess. .
The next meeting will be
with Dottie Byus and Helena
Lear. Aliother white elephant
sale will be beld.

Thev'll Do It Every Time

SAVE '5 ·
ori order of
•so or more
from Sears
Wish Book .
'

..

-.

Gary Lee Altizer

with a flared skirt and cap- Alderigi.
,
ped type collar in peach,
For a wedding trip to
rose, gray and white. Her Virginia Beach, Va.,.the new
corsage was white carnations Mrs. Altizer changed inlo a
tinted apricot.
brown jumpsuit with a mat·
The groom, ushers and chlng blazer jacket.
bride's father wore gray tux·
The couple resides at
edos. The groom and bride's Patriot.
father wore white ruffled
A 1973 graduate of Gallia
shirts while the ushers,wore Academy High School, the
.s hirt s matching the bride is employed in the den·
bridesmaids' ' g0wn;. The tal office of Dr. John R.
groom's bouloMjere was a Sheets.
·talisman rose with baby's
Mr. Altizer, a 1970 graduate
breath. Boutonniers lor' the of Southwestern ):ligh Schoo~ ·
ushers were carnations and 1915 graduate of
tinted to match tbeir shirts.
Morehead Slate University
Arecepti~n was held at the · with a B.S. degree jn,.,
Gallia County Gun Club im· Agriculture, works with his ·
mediately following the father on the family dairy
ceremony. Guests- enjoyed fann
buffet dinner catered by
A 'rehearsal · dinner was
Dean Circle. The bride's hosted by the groom's
table was center with a four- parents at their home.
tiered cake baked by Mrs.
Showers honoring the bride
Denver Walker decorated were given by Joan and
with aprimt flowers and Priscilla Dayton, Mrs. Beth
green leaves. A small white Null, Mrs. Donna McGhee
basket containing a dried and Paula Butler, Cora
flower arrangement topped WSCW and the Calvary Bap.
the cake. Candle holders con- list Church women.
taining apricot candles and
Out-of-town guests at the
fireside baskets with a dried ceremony included Mr. and
flower arrangement · were Mrs . Tim Si m p so n.,
featured on both sides of the Guysville; Mr. and Mrs. Ed
cake.
.
Hurley and Jill, Columbus;
Tables for the guests were Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Vanover,
decorated with white Danville, Ky.;Mr. and Mrs.
tablecloths and small wicker Leonard Walker, In·
baskets containing an apricot dianapolis, Ind.; Mr. and
candle and dried flowers. The Mrs. Harold Crowe, and
Gun Club was adorned with Beverly, Kitts Hill; Mr. and
~pricotandgreenstreamers.
Mrs. Richard Fisher,
Paula Butler and Mrs. Bet:h Athens; Mr. and Mrs. ElfNull registered guests. mond Russell, Grove City;
Presiding at the table were mrs, Vickie Day, SpringSally Winters, Kathy Evans, field; Mrs. Minta Cook,
Vicki Lloyd and Maria Affiherstdale, W.Va.
·

ARMOUR

SAUSAGE:7
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Last.3 Days !w--,@~
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, ATi!ENS - KaWeen Sue ·
Johnson, 137 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis has been named to
the 1976 summer quarter
dean's list at Ohio University.
To be named to the list, a
stud_ent must have earned a
grade point average of 3.3 or
better on a scale of 4.0 for the
quarter and have earned 15
hours, 12 of which were taken
for a letter grade.
Marshall V. Brown, 418
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis
graduated with honors at the
end of the sununer term at
Ohio University. Receiving a
graduate degree was Charles
Robert Haner, 283 Lower
River ·Rd., Gallipolis.
Recipients of graduate
degrees must earn a 3.0 grade
point average or l'.ot.et.

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DOMJNO

7

SUGAR

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MONDAY NIGHT
, . .SP,ecial

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Sears Christmas

Visit Our Salad Bar ·
Chicken Chow Mein

Owned

Pomeroy,
&amp;

Operated by Lou Osborne

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SUPPLY

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CHESTER

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SOFTNESS.you can Feel, Pinch, Poke and SqtJee:te
Put vour Se~se of to.uch to ~o~k. u nth ese soft.les. Ultre ·sup lo leather

uppe~s backed w1th ~;: ush1ony kmt lmmg, sit ti ny ptj! tty on 8 nene~ous
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Candy Bags

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220 E, Main

:-·

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Party Items.

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vice president, Gallipolis;
Greg Oliver, S&lt;!rgeant at
Arms, Jacl&lt;son; John Re!W,
treasurer, Vlnton County;
Randy Mc Kinney,
parlia mentarian, Kyger
Creek; Matthew J ohnson ,
,reporter, Haru1an Trace.

'

•

ping early and take advantage
of our $5 discount on ordera
of $50 or more.

'

RIO GRANDE - Buckeye
Hills Ca reer Center Jqni9r
·Auto.Mechanics ~lass elected
V.I .C.A. officers, Wednesday,'
Se~t . 15.
Officers are Arthur Brown,
secretory, Kyger Creek ; Ed
Adamson,
pre sideiit ,
Jackson; Randy Johnson,

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discount ,~.,!.,i College ·:~:·:
.
'xpires October 13, 197_6 ~ : News i~

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Catal"'f at your near~t
catalog etore

The group studied the
lesson of Galatians I :1-24. A
poeffi was read entitled "God
Will Lighten our Days."
Closing prayer wa8 by Sharon
New and old business was Hively. The next meeting will
discussed. Secretary's report be Oct. 14 at 6 p.m. at the
was by Keith McCarty.
church.

GALLIPOLIS The
Campaign Youth Group held
its meoting Thursday at 6
p.m. wit4 Charlene Hively
leading tM Lord's Prayer.

Sears

(jl

Sean, where America &amp;hops for
gilt•, ,hu a Chriotlnao gift lor
all early Chriotmaa ahoppera!
Save 55' on orders of S50 or
more from our new Chrietmaa
Wioh liook. You won't have to·fight the huoile-and- bu.tle of
big cro&gt;rda and you can leioure·
ly page through ,the catalog
while makinA: your .aelections.

GALLIPOLIS Roy
Newell, administrative
aaalstant to Thomas E,
.'
Ferguson, Auditor of the
'• '
State of Ohio, was the
speaker at' the firSt fall
meeting of Grace Guild Class .
of the Grace United
Methodist Church Monday.
After enjoying a potluck
d!Dner, Newell talked ·about
nl11'81nj! homes, the good ones
and the bad on~3. He !ald the
majority of nursing homes
operate above board, but the
others make the whole In·
. duslfY \ook. . bad. Nursing
homei need reform and a lot
more superviSion. The state
of Ohio reimburses ·nursuig
homes 114 a day, $12 for
actual cost. the other $2 for
profit. Some operators sl8$h
ROY NEWELL
TWELVE SCENES OF CHRIST -Mrs. Wilhelmina Simmons, Mlll Creek Rd:, right,
costs to increase profits by
helps display a quilt made by her friend , Mrs. Homer McCully, Orchard Hill, on which she
spending as little as 37 cents a
has embroidered 12 scene!! of the Clu:ist. A shut-in who gives constant care to her husband
day per. person for food and , lnstitutloos, and hospitals. In
(Eliner), Mrs. Sbrunons embroiders as a sideline and-&lt;&gt;r hobby, "Something to keep me
recycling uneaten porllons.of order to do a better job of
going,"
she.said. She buys tbe desil!l)S and works out her preferred colors. Biblical designs
meat .• Other ways homes Investigating, there are 16~ _
"on
q\llltsa~preltyrare,"
she said. Mrs. Simmons used her spare time over a period of slx
have used to cut costs are by new auditor .examiners being
months to complete the designs on this quilt. At left is Miss Debbie Bennett of the Trlbune
hiring incompetent belp at trained the first new class in
slsff.
low rates, cutting back on 30 yea~. Unless we get tough
SOJIP and rationing toilet · about fraud and overcharges,
paper. Some operators have persons who need care. will be
kickback arrangements 'lj'ith denied, because fraud will
pharmacists and llpen bankrupt all of us.
'
companies, and some . ' bill
According to Newell, the
POINT PLEASANT - The made of the youth cboir Youth Night !rom 3~ p. m.
Medicaid after the patients auditor.'s office Is in the
first
meeting for the fall meeting.held every Thursday with snack time Included.
die. Investigators have fqund process of rating nursing
season
of the St. Pe.ter with Mrs. Scholz, Mrs. Paul ' Mrs. Scholz reported on
funeral directors · making homes five stars for ex·
arrangements to .have bodies cellence down to one star. Lutheran Church Women was Somerville, Jr., organist and August 11·13 Thiel College,
brOught to them before the W]len this rating is completed . held · recenily at the assisted by Mrs. Roger Greenville, Pa., meeting she
!amily is notified, with a in two or three years it will be fellowship hall at the church. Freeman. New acolyte and Miss Myra Roush of New
Mrs. Frank Scholz presided chairman, Mrs. Kenneth Haven attended .' The theme
kickback to the nursing home easier for people to take a
'operators.
.
.
good hard look at nursing and presented devotional Show, has plans for the new was "Life Through Faith" for .
Kickback fees to doctors homes before they get in ope0ing taken from St. Paul and old members to function District No. II and 12,
in the coming year.
•
Western Pennsylvania ·West
and clinics and laboratories . there, and therY be alerted as 12.
Two yard details were VIrginia Synod.
The
busij)ess
meeting
was
,
are the biggest ripoff; said to "where they want to go.
Team Education com,
Newell. Some laboratories They most expensive nursing held ·and officers reports conducted this summer
bill the government for tests homes are not necessarily the 'received. It was noted the headed by Pastor Weirick mlttee will participate in a
pastor's study Is now com· with. much improvement in one day session, Oct. 23 at
that were never cotiducted. best.
Some have charged patients
Mr. Newell advised the plete with new furniture and the church lawn and ad· Clarksburg. Mrs. &amp;hoiz and
· on Medicaid $15 lor tests that class to keep active and try to other accessories. This was ditions of a new flower bed John Knight of St. Peter
cost private patients $3.50. keep out of nurslng homes, the L.C.W. project since the circle in front of the church. Lutheran, are members ol
The Triple Deckers 4-H Ws teaching team and plan
Nine years ago the estimated but to be on the alert to find a new pastor arrived, the Rev,
Club
for the seeohd time put to attend.
cost for Medicare was 51! good one if a nursing borne is George C. Weirick.
its
'
bicenten~ial
border near
All hyrruials 11ave been
Guidelines furnished from
bllllon ·dollaq a year. This needed. He closed his talk by
the
walkway
as
a
project.
.the Nallonal L.C.W. office
year · the projected cost for reading a poem, ,;1 Am Fine, marked with new stamp
Sunshine cards 'were were issued at this meeting.
Medicare and Medicaid has Thank You," with the moral donated by the Dale Rotish
.mailed
.to several since the A proposed adult fellowship
family
for
church
use
and
rise,, to 21 billion dollars a that it's better for us who are
!list
meeting
held in May.
class
work.
It
will
be
main·
·stu"dy wlth Pastor David
year for tbe next 25 years. 'growing old to say, "f'm fine,
Parish
educallon
reported strang wlll begin in October
tained
In
the
pastor
study
for
Nobody really knows how with a grin," than t.o let folks
proper use by ilny church Vacation Church School and all church members and
much fraud is going on, know the shape we are in.
direeted by Mrs. Dorothy gu~ are invited to attend.
group.
Newell said. All th~ auditor's
Grace' Guild officers for
Scholz
with some 31 In at· The first meeting lf&amp;S set for
The
announcement
was
office can do is spot check, 19711-1917 are Mrs. Robert
tendance
was held the week Wednesday. Oct. 27, 7-9 p. "'·
but tbey also have to check Jenkins, president: Mrs.
of
Aug.
23-27. Rally Day
the welfare departments, Kenneth Frazier, vice
observance
was held Sept. 12
schools, local governments, . president; Mrs. ·Charles
and
new
teachers
asswned
Smith, secretary-treasurer.
their
respective
classes
for
The club voted to sell 84~
pounds of' pecans this .year .the coming year 1976·77.
and to use this money to help Thursday has been set as
pay the church buDding fund
debt. Devotions were by 1\uth
·Mullineaux.

Yquth group gathers

LCW has first fall meeting

.Mr. and Mrs.

!

UNICEF will be held in late
October alter dates are set
' for Mason County and LCW
members wlll assist In their
party after collections are
made oii the designated
· &lt;~ night ~ Prius to be awarded
and refreshments served.
c The nut meeting of L.C.W.
will be the annual thank offering on Monday, Nov, 29 at
the church. All ladles of the
congregation are to bring
offering boxes to Ws special
meeting and offering to go
fully to the' Synodical
treasury for project concern.
Refreshments were served
to members ofthe L.C.W. and
church council.

lAYAWAY
FOR
cHRISTMAS

NO MONEY DOWN AND $8.04 PER WEEK
'

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_._OVER
•50.00 IN FREE MUSIC- .
.,

B.RUN'ICARDI. MUSIC .COMPANY

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58-The SwldayTiqles-Senttnel,Sunday, Oct. lO~ 1976

Nuptial vows. read in ·july ceremony
GALUPOUs- Elizabeth chapel train. Her matching
headpiece was of fingertip
mantilla of tulle trimmed
4:30 p.m. at St. Louis with a band of silk chiffon
Catholic Church in Gallipolis. alid chiffon and sa lin
-The Rev. A. J. Golublewski flowerets. She carried a col·
officiated at the double ring onial bouquet of talisman
ceremony.
roses, lime green pompons,
The bride is the daughter of greenery and baby's breath
Mrs. Georgia &lt;;ook, 1111 . withacascadeofpeach,lime
Adrian Ave., Gallljlolis and . green and white ribbons .'
Le Grande Martin, . 2145 · Maid of .honor was the
Eastern Ave. , Gallipolis, and bride's sillier; Mary Belle
the groom's'"parents are Mr. Martin of 1111 Adrian' Ave.,
and Mrs. David Altizer of Rt. Gallipolis. Her gown was
2, Patriot.
apricot jersey fashioned in a
A half hour of prenuptial wrap style with a v·neck and
music was presented by butterfly sleeves. The skirt.
organist· Mrs. Lisa Hill. Her was formed · by three
selections
inc I u de d diagonal flounces. Priscilla
"Stronger Than Our Love," Dayton of 1112 .Adrian Ave.,
"A Time lor Us," "All of My Gallipolis, served as
Ufe," "Love is Surrender/' bridesmaid. Her gown . was
"One Love," "For All We styled like tl1at of the maid of
Know,"uToday," "My Sweet honor, but was nile green.
Lady," and · "The Wedding Both women carried wicker
Prayer. "
·
baskets of talisman' roses,
- Four palms and two lli- summer flowers, baby's
..Jlranch spiral candelabra breath and greenery apd
decorated the altar. The side cascades of ribbon to match
altars were decoraled with their gowns. They wore mat·
wicker bas!Ms filled with ching picture hats:
TO MARRY - Mrs. DenzU .Proctor and Delmar
summer flowers, and the
Rick Altizer of Thurman
Hawley, both of Middleport, &amp;Mounce the engagement
communion railing was served as his brother's best
and approaching marriage of their daughter, Rhonda
demrated with greenery. -man. Ushers included Daryl
Hawley, to ThWllls E. Ro118h, son of Mr. and Mr.!. Thomas
Completing the decorations Martin, brother of the bride;
R. RoUBh, Middleport. An open church wedding will take
was a while aisle car· Mark Harrison, Gallipolis
place on Nov.,l9 at the Middleport Church of Christ. The
pet: Given In marriage by and James Walker, Thur·
Rev. George Glaze~_w;..ill=-.:ofl.:;::lc::ia:.::le:.::._ ___,,....--..:........., her father, the . bride man, both cousins of the
II!.
·was
attired
in
a groom.
godn of white .silk chiffon
For her daughter's wed&lt;~!.,~
O"""
p ,n,
fa~hloned
with a large bertha dinu, Mrs. Cook wore ·a t.vn"
6
';Ill .... '
.1(0
. .
~•
sundaY
,..,.
collar which formed a v- pale0 yellow dress with a0
1
-.d
ft.~ vshaped neckline, and but- natural waistline and lll!lt~ #l·~ll' r•ll'l!l" ,
tertly sleeves. The gown was ching jacket. She had white
,.._.. \IIJU'-'~
trimmed with a wrap tie sash carnations linted·green.
accented w1th a large ruffled · Mrs. Altizer chose a
3 01
ts a'''"'
flounce on the skirt and sleeveless gown fashioned

POWELL'

Ann Martin became the bride
of Gary Lee Altizer July· 17,

Store Hours

Nursing homes
at Grace Guild meeting
..

•

8A.M.-10 P.M.
Mon.-Sat.

10 A.M.-10 P.M.

s.. ~day

298 SECOND Sl

•

Prieas Effective
Thru Oct. 16

POMEROY, OHIO

I'

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Rhonda Hawley

,e . .o..
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so1\ anO~~~\co\ \\~"~~~·
p~J"f'~ w sole a\'\0 u

~''"''"'e

$9 .97

~r9o

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Rodney UMW holds
October meet Tuesday

.

Good

prlc•• sd•Y
tnru _rue ,

.

RODNEY - The October
meeting of . the Rodney
*Use Your MASrER·CHARGE Clltd
U.M.W: was held at the home
!O!UpperRiverRoad • OpenMon.lhruThurs.lOiill81 of Rosalee Pellllie Tuesday at
A(rossfrom S1lver Bri.dge Plaza
Fri. &amp; Sat. lOt0 9-·
7:30p.m. with Annabelle Ball
Gallipolis, OhiO
as co-hostess.
Shoe
The mlettng opened with
the singing of the theme song
"Thank Him." Roll call wsa
answered by 12 members and
two guests by telling their
favorite doll and something
about it.
Secretary and treasurer's
reports were read and ac·
cepted and offering taken.
Twenty-five sick calls were
reported.
!t was · decided' to sell

World •••It's Your Fashion Way

Sears

Christmas paper for $1 and to
order six dozen . calendar
towels to be sold for 11.50
each.
"Songs of Gratitude" was
read by Blanche Miller,
Annabelle Ball introduced
Mrs. FaMie Jones of Cora
who demonstrated 'the con·
structlon of Corn Husk Dolls.
The meeting closed with a
white elephant sale with the
proceeds to go to the church
building fund. ·
Refreshments were served
by the hostess. .
The next meeting will be
with Dottie Byus and Helena
Lear. Aliother white elephant
sale will be beld.

Thev'll Do It Every Time

SAVE '5 ·
ori order of
•so or more
from Sears
Wish Book .
'

..

-.

Gary Lee Altizer

with a flared skirt and cap- Alderigi.
,
ped type collar in peach,
For a wedding trip to
rose, gray and white. Her Virginia Beach, Va.,.the new
corsage was white carnations Mrs. Altizer changed inlo a
tinted apricot.
brown jumpsuit with a mat·
The groom, ushers and chlng blazer jacket.
bride's father wore gray tux·
The couple resides at
edos. The groom and bride's Patriot.
father wore white ruffled
A 1973 graduate of Gallia
shirts while the ushers,wore Academy High School, the
.s hirt s matching the bride is employed in the den·
bridesmaids' ' g0wn;. The tal office of Dr. John R.
groom's bouloMjere was a Sheets.
·talisman rose with baby's
Mr. Altizer, a 1970 graduate
breath. Boutonniers lor' the of Southwestern ):ligh Schoo~ ·
ushers were carnations and 1915 graduate of
tinted to match tbeir shirts.
Morehead Slate University
Arecepti~n was held at the · with a B.S. degree jn,.,
Gallia County Gun Club im· Agriculture, works with his ·
mediately following the father on the family dairy
ceremony. Guests- enjoyed fann
buffet dinner catered by
A 'rehearsal · dinner was
Dean Circle. The bride's hosted by the groom's
table was center with a four- parents at their home.
tiered cake baked by Mrs.
Showers honoring the bride
Denver Walker decorated were given by Joan and
with aprimt flowers and Priscilla Dayton, Mrs. Beth
green leaves. A small white Null, Mrs. Donna McGhee
basket containing a dried and Paula Butler, Cora
flower arrangement topped WSCW and the Calvary Bap.
the cake. Candle holders con- list Church women.
taining apricot candles and
Out-of-town guests at the
fireside baskets with a dried ceremony included Mr. and
flower arrangement · were Mrs . Tim Si m p so n.,
featured on both sides of the Guysville; Mr. and Mrs. Ed
cake.
.
Hurley and Jill, Columbus;
Tables for the guests were Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Vanover,
decorated with white Danville, Ky.;Mr. and Mrs.
tablecloths and small wicker Leonard Walker, In·
baskets containing an apricot dianapolis, Ind.; Mr. and
candle and dried flowers. The Mrs. Harold Crowe, and
Gun Club was adorned with Beverly, Kitts Hill; Mr. and
~pricotandgreenstreamers.
Mrs. Richard Fisher,
Paula Butler and Mrs. Bet:h Athens; Mr. and Mrs. ElfNull registered guests. mond Russell, Grove City;
Presiding at the table were mrs, Vickie Day, SpringSally Winters, Kathy Evans, field; Mrs. Minta Cook,
Vicki Lloyd and Maria Affiherstdale, W.Va.
·

ARMOUR

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Last.3 Days !w--,@~
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, ATi!ENS - KaWeen Sue ·
Johnson, 137 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis has been named to
the 1976 summer quarter
dean's list at Ohio University.
To be named to the list, a
stud_ent must have earned a
grade point average of 3.3 or
better on a scale of 4.0 for the
quarter and have earned 15
hours, 12 of which were taken
for a letter grade.
Marshall V. Brown, 418
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis
graduated with honors at the
end of the sununer term at
Ohio University. Receiving a
graduate degree was Charles
Robert Haner, 283 Lower
River ·Rd., Gallipolis.
Recipients of graduate
degrees must earn a 3.0 grade
point average or l'.ot.et.

''

I

DOMJNO

7

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THE INN PLACE.
MONDAY NIGHT
, . .SP,ecial

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Visit Our Salad Bar ·
Chicken Chow Mein

Owned

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&amp;

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THE MEIGS INN

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SUPPLY

992-3629

CHESTER

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Hot Rolls

SOFTNESS.you can Feel, Pinch, Poke and SqtJee:te
Put vour Se~se of to.uch to ~o~k. u nth ese soft.les. Ultre ·sup lo leather

uppe~s backed w1th ~;: ush1ony kmt lmmg, sit ti ny ptj! tty on 8 nene~ous
crepe '"''"Y·

Wedgelln ••dwood oc camell•~t;~·

'" '"(onnl~.

t&gt;Or1ion of

•

00

HERE IS WITHOUT ADOUBT THE GREATEST
ORGAN BUY EVER .· OFFERED TO THE AMERICAN
BUYING PUBLIC. • •
For the -earliest' beginner to the most advanced~

PAR KAY
M

· nearest Sears·
catalog store

LB.
~

R

Se~n hal •

c.n,.,...,11 ..,., ""'

Silver Bridge .

C.abilt~~ by Phone 446·2770SEA.R8, ROEBUCK AND CO.

aur Phone 5trvtce
I

SEE US FIRSTI

credit plan to ,suit mo•t every need

ISears I
.'

Plaza

A '2095 00 VALUE
''

:!i

·: :

DUrroN'S DRUG STORE

Middleport, o.

00

FOR

All Decorated
For the OCcasion

Napkins, Table Covers,
Window Decorations, ·
Table Centerpieces, '!:,
Cards, Pins,
Plates, Cups,
Pumpkin Trays and
Candy Bags

Call 446-2'{70 .

Alithorizeil Catalog SaleS Merchant.
220 E, Main

:-·

runninQ: out!

Call Seare Home
Shopping Set-vice Todav

· Plus tax

Midd~port. 0.

new Lowrey Organ

Party Items.

It's still not too late to enjoy Sears gift ro you- $5
off on any order of ,!SO or
IJlOre. But hurry ... ti.m e is

Coffee, Tea or Milk

Wash one piece or up to
an 1B·Ib load in this
Frigidaire Heavy Duty
Washer. Matching Dryer
offers a 2-position Fabrics
selector, Tim ad and
No Heat cycles.

We have a
complete line
of·Halloween

SAVE 85 on :aP.y order
of •so or more from

Offer expires October 13, 197d
Ask about Stars credit plans

992-2178

heritage h-ouse

'

Wish Book

.

vice president, Gallipolis;
Greg Oliver, S&lt;!rgeant at
Arms, Jacl&lt;son; John Re!W,
treasurer, Vlnton County;
Randy Mc Kinney,
parlia mentarian, Kyger
Creek; Matthew J ohnson ,
,reporter, Haru1an Trace.

'

•

ping early and take advantage
of our $5 discount on ordera
of $50 or more.

'

RIO GRANDE - Buckeye
Hills Ca reer Center Jqni9r
·Auto.Mechanics ~lass elected
V.I .C.A. officers, Wednesday,'
Se~t . 15.
Officers are Arthur Brown,
secretory, Kyger Creek ; Ed
Adamson,
pre sideiit ,
Jackson; Randy Johnson,

On·a beautiful
.

Frigidaire
Laundry
Pair

• Automatic chain oiling
10" bar and chain
• Easy starting·
• Lightweight-7.21bs !

So start your Chriatrnaa shoP·

'

Officers elected

SAVE '600

Early.
shoppers
discount ,~.,!.,i College ·:~:·:
.
'xpires October 13, 197_6 ~ : News i~

5 LB. BAG

See our 1976 'Chri&amp;lmaa
Catal"'f at your near~t
catalog etore

The group studied the
lesson of Galatians I :1-24. A
poeffi was read entitled "God
Will Lighten our Days."
Closing prayer wa8 by Sharon
New and old business was Hively. The next meeting will
discussed. Secretary's report be Oct. 14 at 6 p.m. at the
was by Keith McCarty.
church.

GALLIPOLIS The
Campaign Youth Group held
its meoting Thursday at 6
p.m. wit4 Charlene Hively
leading tM Lord's Prayer.

Sears

(jl

Sean, where America &amp;hops for
gilt•, ,hu a Chriotlnao gift lor
all early Chriotmaa ahoppera!
Save 55' on orders of S50 or
more from our new Chrietmaa
Wioh liook. You won't have to·fight the huoile-and- bu.tle of
big cro&gt;rda and you can leioure·
ly page through ,the catalog
while makinA: your .aelections.

GALLIPOLIS Roy
Newell, administrative
aaalstant to Thomas E,
.'
Ferguson, Auditor of the
'• '
State of Ohio, was the
speaker at' the firSt fall
meeting of Grace Guild Class .
of the Grace United
Methodist Church Monday.
After enjoying a potluck
d!Dner, Newell talked ·about
nl11'81nj! homes, the good ones
and the bad on~3. He !ald the
majority of nursing homes
operate above board, but the
others make the whole In·
. duslfY \ook. . bad. Nursing
homei need reform and a lot
more superviSion. The state
of Ohio reimburses ·nursuig
homes 114 a day, $12 for
actual cost. the other $2 for
profit. Some operators sl8$h
ROY NEWELL
TWELVE SCENES OF CHRIST -Mrs. Wilhelmina Simmons, Mlll Creek Rd:, right,
costs to increase profits by
helps display a quilt made by her friend , Mrs. Homer McCully, Orchard Hill, on which she
spending as little as 37 cents a
has embroidered 12 scene!! of the Clu:ist. A shut-in who gives constant care to her husband
day per. person for food and , lnstitutloos, and hospitals. In
(Eliner), Mrs. Sbrunons embroiders as a sideline and-&lt;&gt;r hobby, "Something to keep me
recycling uneaten porllons.of order to do a better job of
going,"
she.said. She buys tbe desil!l)S and works out her preferred colors. Biblical designs
meat .• Other ways homes Investigating, there are 16~ _
"on
q\llltsa~preltyrare,"
she said. Mrs. Simmons used her spare time over a period of slx
have used to cut costs are by new auditor .examiners being
months to complete the designs on this quilt. At left is Miss Debbie Bennett of the Trlbune
hiring incompetent belp at trained the first new class in
slsff.
low rates, cutting back on 30 yea~. Unless we get tough
SOJIP and rationing toilet · about fraud and overcharges,
paper. Some operators have persons who need care. will be
kickback arrangements 'lj'ith denied, because fraud will
pharmacists and llpen bankrupt all of us.
'
companies, and some . ' bill
According to Newell, the
POINT PLEASANT - The made of the youth cboir Youth Night !rom 3~ p. m.
Medicaid after the patients auditor.'s office Is in the
first
meeting for the fall meeting.held every Thursday with snack time Included.
die. Investigators have fqund process of rating nursing
season
of the St. Pe.ter with Mrs. Scholz, Mrs. Paul ' Mrs. Scholz reported on
funeral directors · making homes five stars for ex·
arrangements to .have bodies cellence down to one star. Lutheran Church Women was Somerville, Jr., organist and August 11·13 Thiel College,
brOught to them before the W]len this rating is completed . held · recenily at the assisted by Mrs. Roger Greenville, Pa., meeting she
!amily is notified, with a in two or three years it will be fellowship hall at the church. Freeman. New acolyte and Miss Myra Roush of New
Mrs. Frank Scholz presided chairman, Mrs. Kenneth Haven attended .' The theme
kickback to the nursing home easier for people to take a
'operators.
.
.
good hard look at nursing and presented devotional Show, has plans for the new was "Life Through Faith" for .
Kickback fees to doctors homes before they get in ope0ing taken from St. Paul and old members to function District No. II and 12,
in the coming year.
•
Western Pennsylvania ·West
and clinics and laboratories . there, and therY be alerted as 12.
Two yard details were VIrginia Synod.
The
busij)ess
meeting
was
,
are the biggest ripoff; said to "where they want to go.
Team Education com,
Newell. Some laboratories They most expensive nursing held ·and officers reports conducted this summer
bill the government for tests homes are not necessarily the 'received. It was noted the headed by Pastor Weirick mlttee will participate in a
pastor's study Is now com· with. much improvement in one day session, Oct. 23 at
that were never cotiducted. best.
Some have charged patients
Mr. Newell advised the plete with new furniture and the church lawn and ad· Clarksburg. Mrs. &amp;hoiz and
· on Medicaid $15 lor tests that class to keep active and try to other accessories. This was ditions of a new flower bed John Knight of St. Peter
cost private patients $3.50. keep out of nurslng homes, the L.C.W. project since the circle in front of the church. Lutheran, are members ol
The Triple Deckers 4-H Ws teaching team and plan
Nine years ago the estimated but to be on the alert to find a new pastor arrived, the Rev,
Club
for the seeohd time put to attend.
cost for Medicare was 51! good one if a nursing borne is George C. Weirick.
its
'
bicenten~ial
border near
All hyrruials 11ave been
Guidelines furnished from
bllllon ·dollaq a year. This needed. He closed his talk by
the
walkway
as
a
project.
.the Nallonal L.C.W. office
year · the projected cost for reading a poem, ,;1 Am Fine, marked with new stamp
Sunshine cards 'were were issued at this meeting.
Medicare and Medicaid has Thank You," with the moral donated by the Dale Rotish
.mailed
.to several since the A proposed adult fellowship
family
for
church
use
and
rise,, to 21 billion dollars a that it's better for us who are
!list
meeting
held in May.
class
work.
It
will
be
main·
·stu"dy wlth Pastor David
year for tbe next 25 years. 'growing old to say, "f'm fine,
Parish
educallon
reported strang wlll begin in October
tained
In
the
pastor
study
for
Nobody really knows how with a grin," than t.o let folks
proper use by ilny church Vacation Church School and all church members and
much fraud is going on, know the shape we are in.
direeted by Mrs. Dorothy gu~ are invited to attend.
group.
Newell said. All th~ auditor's
Grace' Guild officers for
Scholz
with some 31 In at· The first meeting lf&amp;S set for
The
announcement
was
office can do is spot check, 19711-1917 are Mrs. Robert
tendance
was held the week Wednesday. Oct. 27, 7-9 p. "'·
but tbey also have to check Jenkins, president: Mrs.
of
Aug.
23-27. Rally Day
the welfare departments, Kenneth Frazier, vice
observance
was held Sept. 12
schools, local governments, . president; Mrs. ·Charles
and
new
teachers
asswned
Smith, secretary-treasurer.
their
respective
classes
for
The club voted to sell 84~
pounds of' pecans this .year .the coming year 1976·77.
and to use this money to help Thursday has been set as
pay the church buDding fund
debt. Devotions were by 1\uth
·Mullineaux.

Yquth group gathers

LCW has first fall meeting

.Mr. and Mrs.

!

UNICEF will be held in late
October alter dates are set
' for Mason County and LCW
members wlll assist In their
party after collections are
made oii the designated
· &lt;~ night ~ Prius to be awarded
and refreshments served.
c The nut meeting of L.C.W.
will be the annual thank offering on Monday, Nov, 29 at
the church. All ladles of the
congregation are to bring
offering boxes to Ws special
meeting and offering to go
fully to the' Synodical
treasury for project concern.
Refreshments were served
to members ofthe L.C.W. and
church council.

lAYAWAY
FOR
cHRISTMAS

NO MONEY DOWN AND $8.04 PER WEEK
'

··I

I

_._OVER
•50.00 IN FREE MUSIC- .
.,

B.RUN'ICARDI. MUSIC .COMPANY

'

/,

�-

•

.·
'

= -·

eB-'I'heSundaJ Tlm~tinel, Sunday; Oct.10, 1976 •.. ..

•

'

Pearl Burger hosts
Vinton garden club

Mrs.
Milhoan
.
displays quilts
.

POMEROY - . Lovely ChrlJt'a time, and qullts On
quilts that are true beds signltied a warm and
Americana works of art - loving place.
several made by Meigs ·Mrs. Milhoan noted tbst
County pioneer women - history is filled with accounts
were displayed by Mrs. of bed .and .bedding, and
Dwtcbt .Milhoan, "" antique rigbUully so,' she said, since
collector, at lbe. Friday this Is the p(jlce where people
meetiDg of Return Jonatbsp are born, live and die. She
Meigs ' Chapter of the made reference to the
Dlugbtera of tbe American nwnerous beds which have
Revolution.
been marked " George
Meeting in tbe parish house W~n Slept Here," to
ol Gr1ce Episcopal Cl1urcb, point up the slgnltlcantl! of
Mrs. Milhoan was in!toduced bed and bedding.
by Mn. Grace Elch, program
Early American women
chairman, who quoted trans(4ted their emotions into •
Stephen Fosler's words, "In quUt designs, Mrs. Mllhoan
tbe llky the. bright stars said, mentioning "Job's
glittered, On tbe banks the tears," the "crown of thorns"
pale moon shone, a:nd 'twas and the "world without end."
from Aunt Dinah's qulltlng Sbe spoke ol the siBr (iatiern
party, I was seeing Nellie as being popular In the early
home."
quUts and of the patchwork
)
QuOting, tbst labor of love quUts which captured chUdI
which was a necessity lor hood memories with !!Craps of
wannth in Oirij'-Airierlca and- · materials from gannents.
QUILTS DISPLAYED - Quilts from the early llillls .
Ia now 1 pleasurable pastime
Among the quUIB dlanlaved
to
today
were displayed by Mrs. Dwight Mllhoan at the
lor many, ·began In Egypt, was a friendship qullt of
Mrs. Milhoan said. Egyptian uneven pieces with emkings ·wore qullted robes, broidered names. These, s.ald June Ashley, aod Miss Mae
men wore qullted coats in Mrs. Mllhoan, were popular Weber, a guest.
• for church lund raising
Recognition was given to
projeciB with the· llnlahed Mrs. Dale Dutton· a 56-year
. quill usually being presented member. Mrs. Mae Mora,
to the miniBter. Somber and treasurer, reported tbst the
happy times, war and peace applications and dues of three
pariods, have all been told on prospective members had
quUts.
• • been processed. They are
·She spoke of the current Mrs. PhyliiB Hackett, Mrs.
popular use of quilts for wall Mary Elizabeth ll!orris and
hanging and drapes.
l\1rs. Mary Carolyn WUey.
Mrs. Mllboan dedicated her -. On behaU of Mrs. Jane
program to her mother, Mrs. BroWII, T. B. nurse, Mrs.
Linder Daines of Pom~roy, Beulah Jones spoke on the .4
Route 3, and "to all the genUe of a mill tuberculosis levy to
TENCIE
women throughout time" who be voted on nell month. She
WHA'T A CASE OF
have been avid qullters.
noted that It js a reduced
A~60N .MitSH'T 6E.
On display at the meeting renewal. Mrs. Johnson
were several qullts made by reported thai a thank-you
Mrs. Daines, along with two letter had been received from
STOJEL
Now III'I'Hnge .t.he circled lettel'll
IJ:IIf II,IJilf made In the early 1800s, the tbe Meigs County Council on
V ~~ J~ to fo.rm the sUrprise aNWer, as
"Log Cabin" and the Aging for the exhibit at
:=::::·::::::~::=A::=::::':::::l:::::_,
· suggeste~· br.the above cartoon.
~~ o~esden . Plate/'
by "Yesteryear."
Elizabeth Hoepfner P!arr, an
The national defense report ...,,~·~x---· ., ..,.v·;-; ·m'"'''''; *1
l'lirt~SiiPIIIS!atRben
early settler of Pine Grove. by Mrs. Jones was on liberty
•
(An1weu M und~,)
'An antique "Powder Pu!f and dealt with religion,
Jumbl~: BORAX ADMIT DILUTE LEGACY
qullt was also displayed as morality, and government
Yulerday't
. Amw": WJtot it '• n? plecnare 14' ('at~la-:-!COLD
was a "Tree of Lite."
interference and control of
Columbi;t'diJm..mds frum $1 5U.
For her presentation, Mrs. individual Uberties.
:.:·
Milhoan was attired in a
Mrs. Patrick Lochary
GALUPOLIS - The Senior
eostwne which featured a announced that "Happy Citizens Center ,located at 220
quilted band around the Land" will be presented at Jackson Pike in the County .
422 Second Ave.
bottom of the skirt.
Trinity Church at 3 p.m. on Home Building, is o~en . I
Mrs. Thereon · Johnson, Oct. 24 under sponsorship of Monday through -Friday from
Gallipolis, Ol!io
Streak less Machine Wall Washing
regent , welcomed the the Meigs County Htstori~al 9 a.m.-3 p.m. The schedule of
Upholstery . Windows . Floors ·
PJWnnt•nn
members Including new ones, Society with financial activities for this week Is as 1
Complete
Line of . .. ·
1
A• ,,d,.nu.d '"'' " " lllrr.
Mrs. Elva Cotterill and ..Mrs. assistance
from the Ohio Arts
'-------.....1
. .
follows :
·
1
.· Cle~ning Equipment &amp;_Supplies

r

Engagirig Rings
.For Your

I I

@umbi~

r~::~

I
I]
I

III

. .

I r XXJ[X 11 J

I

I

VINTON - The Vinton
Friendship Garden Club met
at the home of Pearl Burger
with 10 members and two
guests present recenUy. The
vice president, Eleanor
White, called the· meeting to'
on!er in the absence of the
president.
. Devotions were a reading
"At Day's End" by Eleanor
White. Prayer was by Esta
Downard.
. The secretary's report was
given by Beatrice Bush Qlld
treasurer report, Pearl
Burger. Both were approved.
Conununlcatlons were read.
The program on Drying
Flowers was by Ella Payne.
She told of different ways of
·drying flowers and noted the
newest is in a micro-wave
oven.
.
Officers for 1976-1977 were
installed. InstallinR officer
was past president Esta
Downard who used a candle
and flower ceremony. Of·
fleers
installed were
president, Ann Slayton; vice

get t~at 'all around"·bo~r

''

Visiting, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.;
Wreath .CraU (bring nuts,
acorns , pine cones, etc.
DorOthy Hartley, instruCtor,
1-3 p.m.; Dowq payment for
Florida trip is due.
vou to the "'•OII. /O,n••n" '1 ,Wednesday, Oct. 13 Physical Fitness, 11 :30 a.m. ;
-shoes! All -aroUnd good
Rio Grande Recreation, 12
to go .lots of places witli lots
noon-3 p.m.; Card Games, 1-3
different outfits ... all·around
p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 14 fort on new lowered heels ... and
Potluck
supper, annual
GREAT
they 're by Cnn,nio·l
meeting
and volun.teer
A great name in shoes! Strap in ~avv, tan,
recognition party, 6:30 p.m.
Friday, Oct. 15 - Art class,
1-3 p.m.; Social Hour, 7,p.m.
The Seniors' Co-op and the
Crall Shop are open each day
from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m.
The Senior Nutrjtion
Program serves the following
· menu at 12 noon:
Monday' - Closed. 1
Tuesday - Pot roast of
beef, gravy, buttered
steamed potatoes, mixed
vegetables, rQII, butter,
caMed apricots, milk. ,
Wednesday - Creamed
_ _ _ _,.;9:_::92!.·;:_28::;1~5_ _ _ _ __::P~O:::M::;E:,:R;:;:O.:,Y,:.,0;::::-:,_.J chicken with biscuits,
l-!~~E:;,.::::::,:.:,.;_
'
' mashed potatoes, buttered
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,._ _ _....;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _'"" peas, jellied.cranberry salad;
•
butter, ice cream, milk.
·Thursday ' Johnny
Manetti, tossed salad with
dressing, cornbread, :butter,
. canned pears, milk. ·
Friday - Fried fish,
escalloped potatoes, buttered
spinach, bread, butter, cltrus "
sections, sugar cookies, milk.
Choice of tieverage )l'ith
each meal. ' ·. f

around

I ADVANCED CLEANING SE~VICE

I
I
I

FOR FRIENDLY FREE ESTIMATES

I
I

C II 675·5572 After 4 P.M.
a

1

1-- - -----,..------ -":'----,-~----'

A thought for the day:
Famed German scientist
Albert Einstein said, "The
whole of science is nothing
more than a refinement· of
everyday t~."

r:J34MPERv
.YOUR._,
HOME .

With Fine Furnishings
from

ONLY

Baker Fumiture
Middleport,__O.

.

·sAVES30 OFFREG.
PRICE ON TillS

FASHIONMATE
MACH I NE Model·
361 wl lh fronf

'

78-ThP.Sunday. Tlm""·Sentlnel, Sunday, Oct. 10, 1976.

Soup labels wanted
of audio-visual aids an&lt;k&gt;r
athletic equipment.
The PTO s,ays the public
ca~ help ~y collecting
Campbell Soup and .Bean
product labels lor the
organization. Naturallr,
more labela mean more and
better
equipment.
A
collection big will be placed
j n each classroom at the
. !!Chooi, or the labels may be
sent to PTO Ways and Means ·
Committee,
c-o
Tiny
Holstein, Rt. 2, Box 82-A,
POMEROY Meigs Vinton, Ohio 45686, by March
Senior Citizens Center ac- 12, 197'/.
tl{!\tles located at the
Pomeroy Junior High School - - - - - - - - Ia open 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Monday
lllfough Friday.
Monday, Oct. 11 Columbus .Day, Center
· Closed.
Tuesday, Oct. 12 -:Physical Fltneas,, 10:45 a.m.;
Chorus, 12:1ii-2 p.m.
., Wednesday, Oct. 13 Social Security Represen· .
tative, 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. ;
.
Games 12:30-2 p.nun.
Thursday,
Oct.
14
Crafts
MARRIAGE PLANNED - Announcement is made of
the engagement and approaching marriage of Miss Lola
with Evelyn Cullum, 10-ll :30
F. Walker, daughter of Mrs. Eva M. Walker of Grand
a.m. and 1-2:30 p.m.; HorseJunction, Colo. and the late Ivan B. Walker, to MontieR.
shoes, 12:30 p.m.; Sing-a·
Sanders, son of Mr. and Mrs. Montie Sanders, Rt. 1,
Long, 12:30 p.m.
Reedsville. The open church wedding will be an event of
Frtd/.y, Oct. 15 - Blood
Oct. 23 at 6:30 p.m. at the St. Paul United Methodist
Pressure, 10-11:30 a.m.; Art
Church, Tuppers Plains.
Class, 10·11:30
a.m.;
• Bowling, 1-3 p.m.; Soup and
Sandwich Supper, 4-7 p.m.
ll!iiil~:iti::;:m::i:i:':f:i:f:Hi:::~::;::;::t::::'iiiiiMi!MiHi!i'iiiii'iiim::;::;::;::l'ii'il!iil Senior Citizens Nutrition
Program, 11:30 a.m.-12: 30
p.m. Mond~Jy through Friday
except Monday, Oct. 11 due to
Day. · .
:;]~l~;
~:;:~~: Columbus
Monday - Center c~sed.
Exhibit for lhe monlh of Oclober: Annual Antique Show Tuesday- Pot roast of beef,
featuring Victorian antiques from the area.
gravy, buttered steamed ,
Giillery Hours: Saturdays and SUndays, 1 until 5 p.m.; potatoes, buttered frozen
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m. until 3 p.m.
mixed vegetables, canned
Oct. 12, Tuesday, 7-10 p.m. - Workshop on tenure, apricots, roll, butter, milk.
Riverby. Taught by Sarah Moshier. Registration, $4 for
Wednesday - Hot poultry
members, $5 fer ·non-members. Deadline to register for the sandwich with gravy,
Sixth' Annual Antique Seminar; call Mrs. Jennie Lou Hudson, mashed potatoes, buttered
446-2837.
peas and jellied cranberry
Oct. 1ii-16, Friday and Saturday, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. both davs - salad,- ice.cream, milk.
6th annual antique seminar with Orva Walker Heissenbuttel
Thursday, ~ohnny
II -.till mhltr,
· of Washington, D. C. Reserv~tions to he made with Mrs. Jennie Marzettl, tossed salad
Lou Hu&lt;lsop,.phone 4-t6-2837 by Oct. 12. $5 registration each day dressing, canned pears, com·'
includes lunch,
bread, ·butter, milk. ·
Oct. 19, Tues&lt;lay, 8 p.m. - Interdepartmental Meeting,
Friday - Fried fish,
FAC, Riverby.
escalloped potatoes, buttered
Oct. 26, Tuesday, 8 p.m. - FAC Trustees Meeting, spinach, citrus sections ' "1d
River by.
sugar cookie, bread, butter,
Oct. 28, Thursday, 9-)1 a.m. - Christmas Committee, milk.
River by.
,, .
.
Coffee, tes and buttermlll&lt;
Oct. 31, Sunday, 24 p.m. -' Parenkhild workshop, served dally. Registration ''
Riverby. '
required by noon the day
Exbi,bitfor tbe month of November - Matted photographs . before you plan to eat, H you
by local photographers; amaleur and professional to be judged expect to receive a Title VIU
separately; five categories: nature, action, hwnor and meal.
humanity, black and white, miscellaneous. Enter by
corttactlng Susan Clarke at 446-4646 or John Earl Brown at 388u lltpll""
... 11..1101
8444, or wl'lte Riverby Photo Show, Box 472, Gallipolis by
*IIIII n..... or
W:EST
SHAKEN
October 10. Pictures due at Riverby by Oct. 18.
lllllllllar I tiiMf'llltt •IIIII QIIICIII", Of IWH I
INDIO, CaW. (UP!) - A lpal II lin. I ,.,.. •• Wlrtlt Cit 'rtlftUr;b.
weak esrthqi!Bke shook the
far
southeastern comer of
PARTY ENJOYED
Cslifornla Friday night. The
The perfect gift
POMEROY - Mr. and cream were served following · Caltech seismological ob- because it's what you make of it.
Mrs. Harold William Hanson the dinner, and gtfiB were servatory in Pasadena s.aid
of Hysell Run entertained present ed to the couple. the quake registered a lni.id
Where elserecently with a dinner party Others attending were Mrs. 3.9 on the Richter I!Cale, "just
honoring her parents, Mr. Evelyn Spencer, Mr: and big enoogh to feel but not
and Mrs. Harry Clark on Mrs. Rick Clark and Terry strong enough to cause any
thefr 22nd wedding an- Clark.
real damage."
State&amp; Third
Golllpatls,O.

BIDWELL - Tbe Bidwell ·
Porter PTO is participating
in Campbell's Labels-lorEducatioo program.
The program requires tbst
tbe 1m) send tbe appropriate
numbers of labels lor Its
choice of more tbsn.100 Items

. Sr. Citizens
CaletUlar

feet.

Loui Walker ·

also at
sale
prices.

• N~w Wool

Plaids For Coals and Capes
• 60" Printed Knits

• Washable Velveteen

The Fabric Sho~~
--"

McCall's, Kwick-Sew,
· ··
Simplicity Patterns · · ·
115 W. Second
Pomeroy
·
Ph. 992-2284 Approved Aurnomed

Deal. er

w: • FA C Calendar

because

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OF HOME VALUES!
THE FAMILY PUCE YO SAVE

•

WED., OCT. 13TH

STORE

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Closed ell day Thursd,l y
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'

Regular
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00

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NOW

I

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SOFA·LOVESEAT.CHAIR
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. INTERNATIONAL

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LIVING ROOM SUITES

NOW

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BROOKWOOD

'400oo
.. · .

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MORE BARGAINS .·
· ·TH-ROUGHOUT
THE STORE
NOT TOO EARLY TO LAY-AWAY
FOR CHRISTMAS .

'I'

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Regular
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NOW

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SOFA &amp; LOVESEAT

~~~~r

•I 'I ,

• LONDON (UPI) '- Tbe
Paiestlntan or~anlzer of .\be
Munlch Olympic . ~ssacre of
10 Israeli athletes has been
shot in !be stomach . and
critically woundt in Beirut,
prohsbly by Isr ell agents,
the Dally Mail s.aid today.
The unsourced and un·
datelined front P.ge dispatch
identified the l'alestlntan u
Ali Hassan 8alamah. II said '
tbst under the name of Abu
Hassan, he planned and
organized the 1972 maasacre
in Munlch.
·'i. .i-

~~t~;r·

2 SOFA &amp; CHAIRS

INTERN ATIQNAL' .

15.99

1

ALL FLOOR SAMPLES Of·LIVIN.GROOM SUITES ·

EARLY AMERICAN BROOKWOOD

.

SING.ER ·SOFA &amp;CHA~

· Regular
$799.95

..
CLOSED MONDAY
, CHESHIRE .1. The Gallia •
Meigs CommJnity Action
Agency offices will'be closed
Monday in observance of
Columbus Day. '
·

.(,

.SOFA &amp;CHAIR

$~~~

CORf&gt;IN &amp; SNYUfR
fURNITURf CO.

TRADITIQN . .

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nlversa ry. Cake and

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LIVING ROOM SUITES

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Several . othei
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SOFA &amp; CHAIR
Regular
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Regular
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INTERNATIONAL
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Creative Glass SOFA &amp; CHAIR
" $799.95
Regular
NOW '65. QOO
NOW
Glass Tender
lASSEn
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no telling
what
she'll get.

SINGER ZIG·ZAG
SEWING

dropin ~obbln ,
built-in bl ind hem
.MACHINE.
stitch, ·an extra
w i d « z1g . za 9 rrr::-"117'~":'
capacity
and
snap.on presser

l

~~~~J!y~cto~~-- ~~osed.

president, Eleanor White;
secretary, Beatrice Bush and
treasurer, Pearl Burger. The
!!Chedule for a flower show
was dli!Cussed. Tha hostess
served refreshmeniB to the
club members and guests.
The next meeting will be with
Ella Payne.

WORLD'S BIGGEST
SEWING MACIHNE
.SALE! Nows $9995

TAWNEY JEWELERS

..

'

.

.

�-

•

.·
'

= -·

eB-'I'heSundaJ Tlm~tinel, Sunday; Oct.10, 1976 •.. ..

•

'

Pearl Burger hosts
Vinton garden club

Mrs.
Milhoan
.
displays quilts
.

POMEROY - . Lovely ChrlJt'a time, and qullts On
quilts that are true beds signltied a warm and
Americana works of art - loving place.
several made by Meigs ·Mrs. Milhoan noted tbst
County pioneer women - history is filled with accounts
were displayed by Mrs. of bed .and .bedding, and
Dwtcbt .Milhoan, "" antique rigbUully so,' she said, since
collector, at lbe. Friday this Is the p(jlce where people
meetiDg of Return Jonatbsp are born, live and die. She
Meigs ' Chapter of the made reference to the
Dlugbtera of tbe American nwnerous beds which have
Revolution.
been marked " George
Meeting in tbe parish house W~n Slept Here," to
ol Gr1ce Episcopal Cl1urcb, point up the slgnltlcantl! of
Mrs. Milhoan was in!toduced bed and bedding.
by Mn. Grace Elch, program
Early American women
chairman, who quoted trans(4ted their emotions into •
Stephen Fosler's words, "In quUt designs, Mrs. Mllhoan
tbe llky the. bright stars said, mentioning "Job's
glittered, On tbe banks the tears," the "crown of thorns"
pale moon shone, a:nd 'twas and the "world without end."
from Aunt Dinah's qulltlng Sbe spoke ol the siBr (iatiern
party, I was seeing Nellie as being popular In the early
home."
quUts and of the patchwork
)
QuOting, tbst labor of love quUts which captured chUdI
which was a necessity lor hood memories with !!Craps of
wannth in Oirij'-Airierlca and- · materials from gannents.
QUILTS DISPLAYED - Quilts from the early llillls .
Ia now 1 pleasurable pastime
Among the quUIB dlanlaved
to
today
were displayed by Mrs. Dwight Mllhoan at the
lor many, ·began In Egypt, was a friendship qullt of
Mrs. Milhoan said. Egyptian uneven pieces with emkings ·wore qullted robes, broidered names. These, s.ald June Ashley, aod Miss Mae
men wore qullted coats in Mrs. Mllhoan, were popular Weber, a guest.
• for church lund raising
Recognition was given to
projeciB with the· llnlahed Mrs. Dale Dutton· a 56-year
. quill usually being presented member. Mrs. Mae Mora,
to the miniBter. Somber and treasurer, reported tbst the
happy times, war and peace applications and dues of three
pariods, have all been told on prospective members had
quUts.
• • been processed. They are
·She spoke of the current Mrs. PhyliiB Hackett, Mrs.
popular use of quilts for wall Mary Elizabeth ll!orris and
hanging and drapes.
l\1rs. Mary Carolyn WUey.
Mrs. Mllboan dedicated her -. On behaU of Mrs. Jane
program to her mother, Mrs. BroWII, T. B. nurse, Mrs.
Linder Daines of Pom~roy, Beulah Jones spoke on the .4
Route 3, and "to all the genUe of a mill tuberculosis levy to
TENCIE
women throughout time" who be voted on nell month. She
WHA'T A CASE OF
have been avid qullters.
noted that It js a reduced
A~60N .MitSH'T 6E.
On display at the meeting renewal. Mrs. Johnson
were several qullts made by reported thai a thank-you
Mrs. Daines, along with two letter had been received from
STOJEL
Now III'I'Hnge .t.he circled lettel'll
IJ:IIf II,IJilf made In the early 1800s, the tbe Meigs County Council on
V ~~ J~ to fo.rm the sUrprise aNWer, as
"Log Cabin" and the Aging for the exhibit at
:=::::·::::::~::=A::=::::':::::l:::::_,
· suggeste~· br.the above cartoon.
~~ o~esden . Plate/'
by "Yesteryear."
Elizabeth Hoepfner P!arr, an
The national defense report ...,,~·~x---· ., ..,.v·;-; ·m'"'''''; *1
l'lirt~SiiPIIIS!atRben
early settler of Pine Grove. by Mrs. Jones was on liberty
•
(An1weu M und~,)
'An antique "Powder Pu!f and dealt with religion,
Jumbl~: BORAX ADMIT DILUTE LEGACY
qullt was also displayed as morality, and government
Yulerday't
. Amw": WJtot it '• n? plecnare 14' ('at~la-:-!COLD
was a "Tree of Lite."
interference and control of
Columbi;t'diJm..mds frum $1 5U.
For her presentation, Mrs. individual Uberties.
:.:·
Milhoan was attired in a
Mrs. Patrick Lochary
GALUPOLIS - The Senior
eostwne which featured a announced that "Happy Citizens Center ,located at 220
quilted band around the Land" will be presented at Jackson Pike in the County .
422 Second Ave.
bottom of the skirt.
Trinity Church at 3 p.m. on Home Building, is o~en . I
Mrs. Thereon · Johnson, Oct. 24 under sponsorship of Monday through -Friday from
Gallipolis, Ol!io
Streak less Machine Wall Washing
regent , welcomed the the Meigs County Htstori~al 9 a.m.-3 p.m. The schedule of
Upholstery . Windows . Floors ·
PJWnnt•nn
members Including new ones, Society with financial activities for this week Is as 1
Complete
Line of . .. ·
1
A• ,,d,.nu.d '"'' " " lllrr.
Mrs. Elva Cotterill and ..Mrs. assistance
from the Ohio Arts
'-------.....1
. .
follows :
·
1
.· Cle~ning Equipment &amp;_Supplies

r

Engagirig Rings
.For Your

I I

@umbi~

r~::~

I
I]
I

III

. .

I r XXJ[X 11 J

I

I

VINTON - The Vinton
Friendship Garden Club met
at the home of Pearl Burger
with 10 members and two
guests present recenUy. The
vice president, Eleanor
White, called the· meeting to'
on!er in the absence of the
president.
. Devotions were a reading
"At Day's End" by Eleanor
White. Prayer was by Esta
Downard.
. The secretary's report was
given by Beatrice Bush Qlld
treasurer report, Pearl
Burger. Both were approved.
Conununlcatlons were read.
The program on Drying
Flowers was by Ella Payne.
She told of different ways of
·drying flowers and noted the
newest is in a micro-wave
oven.
.
Officers for 1976-1977 were
installed. InstallinR officer
was past president Esta
Downard who used a candle
and flower ceremony. Of·
fleers
installed were
president, Ann Slayton; vice

get t~at 'all around"·bo~r

''

Visiting, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.;
Wreath .CraU (bring nuts,
acorns , pine cones, etc.
DorOthy Hartley, instruCtor,
1-3 p.m.; Dowq payment for
Florida trip is due.
vou to the "'•OII. /O,n••n" '1 ,Wednesday, Oct. 13 Physical Fitness, 11 :30 a.m. ;
-shoes! All -aroUnd good
Rio Grande Recreation, 12
to go .lots of places witli lots
noon-3 p.m.; Card Games, 1-3
different outfits ... all·around
p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 14 fort on new lowered heels ... and
Potluck
supper, annual
GREAT
they 're by Cnn,nio·l
meeting
and volun.teer
A great name in shoes! Strap in ~avv, tan,
recognition party, 6:30 p.m.
Friday, Oct. 15 - Art class,
1-3 p.m.; Social Hour, 7,p.m.
The Seniors' Co-op and the
Crall Shop are open each day
from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m.
The Senior Nutrjtion
Program serves the following
· menu at 12 noon:
Monday' - Closed. 1
Tuesday - Pot roast of
beef, gravy, buttered
steamed potatoes, mixed
vegetables, rQII, butter,
caMed apricots, milk. ,
Wednesday - Creamed
_ _ _ _,.;9:_::92!.·;:_28::;1~5_ _ _ _ __::P~O:::M::;E:,:R;:;:O.:,Y,:.,0;::::-:,_.J chicken with biscuits,
l-!~~E:;,.::::::,:.:,.;_
'
' mashed potatoes, buttered
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,._ _ _....;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _'"" peas, jellied.cranberry salad;
•
butter, ice cream, milk.
·Thursday ' Johnny
Manetti, tossed salad with
dressing, cornbread, :butter,
. canned pears, milk. ·
Friday - Fried fish,
escalloped potatoes, buttered
spinach, bread, butter, cltrus "
sections, sugar cookies, milk.
Choice of tieverage )l'ith
each meal. ' ·. f

around

I ADVANCED CLEANING SE~VICE

I
I
I

FOR FRIENDLY FREE ESTIMATES

I
I

C II 675·5572 After 4 P.M.
a

1

1-- - -----,..------ -":'----,-~----'

A thought for the day:
Famed German scientist
Albert Einstein said, "The
whole of science is nothing
more than a refinement· of
everyday t~."

r:J34MPERv
.YOUR._,
HOME .

With Fine Furnishings
from

ONLY

Baker Fumiture
Middleport,__O.

.

·sAVES30 OFFREG.
PRICE ON TillS

FASHIONMATE
MACH I NE Model·
361 wl lh fronf

'

78-ThP.Sunday. Tlm""·Sentlnel, Sunday, Oct. 10, 1976.

Soup labels wanted
of audio-visual aids an&lt;k&gt;r
athletic equipment.
The PTO s,ays the public
ca~ help ~y collecting
Campbell Soup and .Bean
product labels lor the
organization. Naturallr,
more labela mean more and
better
equipment.
A
collection big will be placed
j n each classroom at the
. !!Chooi, or the labels may be
sent to PTO Ways and Means ·
Committee,
c-o
Tiny
Holstein, Rt. 2, Box 82-A,
POMEROY Meigs Vinton, Ohio 45686, by March
Senior Citizens Center ac- 12, 197'/.
tl{!\tles located at the
Pomeroy Junior High School - - - - - - - - Ia open 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Monday
lllfough Friday.
Monday, Oct. 11 Columbus .Day, Center
· Closed.
Tuesday, Oct. 12 -:Physical Fltneas,, 10:45 a.m.;
Chorus, 12:1ii-2 p.m.
., Wednesday, Oct. 13 Social Security Represen· .
tative, 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. ;
.
Games 12:30-2 p.nun.
Thursday,
Oct.
14
Crafts
MARRIAGE PLANNED - Announcement is made of
the engagement and approaching marriage of Miss Lola
with Evelyn Cullum, 10-ll :30
F. Walker, daughter of Mrs. Eva M. Walker of Grand
a.m. and 1-2:30 p.m.; HorseJunction, Colo. and the late Ivan B. Walker, to MontieR.
shoes, 12:30 p.m.; Sing-a·
Sanders, son of Mr. and Mrs. Montie Sanders, Rt. 1,
Long, 12:30 p.m.
Reedsville. The open church wedding will be an event of
Frtd/.y, Oct. 15 - Blood
Oct. 23 at 6:30 p.m. at the St. Paul United Methodist
Pressure, 10-11:30 a.m.; Art
Church, Tuppers Plains.
Class, 10·11:30
a.m.;
• Bowling, 1-3 p.m.; Soup and
Sandwich Supper, 4-7 p.m.
ll!iiil~:iti::;:m::i:i:':f:i:f:Hi:::~::;::;::t::::'iiiiiMi!MiHi!i'iiiii'iiim::;::;::;::l'ii'il!iil Senior Citizens Nutrition
Program, 11:30 a.m.-12: 30
p.m. Mond~Jy through Friday
except Monday, Oct. 11 due to
Day. · .
:;]~l~;
~:;:~~: Columbus
Monday - Center c~sed.
Exhibit for lhe monlh of Oclober: Annual Antique Show Tuesday- Pot roast of beef,
featuring Victorian antiques from the area.
gravy, buttered steamed ,
Giillery Hours: Saturdays and SUndays, 1 until 5 p.m.; potatoes, buttered frozen
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m. until 3 p.m.
mixed vegetables, canned
Oct. 12, Tuesday, 7-10 p.m. - Workshop on tenure, apricots, roll, butter, milk.
Riverby. Taught by Sarah Moshier. Registration, $4 for
Wednesday - Hot poultry
members, $5 fer ·non-members. Deadline to register for the sandwich with gravy,
Sixth' Annual Antique Seminar; call Mrs. Jennie Lou Hudson, mashed potatoes, buttered
446-2837.
peas and jellied cranberry
Oct. 1ii-16, Friday and Saturday, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. both davs - salad,- ice.cream, milk.
6th annual antique seminar with Orva Walker Heissenbuttel
Thursday, ~ohnny
II -.till mhltr,
· of Washington, D. C. Reserv~tions to he made with Mrs. Jennie Marzettl, tossed salad
Lou Hu&lt;lsop,.phone 4-t6-2837 by Oct. 12. $5 registration each day dressing, canned pears, com·'
includes lunch,
bread, ·butter, milk. ·
Oct. 19, Tues&lt;lay, 8 p.m. - Interdepartmental Meeting,
Friday - Fried fish,
FAC, Riverby.
escalloped potatoes, buttered
Oct. 26, Tuesday, 8 p.m. - FAC Trustees Meeting, spinach, citrus sections ' "1d
River by.
sugar cookie, bread, butter,
Oct. 28, Thursday, 9-)1 a.m. - Christmas Committee, milk.
River by.
,, .
.
Coffee, tes and buttermlll&lt;
Oct. 31, Sunday, 24 p.m. -' Parenkhild workshop, served dally. Registration ''
Riverby. '
required by noon the day
Exbi,bitfor tbe month of November - Matted photographs . before you plan to eat, H you
by local photographers; amaleur and professional to be judged expect to receive a Title VIU
separately; five categories: nature, action, hwnor and meal.
humanity, black and white, miscellaneous. Enter by
corttactlng Susan Clarke at 446-4646 or John Earl Brown at 388u lltpll""
... 11..1101
8444, or wl'lte Riverby Photo Show, Box 472, Gallipolis by
*IIIII n..... or
W:EST
SHAKEN
October 10. Pictures due at Riverby by Oct. 18.
lllllllllar I tiiMf'llltt •IIIII QIIICIII", Of IWH I
INDIO, CaW. (UP!) - A lpal II lin. I ,.,.. •• Wlrtlt Cit 'rtlftUr;b.
weak esrthqi!Bke shook the
far
southeastern comer of
PARTY ENJOYED
Cslifornla Friday night. The
The perfect gift
POMEROY - Mr. and cream were served following · Caltech seismological ob- because it's what you make of it.
Mrs. Harold William Hanson the dinner, and gtfiB were servatory in Pasadena s.aid
of Hysell Run entertained present ed to the couple. the quake registered a lni.id
Where elserecently with a dinner party Others attending were Mrs. 3.9 on the Richter I!Cale, "just
honoring her parents, Mr. Evelyn Spencer, Mr: and big enoogh to feel but not
and Mrs. Harry Clark on Mrs. Rick Clark and Terry strong enough to cause any
thefr 22nd wedding an- Clark.
real damage."
State&amp; Third
Golllpatls,O.

BIDWELL - Tbe Bidwell ·
Porter PTO is participating
in Campbell's Labels-lorEducatioo program.
The program requires tbst
tbe 1m) send tbe appropriate
numbers of labels lor Its
choice of more tbsn.100 Items

. Sr. Citizens
CaletUlar

feet.

Loui Walker ·

also at
sale
prices.

• N~w Wool

Plaids For Coals and Capes
• 60" Printed Knits

• Washable Velveteen

The Fabric Sho~~
--"

McCall's, Kwick-Sew,
· ··
Simplicity Patterns · · ·
115 W. Second
Pomeroy
·
Ph. 992-2284 Approved Aurnomed

Deal. er

w: • FA C Calendar

because

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

ice~------...

MEN'S BOOTS AND CASUALS

black-~O· connle®

CHAPMA~'S ·. sHOE

MEN'S SUEDE GROUND HOGS {R)
Here's the ultimate
; in comfort with
brushed suede uppers,
cushioned insoles,
natural bottoms

OF HOME VALUES!
THE FAMILY PUCE YO SAVE

•

WED., OCT. 13TH

STORE

FOR MEN

\

PRICES CUT ON ALL ROOMS
FULL SIZE BEI)DING
. Pick Your Firmness
· '139 TO '169
BEDROOMS
LIVING ROOMS
Oak or Wa.ll)ut
Finish

Your
Choice

$288

SQFA
&amp; CHAIR
'
.

$299 &amp; .$399
.· .

Mon., Tues., Wed., Sal.

.

-

955 SECOND AVENUE
. GALLIPOLII!. OHIO 45631

9e:m.-5 p.m.

Closed ell day Thursd,l y
Opea Friday I lo I p.m.

---r--------------+------1
'
PHONE 614-446-1171

'19995

NOW

INTERNATIONAL

Regular
$949.95

$48!g. $15~9·

'7.99
ond . '6.99 .
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SIZES TO 12
OLIVE GREEN,
INSULATED FOR
COM FORT, STEEL

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OFF
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ARCH

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POPULAR HARNESS
STYLING WITH WELT
CONSTRUCTION. LONG
WEA.RING HEELS AND
SOLES.
ANTIQUE BRQ_WN

INTERNATIONAL 2 ONLY

SOFA &amp;CHAIR
Regular
$619.95

•

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NOW

CLAYTON MARCUS

SOFA &amp; CHAIR
Regular
$749.95

· Regular
$849.95

'502 47

NOW

lASSEn ·
Regular
$1099.95 .

SOFA·LOVESEAT.CHAIR
Regular .
$949.95
Now

•aoooo

NOW

BASS En

CLAYTON MARCUS

SOFA &amp;CHAIR
Regular
-$699.95

'450

NOW

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INTERNATIONAL

·SOFA &amp; LOVESEAT
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SOFA &amp; CHAIR

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CONTEMPORARY

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'30000

INTERNATIONAL.

NOW

LOUNGE CHAIRS

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SOFA &amp;UQVESEAT
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SECTIONAL
Regular
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N&lt;M

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Regular
$649.95

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BROOKWOOD

llftil
nun

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tSAVE ON ALL OTHER
DINEnES IN STOCK •

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SPANISH DESIGN W/6 CHAIRS
Regular
$399.95
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ROUND DINETTE
W/4 SWIVEL OiAIRS
Regular
$249.95
NOW '199 00
CHROME &amp; GLASS W/4 BLACK
VINYL CHAIRS
N~ '18995

SOFA &amp; LOVESEAT
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NOW

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•

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INTERNATIONAL

Regular
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HUTCH, TABLE W/6 CHAIRS

SOFA
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INTERNATIONAL
$749.95

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NOW

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BROOKWOOD SECTIONAL .
. INTERNATIONAL

'524 97

DINING ROOM SUITESv .:. ::

LIVING ROOM SUITES

NOW

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BROOKWOOD

'400oo
.. · .

'500oo

MORE BARGAINS .·
· ·TH-ROUGHOUT
THE STORE
NOT TOO EARLY TO LAY-AWAY
FOR CHRISTMAS .

'I'

'65000

'NOW

Regular
$799.95

SOFA-LOVESEAT.CHAIR

HARNESS BOOTS

· SHOT IN STOJIIA~H

INTERNATIONAL

NOW

BASSm RED VINYL

I

NOW'33995

... Regular
$399,95

SOFA &amp; LOVESEAT

~~~~r

•I 'I ,

• LONDON (UPI) '- Tbe
Paiestlntan or~anlzer of .\be
Munlch Olympic . ~ssacre of
10 Israeli athletes has been
shot in !be stomach . and
critically woundt in Beirut,
prohsbly by Isr ell agents,
the Dally Mail s.aid today.
The unsourced and un·
datelined front P.ge dispatch
identified the l'alestlntan u
Ali Hassan 8alamah. II said '
tbst under the name of Abu
Hassan, he planned and
organized the 1972 maasacre
in Munlch.
·'i. .i-

~~t~;r·

2 SOFA &amp; CHAIRS

INTERN ATIQNAL' .

15.99

1

ALL FLOOR SAMPLES Of·LIVIN.GROOM SUITES ·

EARLY AMERICAN BROOKWOOD

.

SING.ER ·SOFA &amp;CHA~

· Regular
$799.95

..
CLOSED MONDAY
, CHESHIRE .1. The Gallia •
Meigs CommJnity Action
Agency offices will'be closed
Monday in observance of
Columbus Day. '
·

.(,

.SOFA &amp;CHAIR

$~~~

CORf&gt;IN &amp; SNYUfR
fURNITURf CO.

TRADITIQN . .

::::

PEDDL£R'S PANTRY

nlversa ry. Cake and

LIVING ROOM SUIUS. :.. .-.'.

LIVING ROOM SUITES

'

..

Several . othei
models

LAST WEEK·OF
.EMPIR-E FALL SAVINGS

SOFA &amp; CHAIR
Regular
Give her
Regular
NOW. '70QOO
$849.95
Sll99.95
· NOW '90000
INTERNATIONAL
Corning's
BROOKWOOD
SOFA &amp; CHAIR
.
Creative Glass SOFA &amp; CHAIR
" $799.95
Regular
NOW '65. QOO
NOW
Glass Tender
lASSEn
SOFA &amp;CHAIR

There's
no telling
what
she'll get.

SINGER ZIG·ZAG
SEWING

dropin ~obbln ,
built-in bl ind hem
.MACHINE.
stitch, ·an extra
w i d « z1g . za 9 rrr::-"117'~":'
capacity
and
snap.on presser

l

~~~~J!y~cto~~-- ~~osed.

president, Eleanor White;
secretary, Beatrice Bush and
treasurer, Pearl Burger. The
!!Chedule for a flower show
was dli!Cussed. Tha hostess
served refreshmeniB to the
club members and guests.
The next meeting will be with
Ella Payne.

WORLD'S BIGGEST
SEWING MACIHNE
.SALE! Nows $9995

TAWNEY JEWELERS

..

'

.

.

�-·

-

BBSunday, Oct. IO, !976
. 'rheSundayTime&amp;SenUnel,
.

Gallipolis club conducts meet
GAWPOUS - Nature's tlfication of many species of
·Garden Club of the 'Galllpolls wild flowers and those grown
State Institute met at the In their own gardens.
•
occupation therapy roo·m Each lljember was given a
Thursday with IS members slip of a vine or begonia or
present.
coleus to take to their rooiiill
Members of the club read to start in water. they will
several articles, "Gathering bring them to the next
Chrysanthemums,"

"Oc-

tober" and " One Room
Schoolhouse."
Mrs. Kenneth Frazer of the
Gallipolis Garden . Club
t'Onducted the meeting. Mrs.
Gafl\et Wood of the GSJ staff
called the roU and made some
announcements. Mrs. Wood
also gave each member an
attractive program book for
U1e coming year.
The French C1iy Garden
·
Club had charge. of the
program tor tne aay. A
student of Volce, at Rio
Grande College, Mrs. Gladys
Trainer, led the group In
singing several hymns and
putriotlc songs.
Mrs. Florence Trainer read
"Meaning of Autumn." .Miss
Marie Meal and Mrs. Elaine
G•'Orge conducted an iden·

Cannel 11\Tews,
'4
B. y t.he n·'BY'

•

,
Mrs. Elsie Roush of
Pomeroy spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Edson
RoUBh .
Mr. and Mrs. George Circle
of New Haven, W. Va., vlaited
with Mary Circle on Sunday.
Kim Follrod of Racine was
the guest of Becky Lee
Saturday. night.
,
Mr and Mrs Arthur Orr of ·
, Chester caUed ·at the h .0 f .
,
ome
Mr. aild Mrs. Robert Lee on
Suncday . .
orrectton: Mr. and Mrs.
John
Morrison
(not
Morrison) visited Mrs·. Dean
Brinker recently.

~
~
t~f.,

'

meeting to "show." · They
were also given treats o!
candy and a rain hat
packaged in an attractive
container. .
The enjoya ble as well· as
educational meeting was
followed by refreslun~ts of
punch, cupcakes and cookies.
The next meeting wtll be ·
Oct. 28 with the Star Garden
·Club of M'elgs County as ~e
sponsoring host.

.

CONTRACT AWARDED
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
Rockwell International
CoMiBBIileb SyhasteiiillbeeDivl.•londedof
urn us s
n awar
a•IO,Smi!Uon contract by the
Army for engineering
d
f
evelopment 0 a new laser·
guided antitank missile
system. The contract for the
"Hell-fire" modular missile
will create "several hun·
dred" new technical jobs at
,
Rockwell s east side plant ·
~f:: 8 company spokesman

CHARLES SCHIFF

Concert
today

EXTRA SAVINGS AND ACHANCE TO
WIN sso.OO WORTH OF GROCERI'ES
AT THE JONES BOYS OF POMEROY.

POINT PLEASANT, W.
Va.- Maestro Charles Schiff
Will appear In concert with
the Charleston Symphony
during the orchestra's per·
formance today in Fort
Randolph .in Krodel Park.
Other
free
events
scheduled for the speical

~\tY

~·
u ~

'

Drawing for •so.oo worth of groceries at the
Pomeroy Jones Boys' Saturday, October 30
at 2:00p.m. No purchase necessairy. You "eed
not be present to win. Drawing at Country
'

•

----------q

1..._\
Country Couslns-.IOIES BOYS
L,
~-----I ~ DRIWII&amp; FOR $50.00 WORTH IF GROCERIES ~
I UME G
.
.
I

I

ADDRESS

.

·.

I

I CITY
'
I TELEPHONE NO. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___.
I Please deposit at Country Cousins· Cookshc1pp~ I

Clip &amp; Use these Extra Savings Coupons at Cclunlrf 'Cousins'
~-------------------~
..
I .---------~---. SIVE 28' ~i
. SIYE 30' --1I
I TRIPLE MEAL I 2 TRIPLE TREATS I

1

II
I
I

pure beef patties, cheese, I
1I Two
lett~ce and the Cousins' 1
$110 . . . - I spwal $u1ce.30
With Coupon I
With Coupon

Triple treat, fries , regular
drink.

I

1 EXPIRES 10.30-76 J
~---------------~
san 30'
1....\
SUE 21·
1

I . "'XPIRES 10.30-76

I

..

I ~ 2 DOUBLE
I
I CHEESEBURGERS I HAMBURGERS I
I1 Two
pure ,beef p~ttles with .I Two pure beef patties with our I
melted cheese w1th . fixens I fixins added.
· I
2 DOUBLE

I

r---. ---,---------..,
EXPIREs 10·30-76

·I

SAVE 11'

.

EXPIRES 10.30-76

~L

SAVE 25•

T

BIG

I

.

.II .SALAD BAR ·I1 BEEF PLATTER 1I
I
I
I
I
39c · 1I ~~:::.g $140
1·
1
Come in and fix it the way you
like it. Dining room only.

.,

I

L-

With Coupon
EXPIRES. 10-30-76 .

A 1·3 lb. 100 percent fresh
ground beef steak with fries,
h~t. bread and salad bar.

With Coupon
EXPIRES lD-30-76 . I

only.

··

------ --1.-·------·-------·--;;,;;.;,._..,A
J '

OPEN

----~

SUNDAY 1':00 A.M. TO 10:00 P..M.
·Mondaythru Thursday 7:00A.M. to 10:00 P.M:
Fri~ay and Saturday 7:00A.M. to 12:00 P.M.

Located at6Pii West Main St., next to the Jones

in Pomeroy

Ev·e·nts ·

SUNDAY
REVIVAL at the Cheshlr'
Baptist Church Sunday
through Sunday, Oct. 17.
Evangelist, Jerry . Neal.
Services begin at 7:30 each
evening. Special mustc and
alngtng. Everyone'· welcome:
FRENCH CrtY Garden Club
Held trip to Lake Hope. Meet
at the home of JeweU Moore
promptly at 10 a.m.
STEVE SEVERS, a minister
from the Ohio University
campus, will speak at the
Sunday night servlve of the
Gallipolis CbriBtian Church, 7
p.m. Special music will be
provided. Public Invited.
REVIVAL begins Sunday at
Brown's Place, Bidwell,
sponsored by the Full Gospel
Church Sons and Daughters
or' God. Brother Talmln
Fields .~f Pittsburgh, Pa. and
Detroit, Mich. Will be the
speaker. Service~ will be held
at 7:30 nightly. Pubtic in·
vited.
REVIVAL BEGINS Sunday
at Carmel Church on Jackson
CR 46 near Richard Orchard,
7:30p.m. Everyone.welcome.
Rev. Elmer Jeffers In chatge.
MONTY SHEETS will speak
at Providence Baptist Church
Sunday evening, 7:30 p.m.
Public Invited.
,
REV!V AL' at Crown City
Methodist Church beginning
Monday. Services at 7:30
p.m. Rev, Earl . Whitmore,
evangelist. Special s!nglng
each night. Jack Rankins,
pastor, Invites the public.
MONDAY .
GALLIPOLIS CHAPTER
OES No. 283 dinner for of·
ficers In Masonic dining
room , · 6 p.m. Monday.
Regular meeting and election
of officers, 7:30 p.m.

Bucks roll.-to
34-14 triumph
.

'· OPEN HOUSE SET -

Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Speilcer will observe their 50th .wedding
anniversary on Sunday, Oct. 17 at the Mount Herman Church annex wttb an open _hQUSe
· celebratlan from 1 to 5 p.m . .The couple was married Oct. 18, 1928 by the Rev. Mlli'f L.
Storrer In the Mount Herman parsonage. They have llved all or their married U~es In the
West Shade Conummity, Pomeroy, R. D. Mr. and Mrs. Spencer are the parents of two son.S,
Russell and Gilbert, PomeJOY, and three daughters, Mra. Lots Eberabach, Chester; Mrs.
Wilma Marks, Belpre, and Ml:s. Unda Lute, Pomeroy. They have 13 granclchl,ldten and ooe
great'fll'andson. Friends and relatives are Invited to call during the open house hours. The
church Is loeated In the Texas Community of Chester Township on County Road B2in the
Fistwoods area ..

THE
UNIFORM CENTER
HAs--:-

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI )
Sophomore Harlan
Huckleby scored three times
Saturday to lead top.rated
Michigan past cross-state
rival Micl)igan State, 42·10,
the most . points the
Wolverines have scored
agaL"st the Spartans In 29
years. r
·
Huckleby scored on runs of
38, I and 2 yards while senior
workhorse Rob Lytle tallied
on a 7~yard run as Michigan
improved its record to ~
• With each victory coming
before a crowd of more than

''EVERYTHING FOR THE
· LADY IN-WAITING ''

CLAY PTO Monday, 7:30
p.m. at the school. All
members urged · to at·
tend.
·
VINTON Baptist . Churct
Choir will sing at t~
Chekhire Baptlkt Chur&lt;
Monday, 7:30 p.m. an,
Wednesday, 7:30p.m. Pastor
Jerry Neal wiD bring the
messages.

Slacks
Tops
Blue Jeans
Short Dresses
long Dresses
Jumpers·Pant
Suits

PYTHIAN SISTERS of
Temple 76 will practtceat the
K of P Hall Monday at 7 p.m.
All12 staff members urged to
attend.

-·J

Slips
Panties

'18,000.
;:::·~.:::-"*~~,~~~IIWI!llilllllll!

I Coming
~~:

• &lt;

Girdles
Panty Hose·

Maternity Bras
Nursing Bras

~-366 SECOND AVE.· - -.-• ..__ _ _ GALLIPOLIS, OHIO_...,

7:30p.m.

Buckeyes. totaled 227 yards. ~ threa'tened ~

rips Spartans

runs.
" He's the best money
pitcher in baseball," said
Jackson. "In the big games,
he's the guy you want out
there."
Hunter was even better
than Jackson predicted. It
wsa revealed only a few days
ago that Hunter had pitched
much of the season with
tendonitis In his right
shoulder, but if he felt any
soreness at all, it didn't show.
The only batter to really
trouble htm was, . not so
surprisingly, George Brett,
the league's leading hitter
this season 'tith a .333
average. Brett had three of
the five bits off Hunter - a
single to ~enter in the fourth
·after ·Hunter had retired the
first 12 batters to face him
and a single with one out in
the seventh .
It was Brett, however, who
wore the ·goat horns for the
Royals and ruined a gutsy
pitching performan ce by
Yankee castoff Larry Gura.
Brett, an All-Star third
baseman, committed two
tbrowilig errors In the first
Inning which led to two runs
and those were the only runs
the Yankees managed ofi
Gura until the ninth when
Roy White doUbled In two

more with two out.
hitting slump during the last laced out his tlitrd hit of the·
Brett, usually cabo under month of the regular season, game - a single to rtght - •
p.ressure, played like a were no match for the yankee and Rivers beat out an Infield
harried little leaguer i'n the rtght·hander.' HltUng Mun· hit to Short. White then
first inning when- he threw son's moveable targets with drilled a double Into the left
two balls over the head of big pinJXllnl accuracy, Hunter field comer to score both
first
baseman
John allowed JuSt two rwuiers over runners and kafO Gura.
Mayberry to set the tone of the first seven Innings and
11 just 'wasn 't the Royals'
the day for the Royals. one of .those, Brett in the• dey In more ways than one.
Mickey Rivers opened the fourth Inning, was cut down Amos Otis, their No. 2 run
Inning by grounding to third , attempting to steal. .
. . producer du~lng · the regular .
and Brett made a nice
Aside fro{llllrett; the only season, •suffered a sprained
bilckhanded stop and •!&gt;' trouble spot for Hunter came ankle while trying to beat out
peared to be conceding the In the eighth Inning when AI a bunt In the first ilintng and
base to the fleet Yankee Cowens led off with a triple to was rerooved (rom the game
center fielder.. However ' he right and scored on Tom in the second. It was later
suddenly uncorked a throW Poquette's ground er to revealed he may miSS Swlwhich sailed past ·Mayberry, second. Fred Patek singled dsy's game.
ellabllng Rivers to reach with two out in the Inning but
Am eric1n L11gue
ChimpiOf!Shlp PlayoH
second. Gura then walked he tried to steal on the first
!GomtOnei
White on four pitched and pitch to pinch·hltter Jamie
N
ew
York
200 000 002- 4 12 0
Thurman Munson promptly Quirk and was cut down Ken . City oOO
000 011)-.1 5 2
loaded the bases by singling easily by Munson's rifle peg Hunter end Mun!W\ ; Gura.
L.lMell (9) and Marllne1. LPsharply to t enter.
following a pitohout.
Guru, who.had been having
The Roya ls' last mild Gura.
a running feud with Yankee threat came In the nlnt~ when
ma11ager Billy Martin all Brett lb1ed a single to left
CORRECTION .
week , rea ched back and with two out by Hal McRae · POMEROY - In the Meigs
struck out designated hitl~r lined out to ·third .bl\s~man · Res.erve teaQJ loss to
Leu Plni ella and appeared to Gra1g Nettles to end the. Jackson, the slats of Jlmmer
be out of the Inning when game. ·
Souisb,Y and Bruce Carme~
Chris Chambliss hit what
Gura , th e Royals' best were turned around. The
appeared to be a double play pitcher down the stretch, correct totals were Carmen
ball 'to Brett's right. The didn't pitch badly, even with 53 yards In 14 carries
Roya ls' third .- baseman though he was tagged for 12 whlleSoutshy had 43 yards in
ba ckhand ed the ball and . hits in a 8 2...1 1nnlngs, Nine of 1) attc10p!s.
stopped on third for a tho5!' hits came with two out
forceout but his throw to first and he managed to escape Middletown ?8 Fairfield 14
Aquinas 30 Cll n Tim ken 6
again sailed over.Mayberry's trouble until the ninth when Can
Ca n South 7 Glen CMI&lt;wood 7
head and two runs scored.
\he Yankees mou~t ed a l ilt)
.
Those were. all the runs succuss(ul l)VOi)Ut rally.
Con Me Kinley 47 Cambridge
Hunter needed. The Royals, · Fred Stariley, a .Z38 hitter 34
llon 18. Cle BenediCtine
who had gone Into a severe during the r egular season. MasSi
3
,,----1

by rain . . ·'--·

PHILADELPHIA (UPI )keeper four seconds In the
Leit-handers
Don Gullett and
second quarter to make it 21·
10, and Huckleby scored his Steve Carlton were all
second touchdown about two primed to square off against
minutes later to end the each other Saturday night in
suspense In the bitter rivalry. the National League Playoff
.Michigan defensive back Opener when the skies
Jerry Zuver . returned an . cleared after almost 12 hours
Interception 59 yards for a of heavy rain.
The rain which fell heavily
touchdown.
all
night ended at about noon
Huckleby finished with 126
and
National
Leag ue
yards on 23 carries.
President
Charley
Feeney
· It ·was "'the worst beaUng ·
said,
"
As
a
result
of
Michigan has given the
Spartans since a 55.() 'favorable weather reports,
we don't plan to call the game
shellacking In 1947.
until !onight. We're doing
100,000.
'
everything we can to get the
• The Spartans, now 1-3-1, got
game in."
all their points on Wolverine
Indications in
midmistakes. Hans Nielsen
afternoon were that the game
kicked a 24-yard field goal to
will be played with the
give the Spartans a ~ lead
second game of the besl-&lt;&gt;f·.
.
after a · bad pitch gave
five series scheduled for
'
. •..
..
...; . .
WUII U1 oU.of, .._.., ... ,. .... , ... o, ""'-"-"·" &amp;Niof ..,.,. • ._a 1 ..,. _ _
Michigan State the .b!lll on the
Sunday afternoon. Monday is
"""'U&lt;&gt; UJr&lt;~ '''""' - melgl ll1gh llehool golr'team Follrod who '!l'as alao the madaUst, Dale Browning,
Wolverines' '!I with ihe game
took first plate honors In the Class AA golf toumamen.t ,
a scheduled travel day with
Crenson Pratt, Mark Gilkey and• Lance
Oliver.
held Friday at the Pomeroy Golf Course. The team shot a
less than two minutes old ..
PHILADELPIDA (UPI) - Charleston, W.Va., dashed 2S the scene shifting to Cin·
- "&gt;
Freslunlm tight end Mark West VIrginia, sparked by the yards off tackle for the third cinnati Tuesday for th e
Brammer caught,a lO.yard passing of Dan Kendra and touchdown of the first remaining necessary games.
touchdown
pass from the running of Paul Lumley quarter.
Manager Sparky Anderson
quarterback Ed Smith after and Walter Easley, scored
In the second quarter, of the Reds, who are seeking
the first Urree ttmes it got the Temple had a fourth aod one to become t!J.e first National
bsll Saturday en route to a 42- m the West Virginia five but League team to win two
O'rout of Temple.
a plunge by.quarterback Pat straight World Series since
NHL standings
Kendra 'Jlllssed for twQ Carey failed and the the 1921·22 New York Giants,
By United Press lnlernatiOnal touchdowns as the Mountai· Mountaineers took over.
ended his psychological
campbell Conference
rf
F ld
POfrick Division
neers scored all their points
On the first plar., Kendra wa are game r ay when
By Greg Bailey
AA Golf Tournament Friday. Browning, both tu.,.tng in a Course In · Chillicothe. Those .
w. Lt. ots, gt 9a in the first tbree quarters of passedovertothesidellnesto he named Gullett (11-:lduring
POMEROY - A cold . For the second year in a row, 74 for the day's 18 boles. On three teams are Meigs,.
1
. ~~ ~?;~J;;s
~. ~ ~ ) ~ the. game played at Franklin Tom Bowden who dashed 52 the tegular season ) as his blistery day and so ggy the Meigs High School the second hole of sudden Jackson anH Gallipolis, who
Atlanta
.
1 1 o 2 9 8 Field before a sparse crowd yards to the Owls' 41. Dave first game starter.
grounds at the Pomeroy Golf Unksters came home with death, Follrod came out the flnlslied·wlth a (earn total 328. '
· Philade.~~1rbe Jivlsi~n 0 •3 of 3,767. -·
.
Riley ended that drive by
Anderson admitted ·he Course was the setting for the the sectional title as they shot winner.
The remaining team
w. 1. t. ph . gl ga Lumley scored the first scampering 22 yards around delayed the aMouncement to
a tea m total 315, seven
Under the direction of standings are as follows :
~~~~~ido
~ ~
j touchdown on a one-yard the end for the score. ·
"psyche the Phlllies" and
strokes better than second Nolan Swackliammer, the Chesapeake Union was fourth
sq.ouis
o 1 o o ·, 6 plunge to 76-yard, nlneiJiay
Kendra ' s second then began to "psyche" his GAHSfro~h,
place Jackson who had ·a 323., tourname,~~t ran
very with a 362; B~lpre was fifth
· vancouver
o 1 o o s 9 ·drive that he ignited with .a touchdown pass, a seven- possible American League
Meigs High seemed to JValk' smoothly. Swackhammer with a 363; South Point and
Minn esota
0 2 0 0 7 12 2
d
1
th
·
•·
Wales conference
4-yar
run a ong
e yarder to Bowden and a ten· World Series opponent with
away with all p.e honors as was a former Meigs golf . Warren tied for -stl&lt;th with
Norris DiYilion
sidelines. Kendra also point conversion play made it the atmouncement that he
their Chuck Follrod was .the coach.
386's, and Fairland came In
•.::n · the third qua rterofthe m1g
. ht fl ou I comm Iss Ioner
washinglon w.1 ·0 . pts.
r 3gf. 9 ga8 completed two passes of 14 """''"
medaUst for the toumament.
The top three teams of eighth with a 431.
Monlreol
1 o o 2 10 1 yards each In the drive.
game played under strong Bllwie Kuhn's orders to use a
However, at the end of Friday's tournament will
Following II a list of the
2 10 IS
Pitlsburgh
I
I
o
After
a
Temple
drive
winds aod inte,rmittent rain. designated hitter in the
regulation play Follrod was advance to district play next scores of the day:
Detroi1
0 0 I 1 3 3
· Los Angeles
o 1 1 1 ' 6 staUed ,on the West VIrginia
West Virginia, now 3-2, classic.
tied with teammate Dale Saturday a~ the Veteran's
·--MEIGS (311) .
Adams Divi•ion
2tl and a field goal try faUed, score Its last touchdown on a
Manager Danny Ozark also
PLAYER
SCORE
91 9
Boston
wi 1.~. ~tsi 6 ~ Kendra p11ssed into the flat to three-yard run by second announced that Jbn Len borg,
Browning
74
ATHENS
The
Gallipolis·
Foil rod
1'
Cleveland
o o 1 1 2 2 Steve Lewis who galloped 80 string quarterback Rich 16-10, will start the second
and
Athens
freslunen
battled
Prall
e
~~:~~~~~
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ yards for the second Duggan that was set up by an game for the Phillies while to li ().() deadlock In the mud
Oliver
!
Friday's Resull
.touchdown .
83-yard run With a pass Anderson said , rookie Pat
Gilkey
8
and
rain
here
Saturday
NY Rangers s ColoradO 3
Easley was the mainstay or Interception
by
Tom Zachry, 14·7, will start for the
morning. .
(only game scheduled)
the n-t
Mountaineer march, Pridemore,
Rerls .
JACKSON (323)
Saturdav•s Games
~
The .tie left GAHS with a tJ..
Yerian
82
NY Rangers al s1. LouiS, night
which started on Ure West
·The loss gave Temple a z.3
Both teams were eager to
Wickline
78
Chicago at NY Islander s, night
Vir In ' 22 811d ded wh
d
h
ff
·
2-1
record.
Philadelphia at Atlanta , nigh t
g 18
en
en
recor .
start t e playo S1 ·Inasmuch
Wilson
u
Gallipolis
advanced
to
the
,
· Vancouver al Monlreo l, nlghl
the
freshman
from
as they 'hadn't played since
Forsythe
80
Wash ington at Cleveland. night
the National League season Athens five with a first and
T. Yerian
83,
•
·toal once, but couldn't punch
t.os Angeles at Pittsburgh,
I
nigh I
-.
ended last Sunday and all the It in. Athens never
tiALL
I
POL!l
()21)
Buffalo atalDetroit,
nigh. nigh
t I
l
s en joy the Iuxury. of
Sounders
19
Colorado
Minnesota
Payer
threatened.
Johnson
78
Boston at Toronto. night
the q-avel day.
The Athens reserves held a
u ·
Hawk
Sunday's Games
MOUNT PLEASAN'r score on li 53-yard pass from
''ThiB part of it is work,"
Clary
87
~~ht Angeles at Philadelphia, (UPI) _ Afourth-quarter '!I· Rummel later In the period. said ' Phillies' slugger Greg 20-0 l~ad over the GAllS BlueRice
87
Imps
In
another.
~arne at
• Montr ea l ot Burtolo, nigh I
yard field goal by sophOII)ore
But OU blocked a pmt late Luzinski, referring to the fact
Atheiis Saturday aft..rnoon
Vancouver at Chicl!lgo, night
'
CHESAPEAKE (362)
Cleveland.
at Boslon,. night
Rade Savich Saturday gave In the f1 rst half · deep In . that once In th e World Ser1es
when
Workman
80
!only games schedul ed! ,
Central Michigan a crucial Central territory, and two both' winners and lo~ers a~e ' home. the freshmen !Jiarted
Davis
96
.
.
·
17·15 · Mid-American plays qua~terback Andy guaranteed big shares. "The
Russell
99
Wickham
· Colloge Football Results
88
8 Unit~~~r:;~n~~~~~~~atlonal Conference victory ov~r Vetter ran In frOm four yards World Serle• is fun. But first
Gillan
98
v
east
previously undefeated Ohio out. Five minutes ln!D the you have to get Into it."
Unitod Press international
1
.
w. u . pts. gt •• . University
third quarter the visitors took · Ozark expressed the view ~~~~"~/ ~/;~~Yh ~6
Ci
ncinna ti
)1 oI o0 , 22 134 103 Sa v1'ch' s ' score, the 20th the lead with Arnold ofhi sunderdog PI al.''1'1es w
. heo Syracuse 3 Tulane o
Indianapolis
BELPRE (363)
Birmingham 1 o o 2 • 2 \ career field goal for the Welcher's 22-yard run, with be commented : "TIIeoe ·are Union INYI 6 Colby o
G,lodwln
85
VanMol1er
86'
~~:,"~~glano . ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ nation's sec~nd leading Vetter's run adding two two very ev~r.ly-matchcd '{:.';vi:S•,~~~clh 1.~
~ynder
97
.'Minnesola
o 2 o o s 11 kicker, capped a long drive .points.
. teams. If we're no: tile best Capllal 3 Otterbein 3 .
Oollerly
95
w~~~l.t. ots. gtga that
· saw
starting
Mter SaNich's ~t, Steve t"'!ni In baseill!ll, they are." Pilf5burgh 21 Lculsvlllf· ~
l'tti&gt;Yian
...
Edmonton
r o o 2 2 o quarterback Ron Rummel Green missed a 40.yard
Anderson said the Reds · Rufgen 38 Connetlicuf o
SOUTH POINT IllS)
Winnipeg
1 o o 2 ' 1 injured He was replaced by attempt for Ure Bllbcats With
·
11 t h · 1 Alabama 24 So. MI.,. 8
2 8 6
•
were 10 exce en P ysiCa
Howard 32 Delawore Sf. 0
Belville
85
~:~"0/:oo
~ ~ o o o Greg Orypen, who directed less than six minutes to go, and mental shape - with the Tennessee 42 Georgia' Tech 1
Boggs
9~
Houslon
0 1 0 o 3 • the Chippewas to the Ohio Blld a Central interception slight exceptton of catcher Virg inia Tech 37 VMI 7
Johnson
92
1
0
CalgaryFriday's ~.~.~.
' 10.
. .
wiUr. a minute to go ended Johnny Bench's· jammed left Wa&lt;e .Forest 20 Clemson 14
· Wllllema
120
Enyart
l13
Indianapolis 4 Mlnnesola 3
The victory gav,e Central a Urelr chant:es.
thumb and added, "This is Mi ch igan . ~ Ml~ hlgan Sf. JL
3 6
Walt Hodge s was held to ·. what we play the season fo~ Cornell
Winnipeg • Calgarv I
2-1 cmference and 4-1 overall
Colgate 910Harvard
Holy Cross
WARREN LOCAL !1151
~~~~~~~';' ~:.:'"Ji~~.~. o
record, whUe OU lost ita fir's! Just 54 yards In rushtrig, but ·so Jet's let to it. "
Norwich 43 Boston Sf. 12
Tu_rner ,
92
• Pha!!f!lx • C,lnclnnali o
of five games - four of them he still broke a Central record
The Phillies won their first Penn 1 Brown 6
Spindler
112
Cowell
96
IonlySaturd•y's
ga mes scheduled!
In the MAC. It was Central's for career rushing.
·, "title s·lnc·e 1950 with a 101"V"1 IVIarlfim
Plymo ulh
Sf. · 11 Maine
Games
e0 ·
Adams
109
MEDALIST OF THE DAY at the C1a11 AA golf
Colgory ol Quebec, nlghl
first wih ever over the '
record and also held a 7-li Pr lncelon 9 Columbia 3'
·Dolak
88
Phoenix at Houston , night
Bobc8 ts •
· "· Roc hester lJ . 11 Hoba rt 0
tolirnament played Friday at Pomeroy Golf Course was
Cinctnnali at san Diego , night
margIn over the Reds durmg
!only games scheduled )
Central took a first quarter Bethe l 22 Western Brown 0 regular • season play. The · Tr init y ,I ConnJ 16 Williams o
Chuck Follrod, left. Follrod and Dale Browning, right,
FAIRLAND 14311
sund•r'• G•m••
lfivantage oo .an eight-yard Colrai~ 27 Northwest , .
Red8
d
lost
W
est
Vorgln~a
42
Temple
0
Dillon
tn
both
from
Meigs,
WBIIt
Into
sudden
death
playorf.
Follrod
102
8
0
Birmingham at Quebec
Tiffin Calvert 14 Clyde o
games . . .
Delaware 15 William &amp; Mary
won
Rider
110
shot
a
birdie
on
the
secood
hole
to
defeat
Browning.
In
lndlonopolls at Mlnnesolo
JIIISS from Rammel to Mose Liberty Union 12 Logan Elmo 60and defeated the Phtlhes m 13
Pittman
Ill
tournament play Follrod had two 37's and Browning had a
New England a1 Winni peg
Rfso!n, and tight end Wayne . Tea~s Valley 14 Olenlangy 6 their last three meteings of E. Ker.tucky &lt;0 Mldd. Tenn .
New
99
!only gomes SCheduled)
Schwalbach added another Ealon 77 Rnss 6
the season .
14
35 and 39. 1Katie Crow photos)
Finnell
'122
Rich Baes recovered a
fumbled punt by Jtm Smith
on the Michigan seven. That
made It 14-10 with 4:'!/left In
the first quarter.
Lytle's touchdown came45
seconds after Nielsen's field
goal. Lytle eventually left the
game with a sore right knee
after' gaining 179 yards in 10
carries.
Huckleby gave Michigan
its second touchdown with a
36-yard run.
Sophomore quarterback
Rick Leach scored on a

WVU blanks
Temple teanf

.

~

.

°·.

l

l ;

Athens in

0-0 deadlock

THE SALE OF SALES
AU BRAND NEW

MODE~

·

NOTial
LIMITED QUANTITIES

WHILE THEY LAST!

room

Must be sold to make
for the new models .•.

ou· m

HEAVY
WASHERS

TIJESDAY
RIVERSIDE STUDY Club
Tuesday with Mrs. John
Allen, J:.ariat Drive, Tuesday,
I p.m.

·THURSDAY
PYTHIAN SISTERS of
l;emple 76 national con- ·
ventton at the K of P Hall.
Opening eeremony wiD be at,
1 p.m. Dinner, 5 p.m. at the
Grace United Methodist
. Church. rlothihg ceremony,

NL tilt is

Jackson, a 'former teammate
of Hunter 's at Oakland,
predicted that CBtfish would
give up no more than two

i

.

CHESHIRE-KYGER PTA
w'm enjoy Spooky night
Halloween specials by the
children, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. ·
KYGER CREEK band
boosters potluck dinner · 6
p.m. Tuesday at the high
school· cafeteria. All musical
students and families from
fUth grade up invited.

guard for the score four plays
later.
Skladsny's first field goal
followed Tom Jloche's pass
Interception
and
an
Interception
by
Tom
Cousineau set up Johnson's
finalTD.
·.~.J
•
Iowa, which tot.aleil ooly 55
yards In the f,irst half,.came
to life late In the game.
Tailback Ernie Sheeler
scored on a: flveyard run With
13:as left In the game and
quarterback Buk;h Caldwell
capped a 76-yard. drive by
scoring on a keeper from
three yardoi out With 4:30
remaining.
Ohio ~tate had averaged
305 yards a game rushing but
-finished with only 201 against
the Hawkeyes. Ohio State
finish~ with 274 total yards
and Iowa, which ahd two
more first downs than the

KANSAS CITY (UP! ) Jim "Catfish" Hunter,
baseball'sforemost ''money"
pitcher. turned In a scroogelike performance Saturday,
shortchanging the ~ansas
City Royals on just five hits
while hurling the New York
Yankees to a 4-1 triumph In
the first game of th e
American Leag ue cham:
pionshlp series.
The Yankees now ilaed only
two more victories in the
· best-&lt;&gt;f.five series to wrap up
their first pemiant since 1964.
The secohd game of the series
wiD be played here Sunday
nlght with the teams then
switching to New York
Tuesday.
It was the kind of performance one has come to
expect from the 30-year-&lt;&gt;ld
Hunter under the pressure of
post-season competition.
..Wlille he struggled through a
17-15 regular season - one of
the worst of his 12-year big
league c•re_er - he waS
nearly as perfect as a Picasso
painting against the sluggish
Royals, blanking them for the
first seven innings and
allowing only five base·
runners to run his record in
postseason play to 6-2.
Before the · game, Reggie

Marauders, retain Class .AA
Se·ctipnal golf championship.

Events
'

IOWA CITY,Iowa (UPJ) - The thrfiO TDa gave him nine
Fullback Pete Johnson for the year and 48 for his
scored three touchdowns to career. Billy Marek ofestablish a Big Ten career Wisconsin · had the old
record and Tom Sldadany conference career record of
kick two field goal! to lead 46.
No: 11 Ohio State to a 34-14
JohnsOn also rambled 45
cmference win over Iowa yards to set up a. 26,yard field
Saturday.
goal by Skladany In the
Ohio 841te took control second qulf\er. · Sl\ladany,
lro!n the start, scoring on its who kept Iowa pinned In Its
. !lrst three j&gt;ossessloos and own territory ' with his
building a 24-0 halftime lead. · booming kickoffs, booted a
Iowa, which turned the ball ~yard field goal in the third
over four limes and had 1100r quarter.
field JXJsition most of the day,
Ohio State marched 82
could not put anything yards in 16 plays for a
together until late In the ·touchdown the first time It
game.
had the ball. ~arterback
Ohio State, which had not Rod Gerald circled right end
woo in Its last two outings, to (!COre from 17 yard&amp; out.
upped Its record to 3-1·1 on
Johnson's first touchdown
the 114!8SOn and U In \he Big capped a 57-yard drive With
Ten. Iowa Is z.3 and M .
4:10 left In the (irst period .
Johnson: a· 250-pound Ohio State's Eddie Beamon
senior, twice bulled over then recovered an Iowa
from one yard out and also fumble on the Hawkeye 20
scored on a three-yard run. and Johnson burst over right

Mi~higan

VINTON CUT IN

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
federal Administration of
Aging informed the Ohlo
Commissiqn on Aging Friday
that grants totating ~2S,l25 ,
have been approved to help In
13 Ohio projects. The money
comes out of a total of $5
million available lor the
acquisition and remodeling of
citizens nationwide.
Included in the Dhlo
municipalities and groups
receiving the grants is Vinton
County Senior Citizens, Inc.,

I . $1. DO . . I tl
1-added. $110
.I
With Coupon I .
With. Coupon
I

Afternoon in the Park"

Include a quilt show, an art
exhibit, a photography show
and craft demonstrations, all
beginning at 1 p.m.
The 102nd aMiversary of
the Battle of Point Pleasant
will be commemoraied at 2
p.m. The concert will start at
3 p.m.
Featured with the or·
chestra will be guest soloist
Christina Herrera . Miss
Herrera will perform
selections from Bizet's
Carmen. The program also
InCludes millie of Handel,
Falla, Dvorak, Ri10sky·
Korsakov and.Strauss.
The free event is made
po.uible by the City of '!'oint
Pleasant, Bicentennial
Drama, ' Inc., the West
Virginia Arts and Humanities
Council, ·the National En·
dowment for the Humanities
and local' patrons.
An ox roast luncheon is
being prepared and served to
the orchestra prior to the
concert by the Women's Club
of Point Pleasant and the
Jzaak Walton Leag\le.
In case of bad weather, all
events will be held at the
Point Pleasant Junior High
School.
Because o( limited seating
available at the Fort, guests
are asked to bring their own
chairs.

TRY OUR All NEW DELICIOUS BREAKFAST MENU

Co!Jslns' Cookshoppe.

1

Hunter stOPs Royals

Coming

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de£eat •

51 6

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to last, big tub. 2• speeds,
lint fill., special perma-

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energy ...

15

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SEE ARNOlD, WENQEU. OR'GENE

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-

BBSunday, Oct. IO, !976
. 'rheSundayTime&amp;SenUnel,
.

Gallipolis club conducts meet
GAWPOUS - Nature's tlfication of many species of
·Garden Club of the 'Galllpolls wild flowers and those grown
State Institute met at the In their own gardens.
•
occupation therapy roo·m Each lljember was given a
Thursday with IS members slip of a vine or begonia or
present.
coleus to take to their rooiiill
Members of the club read to start in water. they will
several articles, "Gathering bring them to the next
Chrysanthemums,"

"Oc-

tober" and " One Room
Schoolhouse."
Mrs. Kenneth Frazer of the
Gallipolis Garden . Club
t'Onducted the meeting. Mrs.
Gafl\et Wood of the GSJ staff
called the roU and made some
announcements. Mrs. Wood
also gave each member an
attractive program book for
U1e coming year.
The French C1iy Garden
·
Club had charge. of the
program tor tne aay. A
student of Volce, at Rio
Grande College, Mrs. Gladys
Trainer, led the group In
singing several hymns and
putriotlc songs.
Mrs. Florence Trainer read
"Meaning of Autumn." .Miss
Marie Meal and Mrs. Elaine
G•'Orge conducted an iden·

Cannel 11\Tews,
'4
B. y t.he n·'BY'

•

,
Mrs. Elsie Roush of
Pomeroy spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Edson
RoUBh .
Mr. and Mrs. George Circle
of New Haven, W. Va., vlaited
with Mary Circle on Sunday.
Kim Follrod of Racine was
the guest of Becky Lee
Saturday. night.
,
Mr and Mrs Arthur Orr of ·
, Chester caUed ·at the h .0 f .
,
ome
Mr. aild Mrs. Robert Lee on
Suncday . .
orrectton: Mr. and Mrs.
John
Morrison
(not
Morrison) visited Mrs·. Dean
Brinker recently.

~
~
t~f.,

'

meeting to "show." · They
were also given treats o!
candy and a rain hat
packaged in an attractive
container. .
The enjoya ble as well· as
educational meeting was
followed by refreslun~ts of
punch, cupcakes and cookies.
The next meeting wtll be ·
Oct. 28 with the Star Garden
·Club of M'elgs County as ~e
sponsoring host.

.

CONTRACT AWARDED
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
Rockwell International
CoMiBBIileb SyhasteiiillbeeDivl.•londedof
urn us s
n awar
a•IO,Smi!Uon contract by the
Army for engineering
d
f
evelopment 0 a new laser·
guided antitank missile
system. The contract for the
"Hell-fire" modular missile
will create "several hun·
dred" new technical jobs at
,
Rockwell s east side plant ·
~f:: 8 company spokesman

CHARLES SCHIFF

Concert
today

EXTRA SAVINGS AND ACHANCE TO
WIN sso.OO WORTH OF GROCERI'ES
AT THE JONES BOYS OF POMEROY.

POINT PLEASANT, W.
Va.- Maestro Charles Schiff
Will appear In concert with
the Charleston Symphony
during the orchestra's per·
formance today in Fort
Randolph .in Krodel Park.
Other
free
events
scheduled for the speical

~\tY

~·
u ~

'

Drawing for •so.oo worth of groceries at the
Pomeroy Jones Boys' Saturday, October 30
at 2:00p.m. No purchase necessairy. You "eed
not be present to win. Drawing at Country
'

•

----------q

1..._\
Country Couslns-.IOIES BOYS
L,
~-----I ~ DRIWII&amp; FOR $50.00 WORTH IF GROCERIES ~
I UME G
.
.
I

I

ADDRESS

.

·.

I

I CITY
'
I TELEPHONE NO. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___.
I Please deposit at Country Cousins· Cookshc1pp~ I

Clip &amp; Use these Extra Savings Coupons at Cclunlrf 'Cousins'
~-------------------~
..
I .---------~---. SIVE 28' ~i
. SIYE 30' --1I
I TRIPLE MEAL I 2 TRIPLE TREATS I

1

II
I
I

pure beef patties, cheese, I
1I Two
lett~ce and the Cousins' 1
$110 . . . - I spwal $u1ce.30
With Coupon I
With Coupon

Triple treat, fries , regular
drink.

I

1 EXPIRES 10.30-76 J
~---------------~
san 30'
1....\
SUE 21·
1

I . "'XPIRES 10.30-76

I

..

I ~ 2 DOUBLE
I
I CHEESEBURGERS I HAMBURGERS I
I1 Two
pure ,beef p~ttles with .I Two pure beef patties with our I
melted cheese w1th . fixens I fixins added.
· I
2 DOUBLE

I

r---. ---,---------..,
EXPIREs 10·30-76

·I

SAVE 11'

.

EXPIRES 10.30-76

~L

SAVE 25•

T

BIG

I

.

.II .SALAD BAR ·I1 BEEF PLATTER 1I
I
I
I
I
39c · 1I ~~:::.g $140
1·
1
Come in and fix it the way you
like it. Dining room only.

.,

I

L-

With Coupon
EXPIRES. 10-30-76 .

A 1·3 lb. 100 percent fresh
ground beef steak with fries,
h~t. bread and salad bar.

With Coupon
EXPIRES lD-30-76 . I

only.

··

------ --1.-·------·-------·--;;,;;.;,._..,A
J '

OPEN

----~

SUNDAY 1':00 A.M. TO 10:00 P..M.
·Mondaythru Thursday 7:00A.M. to 10:00 P.M:
Fri~ay and Saturday 7:00A.M. to 12:00 P.M.

Located at6Pii West Main St., next to the Jones

in Pomeroy

Ev·e·nts ·

SUNDAY
REVIVAL at the Cheshlr'
Baptist Church Sunday
through Sunday, Oct. 17.
Evangelist, Jerry . Neal.
Services begin at 7:30 each
evening. Special mustc and
alngtng. Everyone'· welcome:
FRENCH CrtY Garden Club
Held trip to Lake Hope. Meet
at the home of JeweU Moore
promptly at 10 a.m.
STEVE SEVERS, a minister
from the Ohio University
campus, will speak at the
Sunday night servlve of the
Gallipolis CbriBtian Church, 7
p.m. Special music will be
provided. Public Invited.
REVIVAL begins Sunday at
Brown's Place, Bidwell,
sponsored by the Full Gospel
Church Sons and Daughters
or' God. Brother Talmln
Fields .~f Pittsburgh, Pa. and
Detroit, Mich. Will be the
speaker. Service~ will be held
at 7:30 nightly. Pubtic in·
vited.
REVIVAL BEGINS Sunday
at Carmel Church on Jackson
CR 46 near Richard Orchard,
7:30p.m. Everyone.welcome.
Rev. Elmer Jeffers In chatge.
MONTY SHEETS will speak
at Providence Baptist Church
Sunday evening, 7:30 p.m.
Public Invited.
,
REV!V AL' at Crown City
Methodist Church beginning
Monday. Services at 7:30
p.m. Rev, Earl . Whitmore,
evangelist. Special s!nglng
each night. Jack Rankins,
pastor, Invites the public.
MONDAY .
GALLIPOLIS CHAPTER
OES No. 283 dinner for of·
ficers In Masonic dining
room , · 6 p.m. Monday.
Regular meeting and election
of officers, 7:30 p.m.

Bucks roll.-to
34-14 triumph
.

'· OPEN HOUSE SET -

Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Speilcer will observe their 50th .wedding
anniversary on Sunday, Oct. 17 at the Mount Herman Church annex wttb an open _hQUSe
· celebratlan from 1 to 5 p.m . .The couple was married Oct. 18, 1928 by the Rev. Mlli'f L.
Storrer In the Mount Herman parsonage. They have llved all or their married U~es In the
West Shade Conummity, Pomeroy, R. D. Mr. and Mrs. Spencer are the parents of two son.S,
Russell and Gilbert, PomeJOY, and three daughters, Mra. Lots Eberabach, Chester; Mrs.
Wilma Marks, Belpre, and Ml:s. Unda Lute, Pomeroy. They have 13 granclchl,ldten and ooe
great'fll'andson. Friends and relatives are Invited to call during the open house hours. The
church Is loeated In the Texas Community of Chester Township on County Road B2in the
Fistwoods area ..

THE
UNIFORM CENTER
HAs--:-

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI )
Sophomore Harlan
Huckleby scored three times
Saturday to lead top.rated
Michigan past cross-state
rival Micl)igan State, 42·10,
the most . points the
Wolverines have scored
agaL"st the Spartans In 29
years. r
·
Huckleby scored on runs of
38, I and 2 yards while senior
workhorse Rob Lytle tallied
on a 7~yard run as Michigan
improved its record to ~
• With each victory coming
before a crowd of more than

''EVERYTHING FOR THE
· LADY IN-WAITING ''

CLAY PTO Monday, 7:30
p.m. at the school. All
members urged · to at·
tend.
·
VINTON Baptist . Churct
Choir will sing at t~
Chekhire Baptlkt Chur&lt;
Monday, 7:30 p.m. an,
Wednesday, 7:30p.m. Pastor
Jerry Neal wiD bring the
messages.

Slacks
Tops
Blue Jeans
Short Dresses
long Dresses
Jumpers·Pant
Suits

PYTHIAN SISTERS of
Temple 76 will practtceat the
K of P Hall Monday at 7 p.m.
All12 staff members urged to
attend.

-·J

Slips
Panties

'18,000.
;:::·~.:::-"*~~,~~~IIWI!llilllllll!

I Coming
~~:

• &lt;

Girdles
Panty Hose·

Maternity Bras
Nursing Bras

~-366 SECOND AVE.· - -.-• ..__ _ _ GALLIPOLIS, OHIO_...,

7:30p.m.

Buckeyes. totaled 227 yards. ~ threa'tened ~

rips Spartans

runs.
" He's the best money
pitcher in baseball," said
Jackson. "In the big games,
he's the guy you want out
there."
Hunter was even better
than Jackson predicted. It
wsa revealed only a few days
ago that Hunter had pitched
much of the season with
tendonitis In his right
shoulder, but if he felt any
soreness at all, it didn't show.
The only batter to really
trouble htm was, . not so
surprisingly, George Brett,
the league's leading hitter
this season 'tith a .333
average. Brett had three of
the five bits off Hunter - a
single to ~enter in the fourth
·after ·Hunter had retired the
first 12 batters to face him
and a single with one out in
the seventh .
It was Brett, however, who
wore the ·goat horns for the
Royals and ruined a gutsy
pitching performan ce by
Yankee castoff Larry Gura.
Brett, an All-Star third
baseman, committed two
tbrowilig errors In the first
Inning which led to two runs
and those were the only runs
the Yankees managed ofi
Gura until the ninth when
Roy White doUbled In two

more with two out.
hitting slump during the last laced out his tlitrd hit of the·
Brett, usually cabo under month of the regular season, game - a single to rtght - •
p.ressure, played like a were no match for the yankee and Rivers beat out an Infield
harried little leaguer i'n the rtght·hander.' HltUng Mun· hit to Short. White then
first inning when- he threw son's moveable targets with drilled a double Into the left
two balls over the head of big pinJXllnl accuracy, Hunter field comer to score both
first
baseman
John allowed JuSt two rwuiers over runners and kafO Gura.
Mayberry to set the tone of the first seven Innings and
11 just 'wasn 't the Royals'
the day for the Royals. one of .those, Brett in the• dey In more ways than one.
Mickey Rivers opened the fourth Inning, was cut down Amos Otis, their No. 2 run
Inning by grounding to third , attempting to steal. .
. . producer du~lng · the regular .
and Brett made a nice
Aside fro{llllrett; the only season, •suffered a sprained
bilckhanded stop and •!&gt;' trouble spot for Hunter came ankle while trying to beat out
peared to be conceding the In the eighth Inning when AI a bunt In the first ilintng and
base to the fleet Yankee Cowens led off with a triple to was rerooved (rom the game
center fielder.. However ' he right and scored on Tom in the second. It was later
suddenly uncorked a throW Poquette's ground er to revealed he may miSS Swlwhich sailed past ·Mayberry, second. Fred Patek singled dsy's game.
ellabllng Rivers to reach with two out in the Inning but
Am eric1n L11gue
ChimpiOf!Shlp PlayoH
second. Gura then walked he tried to steal on the first
!GomtOnei
White on four pitched and pitch to pinch·hltter Jamie
N
ew
York
200 000 002- 4 12 0
Thurman Munson promptly Quirk and was cut down Ken . City oOO
000 011)-.1 5 2
loaded the bases by singling easily by Munson's rifle peg Hunter end Mun!W\ ; Gura.
L.lMell (9) and Marllne1. LPsharply to t enter.
following a pitohout.
Guru, who.had been having
The Roya ls' last mild Gura.
a running feud with Yankee threat came In the nlnt~ when
ma11ager Billy Martin all Brett lb1ed a single to left
CORRECTION .
week , rea ched back and with two out by Hal McRae · POMEROY - In the Meigs
struck out designated hitl~r lined out to ·third .bl\s~man · Res.erve teaQJ loss to
Leu Plni ella and appeared to Gra1g Nettles to end the. Jackson, the slats of Jlmmer
be out of the Inning when game. ·
Souisb,Y and Bruce Carme~
Chris Chambliss hit what
Gura , th e Royals' best were turned around. The
appeared to be a double play pitcher down the stretch, correct totals were Carmen
ball 'to Brett's right. The didn't pitch badly, even with 53 yards In 14 carries
Roya ls' third .- baseman though he was tagged for 12 whlleSoutshy had 43 yards in
ba ckhand ed the ball and . hits in a 8 2...1 1nnlngs, Nine of 1) attc10p!s.
stopped on third for a tho5!' hits came with two out
forceout but his throw to first and he managed to escape Middletown ?8 Fairfield 14
Aquinas 30 Cll n Tim ken 6
again sailed over.Mayberry's trouble until the ninth when Can
Ca n South 7 Glen CMI&lt;wood 7
head and two runs scored.
\he Yankees mou~t ed a l ilt)
.
Those were. all the runs succuss(ul l)VOi)Ut rally.
Con Me Kinley 47 Cambridge
Hunter needed. The Royals, · Fred Stariley, a .Z38 hitter 34
llon 18. Cle BenediCtine
who had gone Into a severe during the r egular season. MasSi
3
,,----1

by rain . . ·'--·

PHILADELPHIA (UPI )keeper four seconds In the
Leit-handers
Don Gullett and
second quarter to make it 21·
10, and Huckleby scored his Steve Carlton were all
second touchdown about two primed to square off against
minutes later to end the each other Saturday night in
suspense In the bitter rivalry. the National League Playoff
.Michigan defensive back Opener when the skies
Jerry Zuver . returned an . cleared after almost 12 hours
Interception 59 yards for a of heavy rain.
The rain which fell heavily
touchdown.
all
night ended at about noon
Huckleby finished with 126
and
National
Leag ue
yards on 23 carries.
President
Charley
Feeney
· It ·was "'the worst beaUng ·
said,
"
As
a
result
of
Michigan has given the
Spartans since a 55.() 'favorable weather reports,
we don't plan to call the game
shellacking In 1947.
until !onight. We're doing
100,000.
'
everything we can to get the
• The Spartans, now 1-3-1, got
game in."
all their points on Wolverine
Indications in
midmistakes. Hans Nielsen
afternoon were that the game
kicked a 24-yard field goal to
will be played with the
give the Spartans a ~ lead
second game of the besl-&lt;&gt;f·.
.
after a · bad pitch gave
five series scheduled for
'
. •..
..
...; . .
WUII U1 oU.of, .._.., ... ,. .... , ... o, ""'-"-"·" &amp;Niof ..,.,. • ._a 1 ..,. _ _
Michigan State the .b!lll on the
Sunday afternoon. Monday is
"""'U&lt;&gt; UJr&lt;~ '''""' - melgl ll1gh llehool golr'team Follrod who '!l'as alao the madaUst, Dale Browning,
Wolverines' '!I with ihe game
took first plate honors In the Class AA golf toumamen.t ,
a scheduled travel day with
Crenson Pratt, Mark Gilkey and• Lance
Oliver.
held Friday at the Pomeroy Golf Course. The team shot a
less than two minutes old ..
PHILADELPIDA (UPI) - Charleston, W.Va., dashed 2S the scene shifting to Cin·
- "&gt;
Freslunlm tight end Mark West VIrginia, sparked by the yards off tackle for the third cinnati Tuesday for th e
Brammer caught,a lO.yard passing of Dan Kendra and touchdown of the first remaining necessary games.
touchdown
pass from the running of Paul Lumley quarter.
Manager Sparky Anderson
quarterback Ed Smith after and Walter Easley, scored
In the second quarter, of the Reds, who are seeking
the first Urree ttmes it got the Temple had a fourth aod one to become t!J.e first National
bsll Saturday en route to a 42- m the West Virginia five but League team to win two
O'rout of Temple.
a plunge by.quarterback Pat straight World Series since
NHL standings
Kendra 'Jlllssed for twQ Carey failed and the the 1921·22 New York Giants,
By United Press lnlernatiOnal touchdowns as the Mountai· Mountaineers took over.
ended his psychological
campbell Conference
rf
F ld
POfrick Division
neers scored all their points
On the first plar., Kendra wa are game r ay when
By Greg Bailey
AA Golf Tournament Friday. Browning, both tu.,.tng in a Course In · Chillicothe. Those .
w. Lt. ots, gt 9a in the first tbree quarters of passedovertothesidellnesto he named Gullett (11-:lduring
POMEROY - A cold . For the second year in a row, 74 for the day's 18 boles. On three teams are Meigs,.
1
. ~~ ~?;~J;;s
~. ~ ~ ) ~ the. game played at Franklin Tom Bowden who dashed 52 the tegular season ) as his blistery day and so ggy the Meigs High School the second hole of sudden Jackson anH Gallipolis, who
Atlanta
.
1 1 o 2 9 8 Field before a sparse crowd yards to the Owls' 41. Dave first game starter.
grounds at the Pomeroy Golf Unksters came home with death, Follrod came out the flnlslied·wlth a (earn total 328. '
· Philade.~~1rbe Jivlsi~n 0 •3 of 3,767. -·
.
Riley ended that drive by
Anderson admitted ·he Course was the setting for the the sectional title as they shot winner.
The remaining team
w. 1. t. ph . gl ga Lumley scored the first scampering 22 yards around delayed the aMouncement to
a tea m total 315, seven
Under the direction of standings are as follows :
~~~~~ido
~ ~
j touchdown on a one-yard the end for the score. ·
"psyche the Phlllies" and
strokes better than second Nolan Swackliammer, the Chesapeake Union was fourth
sq.ouis
o 1 o o ·, 6 plunge to 76-yard, nlneiJiay
Kendra ' s second then began to "psyche" his GAHSfro~h,
place Jackson who had ·a 323., tourname,~~t ran
very with a 362; B~lpre was fifth
· vancouver
o 1 o o s 9 ·drive that he ignited with .a touchdown pass, a seven- possible American League
Meigs High seemed to JValk' smoothly. Swackhammer with a 363; South Point and
Minn esota
0 2 0 0 7 12 2
d
1
th
·
•·
Wales conference
4-yar
run a ong
e yarder to Bowden and a ten· World Series opponent with
away with all p.e honors as was a former Meigs golf . Warren tied for -stl&lt;th with
Norris DiYilion
sidelines. Kendra also point conversion play made it the atmouncement that he
their Chuck Follrod was .the coach.
386's, and Fairland came In
•.::n · the third qua rterofthe m1g
. ht fl ou I comm Iss Ioner
washinglon w.1 ·0 . pts.
r 3gf. 9 ga8 completed two passes of 14 """''"
medaUst for the toumament.
The top three teams of eighth with a 431.
Monlreol
1 o o 2 10 1 yards each In the drive.
game played under strong Bllwie Kuhn's orders to use a
However, at the end of Friday's tournament will
Following II a list of the
2 10 IS
Pitlsburgh
I
I
o
After
a
Temple
drive
winds aod inte,rmittent rain. designated hitter in the
regulation play Follrod was advance to district play next scores of the day:
Detroi1
0 0 I 1 3 3
· Los Angeles
o 1 1 1 ' 6 staUed ,on the West VIrginia
West Virginia, now 3-2, classic.
tied with teammate Dale Saturday a~ the Veteran's
·--MEIGS (311) .
Adams Divi•ion
2tl and a field goal try faUed, score Its last touchdown on a
Manager Danny Ozark also
PLAYER
SCORE
91 9
Boston
wi 1.~. ~tsi 6 ~ Kendra p11ssed into the flat to three-yard run by second announced that Jbn Len borg,
Browning
74
ATHENS
The
Gallipolis·
Foil rod
1'
Cleveland
o o 1 1 2 2 Steve Lewis who galloped 80 string quarterback Rich 16-10, will start the second
and
Athens
freslunen
battled
Prall
e
~~:~~~~~
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ yards for the second Duggan that was set up by an game for the Phillies while to li ().() deadlock In the mud
Oliver
!
Friday's Resull
.touchdown .
83-yard run With a pass Anderson said , rookie Pat
Gilkey
8
and
rain
here
Saturday
NY Rangers s ColoradO 3
Easley was the mainstay or Interception
by
Tom Zachry, 14·7, will start for the
morning. .
(only game scheduled)
the n-t
Mountaineer march, Pridemore,
Rerls .
JACKSON (323)
Saturdav•s Games
~
The .tie left GAHS with a tJ..
Yerian
82
NY Rangers al s1. LouiS, night
which started on Ure West
·The loss gave Temple a z.3
Both teams were eager to
Wickline
78
Chicago at NY Islander s, night
Vir In ' 22 811d ded wh
d
h
ff
·
2-1
record.
Philadelphia at Atlanta , nigh t
g 18
en
en
recor .
start t e playo S1 ·Inasmuch
Wilson
u
Gallipolis
advanced
to
the
,
· Vancouver al Monlreo l, nlghl
the
freshman
from
as they 'hadn't played since
Forsythe
80
Wash ington at Cleveland. night
the National League season Athens five with a first and
T. Yerian
83,
•
·toal once, but couldn't punch
t.os Angeles at Pittsburgh,
I
nigh I
-.
ended last Sunday and all the It in. Athens never
tiALL
I
POL!l
()21)
Buffalo atalDetroit,
nigh. nigh
t I
l
s en joy the Iuxury. of
Sounders
19
Colorado
Minnesota
Payer
threatened.
Johnson
78
Boston at Toronto. night
the q-avel day.
The Athens reserves held a
u ·
Hawk
Sunday's Games
MOUNT PLEASAN'r score on li 53-yard pass from
''ThiB part of it is work,"
Clary
87
~~ht Angeles at Philadelphia, (UPI) _ Afourth-quarter '!I· Rummel later In the period. said ' Phillies' slugger Greg 20-0 l~ad over the GAllS BlueRice
87
Imps
In
another.
~arne at
• Montr ea l ot Burtolo, nigh I
yard field goal by sophOII)ore
But OU blocked a pmt late Luzinski, referring to the fact
Atheiis Saturday aft..rnoon
Vancouver at Chicl!lgo, night
'
CHESAPEAKE (362)
Cleveland.
at Boslon,. night
Rade Savich Saturday gave In the f1 rst half · deep In . that once In th e World Ser1es
when
Workman
80
!only games schedul ed! ,
Central Michigan a crucial Central territory, and two both' winners and lo~ers a~e ' home. the freshmen !Jiarted
Davis
96
.
.
·
17·15 · Mid-American plays qua~terback Andy guaranteed big shares. "The
Russell
99
Wickham
· Colloge Football Results
88
8 Unit~~~r:;~n~~~~~~~atlonal Conference victory ov~r Vetter ran In frOm four yards World Serle• is fun. But first
Gillan
98
v
east
previously undefeated Ohio out. Five minutes ln!D the you have to get Into it."
Unitod Press international
1
.
w. u . pts. gt •• . University
third quarter the visitors took · Ozark expressed the view ~~~~"~/ ~/;~~Yh ~6
Ci
ncinna ti
)1 oI o0 , 22 134 103 Sa v1'ch' s ' score, the 20th the lead with Arnold ofhi sunderdog PI al.''1'1es w
. heo Syracuse 3 Tulane o
Indianapolis
BELPRE (363)
Birmingham 1 o o 2 • 2 \ career field goal for the Welcher's 22-yard run, with be commented : "TIIeoe ·are Union INYI 6 Colby o
G,lodwln
85
VanMol1er
86'
~~:,"~~glano . ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ nation's sec~nd leading Vetter's run adding two two very ev~r.ly-matchcd '{:.';vi:S•,~~~clh 1.~
~ynder
97
.'Minnesola
o 2 o o s 11 kicker, capped a long drive .points.
. teams. If we're no: tile best Capllal 3 Otterbein 3 .
Oollerly
95
w~~~l.t. ots. gtga that
· saw
starting
Mter SaNich's ~t, Steve t"'!ni In baseill!ll, they are." Pilf5burgh 21 Lculsvlllf· ~
l'tti&gt;Yian
...
Edmonton
r o o 2 2 o quarterback Ron Rummel Green missed a 40.yard
Anderson said the Reds · Rufgen 38 Connetlicuf o
SOUTH POINT IllS)
Winnipeg
1 o o 2 ' 1 injured He was replaced by attempt for Ure Bllbcats With
·
11 t h · 1 Alabama 24 So. MI.,. 8
2 8 6
•
were 10 exce en P ysiCa
Howard 32 Delawore Sf. 0
Belville
85
~:~"0/:oo
~ ~ o o o Greg Orypen, who directed less than six minutes to go, and mental shape - with the Tennessee 42 Georgia' Tech 1
Boggs
9~
Houslon
0 1 0 o 3 • the Chippewas to the Ohio Blld a Central interception slight exceptton of catcher Virg inia Tech 37 VMI 7
Johnson
92
1
0
CalgaryFriday's ~.~.~.
' 10.
. .
wiUr. a minute to go ended Johnny Bench's· jammed left Wa&lt;e .Forest 20 Clemson 14
· Wllllema
120
Enyart
l13
Indianapolis 4 Mlnnesola 3
The victory gav,e Central a Urelr chant:es.
thumb and added, "This is Mi ch igan . ~ Ml~ hlgan Sf. JL
3 6
Walt Hodge s was held to ·. what we play the season fo~ Cornell
Winnipeg • Calgarv I
2-1 cmference and 4-1 overall
Colgate 910Harvard
Holy Cross
WARREN LOCAL !1151
~~~~~~~';' ~:.:'"Ji~~.~. o
record, whUe OU lost ita fir's! Just 54 yards In rushtrig, but ·so Jet's let to it. "
Norwich 43 Boston Sf. 12
Tu_rner ,
92
• Pha!!f!lx • C,lnclnnali o
of five games - four of them he still broke a Central record
The Phillies won their first Penn 1 Brown 6
Spindler
112
Cowell
96
IonlySaturd•y's
ga mes scheduled!
In the MAC. It was Central's for career rushing.
·, "title s·lnc·e 1950 with a 101"V"1 IVIarlfim
Plymo ulh
Sf. · 11 Maine
Games
e0 ·
Adams
109
MEDALIST OF THE DAY at the C1a11 AA golf
Colgory ol Quebec, nlghl
first wih ever over the '
record and also held a 7-li Pr lncelon 9 Columbia 3'
·Dolak
88
Phoenix at Houston , night
Bobc8 ts •
· "· Roc hester lJ . 11 Hoba rt 0
tolirnament played Friday at Pomeroy Golf Course was
Cinctnnali at san Diego , night
margIn over the Reds durmg
!only games scheduled )
Central took a first quarter Bethe l 22 Western Brown 0 regular • season play. The · Tr init y ,I ConnJ 16 Williams o
Chuck Follrod, left. Follrod and Dale Browning, right,
FAIRLAND 14311
sund•r'• G•m••
lfivantage oo .an eight-yard Colrai~ 27 Northwest , .
Red8
d
lost
W
est
Vorgln~a
42
Temple
0
Dillon
tn
both
from
Meigs,
WBIIt
Into
sudden
death
playorf.
Follrod
102
8
0
Birmingham at Quebec
Tiffin Calvert 14 Clyde o
games . . .
Delaware 15 William &amp; Mary
won
Rider
110
shot
a
birdie
on
the
secood
hole
to
defeat
Browning.
In
lndlonopolls at Mlnnesolo
JIIISS from Rammel to Mose Liberty Union 12 Logan Elmo 60and defeated the Phtlhes m 13
Pittman
Ill
tournament play Follrod had two 37's and Browning had a
New England a1 Winni peg
Rfso!n, and tight end Wayne . Tea~s Valley 14 Olenlangy 6 their last three meteings of E. Ker.tucky &lt;0 Mldd. Tenn .
New
99
!only gomes SCheduled)
Schwalbach added another Ealon 77 Rnss 6
the season .
14
35 and 39. 1Katie Crow photos)
Finnell
'122
Rich Baes recovered a
fumbled punt by Jtm Smith
on the Michigan seven. That
made It 14-10 with 4:'!/left In
the first quarter.
Lytle's touchdown came45
seconds after Nielsen's field
goal. Lytle eventually left the
game with a sore right knee
after' gaining 179 yards in 10
carries.
Huckleby gave Michigan
its second touchdown with a
36-yard run.
Sophomore quarterback
Rick Leach scored on a

WVU blanks
Temple teanf

.

~

.

°·.

l

l ;

Athens in

0-0 deadlock

THE SALE OF SALES
AU BRAND NEW

MODE~

·

NOTial
LIMITED QUANTITIES

WHILE THEY LAST!

room

Must be sold to make
for the new models .•.

ou· m

HEAVY
WASHERS

TIJESDAY
RIVERSIDE STUDY Club
Tuesday with Mrs. John
Allen, J:.ariat Drive, Tuesday,
I p.m.

·THURSDAY
PYTHIAN SISTERS of
l;emple 76 national con- ·
ventton at the K of P Hall.
Opening eeremony wiD be at,
1 p.m. Dinner, 5 p.m. at the
Grace United Methodist
. Church. rlothihg ceremony,

NL tilt is

Jackson, a 'former teammate
of Hunter 's at Oakland,
predicted that CBtfish would
give up no more than two

i

.

CHESHIRE-KYGER PTA
w'm enjoy Spooky night
Halloween specials by the
children, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. ·
KYGER CREEK band
boosters potluck dinner · 6
p.m. Tuesday at the high
school· cafeteria. All musical
students and families from
fUth grade up invited.

guard for the score four plays
later.
Skladsny's first field goal
followed Tom Jloche's pass
Interception
and
an
Interception
by
Tom
Cousineau set up Johnson's
finalTD.
·.~.J
•
Iowa, which tot.aleil ooly 55
yards In the f,irst half,.came
to life late In the game.
Tailback Ernie Sheeler
scored on a: flveyard run With
13:as left In the game and
quarterback Buk;h Caldwell
capped a 76-yard. drive by
scoring on a keeper from
three yardoi out With 4:30
remaining.
Ohio ~tate had averaged
305 yards a game rushing but
-finished with only 201 against
the Hawkeyes. Ohio State
finish~ with 274 total yards
and Iowa, which ahd two
more first downs than the

KANSAS CITY (UP! ) Jim "Catfish" Hunter,
baseball'sforemost ''money"
pitcher. turned In a scroogelike performance Saturday,
shortchanging the ~ansas
City Royals on just five hits
while hurling the New York
Yankees to a 4-1 triumph In
the first game of th e
American Leag ue cham:
pionshlp series.
The Yankees now ilaed only
two more victories in the
· best-&lt;&gt;f.five series to wrap up
their first pemiant since 1964.
The secohd game of the series
wiD be played here Sunday
nlght with the teams then
switching to New York
Tuesday.
It was the kind of performance one has come to
expect from the 30-year-&lt;&gt;ld
Hunter under the pressure of
post-season competition.
..Wlille he struggled through a
17-15 regular season - one of
the worst of his 12-year big
league c•re_er - he waS
nearly as perfect as a Picasso
painting against the sluggish
Royals, blanking them for the
first seven innings and
allowing only five base·
runners to run his record in
postseason play to 6-2.
Before the · game, Reggie

Marauders, retain Class .AA
Se·ctipnal golf championship.

Events
'

IOWA CITY,Iowa (UPJ) - The thrfiO TDa gave him nine
Fullback Pete Johnson for the year and 48 for his
scored three touchdowns to career. Billy Marek ofestablish a Big Ten career Wisconsin · had the old
record and Tom Sldadany conference career record of
kick two field goal! to lead 46.
No: 11 Ohio State to a 34-14
JohnsOn also rambled 45
cmference win over Iowa yards to set up a. 26,yard field
Saturday.
goal by Skladany In the
Ohio 841te took control second qulf\er. · Sl\ladany,
lro!n the start, scoring on its who kept Iowa pinned In Its
. !lrst three j&gt;ossessloos and own territory ' with his
building a 24-0 halftime lead. · booming kickoffs, booted a
Iowa, which turned the ball ~yard field goal in the third
over four limes and had 1100r quarter.
field JXJsition most of the day,
Ohio State marched 82
could not put anything yards in 16 plays for a
together until late In the ·touchdown the first time It
game.
had the ball. ~arterback
Ohio State, which had not Rod Gerald circled right end
woo in Its last two outings, to (!COre from 17 yard&amp; out.
upped Its record to 3-1·1 on
Johnson's first touchdown
the 114!8SOn and U In \he Big capped a 57-yard drive With
Ten. Iowa Is z.3 and M .
4:10 left In the (irst period .
Johnson: a· 250-pound Ohio State's Eddie Beamon
senior, twice bulled over then recovered an Iowa
from one yard out and also fumble on the Hawkeye 20
scored on a three-yard run. and Johnson burst over right

Mi~higan

VINTON CUT IN

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
federal Administration of
Aging informed the Ohlo
Commissiqn on Aging Friday
that grants totating ~2S,l25 ,
have been approved to help In
13 Ohio projects. The money
comes out of a total of $5
million available lor the
acquisition and remodeling of
citizens nationwide.
Included in the Dhlo
municipalities and groups
receiving the grants is Vinton
County Senior Citizens, Inc.,

I . $1. DO . . I tl
1-added. $110
.I
With Coupon I .
With. Coupon
I

Afternoon in the Park"

Include a quilt show, an art
exhibit, a photography show
and craft demonstrations, all
beginning at 1 p.m.
The 102nd aMiversary of
the Battle of Point Pleasant
will be commemoraied at 2
p.m. The concert will start at
3 p.m.
Featured with the or·
chestra will be guest soloist
Christina Herrera . Miss
Herrera will perform
selections from Bizet's
Carmen. The program also
InCludes millie of Handel,
Falla, Dvorak, Ri10sky·
Korsakov and.Strauss.
The free event is made
po.uible by the City of '!'oint
Pleasant, Bicentennial
Drama, ' Inc., the West
Virginia Arts and Humanities
Council, ·the National En·
dowment for the Humanities
and local' patrons.
An ox roast luncheon is
being prepared and served to
the orchestra prior to the
concert by the Women's Club
of Point Pleasant and the
Jzaak Walton Leag\le.
In case of bad weather, all
events will be held at the
Point Pleasant Junior High
School.
Because o( limited seating
available at the Fort, guests
are asked to bring their own
chairs.

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Bobcats roll over Eagles,36-3

=

EAST MEIGS - Kyger Steve Baird to tight end Brtan nlgh\pn a 12 yard run up the
On Eastern's next series,
apparently remem- Lucas.
middle. Lucas added the tbe Eagle~ fumbled with
struci 8 ~20 lie last year, Following an exchange of extra point for a 21~ ~beat .Geiger recovering at the 30.
here punts and fwnble recovery by 1ea d
Four p1ays ..
•· ter, KC' s Todd
Frida with
nigha· vengeance
In bli
· Y
t
tzlng the Easlerll at the 48 yard line
While Kyger Creek's IJ'a ylor, another speedy back,
bo,sl East~ Eagles_36-3. - Eastern's senior fullback defen.e kept the Eagle of- ranitin from the ll yard line.
Coupled With N'!fth Galllio'~ Dave Mills picked up a first fense intact, the Bobcat of· Lucas again kicked the EP.
32
~ roml'_, over Southern, down at the Bobcat 42. On the fense took over once again at
The fourth quarter, played
Coach Jo)jjj Blak~'s Pirates next
the Eagies fum- its 38 yard line. Thirteen tn a steady drizzle, was an
and Jim Sprague s Bobcats bled.
·
_ plays later, Geiger got his . exchange of turnovers and
, mov.ed into sole possession of
KC's Ralph Baylor picked third TO of the night on a 10 penalties:
first place.m the SVAC._, .. up the ball .from his yard run. A big play that· ·Kyger Greek was assessed
Following ~ scoreless Ill's! . linebacker's post and ram- series was a 11&gt;-yard roughing 80 yards ln penalties but a
qUf11er m which the Bobcats' bled downfleld S2 yards for - the passer . call against determined Bobcat defense
Doug Sands pounced on a the touchdown. That play Eastern. Baylor added the , held the Eagles to just three·
looplngse .~ndf. wet pigskin stop- seemed to break the Eagles. two pnint conversloo.
points, a ;!5-yard field goal by
w•e li'St Eagle drive. of Again, Lucas' toe added the ·
the night, the 1975 defendmg extra point ·giving the Bobchampion Bobcats reached cats a 1~ lead at the half.
the end zone following a
Eastern ran Into bad luck in
sustain~ dl:ive which began the opening minutes of the
third period. After the Eagle
at the Gals 25 yard stnpe.
Twenty plays later, speedy, kickoff, a IS-yard face mask
ju~lor tailback Marcus penalty moved the baU to the
Ge1ger took the ball over midfield stripe.
. . _
from three-yards out. Bandy
Quarterback Bljird called
Lucas• kick ~ve KC a 7~ the right play as he rambled
lead.
22 yards to 'the 28 yard line.
A big play during the drive On the tackle, Eastern was
was a !~,yard pass in- · hit .with another 1.5-yard
terference call agajnst the penalty for a late hit.
Eagles. It came on a third
Twoplays,later, Geigerhlid
•
.down pass from quarterback his second touchdown of the

ctoi,

ONE OF THOSE NIGHTS - GARS wingback Gary .
Dabney (II, oo groWJd at left ) was wide open on this pass

play with 2: 17 left ln the third pertO(), but sUpped and fell
right is Gallia
end Mike Staggs (80) and Athens' Jeff Griffin (20).

111 the wet turf before the ball got to him. On

GALLIP OLIS - Athens
Following a free kkk hy
became the Southeastern Athens, the over-&lt;lager Blue .
Ohio League's first 200 game Devils made their first winner Friday night by mistakes of the game- they
edging Gallipolis 7-4 ln a had played flawlessly up to
defensiv e struggle on this point. The Galllans were
Memorial Field.
hit with two IS-yard penalties
Both the Bulldogs and and had two passes inJ ackson entered Frida y's terceptec!. One pass ingames with 199 SEOAL wins terception wns nuUUied hy
apiece since the league was off-setting penalties.
organized in 1925. Jackson
After Wall hit Mike Staggs
failed to reach the with a !B-yard strike to put
bicentennial mark after the ha ll on Athens 47 with 1:24
losing a 2!&gt;-14 decision to left in the game, Arthur
Logan. Thus, Athens beel!me Chonko Intercepted a WaU
the league 's most winnlngest bomb and returned it to
football te11m.
Ga ll ia's 32 whe re the
The Bulldogs marched 59 Bulldogs ran out the clock.
yards ln nine plays second
Athens lost the services of
Ume they bad possession In its blocking fullba ck, Neil
the first pertod to score tbe Berberick, 180-pound senior,
game's only touchdown. QB with a knee Injury in the
Brlao Conl&lt;ey bit wingback second period.
Scott Lawreoce with a liveAfter Berberlck left the
yard strike at the 8:51 mark game, Atheos went two aod
for the touchduwo. John
one haH quarter• with ooly
Scbaozeobacb's. kick lrom ' oile first down, none In the
placeJ]ien* \\'811 true.
serond bali, aod 19 total
First of two GAHS Safeties
yardB, a mere nine duriog
came with 7:38 remaining In
lioc final two periods.
the second period. Mike
GAHS dominat ed· the
Wigglesworth caught Conkey game's statistics, chalking up
In the endzone to reduce the 10 first downs to the Bulldogs'
Bulldogs' lead to 7-2.
four. Total yards favored the
Athens stoppe'l a third Galllans, 169-lll. Gallipolis
period GAllS d!'' ve on the ran 60 plays from scrimmage
STRADDLES BUUJJOG - Gallia 's Paul Finnicum
Bulldog 2.1 ~&lt;iter the Jllue to Athens 36. In the second
(76) straddl"" an WJldentifled. Athens Bulldog runner
Devils had ma rched 57 yards haU, Athens ran only 11 plays
while Athens' Jeff Griffin (20) looks on. Athens edged
ln 11 plays.
. from scrimmage. GAH$ ran
GAllS, 7-4. Finnicum stood out defensively for the Blue
GAHS came right back 37.
Devils. - Keith Wilson photos.
with a 33-yard march In 10
The Blue Devils; now 4-1 los! rushing
19
21 Punts ·
5.180 4-12a
139
89 Pe na lt ies
2·30 4-20
plays ln .the .fourth period ,and 1·1 in conference play, Net r ush ing
12
6
Recover ed enemy fum'bles :
before the Bulldogs held on will h,ost Ironton Friday . · Pass atte mpts
3
2 GAH.S - Wal l, Finn icum.
their own 19 with 7:29 ieft in Athens, 2-3 overall and 2~ in Completions
Inter cepted by
1
1 Gal li pol is
0 2 0 2-4
.the game.
the league, will play at Meigs. Yarps pa ssing
30
22 At hens
. 7 0 0 Q-7
Total yards
169
11 1
Scoring - GAHS : safe ty,
': Bls
Paul
Finnicum
INDIVIDUAL NET
Plays
60
36 7: 38, second; safety, 2; 42,
jlo1111ced on a Bulldog fumble
YAROS RUSHING
Return yardage
51
40 fourth. Athens - Li!iiwrence,
I Gallipolis I
I on the Atheos 17 at the 7:19
Fumbles
1
J .5-yard pass from Conkey,
Player
Tcb Yv Avg. Lost fumbles
' mark. It looked good for the Mink
o
1 3: 5d, fir st , ( Schanzenbach,
22 84 3.8 klckl.
Blue Devlli.
Wall
10 23 2.3
.Brian Mink got four and Salisbury
11 25 2:2
5 7 1.4
· :one to put it on the Athens 12. Jackson
48 139 '2.8
QB Terry Wall passed to Totals
IAihensl
Mike Staggs for a first, down Player
Tcb Yv Avg.
2 lS 7.5
on the Bulldog five. It was Berberlck
16 83 5. 1
first and goal with 5 jl~ left to Pennell
· La wren ce
3 5 1.6
play.
Gagle
' 2 3 1.5
Mink got zero, two, then Conkey
6 -10 -1.6
1 -6 -6
ooe. It was fourth and one. Walton
30 89 2.9
Mink plowed Into the Bulldog Totals
IND. PASSING
forward wall again. This
I Gallipolis!
lime, the strong Athens 'line Player
C-A I YG TD
3-12 . I 30 0
held inches from the goal - Wall
J-12 1 JO • o
six to be exact - - and Totals
regained po..,.ssion with 3:31 Player . IAthens)
C·A I YG TO
left to play.
Conkey
2-6 1 22
1
2-6 1 l2 1
Kent Shawver tackled Totals _
TEAM STATISTICS
Conl&lt;ey behind the goal Depa11menl
"
G
with 2:4% left to reduce First down s
10
Atheos' lead to 7-4,
Yards rushing
lSB

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I • •

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Outdoorsman

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Fri. 9:301118 p.m.
Tues. Wed. Sal.
9 ,Jo till p.m.

TOUcHooWN- Athe111' Scott Lawrence (411) slides
Jnto far arner d en!lzone with a Brian Conkey aerial with
3:64 left In the first period t01core Athens' only touchdown
of the game Friday. GAHS defender is Dan Sickles (42).
I

Mon . &amp;

Thursday 9: JO til 12 noon

I

-HARDMAN'S HOME
~-:._- CENTER
WA
'110RE THAN A

IT. 2 BYPASS
)

·

a 10 p.m. College Rec.
Clo~
0:;1. 15-8·10p.m, Farn. Rec. Nlghl a IOp.m. f•m . Rec . Nl9hf

Oct . 16--4 p.m Womer~ ' s VolleytMII
Rio vs . Central St. &amp; Witt enberg
·
Oct 17~2- 4 p.m . Open Rec
.2 4 p .m. Open Swim _
a IOp .m. Coli. Rec.
,
S-IOp ,m. Open Swim

SPRINGI'l)l:LD, MASS.
(\JP!) - Brown U!liverslty
Fu'mbles
3
.t
•'Fumbles 1051
1 4 !cuds u•O natioo .In . team
lnfcrceptlons
3 1 •. defense In ihe NCAA major
Penali1ed
15 140 b-60 college foo tball stimdlngs
By Quarters ,
·
niter last Saturday's play.
Kyger
Creek
o
14
22 0-36 The Bruin.• have '"ven up 13
Eastern
o 0 o 3- 3
--,fSl
points after three game~:._.

1818 EASTERN
AVENUE
.
.
446-1113
.

edge Vikings

Yards Rushing

Yards Passing
Total Yardage .
Passes Altpl.
Passes Com pt.
Interceptions

Fumbles
Fumbles Lost
Penalized
· By Quarters,
Soulhwestern
S. Valley

172

55

2

1

35 27
207 \12
a 5.
3 3
2 1
2 0
6-70 7.45 ·
·

o o D 6-6
o o o 0--ll

LVM.~ER ·:y~!!"
I

period when quarterback J~ff
Smith connected with
wing hack Scott Gasser on a
37 yard TD pass, but a conversion kick failed with 8:41
remaining.
This score stood until the
opening kickoff of the second
hall when Jackson's Ken
Crawford raced 80 yards aqd
Jeff Fenwick's extra point
kick put Jackson on fop :/~.
With 5:32 r~maining in the
third stanza fullback Josh
Jenkins rammed over from
the seven yard line with
Fenwick's kiCk spreading the
margin to 14~.
Following this Logan
mentor Bill Biggers moved
· Scott Gasser into the quarterback slot and he
engineered three. fourth
quarter touchdown driv~s.
Flashy Harold Peppers

JACKSON - A com.
binalion of injuries to key
Jackson players and a sudden
change of quarterbacks by
the Logan Chieftains directly
led to a stunning fourth
quarter comeback by Logan
Friday night as the Chiefs
pinned Jackson 25-14 before a
rain-soaked
crowd at
.Jackson.
With ace running back
David P. Davis observing
from the sidelines in street 1
clothes due to a leg injury last
week, the Jackson Iromnen
watched Logan put six points
on the board in the first
·

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6

Tolal Yardage

Passes Atfpt.
Passes Compt.

810p.m Coii. Rec .

Oct. 14- 7 8 p.m . Cheerleader Tr youts

Logan rally tops

THE ,~.

__.;_ .-

27
75

- ~ighlanders

Synunes Valley, coached
hy OS!J pro4uct Greg
Hallie, came close to scoring
twice, but were stopped by a
determined Highlander
del;.- se.
The Vikings took the
opening kickoff of the third

.

48

57

SPRING VAL~EY PLAZA
Phone 446·1551

,conversion.

.

183

Oct . 13- 2-ll p.m. Senior Citizen Program

WILLOW WOOD - A 12- quarter to the SW 13 before
yard pass from sophomore Mark carterpTckedoff a pass
quarterback Gene UW!on to killing the threat. In the first
junior end Larry Garler_with hBH, SV·got to the Highlander
just 59 seconds left In the !&amp;line before being stopped.
game here Friday night gave
:SOuthwestern's only other
the visiting Southwestern scoring threat ended at the 19
Highlanders a thrilling IHl · yard line.
victory over Symmes Valley.
Defensively, Carter, Don
Symlnes Valley had just Jeffers, Sherman Potter and
Intercepted a pass on its own Curt Nolan were praised for
two-yard line minutes their · efforts. Potter had a
earlier,, but was held forcing blocked punt.
a punt.from the end zone.
Southwestern is 3-2 overall
Coach · · Bob Ashley's and 1-2 in the Southern Valley
lligl;Janders took over at the -Athletic Conference. Synunes
36 yard line with 1:54 left in Valley's record dropped to o-5
the game.
and 0-3 against league foes.
After getting a first down at
Southwestern will host
· the 1~, Lilyton connected with Eastern Friday.
Garter for the winning score.
Symmes Valley plays
Kip Lewis; talented tailback Hannan, W.Va.
who had 1:;6 yards rushing on
. STATISTICS
the night, was stopped in his Department
SW SV
bid to add the two-point First Downs
9
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Ocl.. 11-8-lp p.m. Colle~ Rec .
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Ocl. 12- 8:30-10 p.m. Open Ret.,
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Athens nips Gallia, 7-4

Steve. Hauber In the closing
seconds of the game. It was
set up when Bobcat punter
Todd Taylor was dropped on
a long yardage situation at
the six ·yard line. Coach Joe
Mitchem' s Eagles p la y~d
without senior quarterback
Bob McClure who was in'
jured.
Coach Sprague, whose
· offense ranks pmong the best
in the area, praised his entire
defensive unit for Its out·
standing effort.
The unit is composed .of

defensive ends, Bill Abshire,
Glaude Cornelius, and Roge·r
Spaulding ; tackles, Mike
Hendrickson, Darrell Jones,
Garl Myers, Sam Corlias and
Ted Misner; lin eback'ers,
Marcus Gei ger, Ralph
Baylor, corners, T~&lt;¥1
Taylor, Steve Shoemaker and
Paul Fife and safeties, llrian
Lucas, Steve Baird and Doug
Sands,
The Bobcats ~ will host
Southern Friday. Eastern 2-3
overall and 2-l in the SVAC
goes to Southwestern ~'riday :
STATISTICS
Q.opar.tmenl
· ·- ~C E
·Firs I Downs .
16 a

POINT PLEASANT

set Oct. 16

crammed over from the two

POMEROY- Another first
bas come to Meigs County
and Southeastern Ohio. The
Big Bend Bass Anglers Club
Is sponsoring a Bass Tournament next Saturday, October 16. The tourney will
begtn'at 8:00 and end at 4:00.
The one-day toumlinient is
for baas only, spotted, small
or largemouth. • .
The entry fee Is $25 for a
two-man team· in one boat.
Gash priles will be awarded
In tile follQwing amounts: 25
per cent of aU fees collected
·for the tournament will go to
the fir.st place team, 15 per
cent to second place and 10
·. per cent to third place. Other
prizes of equipment and
iackle will also be awarded.
The tournament will tie
held ln the Bacilie Pool of the
Ohlo River, with launching to
be made·at the Ravenswood,
West Virginia boat dock.
Applications and other
information may he obtained
at Flnlaw's Gravely Tractor
Sales ln Pomeroy or . by
calling 61'-949-2534.

yard line wlth ..11:12
remaining, then fullback
To4d Davidson hulled one
yard with 8: 53lefi, and came
back again on another one
· yard blast with 4:49left ln the
game.
.
Kicker Jeff Lee Smith
co.nverted following the final ..
11Jgan touchdown and the
.Chiefs had salted.away their .
first victory over Jackson
since a 6-2 win in 1972.
-Each teain now shows a 1' 1
· league record as the Chiefs
finished with 10 first downs,
141 yards OQ the ground, and
~omplellng ·four of eight
passes for 78 yards with one
Interception.
The Jronlnen picked up just
si~ first dow, had 89 yards
rushing, aDd hit four of nine '
passes for 26 yards.
Fullback Todd Davidson
led Logan with SO yards on 17
attempts while Josh Jenkins
paced Jackson with 52 yards
in 18 trips.
Score by quarters: .
11Jgan
6 0 0 19- 25
Jackson
0 0 14 0-14

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Bobcats roll over Eagles,36-3

=

EAST MEIGS - Kyger Steve Baird to tight end Brtan nlgh\pn a 12 yard run up the
On Eastern's next series,
apparently remem- Lucas.
middle. Lucas added the tbe Eagle~ fumbled with
struci 8 ~20 lie last year, Following an exchange of extra point for a 21~ ~beat .Geiger recovering at the 30.
here punts and fwnble recovery by 1ea d
Four p1ays ..
•· ter, KC' s Todd
Frida with
nigha· vengeance
In bli
· Y
t
tzlng the Easlerll at the 48 yard line
While Kyger Creek's IJ'a ylor, another speedy back,
bo,sl East~ Eagles_36-3. - Eastern's senior fullback defen.e kept the Eagle of- ranitin from the ll yard line.
Coupled With N'!fth Galllio'~ Dave Mills picked up a first fense intact, the Bobcat of· Lucas again kicked the EP.
32
~ roml'_, over Southern, down at the Bobcat 42. On the fense took over once again at
The fourth quarter, played
Coach Jo)jjj Blak~'s Pirates next
the Eagies fum- its 38 yard line. Thirteen tn a steady drizzle, was an
and Jim Sprague s Bobcats bled.
·
_ plays later, Geiger got his . exchange of turnovers and
, mov.ed into sole possession of
KC's Ralph Baylor picked third TO of the night on a 10 penalties:
first place.m the SVAC._, .. up the ball .from his yard run. A big play that· ·Kyger Greek was assessed
Following ~ scoreless Ill's! . linebacker's post and ram- series was a 11&gt;-yard roughing 80 yards ln penalties but a
qUf11er m which the Bobcats' bled downfleld S2 yards for - the passer . call against determined Bobcat defense
Doug Sands pounced on a the touchdown. That play Eastern. Baylor added the , held the Eagles to just three·
looplngse .~ndf. wet pigskin stop- seemed to break the Eagles. two pnint conversloo.
points, a ;!5-yard field goal by
w•e li'St Eagle drive. of Again, Lucas' toe added the ·
the night, the 1975 defendmg extra point ·giving the Bobchampion Bobcats reached cats a 1~ lead at the half.
the end zone following a
Eastern ran Into bad luck in
sustain~ dl:ive which began the opening minutes of the
third period. After the Eagle
at the Gals 25 yard stnpe.
Twenty plays later, speedy, kickoff, a IS-yard face mask
ju~lor tailback Marcus penalty moved the baU to the
Ge1ger took the ball over midfield stripe.
. . _
from three-yards out. Bandy
Quarterback Bljird called
Lucas• kick ~ve KC a 7~ the right play as he rambled
lead.
22 yards to 'the 28 yard line.
A big play during the drive On the tackle, Eastern was
was a !~,yard pass in- · hit .with another 1.5-yard
terference call agajnst the penalty for a late hit.
Eagles. It came on a third
Twoplays,later, Geigerhlid
•
.down pass from quarterback his second touchdown of the

ctoi,

ONE OF THOSE NIGHTS - GARS wingback Gary .
Dabney (II, oo groWJd at left ) was wide open on this pass

play with 2: 17 left ln the third pertO(), but sUpped and fell
right is Gallia
end Mike Staggs (80) and Athens' Jeff Griffin (20).

111 the wet turf before the ball got to him. On

GALLIP OLIS - Athens
Following a free kkk hy
became the Southeastern Athens, the over-&lt;lager Blue .
Ohio League's first 200 game Devils made their first winner Friday night by mistakes of the game- they
edging Gallipolis 7-4 ln a had played flawlessly up to
defensiv e struggle on this point. The Galllans were
Memorial Field.
hit with two IS-yard penalties
Both the Bulldogs and and had two passes inJ ackson entered Frida y's terceptec!. One pass ingames with 199 SEOAL wins terception wns nuUUied hy
apiece since the league was off-setting penalties.
organized in 1925. Jackson
After Wall hit Mike Staggs
failed to reach the with a !B-yard strike to put
bicentennial mark after the ha ll on Athens 47 with 1:24
losing a 2!&gt;-14 decision to left in the game, Arthur
Logan. Thus, Athens beel!me Chonko Intercepted a WaU
the league 's most winnlngest bomb and returned it to
football te11m.
Ga ll ia's 32 whe re the
The Bulldogs marched 59 Bulldogs ran out the clock.
yards ln nine plays second
Athens lost the services of
Ume they bad possession In its blocking fullba ck, Neil
the first pertod to score tbe Berberick, 180-pound senior,
game's only touchdown. QB with a knee Injury in the
Brlao Conl&lt;ey bit wingback second period.
Scott Lawreoce with a liveAfter Berberlck left the
yard strike at the 8:51 mark game, Atheos went two aod
for the touchduwo. John
one haH quarter• with ooly
Scbaozeobacb's. kick lrom ' oile first down, none In the
placeJ]ien* \\'811 true.
serond bali, aod 19 total
First of two GAHS Safeties
yardB, a mere nine duriog
came with 7:38 remaining In
lioc final two periods.
the second period. Mike
GAHS dominat ed· the
Wigglesworth caught Conkey game's statistics, chalking up
In the endzone to reduce the 10 first downs to the Bulldogs'
Bulldogs' lead to 7-2.
four. Total yards favored the
Athens stoppe'l a third Galllans, 169-lll. Gallipolis
period GAllS d!'' ve on the ran 60 plays from scrimmage
STRADDLES BUUJJOG - Gallia 's Paul Finnicum
Bulldog 2.1 ~&lt;iter the Jllue to Athens 36. In the second
(76) straddl"" an WJldentifled. Athens Bulldog runner
Devils had ma rched 57 yards haU, Athens ran only 11 plays
while Athens' Jeff Griffin (20) looks on. Athens edged
ln 11 plays.
. from scrimmage. GAH$ ran
GAllS, 7-4. Finnicum stood out defensively for the Blue
GAHS came right back 37.
Devils. - Keith Wilson photos.
with a 33-yard march In 10
The Blue Devils; now 4-1 los! rushing
19
21 Punts ·
5.180 4-12a
139
89 Pe na lt ies
2·30 4-20
plays ln .the .fourth period ,and 1·1 in conference play, Net r ush ing
12
6
Recover ed enemy fum'bles :
before the Bulldogs held on will h,ost Ironton Friday . · Pass atte mpts
3
2 GAH.S - Wal l, Finn icum.
their own 19 with 7:29 ieft in Athens, 2-3 overall and 2~ in Completions
Inter cepted by
1
1 Gal li pol is
0 2 0 2-4
.the game.
the league, will play at Meigs. Yarps pa ssing
30
22 At hens
. 7 0 0 Q-7
Total yards
169
11 1
Scoring - GAHS : safe ty,
': Bls
Paul
Finnicum
INDIVIDUAL NET
Plays
60
36 7: 38, second; safety, 2; 42,
jlo1111ced on a Bulldog fumble
YAROS RUSHING
Return yardage
51
40 fourth. Athens - Li!iiwrence,
I Gallipolis I
I on the Atheos 17 at the 7:19
Fumbles
1
J .5-yard pass from Conkey,
Player
Tcb Yv Avg. Lost fumbles
' mark. It looked good for the Mink
o
1 3: 5d, fir st , ( Schanzenbach,
22 84 3.8 klckl.
Blue Devlli.
Wall
10 23 2.3
.Brian Mink got four and Salisbury
11 25 2:2
5 7 1.4
· :one to put it on the Athens 12. Jackson
48 139 '2.8
QB Terry Wall passed to Totals
IAihensl
Mike Staggs for a first, down Player
Tcb Yv Avg.
2 lS 7.5
on the Bulldog five. It was Berberlck
16 83 5. 1
first and goal with 5 jl~ left to Pennell
· La wren ce
3 5 1.6
play.
Gagle
' 2 3 1.5
Mink got zero, two, then Conkey
6 -10 -1.6
1 -6 -6
ooe. It was fourth and one. Walton
30 89 2.9
Mink plowed Into the Bulldog Totals
IND. PASSING
forward wall again. This
I Gallipolis!
lime, the strong Athens 'line Player
C-A I YG TD
3-12 . I 30 0
held inches from the goal - Wall
J-12 1 JO • o
six to be exact - - and Totals
regained po..,.ssion with 3:31 Player . IAthens)
C·A I YG TO
left to play.
Conkey
2-6 1 22
1
2-6 1 l2 1
Kent Shawver tackled Totals _
TEAM STATISTICS
Conl&lt;ey behind the goal Depa11menl
"
G
with 2:4% left to reduce First down s
10
Atheos' lead to 7-4,
Yards rushing
lSB

STOP IN TODAY FOR THE BEST SELECTION
I • •

NO. 628

Outdoorsman

:..

work

shoes for workmen, Qualit)l

built to stay "on duty"

when you' re " on duty" .

Designed lo keep you
comfortable all day ... and
deliver lhe kind of long

\,:6"'
WE .HAVE
FAMOUS~ '
COAL, WOOD &amp;GAS
.'

"HEARTH-GLOW"
GAS SPACE HEATERS

Bass tourney

"i':\\'' ~ · ,,~

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Fri. 9:301118 p.m.
Tues. Wed. Sal.
9 ,Jo till p.m.

TOUcHooWN- Athe111' Scott Lawrence (411) slides
Jnto far arner d en!lzone with a Brian Conkey aerial with
3:64 left In the first period t01core Athens' only touchdown
of the game Friday. GAHS defender is Dan Sickles (42).
I

Mon . &amp;

Thursday 9: JO til 12 noon

I

-HARDMAN'S HOME
~-:._- CENTER
WA
'110RE THAN A

IT. 2 BYPASS
)

·

a 10 p.m. College Rec.
Clo~
0:;1. 15-8·10p.m, Farn. Rec. Nlghl a IOp.m. f•m . Rec . Nl9hf

Oct . 16--4 p.m Womer~ ' s VolleytMII
Rio vs . Central St. &amp; Witt enberg
·
Oct 17~2- 4 p.m . Open Rec
.2 4 p .m. Open Swim _
a IOp .m. Coli. Rec.
,
S-IOp ,m. Open Swim

SPRINGI'l)l:LD, MASS.
(\JP!) - Brown U!liverslty
Fu'mbles
3
.t
•'Fumbles 1051
1 4 !cuds u•O natioo .In . team
lnfcrceptlons
3 1 •. defense In ihe NCAA major
Penali1ed
15 140 b-60 college foo tball stimdlngs
By Quarters ,
·
niter last Saturday's play.
Kyger
Creek
o
14
22 0-36 The Bruin.• have '"ven up 13
Eastern
o 0 o 3- 3
--,fSl
points after three game~:._.

1818 EASTERN
AVENUE
.
.
446-1113
.

edge Vikings

Yards Rushing

Yards Passing
Total Yardage .
Passes Altpl.
Passes Com pt.
Interceptions

Fumbles
Fumbles Lost
Penalized
· By Quarters,
Soulhwestern
S. Valley

172

55

2

1

35 27
207 \12
a 5.
3 3
2 1
2 0
6-70 7.45 ·
·

o o D 6-6
o o o 0--ll

LVM.~ER ·:y~!!"
I

period when quarterback J~ff
Smith connected with
wing hack Scott Gasser on a
37 yard TD pass, but a conversion kick failed with 8:41
remaining.
This score stood until the
opening kickoff of the second
hall when Jackson's Ken
Crawford raced 80 yards aqd
Jeff Fenwick's extra point
kick put Jackson on fop :/~.
With 5:32 r~maining in the
third stanza fullback Josh
Jenkins rammed over from
the seven yard line with
Fenwick's kiCk spreading the
margin to 14~.
Following this Logan
mentor Bill Biggers moved
· Scott Gasser into the quarterback slot and he
engineered three. fourth
quarter touchdown driv~s.
Flashy Harold Peppers

JACKSON - A com.
binalion of injuries to key
Jackson players and a sudden
change of quarterbacks by
the Logan Chieftains directly
led to a stunning fourth
quarter comeback by Logan
Friday night as the Chiefs
pinned Jackson 25-14 before a
rain-soaked
crowd at
.Jackson.
With ace running back
David P. Davis observing
from the sidelines in street 1
clothes due to a leg injury last
week, the Jackson Iromnen
watched Logan put six points
on the board in the first
·

HEATING STOVES

NO. 30H25

a
1

240

8-IOp.m. (JpenSwlm

'

Jackson, 25-14

"WARM MORNING''

wear you expect for your
wor~ shoe dolla rs. ~

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6

Tolal Yardage

Passes Atfpt.
Passes Compt.

810p.m Coii. Rec .

Oct. 14- 7 8 p.m . Cheerleader Tr youts

Logan rally tops

THE ,~.

__.;_ .-

27
75

- ~ighlanders

Synunes Valley, coached
hy OS!J pro4uct Greg
Hallie, came close to scoring
twice, but were stopped by a
determined Highlander
del;.- se.
The Vikings took the
opening kickoff of the third

.

48

57

SPRING VAL~EY PLAZA
Phone 446·1551

,conversion.

.

183

Oct . 13- 2-ll p.m. Senior Citizen Program

WILLOW WOOD - A 12- quarter to the SW 13 before
yard pass from sophomore Mark carterpTckedoff a pass
quarterback Gene UW!on to killing the threat. In the first
junior end Larry Garler_with hBH, SV·got to the Highlander
just 59 seconds left In the !&amp;line before being stopped.
game here Friday night gave
:SOuthwestern's only other
the visiting Southwestern scoring threat ended at the 19
Highlanders a thrilling IHl · yard line.
victory over Symmes Valley.
Defensively, Carter, Don
Symlnes Valley had just Jeffers, Sherman Potter and
Intercepted a pass on its own Curt Nolan were praised for
two-yard line minutes their · efforts. Potter had a
earlier,, but was held forcing blocked punt.
a punt.from the end zone.
Southwestern is 3-2 overall
Coach · · Bob Ashley's and 1-2 in the Southern Valley
lligl;Janders took over at the -Athletic Conference. Synunes
36 yard line with 1:54 left in Valley's record dropped to o-5
the game.
and 0-3 against league foes.
After getting a first down at
Southwestern will host
· the 1~, Lilyton connected with Eastern Friday.
Garter for the winning score.
Symmes Valley plays
Kip Lewis; talented tailback Hannan, W.Va.
who had 1:;6 yards rushing on
. STATISTICS
the night, was stopped in his Department
SW SV
bid to add the two-point First Downs
9
s

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Yards Rushing

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LYNE CENTER
GYM AND POOL SCHEDULE
Ocl.. 11-8-lp p.m. Colle~ Rec .
8-10 p.m. Open Swim
Ocl. 12- 8:30-10 p.m. Open Ret.,
8:30-10 p.m. Open Swim

NOW 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU

YES, WE DO CARRY HEATING STOVESI
WOOD, COAL, GAS AND ELEctRIC ···

Athens nips Gallia, 7-4

Steve. Hauber In the closing
seconds of the game. It was
set up when Bobcat punter
Todd Taylor was dropped on
a long yardage situation at
the six ·yard line. Coach Joe
Mitchem' s Eagles p la y~d
without senior quarterback
Bob McClure who was in'
jured.
Coach Sprague, whose
· offense ranks pmong the best
in the area, praised his entire
defensive unit for Its out·
standing effort.
The unit is composed .of

defensive ends, Bill Abshire,
Glaude Cornelius, and Roge·r
Spaulding ; tackles, Mike
Hendrickson, Darrell Jones,
Garl Myers, Sam Corlias and
Ted Misner; lin eback'ers,
Marcus Gei ger, Ralph
Baylor, corners, T~&lt;¥1
Taylor, Steve Shoemaker and
Paul Fife and safeties, llrian
Lucas, Steve Baird and Doug
Sands,
The Bobcats ~ will host
Southern Friday. Eastern 2-3
overall and 2-l in the SVAC
goes to Southwestern ~'riday :
STATISTICS
Q.opar.tmenl
· ·- ~C E
·Firs I Downs .
16 a

POINT PLEASANT

set Oct. 16

crammed over from the two

POMEROY- Another first
bas come to Meigs County
and Southeastern Ohio. The
Big Bend Bass Anglers Club
Is sponsoring a Bass Tournament next Saturday, October 16. The tourney will
begtn'at 8:00 and end at 4:00.
The one-day toumlinient is
for baas only, spotted, small
or largemouth. • .
The entry fee Is $25 for a
two-man team· in one boat.
Gash priles will be awarded
In tile follQwing amounts: 25
per cent of aU fees collected
·for the tournament will go to
the fir.st place team, 15 per
cent to second place and 10
·. per cent to third place. Other
prizes of equipment and
iackle will also be awarded.
The tournament will tie
held ln the Bacilie Pool of the
Ohlo River, with launching to
be made·at the Ravenswood,
West Virginia boat dock.
Applications and other
information may he obtained
at Flnlaw's Gravely Tractor
Sales ln Pomeroy or . by
calling 61'-949-2534.

yard line wlth ..11:12
remaining, then fullback
To4d Davidson hulled one
yard with 8: 53lefi, and came
back again on another one
· yard blast with 4:49left ln the
game.
.
Kicker Jeff Lee Smith
co.nverted following the final ..
11Jgan touchdown and the
.Chiefs had salted.away their .
first victory over Jackson
since a 6-2 win in 1972.
-Each teain now shows a 1' 1
· league record as the Chiefs
finished with 10 first downs,
141 yards OQ the ground, and
~omplellng ·four of eight
passes for 78 yards with one
Interception.
The Jronlnen picked up just
si~ first dow, had 89 yards
rushing, aDd hit four of nine '
passes for 26 yards.
Fullback Todd Davidson
led Logan with SO yards on 17
attempts while Josh Jenkins
paced Jackson with 52 yards
in 18 trips.
Score by quarters: .
11Jgan
6 0 0 19- 25
Jackson
0 0 14 0-14

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~·

.

-~ How top _t~ms jared1Frida1
COLUMBUS {UP il - Two Ot
the top rated teams ln the UPI

Board ol coaches ' poll were
detealfod

In

Fr iday

night

oames.

f\lewark CathOlic , tops in
Clast A, lost. 7tl-7 to Hebron
Lakewood, whi!e Wyoming , the
leader in Clns AA , lost 14-8 to
Reading .
Clnclnnil!ti Moeller , tops in
Clwu AAA , defeated Cinci nnat i
Elder 32-6.
No.
10 Class
A
Clark
Southeaste-rn defeated severith
ranked Cedarvif!e 30 -10. wnite
Lorain Senior, nint h ill Class

defea ted Cleveland Si. Ignatius

Newcomerstown 33 Tusky Groveport 34 Whllthllt a
Cath 7
1 Reynoldsburg 10 Weslef'vlllt

• 7

Napoleon 26 Wauseon 6

3
4. 51. Mar ys Memor ial defeated
Celina 32 0

8. Shelby defeated Gallon 28 12
9 Huron plays Elyr ia West

14

Newark 25 Winter svi ll e 0
Lakewood 20 New ark Cath 7
Utica 40 Nor th r idge 6
Norwalk 33 Bucyru s 13
Bell evue 13 Ti fl ln Columbian

7
_findl ay 27 Marlon Harding 0

Cuyahoga Hts 31 Slrongsvill e
15
Ashl a bula Edg ewood 20
Co11neaut 14

. Amherst 13 Wellington 0
Cte Latin 34 Erie {Pci. ) Te&lt;:h

"

Ri ve r da le 14 £ 1g_in 6
M onroeville 34 Gr een wich S

Cen o

New London 21 Mapleton 6
Day Ro th 58 Day Kaiser 0
Fairb or n Pa rk Hill
21
Tecumseh 13
Centervi lle 3 Spr ingfield S 0

Spr ingfield N16 Day Stebbins
12
Oay Cham -Ju l 12 Day

· Fa ir view 6
Da y Carroii 2B Lima Sh awnee

• WeH construction

• Cushion insole and steel
shank a~ch supporl
• Oiile.sistant neoprene sole
and heel

,0
Leba non 0 Lakota 0
Lemon -Monr oe
30
Mid dletow n Fenw ick 6
Marion Loca l 20 Ansonia 0
Mins ter 14 Bradford 0
St. M ar y 32 Ce lina 0
Wapakoneta 21 Defiance 14
twin Val ley S 44 Ne w Miami
0
Belle f on taine
22
N or theast er n 0
Coshocton 28 West Holmes 0
Indian ValleyS 27 Ridg ewood

CARL'S
SHOE STORE
Gallipolis, Ohio

6

London · 21

•

NOBLE SMOTIIERED - Waverly's Jeff.Noble (80, in
while) is smothered by Meigs Dan Granda! (82) and a host

of Marauders during Friday's league gsme at Waverly.
Other l)larauders in photo are Dave Blake (35) Ray Willford (74) and Dave Miler (65).
'

•

for first SEOAL win
•
By Greg BaUey
WAVERLY - The Meigs
high school football team
evened Its league record
Friday night as ihe
Marauders travelled to
Waverly and squeaked by the
winless Tigers 7-0.
Fullback Dan Buffington
led his team to victory as he
titne and again crashed the
Tiger line and ended the night
with 154 yards on 27 carries.
Neither team seemed
anxious to win as they played
the entire first period withOut
mounting a serious threat.
The second quarter looked to
be the same way until Meigs
got a break When they force d
the Tigers to punt lrol)l deep
within their own territory and
the . Marauders · ·round
themselves with the ball on
the Waverly"!l6 yard Hne.
Buffington then took over
and carried the ball eight
straight times and took the
pigskin down to the four.
Junior southpaw 9.uarterback

·(2nd AVE. ENTRANCE)

(2% ALLEY ENTRANCE)

9 AM-3 PM

THURSDAY

CLOSED

MON.-WED.~B

FRIDAY

AM-4:30 PM
8 AM-4:30 PM
•

SATURDAY-SAM-4:30PM
THURSDAY
CLOSED

AUTO BANK

MON-WED••••·: ................... •• •••• 9 AM·3 PM

••!t••••························

THURSilAY
9 AM:3 PM
FRIDAY~-•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 9 AM-7 .- PM
SATURDAY·•••••••·••••••••••••••••••••••• 9 AM-3 PM
The First Natinnal is open JonKer hours for the
.convenience of their customers.

3 LOCATIONS TO ·SERVE ·YOU!
MAIN OFFICE-SECOND AVE.
AUTO BANK-THIRD AVE.
VINTON BRANCH-VINTON

,. .

Watkins Memorl~l 6 Gran .
.vi ll e 3
.

Springfield Bloom Carroll44 Berne Union
6

Cana l Winchester 24 Fairfield
4

13

Uhion 20
Pi ckeri ngton 21 Mlller$port 0

-

Fredericktown 13 Crestview 6 Mt. Gilead 16 Bvckeye Valley
Steubenville 37 Youngs town 6

No
Austintown Fitch 7 Akron
Howland 0
, Boardman 28 Struthers 6

Big Walnut 7 Northmor 7
Bedford (Mich.) 7 Oregon
Clay 6

Washington CH22 Sylvania

~

George GIIIJl carried it for
two more, tailback Steve
Randolph picked up a yard,
and then on the next pl~y
Randolph fo und paydir t.
After a Meigs penalty; Duane
-Weber kicked the extra point
lo make the soore read 7~
and that's the way it ended.
Meigs threatened twice
more in the . game.. In the
second period they had the
hall on the Waverly ten, but
fwnbled ·lhe ball away. They
did that a total of twice on the' ·
night while Waverly lost one
of its two fwnbles. In the
third quarter Meigs had the
ball on the Tiger 12, but a
Weber field goal was blocked.
Waverly got a final chance
with just two mimites left in
the game when they took a
punt on the Meigs 43 and
began a drive. A ten yard
gain by Rob . Leffler and a
completed pass coupled with
a fifteen yard penally on the
Marauders left the ball on the
nine yard stripe with first ~ nd
goal. But two plays later
Meigs' Brent Arnold leaped
up at the line and balled a
Tiger pass that came down in
his hands and that was the
·ball game.
Randolph pick ed up
seventeen yards for the
winners while Gum got ten.
Meigs had no completed
passes and had one intercepted. They outrushed
Waverly 181 to 107, ~ut both

Pro standings
NFL Standings
By United Press Interna tion al
American Conf erence
·
East
W. L. T . Pet. PF PA

Balt imore
New Englnd
Mia m i
Buffalo
NV Jets

J 1 o .750 124 87
85
2 2 o .soo ·as 82
~ 2 0 .500 88 69
0 4 0 .000 ~6 11 7
Centra l
W. L. T. Pel. PF PA
Cin ci nnati 3 1 0 .750 117 66
Houston
3 1 0 .750 77 43
Pittsburgh 1 3 0 .250 92 92
Cleveland
1 3· 0 250 89 137
West
W. L. T. Pet . PF PA
Sa n Diego 3 I 0 .750 96 66
Oakl and
J 1 0 .750 86110
Denver
J 1 0 .750 123 JJ
Kansas City 0 4 0 .000 71 Ill
Tampa Bay o 4 o ." ·ooo 16 99
National confere nce
East
W. L. T. Pet. PF PA
Dallas
4 a o 1.000 109 53
Washingtn 3 1 0 .750 77 74
·st. Louis
3 1 0 .750 11.0 88
f.' hila
2 2 0 .500 58 67,
N Y Giants 0 4 0 .000 55 90
Ci!ntra.t
W. L. T. Pet. PF PA
M in n .~
3 0 1 .875 77 34
Chicago
3 1 a .750 62 32
Detroi t
· 1 3 a .2s·o so 54
Green Bay
l J a . 250 45 97
west ·.
••
W. L. T. Pl:t. PF PA
Los Angeles J 0 1 .875 95 62
San Fr ar1
J 1 o .750 92 60
Atlant a
1 J 0 .250 47 68
Newor le &amp;n s1 J a .250 661 12
a 4 ·a .000 . 65126
Seaffle
Sunday' s Gar:n-eS - Atla n ta at New Orl eans
Buffalo at NY Jets
Chicago at M innesota
Dalla s at NY Giant s
Den11er at Houston
Kan City at Washi ngton
M iami at Balt imore
· New E~g la nd af Detroi t
Oakland 51 San Diego
Pi lf~burg h at Clevelan d
Ph iladelphia at St. LO UIS
Sea ttl e liS . Green Bay
at Mi lwaukee
Tampa Bay at Cinc innati
(Only gam es SChedUled )
Monday's Games
San Fran at Los Ang , night
IOn~y 911m e scHeduled)
J 1 0 .750 121

~

Carro ll ton 7 E:asf Canton 6
Lovel and 6 M ariem ont 0
Cin Woodward 21 Cin Aiken 14
Oak Hill 20 Lima 6
Cln Ba con 1 LaSalle 0

teams had a like number of
IND. STATS
Yds. Car.
scrimma ge plays, fifty. Meigs
Buffington
154 . ... 27
Mei!is had · 85 yards in Randolph
17 ..... 8
penalties while Waverly had Gum
10"' .. 5
39. Meigs had nine first downs
TEAM STATS
to Wave rly's eight, but the
,
M W
Tigers got only one in the Penalties
85.. ' .39
entire first hall.
Rush . yds .
181. ' 107
Leffler was the Tigers' Pa5S. yds.
0 ... 36
Atp, Cpf.
0-4. . 6-15
leading rusher as he chalked Passes
lntcpf ,
1. .. .. 2
. up 48 chunks of turf.
First downs
' 9... .. 8
Meigs' overall record is Pun t s, Avg .
JJ~
2-2.... 2·1
now 2-3 while Waverly is 0-5. Fumbles, lost
50 " " 50
Friday the Marauders will Pla ys
By quarters :
host the Athens Bulldogs.
Meigs
0 7 0 G-7
Waverly
oooo-o

Campbell 0
Hubbard 17 Youngs Ursul ine
. 12
Canfield 55 liberty 7

Euclid 27 Bedford. 21
'Mentor 35 Mayfield 12
Westlake 27 Rocky River 7
Brooklyn 40 Brecksville t5

M inera l
Rtdg e 13
l-akev iew 14 Br ookfield 7

Cha grin Fa lls 35 Aurora 12
Midview 21 Lorain Clearvlew

7

Canfield 55 liber ty I

Akron St. Vincent 8 Cte ·St.

Jackson Milton

Ignatius 7

J~ c kson -Milton . 14

14 M ineral

Ridge 13
Adena 28 Paint Valley 0

Genoa 20 Eastwood tc
Zanesvil le 34 'Chillicothe 0

Piketon 40 Ross Zane Trace 6
Greenfield McClean 6 Circlev llle 0
Miami Tn~ce 66 M adison
Plains 0
N~ l sonville 20 Tr.i mble 6

Philo 33 West Muskindum 28
Maysvi lle 22 Crooksville 7 •
Morgan 6 Sheridan 0
Ca ldwell
12
Zanesville
Rosecrans 7
M-eadowbr oOk 14 Ft. Frye 13

Con Moeller 32 Con Elder 6

Cary-Rawson 33 McCom b

I

!

Olmsted Falls 14 Bay VIllage

Fairpor t 53 Perry 32
Col Eastmoor 14 Col South 7 Brookside 14 Oberlin 13 .
Col _Ridge 18 Col Marion -, Columbia 19 Keystone 0
New Lexington 34 Tri-Valley

Col West 26 Co l Mohawk 0 6
Col Northl and 29 Col Nor th 7 United 14 Stan ton Local 3
Col

Brook haven

14

Whelslone 0
Col East 8 Col Mifll in 6

Col

Portsmouth

33

Gn•d
standinu.

Huntington

(W. Va.) 15
Claymont 7 Tuslaw"6

SENIORS
Reserve.,. your job
for after graduation now.
With the Army 's · Delayed Entry
Program, you can come down now and pick
the job you want. And if you qualify , we'll
hold it for you - for up to 270 days,
depending on the job you choose.
Then you can rela x and en joy the
summer without worrying about what you'll
be doing when it's over .
When you do come in the Army, you'll
also have a salary of $361
IT]Onth before
deductions waiting for you . Plus free meals, '·
housing. health care and 30 days paid
vacation . And if you'd like to try college
while you're in, we'll pay up to 75 per cent of
your tuition for you .

a

Call Army
Sgt. ·Tom ..,.,
ON TJiE LOOSE- Meigs' Steve Randolph (15,right)
breaks loose from Waverly defender Jay ·Kegley (24)
during Friday's SEOAL actioo at Waverly. The
Marauders won, 7-0. - Gary Sisk photos,

"Ironton mauls Wellston,
'

6

Frkltn 14

By GARY CLAitK
MILTON . ""' The Milton
Greyhounds halted the
W.ahama Whit e Falcons
consecutive
win string of lour
BOSO NAILED- An ~UIIed North Galllli taclder brfnw! down Southern ace Steve
Friday
night
when they
Bolo (45)durlng Friday's SVAC grid batUe at Racine . Tornado on rtght Ia Joe Brown 118).
turned two costly Wahama
.'- Bruce Galrlel-photo.
·
·
turnovers into touchdowns
"
.,•
enroute to a itl-7 rain soaked
victory.
It was the first win of the
year lor Coach Lewis Ball's
&gt;
Greyhounds while the White
•
Falcons feU victim for -only
the second lime this season.
An 87 yafd touchdown jaunt
with
a Falcon fwnble (one of
eight Wahama fwnbles ori the
~- ffiONTON - Coach Bob
Fu.llback Rick Howard second To 00 a one yard night) and a 34 yard return of
Lull'slrontm Tigers allowe&lt;j tallied the first of hts two plunge with 8:.09 left in the a Mike Goldsberry· pass
WeliJton a brief 3-0 lead touchdowns with 2:261eft in thirdquarterandhefollowed acco~ntedfortwoofthethree
flrlday ntgbt and then the half on a five yard blast with a two point conversion Milton scores. The third
riiethodlcally chewed up the and then ran the two point run.
touchdown for the host
visiting Golden Rockets if6.3 conversion for a 14-3 halftiine
Flashy tailback, Juan Greyhounds was set up by
to run th~lr ·SEOAL' victory lead.
' Thomas, who ftnlshed as the still another Wahama fwnble
skeen to 34 since 1971.
Howard accounted for hts game's top rusher with 99 on their own six yard line.
· ·Following the opening
yards in 17 carries, tallied the
Wahama never gave up
. kickoff the Rockets drove
lastpairolTigertouchdowns. hope and kept fighting back
deep iDto Tiger territory
With 3:09 left in the third despite demoralizing and
l!efore caWng·on Jeff Montperiod Thomas raced 21 costly turnovers . With a
~ery for a 28-yard Held
•~t .
yards to paydlri ·and added second.and goal·situation on
Coal and a 3-0 lead with 6:45
eo
another on a five yard effort the Milton three yard line,
llhowlng on the clock.
with 1:39 rematnlng in the quarterback Mike Golds:: 'l'be four-time defending Teo in ALL G~MLE~ P OP final quarter with Howard berry_ attempted a pitch
~OAL · cllampiona roared Ironton
5 0 0 100 31 running the conversion to outside· but the wet pigskin
lllck to grab the lead on a 29 Gallipolis
• t o 70 42 close out the searing.
squirted loose when It was
f&amp;rd pUs from QB Mike ~an
2 3 .0 60 42
The Ironton offense picked up by Ken Mercer who
BrowntoendJohnWhltehead - ~c:~n
~ ~ ~ ~ ~~ .operate!~_ so smoothly during .taced87yardstopaydirtand
:tith 3:13 left in the. first Meigs
2 3 0 40 77 the contest that the 'I'ig ~ turned what was an inunment
)!erlod.
Chillicothe 2 3 o 49 111 never had to punt as ~! Wahllma to~chdo"!' into six
~ .; __ _ ___:_ _..; . ~':[~, ~~1
j ; · ~ ~ ~ Brown and Company rolled pomts lor Milton. R1ck Alford 1
~
Coal Grove 1 4 0 65 126 up 17 first doWIIl! had 148 booted the PAT to make il7-0.
~ SEATI'LE (UP!) - Four Waverly
o 5 o 22 108 yardsruslllng and~ompleted Wahama"came fi ghting
Seattle
Supersonics,
Non-lugue results:
nine of 11 pa~es for an ad- back with the ensuing kicKoff
1
6
liaclootng three starters from ~~~:~11 ;~,c~ 11 ft~~~e 0
ditional 191 yards.
~o~.:~; s:;:k~7-~_7. ~~~
liat yelll''s team, remained ,S:eredo-Kenova 22 Rock Hill 8
ooe yard out cappin •.a 68
ll!dellned
Friday because of
Wellst •
'
'"Juri and 8lclmeu
SEOAL stondings
oo s offense netted yard drive that took s~n
HI
es
·
•
Team
w L T p OP nine first downs on just 80 minutes and 14 plays. •;
:;~ forwards Leonard Ironton
2 o o 44 3 ~bing yards and two pass
Milton threatened to score
uray and Bruce Seales were Athe
2 o o JJ 4
1
.ijlpt OUi of training camp Loga~s
~~P
etioinns
in
five
atlempts
on
its first possession of the
1 1 0 25 22
l!!lllon. Gray had a badly Jackson
1 1 o 33 25 · WI one tercepted.
second half but a major
lrool...! 1mee
d
Gatllpotls
1 1 0 10 7
penalty and a stiff White
·~C.~
an Sea 108 was Meigs
1 t 0 7 ·19
A steady downpour of rain FalCQn defense held on fourth
tiUI!erjng
oQ 2•
2 0o 0J 33
·~&gt; in the second half led to six down a t lh eJr
· own sx
i yard
::'Guard fmn
Fred .lli'onchitls.
Brown, ·the Wellston
Waverly
~m's top scorer fmn list TOTALS
t 8 o m 155 fwnbles by , the two teams, line.
~. was still recovering
Friday's results:
with Ironton losing one of
A fumbled snap from
Athens 7 Gallipolis 4
three and the Rockets two of center was recovered . by
!J:om
a severe gr$1 Jl!IU and lroofon 36 Wellston 3·
three:
Anthony Courts on tbe. first
was liBtecl as doubtful for the· Meigs 7 Waverly o
·
New York Net exhlblti&lt;11 Logan 25 Jackson .14
Ironton is now 5-0 on the Wahama scrimmage play
pme Swiday.
Oct. 15 games:
year while Wellston dips to 1- giving the Greyhounds a
Ironton at Galllpglls
4.
·
second chance which they
Free agent forward · Dean Athens at Meigs
didn
1
'l'olaon, who,played briefly for Jackson af Wellston
Score by quarters:
't bow. Two atlempts
lbe Sonlcs two seasons ago, Waverly af Logan
WeUston
3 0 0 0- 3 into th-e line failed to net any
Oak Hill at Coal Grove .
Ironton
6 8 14 8-,16 yardageandafiveyarddelay
~!,}!~. out with a sore Chillicothe at Lancaster
of game penalty made the
....-Moe
Roc~ Hill at Fairland

.ups string to 34 in row

34

0

.Lepsic. 17 Hard in Northern 0
Ada 7 Allen East 6

I

Can McKinley 47 Cambridge

,,Arlington 41 Li berty Benton 0

COLLECT: 61,4-446-3343
~

Join· the people wholve joined the Army.

WEEKEND

0CTO.,ER

W~E'VE

11 ·12-13-14·15
' &amp; 16TH

Prefinlshed Paneling Now Reduced: SH~

'

PARADISE LAKE
BEAUTY SALON
PERMANENT WAVES '12.50
SHAMPOO &amp; ·sET s3.75

AU.-PRICES
IN EFFECT
THRU
OCTOBER 16, 1976

AT

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Finnevtown 20 Taylor 0
Harr ison 22 Lockland 15

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N College Hi ll 15 Greenhills 8

Madeira 21 Deer Park 20
Kings •15 Springboro 13
Gree:n~ield 6 Circleville 0
Goshen 20 Williamsbur g 7
New Rich.nond 31 Clermont

top Jackson

, touchdowns. One ctme willl Mundale added llle extru on
8:00 showing on the clock as a run .
be seampered 33 yards, and
Southern's Steve Boao led
JACKSON - The Blue
the other came at the 3:50 his team as he racked up 89 Angels travelled to Jacklon
mark when he bulled !lis way yards in 17 carries while Thursday night to down the
over from the si1 .
.,
Jerry Johnson had eight fronwomen In varsity and JV
Scotl Souder put the only tackles for the Tornadoes . volleyball matches.
Southern poi~$ on the board Souder and Martin Bush each
The JV playing lhort wlth
for the night as he raced back had seven. Plants, Justis, and Sl!eryl Shaw, captain, helplnf.
with one of those second Potts each got live tackles for
oil! &lt;11 the val'lity and Taml ·
quarter kick-offs !or BO yards the Pirates.
feaser ill, took the Jacklon
and a tou chdown. North
North Gallia dominated Jv in 3 ~ames lH, 11-15, IW.
GaUia scored once more "" nearly every aspect of the . Kim Beli, Valerie Finley ind ·
Logan crossed the goal 1ine . game as they racked up 28? Karen Steln)lruni:ler took the
with just :38 on the clock, and yards on the ground and lour searing honO\a.in the match
in ·the air. Southern managed
ooly 149 on the ground and tS at the service lkle. The JV
linlshed the week with 4 wins
via the air route.
The victors fumbled once to boost their reco.rd to 1-1.
The varslty downed t6o
and lost it , while Southern
Jackson
lronwomen in two
situation even more tougher picked up 85 yards on the fumbled three times and lost
straight
games
16-7, 16-13:
ground
-in
mteen
carries.
for Mllton, but quarterback
aU of them.
Maria
Singer
and
Ginny
Sigpal
caUer
Kenny
Hopkins
Kenny Hopkins scored down .
On defense, Re• Justice,
Young
led
.llle
Angels
in
rambled
for
29
yards
in
nine
the left sideline on a keeper
Bill Luckadoo and Ron Plants
service.
The
Angela
got
off
to
attempts.
Hopkins
also
play to put the Greyhounds
·had outstanding nights.
a fast start scoring 6 pointa
out in front 13-7. The extra · completed one pa!S in. three
s ~G before the Ironwomen got
point attempt was wlde to the tries lor 16 yards and had one Department
Rushing
149 287 started. Debt:&gt;le Shaw and
intercepted.
right.
1
23
i~~ 1 -~~ Sheryl Shaw made their first
Milton made it 19-0 on the • W~hama (4·2) must now ~~f!1 "9
Pen~t11
es
15 30 varsity start. heplng the
next series or plays when journey to C3lhoun Co. to
Fumbles,
los!
J.J
1-1 Angels in the absence of
Steve Kirtley picked off a . meet the winless Red Devils.
lntercepll
ons
o
o . Janet Groves, Kathy Daniela
Milton (I .S) wlll play host
Goldsberry aerial for a 34
5·34 3.40 · and Pam Pasquale. Pam
~~~ar
ters:
yard touchdown scamper. On to powerful Ceredo Kenova
17 , 2 0 8.:... 32 · broke a finger Ql a strong :
the play the Wahama on the Greyhounds' home N. Gallla
So
uthern
o 6 o 0- 6 perfonnance against Ironton '
field.
receiver slipped and fell on
Scoring
:
Logan,
35 yd. run, and Wellston Wednesday
Score
by
quarters:
the muddy gridiron enabling
no
ex
tras
.
Justis,
50
yd. punt night and will be out for
0 7 o G-7
Kirtley to dash into the end Wal'lama
, no ex tr es . Logan, 33
Millon
0 7 t3 G-20 return
yd . run , no e.d ras. Logan , 6 several weeks.
•
zone untouched. The PA1 Slatlstlcs .
W M yd.
run.
no
ex
tras
,
Logan
,
17
The
Angels
host
Meigs
First
Downs
9
7
boot by Aiford .made1t 20-0
3-47 3•·149 yd. run , Mundale got extras. Tuesday night at 6:30 and '
with Soli to play·ln the third Yds. Rushing
Yds.
passing
9-93 ·1-16 Snider ran kick -off back 80 travel to Logan Thursday in
stanza . ,
Tot. yards
140
165 ya rd s, no extra s.
action this week.
Wahania threatened twice Passing
9-21
J.J
·1 ·
l
more before Milton ran out Interception s
j
' NORTHFIELD
8·2 5 · ~
.. .
the clock to end the game. A Fumbles-lost
Punts
5-27.2 J-12,3 NORTHFIELD , Oh~
''
partially blocked punt by Pona ltles
5-S5 8-60 (UPI) - Sugar WaU charged
Kelvin Hooaker gave the Off Play_s
TIUSTLEDOWN
'
64, · 42
through Northlleld Park's
NOI\TH RANDALL, Ohio • ; ·
Scoring :
bend area team a first down
Milton - Mercer 87 ya rd stretch Friday night to topple
(UPI) - Groundlark ran the 1
deep inside Greyhound
fum ble recov.e ry (Alford a field of lillies and mares, ·
mile and 4ll yards in 1:43 3-5 ,
territory at the 21 yard line ki ck) .
but three straight incomplete
Wahama - Goldsberry 1 pacing to a 2.,., length victory Friday to capture the ;
in the featured $3,000 ninth featured ninth race at ;
yard
run !Sm ith kick)
passes and a run failed to
Milton
Hopkins
11
yard
race.
Thistledown.
i
produce anything.
run !Kick failed)
The
winner
,
drive
n
by
The
winner,
ridden
by
Rick
'
Brett· Holbrook recovered
Milton - Kirtley 34 yard
an Alford fumble on the pass Interception !Alford Robert Davenport, covered Luhr, paid $5.80, S3.4ll and ~
the mile in 2:03 3-5 and $3.00. Full Green was aecond .'
Milton 24 yard line to give the· kick!.
Individual
Stotislics
returned 19 .20, 16.60 . and and Proper Position waa l
White Falcons another. exRushing : Waham a: Oliver $4.20. Charity Byrd was .
third.
; 0
cellent scoring opportunity 9-27, Thompson 12·23, Barnltz
The l.S-3 tenth race trilecta
for the second consecutive 1-7, Davis · 1-2, Goldsberry 10 second and returned $22.60
and 19.20, whlle Roan Magic Ill Gtwn Scot, Easy Mann.er
series of downs but the six 1·12) '
Mil
ton
:
Altord
15
-85,
finished third and paid $6.80. and ·Angles Sweet Pie was
Yard line was as close as the
Hopkins
9-29;
.Kirtley
6-1
9,
The tenth race blg triple of worth 11,1160.80 and the 10-11
Falcons could· get. Milton Foster J.JJ ; Cham~e J.J.
4-10-a was worth $849.00.
daily double of Bonnie's
then began a sustaining drlve
Receiving :
Wahama :
A crowd of 3,555 wagered Delight and Free. Stiver
of 15· plays eating up the Sayre 5·46, Blessing 2-34,
$379,242.
returned 1211.60.
remainder of time left in the Davis 1-9, Barnltz 1-4.
Mi lton : Wallace 1-16.
contest.
. Pcts slng :· Wahama : GoldsIndividual statistics for the berry 9-19-93-1, Davis 0-2.
Milton ; Hopkins J.J.t6-1.
White Falcons show Jim
Oliver and Tim Thompson as
the leading rushers with 27
and 23 yards respectively.
Tim Sayre caught live passes
LONG BEACH , Calif .
for 46 yards and Gregg (UPI ) - Tour pro Gary
Blessing two receptions for 34 McCord of Escondindo;
OCTOBER SPECIAL '
ya'rct,. including a 26 yard Calif., and club pro Paul Wise
grab in the 68 yard touchdown of El Segundo, Calif., fired
.
drlv0.
.
one-under-par ils Friday to
Mike Goldsberry connected relilin the lead In the $25,000
on 9 of 19 aerials for 93 yards. Long Beach Queen Mary
Open. T11esday .thr11 Saturday evenings by
The senior lefthander bad one Open golf tournament.
appointment.
·
.pass picked off and had · Wise and McCord each shot
numerous pitches dropped by ' 68s In the opening r round
2J6·1246
his receivers due to the wet Thursday and both collected
Hannan Trace Road
football.
three birdies and two'bogeys
(Off Rt.790)
Milton was led by the Friday over the 6,800-yard El
Lake is open for fishing.
punishing running of senior Dorado Municipal course lor
Dperoto(S Pat bllnco, Randy Singleton. Ownerhllllback Rick Alford who · a five-under 139 total.
'
lf carries and scored four of
the five Pirate touchdowns..
He struck paydirt first with
lessthanfourminutesgonein
the first · quarter When he
broke loose on a 35 yard run
from serinunage. One minute
later Nortli-...Gallia's Justis
made It 12-0 when hi. returned
a Southern punt 50 yards.
The Pirates added some
insurance points in the
second quarter when they
again ·chalked Up twelve
points on two ·more Logan

SHOT DOWN PRICES
'•

BRANDY BIRCH

Blue Angels

Milton. stops. Wahama, 20-7

Westervil le N23 Col Brlggo 20
Col l in den 21 Col· Central 0
Bexley .15 Col Academy tc

.

Princeton 37 Ham ilton Tatl 0

"Your Full Service People To People Bank"
MEMBER F IC

,

Youngs Cardinal M oone y 41 . IS

Meigs defeats Waverly

MAIN BANK

SATURDAY

Heath 27 Licking His 8

Aide' 7
Danville 48 East Knox 0
Gahanna 42 Mt. Vernon 7

MAIN BANK
~ .t-~·

6 .

U tica '40 Northridge 6
Cen terbur g 18 Jonathan

--·'The 1'irst National Serves Its Customers
6.Full Days A Week

9 AM-3 PM
9 AM-3 PM

Marrsvllle f6 Dublin 13Wes Jefferson 21 Fronklln
Hfs 13 · Hamilton Twp 20 Grandview

North·

Ridgedale 14 Mohawk

First Nat-ional
Bank

MON.-WED.
FRIDAY

16

Admiral

Shawnee .6

NO BANK IN THE AREA
IS OPEN
LONGER HOURS THAN THE

1

Lorain

Covington 26 Cl ark
western- 3

Cl earcreek

Fisher Calh o

• Pebble texluJed cowhide
leather

~lyria 28

Hilliard 26 Delaware 6
Col Harfley 26 Col Wthrle a
Lancaster 24 Upper Arlington

a

.King o
Buck,eye Soufh ·OBridgepor t a
Woodsfield 24 'Beallesvllle 8
Shadyside 29 Union Local 6
Paden City 12 St. Marys 0
Urbana Jl Greenan 6

r·

16

By Gre1 Bailey
RACINE - The North
Gallia Pirates came to Southern territory Friday oight
. and went away victors 3U
and proved that they are a
real tiUe threat in the SVAC
this year. lt now appears that
the real showdown· will come
in the last night of the season
when the Pirates tangle with
Kyger Creek.
The big story at Racine was
Npi1h Gallili's Fred Logan as
be seanipered for 143 yards in

S0

Valley 6
Findlay 27 Marlon Harding
Shelby JB Gallon 12

5 New LeK 1ngton defeated Tri
valley 34 6
'
6 Columbus wauerson plays
ColuMbus Ready Saturday
Urbi!lna defeated Greenon,_JJ.

Amanda

Pirates ·b omb Tornadoes, 32-6

Everoreen 7 Archlbold 0 '• Worthington Jl Col Westland
Colonel Crawford 27 River 6

3. Ironton defeated Wellston 36

Satu.rday
10. Bella ire ·p1ay5 Glendale
(W.Va ,J Saturdey
Cl•n AAA . .
,
AAA., lo.st to Sandusky 22-19.Here Is how the lop len ill the 1. Cirn:innati Moeller defeated
lhree classes tared Fr iday Cins:;inna ti Elder 32 6
2. F indlay delealed Marior1
, nlg bJ :
, ClauA -·
Hard ing 27 0
1. Newark Catholic I0$1 to 3. . Gahanna ~incoln defeat~d
Hebron Lakewood 20 1
MI . Vernon 42 7
2. Arlington defeated Liberty
4. Cinci nnat i Pr inceton defeated
Benton li-0
Ham ilton Taft J7 o
-~
J . Black River defeated Coll ins 5. Youngstown c ardinal
western Reserve 6l -O
Mooney dete&amp;te d Campbell
4. Newcomerstown defeated Memorial 41 -0
,
Tuscarawas CathOlic 33·7
6.
Zanesv i lle
de feat ed
5. Blufflon defeated Spencer
Chi ll icothe 34 -0
·ville 15· 1]
~
7.
Alliance
plays
Easl
6. Sandusky St. Mary 's plays Liverpool Saturday
Fremont St. Joseph Saturday
8. Ely·r i a defeat ed Lo'r a in
7. Cedarville lost to Clark Admiral K ing 28 -0
·southeestern J0-20
9. Lorain Senior lost to San .
8. Cer ey def ea~ed Wynford 42-6 dusky 22 19
9. Ridgemont de feated Wl'lynes - 10 . M lctdle town defea te d
f leld-Goshen 25-14
Fai rfi eld 28 14
10. Clark Sou theaster n defeBted
.
Cedarvil le 30-20
Clan P..A . ~
Ohio High School
1. Wyoming lo51 to Reading 14·8
· Football. Results
2. Ak ron Sl. Vl nceni -SI . Marv
United Press lnterna11onal
Lancaster. 24 Upper Ar lingtQn

WOLVERINEao
6" WELT WORK BOOT

'

Fr.iiJJly's grid scores

;~:

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CASH &amp; CARRY
"FREE PARKING"

I

· WICABIHI
WIIOLt YIAI LONG

SIREET
,,
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Y.fRIDAY

1:00 TO 5:00-

POINT PLEASANT

RDAY
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�'.tv-l~-~Wl08Y nm~nune1, :&gt;unaay, uct. tU, 1117S

•

~==-~;$.;;x::::::::~;~::::~::::~:=::::::::::::::::::::~::;~:::::::::;:::::::;::::::::::::::::~:::::~::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:1*

~~

~·

.

-~ How top _t~ms jared1Frida1
COLUMBUS {UP il - Two Ot
the top rated teams ln the UPI

Board ol coaches ' poll were
detealfod

In

Fr iday

night

oames.

f\lewark CathOlic , tops in
Clast A, lost. 7tl-7 to Hebron
Lakewood, whi!e Wyoming , the
leader in Clns AA , lost 14-8 to
Reading .
Clnclnnil!ti Moeller , tops in
Clwu AAA , defeated Cinci nnat i
Elder 32-6.
No.
10 Class
A
Clark
Southeaste-rn defeated severith
ranked Cedarvif!e 30 -10. wnite
Lorain Senior, nint h ill Class

defea ted Cleveland Si. Ignatius

Newcomerstown 33 Tusky Groveport 34 Whllthllt a
Cath 7
1 Reynoldsburg 10 Weslef'vlllt

• 7

Napoleon 26 Wauseon 6

3
4. 51. Mar ys Memor ial defeated
Celina 32 0

8. Shelby defeated Gallon 28 12
9 Huron plays Elyr ia West

14

Newark 25 Winter svi ll e 0
Lakewood 20 New ark Cath 7
Utica 40 Nor th r idge 6
Norwalk 33 Bucyru s 13
Bell evue 13 Ti fl ln Columbian

7
_findl ay 27 Marlon Harding 0

Cuyahoga Hts 31 Slrongsvill e
15
Ashl a bula Edg ewood 20
Co11neaut 14

. Amherst 13 Wellington 0
Cte Latin 34 Erie {Pci. ) Te&lt;:h

"

Ri ve r da le 14 £ 1g_in 6
M onroeville 34 Gr een wich S

Cen o

New London 21 Mapleton 6
Day Ro th 58 Day Kaiser 0
Fairb or n Pa rk Hill
21
Tecumseh 13
Centervi lle 3 Spr ingfield S 0

Spr ingfield N16 Day Stebbins
12
Oay Cham -Ju l 12 Day

· Fa ir view 6
Da y Carroii 2B Lima Sh awnee

• WeH construction

• Cushion insole and steel
shank a~ch supporl
• Oiile.sistant neoprene sole
and heel

,0
Leba non 0 Lakota 0
Lemon -Monr oe
30
Mid dletow n Fenw ick 6
Marion Loca l 20 Ansonia 0
Mins ter 14 Bradford 0
St. M ar y 32 Ce lina 0
Wapakoneta 21 Defiance 14
twin Val ley S 44 Ne w Miami
0
Belle f on taine
22
N or theast er n 0
Coshocton 28 West Holmes 0
Indian ValleyS 27 Ridg ewood

CARL'S
SHOE STORE
Gallipolis, Ohio

6

London · 21

•

NOBLE SMOTIIERED - Waverly's Jeff.Noble (80, in
while) is smothered by Meigs Dan Granda! (82) and a host

of Marauders during Friday's league gsme at Waverly.
Other l)larauders in photo are Dave Blake (35) Ray Willford (74) and Dave Miler (65).
'

•

for first SEOAL win
•
By Greg BaUey
WAVERLY - The Meigs
high school football team
evened Its league record
Friday night as ihe
Marauders travelled to
Waverly and squeaked by the
winless Tigers 7-0.
Fullback Dan Buffington
led his team to victory as he
titne and again crashed the
Tiger line and ended the night
with 154 yards on 27 carries.
Neither team seemed
anxious to win as they played
the entire first period withOut
mounting a serious threat.
The second quarter looked to
be the same way until Meigs
got a break When they force d
the Tigers to punt lrol)l deep
within their own territory and
the . Marauders · ·round
themselves with the ball on
the Waverly"!l6 yard Hne.
Buffington then took over
and carried the ball eight
straight times and took the
pigskin down to the four.
Junior southpaw 9.uarterback

·(2nd AVE. ENTRANCE)

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9 AM-3 PM

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The First Natinnal is open JonKer hours for the
.convenience of their customers.

3 LOCATIONS TO ·SERVE ·YOU!
MAIN OFFICE-SECOND AVE.
AUTO BANK-THIRD AVE.
VINTON BRANCH-VINTON

,. .

Watkins Memorl~l 6 Gran .
.vi ll e 3
.

Springfield Bloom Carroll44 Berne Union
6

Cana l Winchester 24 Fairfield
4

13

Uhion 20
Pi ckeri ngton 21 Mlller$port 0

-

Fredericktown 13 Crestview 6 Mt. Gilead 16 Bvckeye Valley
Steubenville 37 Youngs town 6

No
Austintown Fitch 7 Akron
Howland 0
, Boardman 28 Struthers 6

Big Walnut 7 Northmor 7
Bedford (Mich.) 7 Oregon
Clay 6

Washington CH22 Sylvania

~

George GIIIJl carried it for
two more, tailback Steve
Randolph picked up a yard,
and then on the next pl~y
Randolph fo und paydir t.
After a Meigs penalty; Duane
-Weber kicked the extra point
lo make the soore read 7~
and that's the way it ended.
Meigs threatened twice
more in the . game.. In the
second period they had the
hall on the Waverly ten, but
fwnbled ·lhe ball away. They
did that a total of twice on the' ·
night while Waverly lost one
of its two fwnbles. In the
third quarter Meigs had the
ball on the Tiger 12, but a
Weber field goal was blocked.
Waverly got a final chance
with just two mimites left in
the game when they took a
punt on the Meigs 43 and
began a drive. A ten yard
gain by Rob . Leffler and a
completed pass coupled with
a fifteen yard penally on the
Marauders left the ball on the
nine yard stripe with first ~ nd
goal. But two plays later
Meigs' Brent Arnold leaped
up at the line and balled a
Tiger pass that came down in
his hands and that was the
·ball game.
Randolph pick ed up
seventeen yards for the
winners while Gum got ten.
Meigs had no completed
passes and had one intercepted. They outrushed
Waverly 181 to 107, ~ut both

Pro standings
NFL Standings
By United Press Interna tion al
American Conf erence
·
East
W. L. T . Pet. PF PA

Balt imore
New Englnd
Mia m i
Buffalo
NV Jets

J 1 o .750 124 87
85
2 2 o .soo ·as 82
~ 2 0 .500 88 69
0 4 0 .000 ~6 11 7
Centra l
W. L. T. Pel. PF PA
Cin ci nnati 3 1 0 .750 117 66
Houston
3 1 0 .750 77 43
Pittsburgh 1 3 0 .250 92 92
Cleveland
1 3· 0 250 89 137
West
W. L. T. Pet . PF PA
Sa n Diego 3 I 0 .750 96 66
Oakl and
J 1 0 .750 86110
Denver
J 1 0 .750 123 JJ
Kansas City 0 4 0 .000 71 Ill
Tampa Bay o 4 o ." ·ooo 16 99
National confere nce
East
W. L. T. Pet. PF PA
Dallas
4 a o 1.000 109 53
Washingtn 3 1 0 .750 77 74
·st. Louis
3 1 0 .750 11.0 88
f.' hila
2 2 0 .500 58 67,
N Y Giants 0 4 0 .000 55 90
Ci!ntra.t
W. L. T. Pet. PF PA
M in n .~
3 0 1 .875 77 34
Chicago
3 1 a .750 62 32
Detroi t
· 1 3 a .2s·o so 54
Green Bay
l J a . 250 45 97
west ·.
••
W. L. T. Pl:t. PF PA
Los Angeles J 0 1 .875 95 62
San Fr ar1
J 1 o .750 92 60
Atlant a
1 J 0 .250 47 68
Newor le &amp;n s1 J a .250 661 12
a 4 ·a .000 . 65126
Seaffle
Sunday' s Gar:n-eS - Atla n ta at New Orl eans
Buffalo at NY Jets
Chicago at M innesota
Dalla s at NY Giant s
Den11er at Houston
Kan City at Washi ngton
M iami at Balt imore
· New E~g la nd af Detroi t
Oakland 51 San Diego
Pi lf~burg h at Clevelan d
Ph iladelphia at St. LO UIS
Sea ttl e liS . Green Bay
at Mi lwaukee
Tampa Bay at Cinc innati
(Only gam es SChedUled )
Monday's Games
San Fran at Los Ang , night
IOn~y 911m e scHeduled)
J 1 0 .750 121

~

Carro ll ton 7 E:asf Canton 6
Lovel and 6 M ariem ont 0
Cin Woodward 21 Cin Aiken 14
Oak Hill 20 Lima 6
Cln Ba con 1 LaSalle 0

teams had a like number of
IND. STATS
Yds. Car.
scrimma ge plays, fifty. Meigs
Buffington
154 . ... 27
Mei!is had · 85 yards in Randolph
17 ..... 8
penalties while Waverly had Gum
10"' .. 5
39. Meigs had nine first downs
TEAM STATS
to Wave rly's eight, but the
,
M W
Tigers got only one in the Penalties
85.. ' .39
entire first hall.
Rush . yds .
181. ' 107
Leffler was the Tigers' Pa5S. yds.
0 ... 36
Atp, Cpf.
0-4. . 6-15
leading rusher as he chalked Passes
lntcpf ,
1. .. .. 2
. up 48 chunks of turf.
First downs
' 9... .. 8
Meigs' overall record is Pun t s, Avg .
JJ~
2-2.... 2·1
now 2-3 while Waverly is 0-5. Fumbles, lost
50 " " 50
Friday the Marauders will Pla ys
By quarters :
host the Athens Bulldogs.
Meigs
0 7 0 G-7
Waverly
oooo-o

Campbell 0
Hubbard 17 Youngs Ursul ine
. 12
Canfield 55 liberty 7

Euclid 27 Bedford. 21
'Mentor 35 Mayfield 12
Westlake 27 Rocky River 7
Brooklyn 40 Brecksville t5

M inera l
Rtdg e 13
l-akev iew 14 Br ookfield 7

Cha grin Fa lls 35 Aurora 12
Midview 21 Lorain Clearvlew

7

Canfield 55 liber ty I

Akron St. Vincent 8 Cte ·St.

Jackson Milton

Ignatius 7

J~ c kson -Milton . 14

14 M ineral

Ridge 13
Adena 28 Paint Valley 0

Genoa 20 Eastwood tc
Zanesvil le 34 'Chillicothe 0

Piketon 40 Ross Zane Trace 6
Greenfield McClean 6 Circlev llle 0
Miami Tn~ce 66 M adison
Plains 0
N~ l sonville 20 Tr.i mble 6

Philo 33 West Muskindum 28
Maysvi lle 22 Crooksville 7 •
Morgan 6 Sheridan 0
Ca ldwell
12
Zanesville
Rosecrans 7
M-eadowbr oOk 14 Ft. Frye 13

Con Moeller 32 Con Elder 6

Cary-Rawson 33 McCom b

I

!

Olmsted Falls 14 Bay VIllage

Fairpor t 53 Perry 32
Col Eastmoor 14 Col South 7 Brookside 14 Oberlin 13 .
Col _Ridge 18 Col Marion -, Columbia 19 Keystone 0
New Lexington 34 Tri-Valley

Col West 26 Co l Mohawk 0 6
Col Northl and 29 Col Nor th 7 United 14 Stan ton Local 3
Col

Brook haven

14

Whelslone 0
Col East 8 Col Mifll in 6

Col

Portsmouth

33

Gn•d
standinu.

Huntington

(W. Va.) 15
Claymont 7 Tuslaw"6

SENIORS
Reserve.,. your job
for after graduation now.
With the Army 's · Delayed Entry
Program, you can come down now and pick
the job you want. And if you qualify , we'll
hold it for you - for up to 270 days,
depending on the job you choose.
Then you can rela x and en joy the
summer without worrying about what you'll
be doing when it's over .
When you do come in the Army, you'll
also have a salary of $361
IT]Onth before
deductions waiting for you . Plus free meals, '·
housing. health care and 30 days paid
vacation . And if you'd like to try college
while you're in, we'll pay up to 75 per cent of
your tuition for you .

a

Call Army
Sgt. ·Tom ..,.,
ON TJiE LOOSE- Meigs' Steve Randolph (15,right)
breaks loose from Waverly defender Jay ·Kegley (24)
during Friday's SEOAL actioo at Waverly. The
Marauders won, 7-0. - Gary Sisk photos,

"Ironton mauls Wellston,
'

6

Frkltn 14

By GARY CLAitK
MILTON . ""' The Milton
Greyhounds halted the
W.ahama Whit e Falcons
consecutive
win string of lour
BOSO NAILED- An ~UIIed North Galllli taclder brfnw! down Southern ace Steve
Friday
night
when they
Bolo (45)durlng Friday's SVAC grid batUe at Racine . Tornado on rtght Ia Joe Brown 118).
turned two costly Wahama
.'- Bruce Galrlel-photo.
·
·
turnovers into touchdowns
"
.,•
enroute to a itl-7 rain soaked
victory.
It was the first win of the
year lor Coach Lewis Ball's
&gt;
Greyhounds while the White
•
Falcons feU victim for -only
the second lime this season.
An 87 yafd touchdown jaunt
with
a Falcon fwnble (one of
eight Wahama fwnbles ori the
~- ffiONTON - Coach Bob
Fu.llback Rick Howard second To 00 a one yard night) and a 34 yard return of
Lull'slrontm Tigers allowe&lt;j tallied the first of hts two plunge with 8:.09 left in the a Mike Goldsberry· pass
WeliJton a brief 3-0 lead touchdowns with 2:261eft in thirdquarterandhefollowed acco~ntedfortwoofthethree
flrlday ntgbt and then the half on a five yard blast with a two point conversion Milton scores. The third
riiethodlcally chewed up the and then ran the two point run.
touchdown for the host
visiting Golden Rockets if6.3 conversion for a 14-3 halftiine
Flashy tailback, Juan Greyhounds was set up by
to run th~lr ·SEOAL' victory lead.
' Thomas, who ftnlshed as the still another Wahama fwnble
skeen to 34 since 1971.
Howard accounted for hts game's top rusher with 99 on their own six yard line.
· ·Following the opening
yards in 17 carries, tallied the
Wahama never gave up
. kickoff the Rockets drove
lastpairolTigertouchdowns. hope and kept fighting back
deep iDto Tiger territory
With 3:09 left in the third despite demoralizing and
l!efore caWng·on Jeff Montperiod Thomas raced 21 costly turnovers . With a
~ery for a 28-yard Held
•~t .
yards to paydlri ·and added second.and goal·situation on
Coal and a 3-0 lead with 6:45
eo
another on a five yard effort the Milton three yard line,
llhowlng on the clock.
with 1:39 rematnlng in the quarterback Mike Golds:: 'l'be four-time defending Teo in ALL G~MLE~ P OP final quarter with Howard berry_ attempted a pitch
~OAL · cllampiona roared Ironton
5 0 0 100 31 running the conversion to outside· but the wet pigskin
lllck to grab the lead on a 29 Gallipolis
• t o 70 42 close out the searing.
squirted loose when It was
f&amp;rd pUs from QB Mike ~an
2 3 .0 60 42
The Ironton offense picked up by Ken Mercer who
BrowntoendJohnWhltehead - ~c:~n
~ ~ ~ ~ ~~ .operate!~_ so smoothly during .taced87yardstopaydirtand
:tith 3:13 left in the. first Meigs
2 3 0 40 77 the contest that the 'I'ig ~ turned what was an inunment
)!erlod.
Chillicothe 2 3 o 49 111 never had to punt as ~! Wahllma to~chdo"!' into six
~ .; __ _ ___:_ _..; . ~':[~, ~~1
j ; · ~ ~ ~ Brown and Company rolled pomts lor Milton. R1ck Alford 1
~
Coal Grove 1 4 0 65 126 up 17 first doWIIl! had 148 booted the PAT to make il7-0.
~ SEATI'LE (UP!) - Four Waverly
o 5 o 22 108 yardsruslllng and~ompleted Wahama"came fi ghting
Seattle
Supersonics,
Non-lugue results:
nine of 11 pa~es for an ad- back with the ensuing kicKoff
1
6
liaclootng three starters from ~~~:~11 ;~,c~ 11 ft~~~e 0
ditional 191 yards.
~o~.:~; s:;:k~7-~_7. ~~~
liat yelll''s team, remained ,S:eredo-Kenova 22 Rock Hill 8
ooe yard out cappin •.a 68
ll!dellned
Friday because of
Wellst •
'
'"Juri and 8lclmeu
SEOAL stondings
oo s offense netted yard drive that took s~n
HI
es
·
•
Team
w L T p OP nine first downs on just 80 minutes and 14 plays. •;
:;~ forwards Leonard Ironton
2 o o 44 3 ~bing yards and two pass
Milton threatened to score
uray and Bruce Seales were Athe
2 o o JJ 4
1
.ijlpt OUi of training camp Loga~s
~~P
etioinns
in
five
atlempts
on
its first possession of the
1 1 0 25 22
l!!lllon. Gray had a badly Jackson
1 1 o 33 25 · WI one tercepted.
second half but a major
lrool...! 1mee
d
Gatllpotls
1 1 0 10 7
penalty and a stiff White
·~C.~
an Sea 108 was Meigs
1 t 0 7 ·19
A steady downpour of rain FalCQn defense held on fourth
tiUI!erjng
oQ 2•
2 0o 0J 33
·~&gt; in the second half led to six down a t lh eJr
· own sx
i yard
::'Guard fmn
Fred .lli'onchitls.
Brown, ·the Wellston
Waverly
~m's top scorer fmn list TOTALS
t 8 o m 155 fwnbles by , the two teams, line.
~. was still recovering
Friday's results:
with Ironton losing one of
A fumbled snap from
Athens 7 Gallipolis 4
three and the Rockets two of center was recovered . by
!J:om
a severe gr$1 Jl!IU and lroofon 36 Wellston 3·
three:
Anthony Courts on tbe. first
was liBtecl as doubtful for the· Meigs 7 Waverly o
·
New York Net exhlblti&lt;11 Logan 25 Jackson .14
Ironton is now 5-0 on the Wahama scrimmage play
pme Swiday.
Oct. 15 games:
year while Wellston dips to 1- giving the Greyhounds a
Ironton at Galllpglls
4.
·
second chance which they
Free agent forward · Dean Athens at Meigs
didn
1
'l'olaon, who,played briefly for Jackson af Wellston
Score by quarters:
't bow. Two atlempts
lbe Sonlcs two seasons ago, Waverly af Logan
WeUston
3 0 0 0- 3 into th-e line failed to net any
Oak Hill at Coal Grove .
Ironton
6 8 14 8-,16 yardageandafiveyarddelay
~!,}!~. out with a sore Chillicothe at Lancaster
of game penalty made the
....-Moe
Roc~ Hill at Fairland

.ups string to 34 in row

34

0

.Lepsic. 17 Hard in Northern 0
Ada 7 Allen East 6

I

Can McKinley 47 Cambridge

,,Arlington 41 Li berty Benton 0

COLLECT: 61,4-446-3343
~

Join· the people wholve joined the Army.

WEEKEND

0CTO.,ER

W~E'VE

11 ·12-13-14·15
' &amp; 16TH

Prefinlshed Paneling Now Reduced: SH~

'

PARADISE LAKE
BEAUTY SALON
PERMANENT WAVES '12.50
SHAMPOO &amp; ·sET s3.75

AU.-PRICES
IN EFFECT
THRU
OCTOBER 16, 1976

AT

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. Mt. Healthy 21 Norwood o

PHONE· ~

Finnevtown 20 Taylor 0
Harr ison 22 Lockland 15

NE 8

~"

CAROLINA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.

N College Hi ll 15 Greenhills 8

Madeira 21 Deer Park 20
Kings •15 Springboro 13
Gree:n~ield 6 Circleville 0
Goshen 20 Williamsbur g 7
New Rich.nond 31 Clermont

top Jackson

, touchdowns. One ctme willl Mundale added llle extru on
8:00 showing on the clock as a run .
be seampered 33 yards, and
Southern's Steve Boao led
JACKSON - The Blue
the other came at the 3:50 his team as he racked up 89 Angels travelled to Jacklon
mark when he bulled !lis way yards in 17 carries while Thursday night to down the
over from the si1 .
.,
Jerry Johnson had eight fronwomen In varsity and JV
Scotl Souder put the only tackles for the Tornadoes . volleyball matches.
Southern poi~$ on the board Souder and Martin Bush each
The JV playing lhort wlth
for the night as he raced back had seven. Plants, Justis, and Sl!eryl Shaw, captain, helplnf.
with one of those second Potts each got live tackles for
oil! &lt;11 the val'lity and Taml ·
quarter kick-offs !or BO yards the Pirates.
feaser ill, took the Jacklon
and a tou chdown. North
North Gallia dominated Jv in 3 ~ames lH, 11-15, IW.
GaUia scored once more "" nearly every aspect of the . Kim Beli, Valerie Finley ind ·
Logan crossed the goal 1ine . game as they racked up 28? Karen Steln)lruni:ler took the
with just :38 on the clock, and yards on the ground and lour searing honO\a.in the match
in ·the air. Southern managed
ooly 149 on the ground and tS at the service lkle. The JV
linlshed the week with 4 wins
via the air route.
The victors fumbled once to boost their reco.rd to 1-1.
The varslty downed t6o
and lost it , while Southern
Jackson
lronwomen in two
situation even more tougher picked up 85 yards on the fumbled three times and lost
straight
games
16-7, 16-13:
ground
-in
mteen
carries.
for Mllton, but quarterback
aU of them.
Maria
Singer
and
Ginny
Sigpal
caUer
Kenny
Hopkins
Kenny Hopkins scored down .
On defense, Re• Justice,
Young
led
.llle
Angels
in
rambled
for
29
yards
in
nine
the left sideline on a keeper
Bill Luckadoo and Ron Plants
service.
The
Angela
got
off
to
attempts.
Hopkins
also
play to put the Greyhounds
·had outstanding nights.
a fast start scoring 6 pointa
out in front 13-7. The extra · completed one pa!S in. three
s ~G before the Ironwomen got
point attempt was wlde to the tries lor 16 yards and had one Department
Rushing
149 287 started. Debt:&gt;le Shaw and
intercepted.
right.
1
23
i~~ 1 -~~ Sheryl Shaw made their first
Milton made it 19-0 on the • W~hama (4·2) must now ~~f!1 "9
Pen~t11
es
15 30 varsity start. heplng the
next series or plays when journey to C3lhoun Co. to
Fumbles,
los!
J.J
1-1 Angels in the absence of
Steve Kirtley picked off a . meet the winless Red Devils.
lntercepll
ons
o
o . Janet Groves, Kathy Daniela
Milton (I .S) wlll play host
Goldsberry aerial for a 34
5·34 3.40 · and Pam Pasquale. Pam
~~~ar
ters:
yard touchdown scamper. On to powerful Ceredo Kenova
17 , 2 0 8.:... 32 · broke a finger Ql a strong :
the play the Wahama on the Greyhounds' home N. Gallla
So
uthern
o 6 o 0- 6 perfonnance against Ironton '
field.
receiver slipped and fell on
Scoring
:
Logan,
35 yd. run, and Wellston Wednesday
Score
by
quarters:
the muddy gridiron enabling
no
ex
tras
.
Justis,
50
yd. punt night and will be out for
0 7 o G-7
Kirtley to dash into the end Wal'lama
, no ex tr es . Logan, 33
Millon
0 7 t3 G-20 return
yd . run , no e.d ras. Logan , 6 several weeks.
•
zone untouched. The PA1 Slatlstlcs .
W M yd.
run.
no
ex
tras
,
Logan
,
17
The
Angels
host
Meigs
First
Downs
9
7
boot by Aiford .made1t 20-0
3-47 3•·149 yd. run , Mundale got extras. Tuesday night at 6:30 and '
with Soli to play·ln the third Yds. Rushing
Yds.
passing
9-93 ·1-16 Snider ran kick -off back 80 travel to Logan Thursday in
stanza . ,
Tot. yards
140
165 ya rd s, no extra s.
action this week.
Wahania threatened twice Passing
9-21
J.J
·1 ·
l
more before Milton ran out Interception s
j
' NORTHFIELD
8·2 5 · ~
.. .
the clock to end the game. A Fumbles-lost
Punts
5-27.2 J-12,3 NORTHFIELD , Oh~
''
partially blocked punt by Pona ltles
5-S5 8-60 (UPI) - Sugar WaU charged
Kelvin Hooaker gave the Off Play_s
TIUSTLEDOWN
'
64, · 42
through Northlleld Park's
NOI\TH RANDALL, Ohio • ; ·
Scoring :
bend area team a first down
Milton - Mercer 87 ya rd stretch Friday night to topple
(UPI) - Groundlark ran the 1
deep inside Greyhound
fum ble recov.e ry (Alford a field of lillies and mares, ·
mile and 4ll yards in 1:43 3-5 ,
territory at the 21 yard line ki ck) .
but three straight incomplete
Wahama - Goldsberry 1 pacing to a 2.,., length victory Friday to capture the ;
in the featured $3,000 ninth featured ninth race at ;
yard
run !Sm ith kick)
passes and a run failed to
Milton
Hopkins
11
yard
race.
Thistledown.
i
produce anything.
run !Kick failed)
The
winner
,
drive
n
by
The
winner,
ridden
by
Rick
'
Brett· Holbrook recovered
Milton - Kirtley 34 yard
an Alford fumble on the pass Interception !Alford Robert Davenport, covered Luhr, paid $5.80, S3.4ll and ~
the mile in 2:03 3-5 and $3.00. Full Green was aecond .'
Milton 24 yard line to give the· kick!.
Individual
Stotislics
returned 19 .20, 16.60 . and and Proper Position waa l
White Falcons another. exRushing : Waham a: Oliver $4.20. Charity Byrd was .
third.
; 0
cellent scoring opportunity 9-27, Thompson 12·23, Barnltz
The l.S-3 tenth race trilecta
for the second consecutive 1-7, Davis · 1-2, Goldsberry 10 second and returned $22.60
and 19.20, whlle Roan Magic Ill Gtwn Scot, Easy Mann.er
series of downs but the six 1·12) '
Mil
ton
:
Altord
15
-85,
finished third and paid $6.80. and ·Angles Sweet Pie was
Yard line was as close as the
Hopkins
9-29;
.Kirtley
6-1
9,
The tenth race blg triple of worth 11,1160.80 and the 10-11
Falcons could· get. Milton Foster J.JJ ; Cham~e J.J.
4-10-a was worth $849.00.
daily double of Bonnie's
then began a sustaining drlve
Receiving :
Wahama :
A crowd of 3,555 wagered Delight and Free. Stiver
of 15· plays eating up the Sayre 5·46, Blessing 2-34,
$379,242.
returned 1211.60.
remainder of time left in the Davis 1-9, Barnltz 1-4.
Mi lton : Wallace 1-16.
contest.
. Pcts slng :· Wahama : GoldsIndividual statistics for the berry 9-19-93-1, Davis 0-2.
Milton ; Hopkins J.J.t6-1.
White Falcons show Jim
Oliver and Tim Thompson as
the leading rushers with 27
and 23 yards respectively.
Tim Sayre caught live passes
LONG BEACH , Calif .
for 46 yards and Gregg (UPI ) - Tour pro Gary
Blessing two receptions for 34 McCord of Escondindo;
OCTOBER SPECIAL '
ya'rct,. including a 26 yard Calif., and club pro Paul Wise
grab in the 68 yard touchdown of El Segundo, Calif., fired
.
drlv0.
.
one-under-par ils Friday to
Mike Goldsberry connected relilin the lead In the $25,000
on 9 of 19 aerials for 93 yards. Long Beach Queen Mary
Open. T11esday .thr11 Saturday evenings by
The senior lefthander bad one Open golf tournament.
appointment.
·
.pass picked off and had · Wise and McCord each shot
numerous pitches dropped by ' 68s In the opening r round
2J6·1246
his receivers due to the wet Thursday and both collected
Hannan Trace Road
football.
three birdies and two'bogeys
(Off Rt.790)
Milton was led by the Friday over the 6,800-yard El
Lake is open for fishing.
punishing running of senior Dorado Municipal course lor
Dperoto(S Pat bllnco, Randy Singleton. Ownerhllllback Rick Alford who · a five-under 139 total.
'
lf carries and scored four of
the five Pirate touchdowns..
He struck paydirt first with
lessthanfourminutesgonein
the first · quarter When he
broke loose on a 35 yard run
from serinunage. One minute
later Nortli-...Gallia's Justis
made It 12-0 when hi. returned
a Southern punt 50 yards.
The Pirates added some
insurance points in the
second quarter when they
again ·chalked Up twelve
points on two ·more Logan

SHOT DOWN PRICES
'•

BRANDY BIRCH

Blue Angels

Milton. stops. Wahama, 20-7

Westervil le N23 Col Brlggo 20
Col l in den 21 Col· Central 0
Bexley .15 Col Academy tc

.

Princeton 37 Ham ilton Tatl 0

"Your Full Service People To People Bank"
MEMBER F IC

,

Youngs Cardinal M oone y 41 . IS

Meigs defeats Waverly

MAIN BANK

SATURDAY

Heath 27 Licking His 8

Aide' 7
Danville 48 East Knox 0
Gahanna 42 Mt. Vernon 7

MAIN BANK
~ .t-~·

6 .

U tica '40 Northridge 6
Cen terbur g 18 Jonathan

--·'The 1'irst National Serves Its Customers
6.Full Days A Week

9 AM-3 PM
9 AM-3 PM

Marrsvllle f6 Dublin 13Wes Jefferson 21 Fronklln
Hfs 13 · Hamilton Twp 20 Grandview

North·

Ridgedale 14 Mohawk

First Nat-ional
Bank

MON.-WED.
FRIDAY

16

Admiral

Shawnee .6

NO BANK IN THE AREA
IS OPEN
LONGER HOURS THAN THE

1

Lorain

Covington 26 Cl ark
western- 3

Cl earcreek

Fisher Calh o

• Pebble texluJed cowhide
leather

~lyria 28

Hilliard 26 Delaware 6
Col Harfley 26 Col Wthrle a
Lancaster 24 Upper Arlington

a

.King o
Buck,eye Soufh ·OBridgepor t a
Woodsfield 24 'Beallesvllle 8
Shadyside 29 Union Local 6
Paden City 12 St. Marys 0
Urbana Jl Greenan 6

r·

16

By Gre1 Bailey
RACINE - The North
Gallia Pirates came to Southern territory Friday oight
. and went away victors 3U
and proved that they are a
real tiUe threat in the SVAC
this year. lt now appears that
the real showdown· will come
in the last night of the season
when the Pirates tangle with
Kyger Creek.
The big story at Racine was
Npi1h Gallili's Fred Logan as
be seanipered for 143 yards in

S0

Valley 6
Findlay 27 Marlon Harding
Shelby JB Gallon 12

5 New LeK 1ngton defeated Tri
valley 34 6
'
6 Columbus wauerson plays
ColuMbus Ready Saturday
Urbi!lna defeated Greenon,_JJ.

Amanda

Pirates ·b omb Tornadoes, 32-6

Everoreen 7 Archlbold 0 '• Worthington Jl Col Westland
Colonel Crawford 27 River 6

3. Ironton defeated Wellston 36

Satu.rday
10. Bella ire ·p1ay5 Glendale
(W.Va ,J Saturdey
Cl•n AAA . .
,
AAA., lo.st to Sandusky 22-19.Here Is how the lop len ill the 1. Cirn:innati Moeller defeated
lhree classes tared Fr iday Cins:;inna ti Elder 32 6
2. F indlay delealed Marior1
, nlg bJ :
, ClauA -·
Hard ing 27 0
1. Newark Catholic I0$1 to 3. . Gahanna ~incoln defeat~d
Hebron Lakewood 20 1
MI . Vernon 42 7
2. Arlington defeated Liberty
4. Cinci nnat i Pr inceton defeated
Benton li-0
Ham ilton Taft J7 o
-~
J . Black River defeated Coll ins 5. Youngstown c ardinal
western Reserve 6l -O
Mooney dete&amp;te d Campbell
4. Newcomerstown defeated Memorial 41 -0
,
Tuscarawas CathOlic 33·7
6.
Zanesv i lle
de feat ed
5. Blufflon defeated Spencer
Chi ll icothe 34 -0
·ville 15· 1]
~
7.
Alliance
plays
Easl
6. Sandusky St. Mary 's plays Liverpool Saturday
Fremont St. Joseph Saturday
8. Ely·r i a defeat ed Lo'r a in
7. Cedarville lost to Clark Admiral K ing 28 -0
·southeestern J0-20
9. Lorain Senior lost to San .
8. Cer ey def ea~ed Wynford 42-6 dusky 22 19
9. Ridgemont de feated Wl'lynes - 10 . M lctdle town defea te d
f leld-Goshen 25-14
Fai rfi eld 28 14
10. Clark Sou theaster n defeBted
.
Cedarvil le 30-20
Clan P..A . ~
Ohio High School
1. Wyoming lo51 to Reading 14·8
· Football. Results
2. Ak ron Sl. Vl nceni -SI . Marv
United Press lnterna11onal
Lancaster. 24 Upper Ar lingtQn

WOLVERINEao
6" WELT WORK BOOT

'

Fr.iiJJly's grid scores

;~:

.

'

CASH &amp; CARRY
"FREE PARKING"

I

· WICABIHI
WIIOLt YIAI LONG

SIREET
,,
I

'"

•

675-1160
Y.fRIDAY

1:00 TO 5:00-

POINT PLEASANT

RDAY
I'

�.·
7G-TheSundayTiJnes.Senlinel, Sunday, Oct, 10,1978
· ~

Carter embargo Your Wayne National Forest
statement held
a~ relealed - enough to leave the
coolest filhennan awestruck and
tremb~ inside his waders.
FIIIU( tile mout!n~ the Blark
River - momlDc I l11t eouat of
letlplq 15 ud 21 poud aalmOD that
rame -pletely cle.. of tile Wllef
century ago lqmberjacks
to crub den In 1 belly fioeplq ker- ·
Gag~ shore to shore on a river of
lflll•b. rve never •eea aoytlllq like
lumber for a grow!Jlg nation.
It! WIU.O.C fall, '1uch anllts alwaya
of the loggejl over land Is now
breulbl forlb a "did you lee
of the Huron National Forest 11IATl" from Dtarlly fl1bermea.
the land II again suppOrting a ·
What has caused such an lh!th•l'""" forest. This time, though, it
crease In trout and salmon
amanagejl forest producing much populaUons in what some now call
than lust timber.
the greatest flsliing habitat in the
The virgin timber II gone now Great Lakes?
new naturall:tSOurce, perhap8
Certainly control of the seal
lamprey bas to rank high on the list.
the In addlUon to that, however, Is inbe
FISH!in"Big
Coho and Chinook salmoo, creased knl!wledge gained through
:steelhutd and brown and lake trout research about managing Inturning the Great Lakea In a troduced species such as cobil,
naUonaDy known SPOrts llsherv. ·
chinook and steelhead.
I'm here for the fall ouUng of
As an erample, hatchery raised
u.i Outdoo~ Writers of Ohio - a fipgerllng chinook salmon are held
UtUe bu.ness, but mostly to sample ~ streams alon~ take l!uron to
the fantaattc new salmon and trout . "imprint" their memory with that
fiShery that has deyeloped in the particular stream. This Imprinting
Great Lakes - Superior, Michigan · process takes about 10 days afler
and Huron.
which they are· released through
Sleepy little lakeabore towns check dams to go their, own way'
such -as Harrisville and Oscnda;- which is usually into Lake Huron.
economlcs were dependent on
After two years growth, these
lumbering and Ianning, have been · fish, now in the 10 pound size class,
given a shot of adrenalln. Fishermen are ready to make their unerring
just finding out about 25 pound way back to the exact stream where
~!chhlook salmon and a 10 pound steel- they were "born." Experts believe
whose lighting leaps are each stream has its own distinctive
l!!'::~:~~~~~:.nt of . tarpon and "smell" and the fish simply follows
his-her nose hundreds of miles back
of !he writers reported to what will be their spawning
!atclrlng a 15 pound chb)ook that grounds.
times ~fore being caught
Ariglers employ two major

·contradictory

• - Six Blue Devils smothered
CONKEY SACKED
Athens Quarterback Brian Conkey oq·this play Friday on
Memorial Field ln Galllpolls. Bringing down the AHS

ev=:~~ ~~~~:;~ls:e~nowlng

dUring this actloo photo of the Meigs-Waverly game
Frlday.'Leading interference is Dan Granda!, 82. Tiger
defender m. left is Jay Kegley.

BUFFINGTON HAS BIG GAIN - Meigs Dan
Buffington (40, on right) gained a huge piece of yardage
signal caller are Tim Olevaller, (81 ), Mike Staggs (80) ,
Kev Jackson (82); Paul Finnicum (76) and Dan Sickles
·(42). On left ln rear Is Mike Wigglesworth (7o) and on
right is Kent Shawver (74).

an

Rio winners
announced
_ •· RIO GRANDE - Despite
heavy rains Friday night and
early Saturday morning, the
sixth annuai'ilio Grande College Invitational Cross
Country Race was held
Saturday .
Meet directors Bob Willey
and Terry Cordle had to set
up a special road course for
the Class A, Class AA and
,Class AAA runners and college participants because
the regular cross-country
c6urse was inundated by high .
wC:~ter.

GALUA ACAQEMY High School's marching band pepped things up when it appeared
the Blue Devils were going to score the go.ahead toochdown Ia te in the fourth period Friday,
Athens held on, however, to edge GAHS, 7-4, stopping the Gallians on the Bulldog siX-inch
line with 3:31 remaining in the game.
·

•

Eight ex-Bengals zn
Tampa Bucs lineup
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
"new"
Tampa
Bay

Buccaneers already seem old
hal to the Cincinnati 13\!ngals.

Den Talk
By GREG BAILEY
POMEROY - The interest in the ancien£ cross bow is
zooming now that Ohio is going to have Us first crossbow
season. I do have one important correction to niake, however,
before I tellyoumoreabout the weapon. Last Sunday 1 made a
mistake - the season runs from January 1-22, NOT to the 25th.
The season was Instituted this year mainly as a result of a
push of about forty people across the state. This is not to say
that these f~ty folks are "bad eggs", but if ~ny of we sportsmen are agamst thisaeason,.it's a shame our apathy is so great
lthat we didn't voice our opinion. In a way, my hat's off to those
forty lor baving the ambition to work lor what they wanted.
Now lor my opinions (and some facts) on this new season.
As far as I can see, there are no "pros" for the crossboW and
my opinion is shared by many of the Department of Naiural
Resources people. There will undoubtedly be many more
wounded deer that•will not be harvested but will crawl off to a
slow death. The reason is that many new hunters who have
never hunted with a bow will take to the field, thinking this is
an easy sport. The crossbows are selling like hotcakes.
Lots of people havelhe misconception that this weapon
shoots like a rifle. Not true, not true ! The majority of
crossbows are not consistently accurate , especially the
cheaper models. A second drawback in the weapon itself is its
Harrow." Bolts, as these arrows are ccilled, average only about
half as long as an arrow shot In a traditional bow. Due to this
decrease in size and weight, the penetration will be much less,
thus more wounded animals will escape. Achild's thirty-pound
bow will achieve nearly the same penetration as an 80-pound
crossbow.
.
·
Many wildlife people say tbatthey have yet to see a truly
sale crossbow. The loading and cocking Is dangerous because
it requires the loader to actually have his hand in front of the
device. Although some comji with safety devices, these stiU
have their drawbacks 'as they aren't nearly fool-proof.
The price of a crowsbow runs from $60 - $3110, and the more
el]lenslve ones can be accurate, especially if they're fitted
• with a ~pe. The only two specifications the State requires is a
25-inch stock and a working safety.
Game protectors will face some new problems with this
weapon. Poaching Will be easier becall,'le the noise will be
practically nil.
But tho'*! ol.you who choose to try the crossbow will also
face a problem - transporting your weapon. If you carry it in
your car and the bolts are accessible, you'll be pinched the
same as l!you'd been carrying a rllie. $o be aware.
Now that the regular archery sea'son is open, there are
\hree placeB to check your deer if you get luckY. Andy Lyles,
~ur local game trotector~ts-one of them. Just give him a call at
~7. Forked Run State Park will he an official station .this
l!eBSOn, and so will Erwin's Gull in Middleport. Forked Run is
for Meigs. County-killed deer only.
,
Andy would like to make it clear on the hunting hours of
•' certain .Jrildllfe.lf there Is not a set time (like s:oo, etc.) then
· the times are set by the Division of Wildlife. For instance,
some species are hunted from sunrise to sunset, The Division
!iuts out a pamphlet with the ofllclanmnrises and sunsets
Usted. Ooo'lo put Andy.on the spot by your not knowing when
It's legal to hunt. You can get a list of these times by calling
him or by writing the Athens office of the Division of Wildlife,
Department of Natural Resources, and ask for publication No.
3f11. You will abide by the times listed lor Columbus since.
·
that's the neatest major city.
The duck and geese stampa and other information are
deftnJtely now at the Pomeroy Post Office. They were a little
.
.late arriving.
Doo 't forget the Bass Tournament coming up next
weekend.

Eigllt of the 43-man Tampa .
ll!am Ulking the field Sunday
against Cincinnati are .exBengals. _
The Buccsneers already
are being called "Bengals
South," but another term fils
the Bucs better - winless.
As' could be expected, the
expansion. club is 0-4 so far ,
and just about everybody
figures Tampa to be Q-; after
Sunday.
Od.dsmakers say the
Bengals·Bucs matchup is the
most lopsided this weekend
and they have made
Cil)cinnsti a whOpping 21. poinUavorile.
That kind of a point spread
seem justified hetause the
Bengals rarely lose at home ,
plus Cincy is off to a solid 3-1
start this year with one of its
best teams ever.
And , Tampa will he without
its top defensive performer,
end Lee Roy Seimon, the
NFL's lop rookie draft pick.
The 1).3, 263-pound former
Oklahoma star, who injured
his knee last weekend against
llaltimore, will be replaced
by .his "little" brother, 6-I,
254-pound Dewey.
·
Also, it
must be
remeil)bered that eight of the
Tampa players, several of
them starters, are Bengal
castoffs.
Former Benga!s now
playing for Tampa are
punter·placekicker Dave
Greeri, starting running
backs Charlie Davis and Ed
Williarils, reserve running
back Essex Johnson, starting
defensive back Danny Reece ,
starting guard Howard Fest;
mlich·used tight end Jack
Novak and possible starting
defensive back Ricky Davis.
,After failing to ·score a
touchdown in its first three .
games, Tampa finally
reached .the end zone a couple
of times last Sunday against
Baltimore, but still was
trampled 42-17 by the Colts.
Coach. .John McKay,
.however, is keeping his sense
of humor.
He said of the lall!st defeat,
·•field po.~ition hurt us badly,
dropped passes llurt us badly,
no blocking hurt us badly and
injuries hurt us badly. Otherwise, il was a perfect alter-

noon.

Thirty-six high school
teams and three college
squads took part inothe meet.
Georgetown
captured
Class A honors with 53 points.
Newark Heath was the Class
AA charr1pion with 38 poinis.
Cincinnati . Forest Park
claimed AAA honors with 47
points.
Rio Grande College cal&gt;'
lured the college division
title with 22 points.
Brian Jonard, Caldwell,
captured Class A individual
lwnors with a 10:29 effort.
Jay Moore, Bethel-Tate, was
the Class AA champion with
a 10:30 effort and James
Smith, Dayton Roth, was the
Class AAA champion with.a
!O ~ li performance.
Rio Gande's Bernard Tilly
captured the college division
honors with a 26 :56 'perfmmance .
The top three teams in each
division received team and
individual trophies. The top
10 runners ·in each class also
received individual trophies.
Here's Saturday's resulis :
CLASS A
Points
53

Team

Georgetown

83

Cincinnati CD

head coach Bill Johnson's
debut Is going great, but he
realizes Tampa is itching lor
its first win and is waiJiing
his players of an JJpse(
possibility.
"This is a very important
game for us," ~ declared.
" We cannot afford any kind
of letdown. We must keep our
momentum going."
Although the Buccaneers
would like to ambush the
Bengals, it appears Tampa's
best chance. for a win will
come a week from Sunday,
when lhey entertain fellow
expansion team ·Seattle.

·'

90
99

112 '"""

ll5
170
181
201

Batavia

Zane Trace

Adena .
Ross SE
CLASS A

Points

Heath
Ridgewood

38

@

93

Fairfield Union
Circleville

119

Bethel Tate

Chesapeake

Indian Lake
Vincent Warren

250

257
285
297
317
323
:l60
387

Greenfield .
Jackson
Ironton

Wheelersburg'
Minford

Edgewood
CLASS AAA
Team

.Forest Po;~rk
Gahanna

Texas race

PointS
47

75
109

Cln. Oak Hills
Copley
Ketlerlng Alter

116

120

Miamisburg

175

Norwood

186

Marietta

207

BRAVE ELEMENTS- North Gallla Plrall! followers braved the elements in Racine
Friday night to watch their team roll over the Tornados. Left to right are Margie Thaxton,
Glory Pope, BeckY Hash, Debbie Hash and Gwynn Hash.
·

Dayton Roth
207 Marietta 2.8 Grove City 8
Alhens
2~0
Bel pre 22 River Loca I 8
Hudson
2@ Butler
52 Oxford .Talawanda
Ch illicothe
295 12
COLLEGE DIVISION .
Trenton
EdgeWood
35
Team
Points Franklin 0
Rio Grande
. 22
Northern Ky St.
L~keland

34

CC

. 69

Kent State %1,
Western M!cb. lZ
KENT, Ohio (UP!)
Junior quarterback Mike
Wljalen ran for 104 yards and
two touchdowns Saturday to
lead Kent State to a 24-12
error-filled Mid-Anierican
Conference . victory over .
Weste.rn Michigan.
The Golden Flashes, now 32 overall and 2-1 in the MAC,
grabbed four of Western's
nine fumbles on ·a windy,
rainy day, two of them,
covered by defensive tackle
Glenn Deadmond, setting up
Kent touchdowns. ·

Martins Ferry 29 St. Clairs·
ville 0

Norwayne 30 Hillsdale 20
Northwestern 21 Rittman 0
Northmont 18 Sidney 13
Sidney Lehman 42 Grant 20
Parkway 47 New Bremen 0 .
Minster 14 Bradford 0

_______..__________
Shadyside 29 Union Local 6
Dover 14 Wooster 12
Manchester 23 Triway '6
Dalton 24 Waynedale 15

,_.

Doylestown 14 Smithtown 8

Blanchester 14 Mason 6

WORKING FULL TIME ·

Ashland 35,•Musldngum 0
MUSKINGUM, Ohio (UP!)
- Ashland College tailback
Tim Burns rushed lor 112
yards in 18 carries and scored
touchdowns ol25 and 20 yards
Saturday to lead the Eagles
to a 3o-O thrashing of
prevl.ously
undefeated
Muskingum.
.,

...

were

RON JAMES

Ford expects to

FOR ALL
THE PEOPLE

set meat quotas

PD. POL ADV.

LAWTON, Okla. (UPI)_:President Ford said there Is a
"high degree of llkeHhood" some action would be taken
Saturday on Imposing quotas on foreign meat Imports to the
United States - an actioo that Jimmy Carter clalma Is
I)Verdue,

In a private meetJng with about 50 catUemen !rom
Oklahoma, Teus and Kansas Friday night, Ford was pressed
for some Indication on whether he would 1lnpose the heel
quotas on the 13 .countries which export to the United States.

.

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•'

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'

Op.e ning Thursday
'

·

STATE REPRESENTAliVE

.

.

October 14

529 Jackson Pike

SUNDAY,OCTOIIER 10, 1t71
6:oo--VIewpolnt I; This Is The· Life 10.
6:30-Jerry F1lwell 4; Talking HandJ I ; Wethington ·•
Debates for the '70s tO; Newtmaker '16 13.

•

·methods of fishing durin&amp; the
7 :oo--&lt;:hrlst()pher Closeup 3; Thinking It&gt; Black I ; Rev.
autumn and spring mlgratidns.
Cleophus Robinson 13. ,
Spawn bags (dime sl!ed ellllllfiS of .
7:30-ThiS lsthe Life 3; Your Health 4; Bullwlnkle 6;
sabnon eggs enclosed in meah cloth ·: .
Jerry Falwell 11 It Is Written 10; Amarlng Grace
on a hook) and smal) sl!e sllvery ,: ·
Bible Class 19.
•
spoons are preferred for stream and
7:5.S-Biack Cameo 4.
! :do--Mormon Choir 3; Day of Discovery I ; Tanniilakeshore fishing. Boat fishennen
TuKedo 6; Churdl Servlci 10; Blue Ridge' Quartet
trolllng the same type or spoon were
. 13; Sesal)'le Strnt 20.
having the best luck. Shore
8:3G--Oral Robertl 3; Yours for the Asking 4; Gospel
fishermen were having the belt
Caravan 6; Day of Discovery a: James Robison
.success wit]) spawn bags.
Pr-~ts . lp; Re• Humbard 13; Open Blb!t.15.
Ught salt .water or heavy fresh
9:00--Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Hour of Power 11 Oral
· water tackle is needed because It's
Roberts iO; Re• Humbard 6: Rev. Leonard Repan
not uncommon to latch on to a 25
8; Across the Fence 15; Mister ROQers 20.
·•
9:30-Whot Does the Bible Plainly Say? 8; Movla
pounder with 40 pounders a distinct
"The Great Race" 10; Christ Is the Answer 13;
possibility . I saw a 70-year pld .man
-~ .. Insight IS; Sesame Strnt 20.
• ·
land the first chinook of his llfe on
.. · 10 :oo--Jim Franklh\ 3; Church Service 4; Leroy
light $pinning tackle. With 10 pound
Jenklns6; ChrlstlanctnterS; Jimmy Swaggart 13;
test line, II took him 30 minutes to do
Feith for Today 15.
so - nip and tuck all the way.
10:3()-Big Blue Marble 3; Garner Ted Armstrong 1, 13;
Twenty pound test line would be a
ReK Humbard 8; Jimmy Swaggarl 6; This Is the
wise choice.
;
Life 15; Zoom 20.
You take your chances with
11 :co-TV Chapel 3; OSU Football Highlights 4; Hoi
anything lighter. .
Fudge 6; ReK Humbard IS; Rev. Henry Mahan 13;
Rebop 20 .
Allbaugh we saw plenty of fish,
11 :3()-At Issue 3; Animals, Animals, Animals 6.13;
the big run Is stU! a few weeks off.
Face the Nation 8; Once Upon • Clotslc 20.
1\lost of the run Occurs In November.
12
:1l0-Meet
the Pre" 3,4,15; Issues and Answers 6;
The locals t~ld us It's simply un·
Rev. Robert Schuler 8; Rev . Calvin Evant 13;
believable when the streal'il!l are
Boarding House 20,
literally choked with fish. There's
12 :3o--Grandstand 3,15; News Conference 4; NFL
p!enty.of state and NaUonal Forest
Today 8; The Issue 10; Lowor Llghtt)ouae 13;
land to fish from if you're a stream
Caughl I~ the ·Act 20.
.
I:oo-NFL Football 3; NFL Football 4, 15; Com·
· fishennan and charter boat service
munlque 6; NFL Football 8; Face the Nation 10; .
with everything furnished is
College
Footbllll '76 13;Adoms Chronicle• 20; In·
available !I you like that type of
flnlty
Factory
33.
angling. I tried both and enjoyed
1
:3()-Aware
6; Wlldllte In Crisis 10; Zoom 33.
both. Non-resident fishing licenses
2:oo-Polnt of VIew 6; NFL Football 10; lt~uet and
are one dollar per day including the
Answero 13( Leonard Bernstein at Harvard 20;
trout stamp.
Once Upon o Cla!llc 33.
Precise detalla can he obtained
2:31)-Formby's Antique Furniture Workshop 6: Rebop
· by writing the Ol;cnda and Harris33.
3:oo-Witnesa• to Yesterday 6; Next Generation 13;
ville Chambers of Commerce or the
Youth In trouble 33.
Michigan Drpariment of Natural
Resources at Lansing. Have a good
3:3()-Boseball Ploy-on 6,13.
day.
&lt;:oo-NFL Football J, 15; NFL Football ; ; Formby's
Antique Furniture WorkshopS; Crockett's VIctory
Garden 33.
1:3()-FIIm 8; The Othtiro 20; French Chef 33.
4:55-Pollllcal Program 10.
.
s·oo--Festlval of Ll..,ly Arts for Young PeopleB;Movle
' "The Bride• of Fu Manchu" 10; Tennis for
Everyone 33.
.
5:31l--Eiectrlc Compeny 20; Consumer Survival Kit 33.

•

•

..

Title 'Top Turkey of the Year' at st*e in

122
209
238

Grandview Heights

This is the week
that ••soon'' arrives!

~

"But we'll be back," he
promised, adding however,
·•Maybe not in this century,
u10ugh."
As for the Bengals, rookie

South Webster
Waterford
Caldwell

Team

By IIO,WARD FIEU)S
permanent secreiary ls
WASIIINGTON (UP!)
named later 'this 'year and
For the first Ume in the probably alter the electioo.
presidential debates, the
But grain embargoes also
farmer, at leaat lndlrecUy, restrain the free market and
hall been menUoned. ~lmmy farmers
don't
like
Carter mentiooed It and it embargoes. II reduces the
doeln~ bode well !CJ" his amount of foreign sales they
chances of picking up the can make while at the same
!ann vote.
time pushing m«re grain into
"I will never single out food the U.S. market place. .
88 an embargo Item," Carter
The economic law of supply
said In the foreign policy and demarrl says that the
debate In San Francisco more there· is available, the
, Wedneaday night. "If I ever cheaper it wl1l be. That Is
. decided to Impose an good lot the consumer, but
embargo, because of a crisis bad for the ianner ·who
ln lnlerpatlooal relationships, reaUzes a smaller return oo
It would Include all shi[iments his inV.sbnenl and sweat.
of equipment... ! wouldn't
When the United States
single out just food ."
placed an embargo oo beign
That means he would sales of soybellllll in 1973 and
include food in a total on grain sales to the Soviet ·
embargo as retribution Union and Potilnd in 1974 and
agalnlt, say, an Arab ·nation 1975, it incurred the wrath of
f«r hnposlng an oil embargo organizations representing
oo the United States.
the fanner.
·
But Carter's statement in
Oren Lee Staley, tresident
the debate must be tempered of the National Farmers
with position papers he Organization, le!itlfied before
previously provided which a Senate subcommittee
saY .hiB policy woUld be to .. earlier this year. that the
"lncr~ opportunities in the embargo on i;raln sales wthe
world market for our Soviets cost the American
agricultUral commodities farmer between $6 billion and
through an innovative, $10 billion.
aggressive foreign sales
program. I•
And, during a news cooference at Plains, Ga., after he
was ncmlnated, Carter sal( "I certainly agree with the
fact that we should not use
thewltliboldlng or the boycott
· of shl[lllents of food overseas
to try to effectuat.e some sort
of lntematonal pulley ·as it
relates to other coimtrles.
CUERO, Tex. (UP!) - A based on. the first heat at
President Ford shouted at coupla ql real tUrkeys are Worthington's King Turkey
the !lepubllcail cooventlon, going to have It out. No more Day' last Sept. 11, Paycheck
"No more embargoes," and bragging or wild tales, lt'sall could be considered the beit
although the admlnlstratioo going to be settled on main bet.
.
posltim, like· Carter's, has street urrler the hot Texsa
Paycheck dld the three
been muddied somewhat by sun.
blocks distance in one minute
statements since then, the
The wimer will get the tiUe 14.9 secmds, while Ruby
administration· policy oltopturkeyoltheyear.The ·covered the same dlatance In .
remains antlembargo.
loser, well, may end up u
two minutes and 35 seconds,
But that may be only a someone's guest lor ThanksMrs. Ernster, however,
temporary policy. Ford's giving.
emphasized FridaY one heat
running mate, Robert Dole,
Tbe event is the Great does not a cmnplete race
has told audiences that Ford Gobbler Gallop and the make. She said other factors
really didn't mean that favQI'Ites are the long~egged are just as important. as
statement, .since embargoes Ruby Begonia IV from Cuero , .~ed and ' ooce the two
might have to be Imposed In and Paycheck, a highly frightened birds are beiDg
case of a food shortage. •
touted
runner · from . shooed down the street by
Former Agriculture Worthington, Minn.
their trainers anything could
Secretary Earl Butz Insisted
At stake in the grudge happen.
on a policy of letting the free match Sunday Is the title of
M«e than 38,1100 Jl8rtisan
market place deterinine the Tui'key Capital of the W«rlcl, Ruby backers are expected to
price of grain. Thus he which both Cuero and be m hand, while only 10
opposed price supports Worthington lay claim to.
Minnesotans wW be available ·
despite pleas from the
"Last year 1 ·raced Ruby w 1D'ge their turkey on w·
farmers.
·
down the street in Cuero ln viclllry.
• In posiiloo papers, carter 38.3 seconds," said owner
J.luby Begonia IV was
has
criticized
the Sherre Ernster. "That waa selected from a field of three
admlniatratioo policy; "Wiwm aD seconds. No . minut~. The Cuero tiU'keys .who raced In
they say, 'free market,' they people were sorta behind the the Houston A$trodome
realjy mean 'high-risk turkey.
bJ)wee .n
baseba II
market.' The· farmer takes
"Last year she was behind dOUbleheaders last August.
the rlaks; the ~tors get almost five minutes. She got
BeSides the great gobbler
the rewards," he said.
In a crowd and started eating gallop, there
other
Butz' acting successor, popcorn one year. Their turkey races Saturday with
John A., Knebel, worked (Worthington's) turkey new the llnala of the turkey trot
dlrecUy under. Butz and has up m top of a building and r.aces scheduled Sunday.
endoraetl Butz' views ln many watched the lace me year." Other events Include gunspeeches and ·statements.
It will be the fourth year slingers, mariachis, a rodeo,
Agriculture pollcy is not Cuero am Wbrthingtm have arts and crafts and dancing.
likely to change until a held the grudge races and,

·Television Log

446-4554

Gallipolis, Ohio

.,

CatUemen have strongly requested such quotas to protect
dolneitic prices of beef.
"You- can say that t11e of beef imports, and allo'VS
matter of quotas Ia being the President to .adjust the
worked oo at the highest quotas . ~ .n_eeded to protect
level," White House ofllclals domestic pniducers.
The meat Industry 10urces
·quoted the President as
llll)'ing. "If a few details can sald the prime purpose of the
be worl!ed out, lhere.la a high quotas would be to • block
degree of likelihood of Australia from
clrcumvenUng the volWllary
afflnnative actioo."
lhnlt
on Its el[lOI'ls oo the
Ford, however, d~~elined to
United States by operating
Ill)' whether that meant he
definitely would approve through I"'OC"5Slng plants ln
IIIICh quotas. The President Puerto Rico.
U.S. catUemen, clUng a
"1181d be eKJ)tCied 110111e actloo
would be tllken In the next 24 drop In prices f«r domestic
meat, have been pressing the
hoiD'I,
White HoUle offtclala said administration lor several
there were several different weeks to impose the quotas.
Carter , · campaignipg
~ble acU01111 Ford could
Friday
ln El Paso, Tez.,
ta1r1 oo beef . imports, but
called
on
Fll'd to 1mpOae the
would not 10 beyond F«d's
quotaa,
remuU 00 the BUbjecl.
"For the last three years,
Ford's .deputy preu seCI'IIIIIr1, Jciu! Carlaon, saki In catUe producers have been
WllbiJI&amp;Ion the 1184 Meat losing $50 to f]OO on each
lqlort Quail Act requires animal they sell," Carter
the Agriculture Department sald, "Many cattle [l'aducers
to llllb quarterly estimates are being forced out of
,

I

business.
"Consumers, too, will
suffer In the long run If the
present condltlons are
allowed to CCJnlinue. As fewer
and fewer cattle are railed
Ill' market, beef prices may
once agiln slcyrocket to their
1973 levels." ·
"While catUe fanners have
suffered, PrelldenrFord and
former
Secretary
of
Agriculture (Earl) Butz have
hesitated to · protect cattle
raisers from meat lmporla
that exceed t.he legally
perrnlaalble amount,'' Carter
sald.
.
"'lllls admlnlatraUon hu
apparenUy perlllllted beef
import. 111 l!liCI!IIi of the
trigger .level for quotas,"
Carter uld.
Erporllng cowdrlea haw
increasingly turned to the
U.S.. IIIU'ket becauae the
European Onnmccl Markel
has barred
llll!llt lmporla
and Japan has !mpoeed a oneyear cutoff.
· The collbtries exportlna
. meat to the United State&amp;, In
add!Uon to Allltnlla, art
New Zeat.nd, Canada, Costa
Rica,
the - Domlnlcari
Republic, El Salvador,
Gualimala, HalU, H~,
Inland, Mexico, Nicarqua
and Panama.

an

6 : ~To

8e Announced 8; Sesame Street 20i Wnll

Street Wnk 33.
6:30--News 6: 30 Minutes 8; World Press 33: Fran
Curci : Football 13.
J:oo-World of Disney 3,4,15; Bill Cosby 6,13; 60
Minutes a,10; Crockett's ' VIctory Gardens 20;
Onedln Line 33.
7:30-Antlques 20.
' 7:55-Polltlcal Program 6,13.
8:oo--&lt;:olumbo 3,4, 15; Baaeball Plily·off 6,13; Sonny &amp;
Cher 8,10; Evening at Symphony 20,33 .
9:oo--Kojak 8, 10; Masterpiece Theatre 20.33.
9:3ir-Oulncy 3,4,15.
lO :oo-Oelvecchlo 8,10 ; Great Performances 20,33.

11 :oo-News 3,4.8, 10, 13, 15,20; Peter Marshall6; Jonakl
33.
11 :15-CBS News 8,10; Music Holl America 15.
11 :3()-Star Trek 3; Movie "Torbruk" 4; Movies
"Career" 8; Hawaii Flve·O 10; Ironside 13 . .
12:3()-ABC N6ws 6.13.
1:30--Peyton Pia" 4. ·
MONDAY,OCTOBI;R 11.1976
6:oo--Sunrlse Semester 10.
6:15-Engllsh 3; Form Report 13.
6:20-Not For Women Only 13.
,
6:3()-Columbus Today 41 News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
· Ounro of Prevention 10.
·
6:45-Mornlng Report 3.
·
6:50--Good Morning, West VIrginia t3,
6:55-Good Morning, Trl State 13.
7:oo-- Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Chuck White Reports 10.
7:05-Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10 .
7:3()-Schoolles 10.
7:45-Sesame St. 33.
8:oo--Lassle 6; Copt. Kangaroo 8,10.
8:3()-Biq Valley 6.
?;QII-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15; Luc~ Show 8:·
Mike Oouglu 10.
9:30-Cro!S.Wits 3; One Life to Live 61 Good Day! a.
IO:oo--Sanford &amp; Son.3,4, 15; Price Ia Right ,a, 10; Mlka
Douglas 13 .
10: 15-General Hospital 6.
10:30-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15.
11 :co-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Weekday 4; Edge of
Night 6; Gambit 8.10; Morning wllh D.J. 13.
11 : 3()-Stumpen 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13; Lovo of Life
8,10; Sesame St. 33.
•
11 :55-Take1&lt;err8; Ms. FIKit 10.
12 :oo-News 3.6,8,10; Hot Soot 13; Bob Broun 4; 50
Grand Slam 15.
12:3()-Gong Show 3, 15; All My Children 6, 13; Search
for Tomorrow 8, 10..
12:55-NBC News ~.15; Political PrOjlram 8,10.
1:oo--Someroet 3; Ryan's Hope 6.13; Concentration 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:30--Deys of Our Lives 3.4. t5; Family Feud 6,13; As
The World Turns 8,10.
2:0()-$20,000 Pyramid 13; Dinah 6.
2:30-Doctors 3,4,15; One Lite to Live 13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3:oo--Another World 3.4,15; All In The Family a,10;
Woman 20.
3:15-Gellerol Hospital 13.
3:30-4.\aK B. Nimble 6; Match Game 8,10; Llllat,
Yoga &amp; You 20.
&lt;:co-Mister Cartoon 3; Somerset 15; Marcus Welby,
M.D. 4; Howdy Doody 6; Mickey Mouse CIIJb 81
Sesame St. 20,33; Movie" Along Come o Spider" 10;
Olnah 13
·
4:3()-My Thrn Sons3; Emergency One I 6; Partridge
Family 8; Fllntstones 15.
S:oo--Big Volley 3; Mer-v Griffin 4: Mister Rogers
20,33; Star Trek 15.
·
5:3()-News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co. 20,33; Adam·
12 13.
6:oo--News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Education In Tran,~lbn 33.
•
6:30-NBC News3,4,t5; ABC News 13; Andy ·Grlfflth 6;
H~epod!le LI&gt;Cige ·20.

'·

•

.

7:00:: ruth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bownng tor
Dollars 6; Buck Owens 8; To Tetl the Truth 13;
Family Affair 15; The Vet 20; Know Your Sch!JO(s
33.
7:30-That Good Ole Nashville Music J; Bobby VInton
41 Muppet Show 6; Gong Show 8; MacNeil Report
20,33; Candid Camera 13; Friends of Man 15.
8:oo-Little House on the Prairie 3,4,15; Captain &amp;
Tennille 6.13; Adams Chronicles 20,33.
8:3Q-S128,000 @uestlon 8; Phytllt 10.
9·:oo--Movle "Jesus Christ Superstar" 3.4.151' NFL
· Football 6.13; Maude 8, 10; In Performance at Wolf
Trap 20,33.
,
·
·
9:30-Country Music Association Awards 1.10.
10:30--Newa 20; Catch.33 33.
· ·
n :oo--Newa 3,4,1,10,15; MacNeil Report 33.
11: :tO-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; McCiouct. 8; Mary Hart. mon 10; sp(&gt;tlto 33.
12:00:....News 6, 13; Movie "Thunder Atley" 10; Jsnakl
33.
12:30-College Football '76 6; Ironside 13.
1:co-Tomorrow 3.•.
1:30-News 13.
•

.'

'!

•

�.·
7G-TheSundayTiJnes.Senlinel, Sunday, Oct, 10,1978
· ~

Carter embargo Your Wayne National Forest
statement held
a~ relealed - enough to leave the
coolest filhennan awestruck and
tremb~ inside his waders.
FIIIU( tile mout!n~ the Blark
River - momlDc I l11t eouat of
letlplq 15 ud 21 poud aalmOD that
rame -pletely cle.. of tile Wllef
century ago lqmberjacks
to crub den In 1 belly fioeplq ker- ·
Gag~ shore to shore on a river of
lflll•b. rve never •eea aoytlllq like
lumber for a grow!Jlg nation.
It! WIU.O.C fall, '1uch anllts alwaya
of the loggejl over land Is now
breulbl forlb a "did you lee
of the Huron National Forest 11IATl" from Dtarlly fl1bermea.
the land II again suppOrting a ·
What has caused such an lh!th•l'""" forest. This time, though, it
crease In trout and salmon
amanagejl forest producing much populaUons in what some now call
than lust timber.
the greatest flsliing habitat in the
The virgin timber II gone now Great Lakes?
new naturall:tSOurce, perhap8
Certainly control of the seal
lamprey bas to rank high on the list.
the In addlUon to that, however, Is inbe
FISH!in"Big
Coho and Chinook salmoo, creased knl!wledge gained through
:steelhutd and brown and lake trout research about managing Inturning the Great Lakea In a troduced species such as cobil,
naUonaDy known SPOrts llsherv. ·
chinook and steelhead.
I'm here for the fall ouUng of
As an erample, hatchery raised
u.i Outdoo~ Writers of Ohio - a fipgerllng chinook salmon are held
UtUe bu.ness, but mostly to sample ~ streams alon~ take l!uron to
the fantaattc new salmon and trout . "imprint" their memory with that
fiShery that has deyeloped in the particular stream. This Imprinting
Great Lakes - Superior, Michigan · process takes about 10 days afler
and Huron.
which they are· released through
Sleepy little lakeabore towns check dams to go their, own way'
such -as Harrisville and Oscnda;- which is usually into Lake Huron.
economlcs were dependent on
After two years growth, these
lumbering and Ianning, have been · fish, now in the 10 pound size class,
given a shot of adrenalln. Fishermen are ready to make their unerring
just finding out about 25 pound way back to the exact stream where
~!chhlook salmon and a 10 pound steel- they were "born." Experts believe
whose lighting leaps are each stream has its own distinctive
l!!'::~:~~~~~:.nt of . tarpon and "smell" and the fish simply follows
his-her nose hundreds of miles back
of !he writers reported to what will be their spawning
!atclrlng a 15 pound chb)ook that grounds.
times ~fore being caught
Ariglers employ two major

·contradictory

• - Six Blue Devils smothered
CONKEY SACKED
Athens Quarterback Brian Conkey oq·this play Friday on
Memorial Field ln Galllpolls. Bringing down the AHS

ev=:~~ ~~~~:;~ls:e~nowlng

dUring this actloo photo of the Meigs-Waverly game
Frlday.'Leading interference is Dan Granda!, 82. Tiger
defender m. left is Jay Kegley.

BUFFINGTON HAS BIG GAIN - Meigs Dan
Buffington (40, on right) gained a huge piece of yardage
signal caller are Tim Olevaller, (81 ), Mike Staggs (80) ,
Kev Jackson (82); Paul Finnicum (76) and Dan Sickles
·(42). On left ln rear Is Mike Wigglesworth (7o) and on
right is Kent Shawver (74).

an

Rio winners
announced
_ •· RIO GRANDE - Despite
heavy rains Friday night and
early Saturday morning, the
sixth annuai'ilio Grande College Invitational Cross
Country Race was held
Saturday .
Meet directors Bob Willey
and Terry Cordle had to set
up a special road course for
the Class A, Class AA and
,Class AAA runners and college participants because
the regular cross-country
c6urse was inundated by high .
wC:~ter.

GALUA ACAQEMY High School's marching band pepped things up when it appeared
the Blue Devils were going to score the go.ahead toochdown Ia te in the fourth period Friday,
Athens held on, however, to edge GAHS, 7-4, stopping the Gallians on the Bulldog siX-inch
line with 3:31 remaining in the game.
·

•

Eight ex-Bengals zn
Tampa Bucs lineup
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
"new"
Tampa
Bay

Buccaneers already seem old
hal to the Cincinnati 13\!ngals.

Den Talk
By GREG BAILEY
POMEROY - The interest in the ancien£ cross bow is
zooming now that Ohio is going to have Us first crossbow
season. I do have one important correction to niake, however,
before I tellyoumoreabout the weapon. Last Sunday 1 made a
mistake - the season runs from January 1-22, NOT to the 25th.
The season was Instituted this year mainly as a result of a
push of about forty people across the state. This is not to say
that these f~ty folks are "bad eggs", but if ~ny of we sportsmen are agamst thisaeason,.it's a shame our apathy is so great
lthat we didn't voice our opinion. In a way, my hat's off to those
forty lor baving the ambition to work lor what they wanted.
Now lor my opinions (and some facts) on this new season.
As far as I can see, there are no "pros" for the crossboW and
my opinion is shared by many of the Department of Naiural
Resources people. There will undoubtedly be many more
wounded deer that•will not be harvested but will crawl off to a
slow death. The reason is that many new hunters who have
never hunted with a bow will take to the field, thinking this is
an easy sport. The crossbows are selling like hotcakes.
Lots of people havelhe misconception that this weapon
shoots like a rifle. Not true, not true ! The majority of
crossbows are not consistently accurate , especially the
cheaper models. A second drawback in the weapon itself is its
Harrow." Bolts, as these arrows are ccilled, average only about
half as long as an arrow shot In a traditional bow. Due to this
decrease in size and weight, the penetration will be much less,
thus more wounded animals will escape. Achild's thirty-pound
bow will achieve nearly the same penetration as an 80-pound
crossbow.
.
·
Many wildlife people say tbatthey have yet to see a truly
sale crossbow. The loading and cocking Is dangerous because
it requires the loader to actually have his hand in front of the
device. Although some comji with safety devices, these stiU
have their drawbacks 'as they aren't nearly fool-proof.
The price of a crowsbow runs from $60 - $3110, and the more
el]lenslve ones can be accurate, especially if they're fitted
• with a ~pe. The only two specifications the State requires is a
25-inch stock and a working safety.
Game protectors will face some new problems with this
weapon. Poaching Will be easier becall,'le the noise will be
practically nil.
But tho'*! ol.you who choose to try the crossbow will also
face a problem - transporting your weapon. If you carry it in
your car and the bolts are accessible, you'll be pinched the
same as l!you'd been carrying a rllie. $o be aware.
Now that the regular archery sea'son is open, there are
\hree placeB to check your deer if you get luckY. Andy Lyles,
~ur local game trotector~ts-one of them. Just give him a call at
~7. Forked Run State Park will he an official station .this
l!eBSOn, and so will Erwin's Gull in Middleport. Forked Run is
for Meigs. County-killed deer only.
,
Andy would like to make it clear on the hunting hours of
•' certain .Jrildllfe.lf there Is not a set time (like s:oo, etc.) then
· the times are set by the Division of Wildlife. For instance,
some species are hunted from sunrise to sunset, The Division
!iuts out a pamphlet with the ofllclanmnrises and sunsets
Usted. Ooo'lo put Andy.on the spot by your not knowing when
It's legal to hunt. You can get a list of these times by calling
him or by writing the Athens office of the Division of Wildlife,
Department of Natural Resources, and ask for publication No.
3f11. You will abide by the times listed lor Columbus since.
·
that's the neatest major city.
The duck and geese stampa and other information are
deftnJtely now at the Pomeroy Post Office. They were a little
.
.late arriving.
Doo 't forget the Bass Tournament coming up next
weekend.

Eigllt of the 43-man Tampa .
ll!am Ulking the field Sunday
against Cincinnati are .exBengals. _
The Buccsneers already
are being called "Bengals
South," but another term fils
the Bucs better - winless.
As' could be expected, the
expansion. club is 0-4 so far ,
and just about everybody
figures Tampa to be Q-; after
Sunday.
Od.dsmakers say the
Bengals·Bucs matchup is the
most lopsided this weekend
and they have made
Cil)cinnsti a whOpping 21. poinUavorile.
That kind of a point spread
seem justified hetause the
Bengals rarely lose at home ,
plus Cincy is off to a solid 3-1
start this year with one of its
best teams ever.
And , Tampa will he without
its top defensive performer,
end Lee Roy Seimon, the
NFL's lop rookie draft pick.
The 1).3, 263-pound former
Oklahoma star, who injured
his knee last weekend against
llaltimore, will be replaced
by .his "little" brother, 6-I,
254-pound Dewey.
·
Also, it
must be
remeil)bered that eight of the
Tampa players, several of
them starters, are Bengal
castoffs.
Former Benga!s now
playing for Tampa are
punter·placekicker Dave
Greeri, starting running
backs Charlie Davis and Ed
Williarils, reserve running
back Essex Johnson, starting
defensive back Danny Reece ,
starting guard Howard Fest;
mlich·used tight end Jack
Novak and possible starting
defensive back Ricky Davis.
,After failing to ·score a
touchdown in its first three .
games, Tampa finally
reached .the end zone a couple
of times last Sunday against
Baltimore, but still was
trampled 42-17 by the Colts.
Coach. .John McKay,
.however, is keeping his sense
of humor.
He said of the lall!st defeat,
·•field po.~ition hurt us badly,
dropped passes llurt us badly,
no blocking hurt us badly and
injuries hurt us badly. Otherwise, il was a perfect alter-

noon.

Thirty-six high school
teams and three college
squads took part inothe meet.
Georgetown
captured
Class A honors with 53 points.
Newark Heath was the Class
AA charr1pion with 38 poinis.
Cincinnati . Forest Park
claimed AAA honors with 47
points.
Rio Grande College cal&gt;'
lured the college division
title with 22 points.
Brian Jonard, Caldwell,
captured Class A individual
lwnors with a 10:29 effort.
Jay Moore, Bethel-Tate, was
the Class AA champion with
a 10:30 effort and James
Smith, Dayton Roth, was the
Class AAA champion with.a
!O ~ li performance.
Rio Gande's Bernard Tilly
captured the college division
honors with a 26 :56 'perfmmance .
The top three teams in each
division received team and
individual trophies. The top
10 runners ·in each class also
received individual trophies.
Here's Saturday's resulis :
CLASS A
Points
53

Team

Georgetown

83

Cincinnati CD

head coach Bill Johnson's
debut Is going great, but he
realizes Tampa is itching lor
its first win and is waiJiing
his players of an JJpse(
possibility.
"This is a very important
game for us," ~ declared.
" We cannot afford any kind
of letdown. We must keep our
momentum going."
Although the Buccaneers
would like to ambush the
Bengals, it appears Tampa's
best chance. for a win will
come a week from Sunday,
when lhey entertain fellow
expansion team ·Seattle.

·'

90
99

112 '"""

ll5
170
181
201

Batavia

Zane Trace

Adena .
Ross SE
CLASS A

Points

Heath
Ridgewood

38

@

93

Fairfield Union
Circleville

119

Bethel Tate

Chesapeake

Indian Lake
Vincent Warren

250

257
285
297
317
323
:l60
387

Greenfield .
Jackson
Ironton

Wheelersburg'
Minford

Edgewood
CLASS AAA
Team

.Forest Po;~rk
Gahanna

Texas race

PointS
47

75
109

Cln. Oak Hills
Copley
Ketlerlng Alter

116

120

Miamisburg

175

Norwood

186

Marietta

207

BRAVE ELEMENTS- North Gallla Plrall! followers braved the elements in Racine
Friday night to watch their team roll over the Tornados. Left to right are Margie Thaxton,
Glory Pope, BeckY Hash, Debbie Hash and Gwynn Hash.
·

Dayton Roth
207 Marietta 2.8 Grove City 8
Alhens
2~0
Bel pre 22 River Loca I 8
Hudson
2@ Butler
52 Oxford .Talawanda
Ch illicothe
295 12
COLLEGE DIVISION .
Trenton
EdgeWood
35
Team
Points Franklin 0
Rio Grande
. 22
Northern Ky St.
L~keland

34

CC

. 69

Kent State %1,
Western M!cb. lZ
KENT, Ohio (UP!)
Junior quarterback Mike
Wljalen ran for 104 yards and
two touchdowns Saturday to
lead Kent State to a 24-12
error-filled Mid-Anierican
Conference . victory over .
Weste.rn Michigan.
The Golden Flashes, now 32 overall and 2-1 in the MAC,
grabbed four of Western's
nine fumbles on ·a windy,
rainy day, two of them,
covered by defensive tackle
Glenn Deadmond, setting up
Kent touchdowns. ·

Martins Ferry 29 St. Clairs·
ville 0

Norwayne 30 Hillsdale 20
Northwestern 21 Rittman 0
Northmont 18 Sidney 13
Sidney Lehman 42 Grant 20
Parkway 47 New Bremen 0 .
Minster 14 Bradford 0

_______..__________
Shadyside 29 Union Local 6
Dover 14 Wooster 12
Manchester 23 Triway '6
Dalton 24 Waynedale 15

,_.

Doylestown 14 Smithtown 8

Blanchester 14 Mason 6

WORKING FULL TIME ·

Ashland 35,•Musldngum 0
MUSKINGUM, Ohio (UP!)
- Ashland College tailback
Tim Burns rushed lor 112
yards in 18 carries and scored
touchdowns ol25 and 20 yards
Saturday to lead the Eagles
to a 3o-O thrashing of
prevl.ously
undefeated
Muskingum.
.,

...

were

RON JAMES

Ford expects to

FOR ALL
THE PEOPLE

set meat quotas

PD. POL ADV.

LAWTON, Okla. (UPI)_:President Ford said there Is a
"high degree of llkeHhood" some action would be taken
Saturday on Imposing quotas on foreign meat Imports to the
United States - an actioo that Jimmy Carter clalma Is
I)Verdue,

In a private meetJng with about 50 catUemen !rom
Oklahoma, Teus and Kansas Friday night, Ford was pressed
for some Indication on whether he would 1lnpose the heel
quotas on the 13 .countries which export to the United States.

.

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•'

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'

Op.e ning Thursday
'

·

STATE REPRESENTAliVE

.

.

October 14

529 Jackson Pike

SUNDAY,OCTOIIER 10, 1t71
6:oo--VIewpolnt I; This Is The· Life 10.
6:30-Jerry F1lwell 4; Talking HandJ I ; Wethington ·•
Debates for the '70s tO; Newtmaker '16 13.

•

·methods of fishing durin&amp; the
7 :oo--&lt;:hrlst()pher Closeup 3; Thinking It&gt; Black I ; Rev.
autumn and spring mlgratidns.
Cleophus Robinson 13. ,
Spawn bags (dime sl!ed ellllllfiS of .
7:30-ThiS lsthe Life 3; Your Health 4; Bullwlnkle 6;
sabnon eggs enclosed in meah cloth ·: .
Jerry Falwell 11 It Is Written 10; Amarlng Grace
on a hook) and smal) sl!e sllvery ,: ·
Bible Class 19.
•
spoons are preferred for stream and
7:5.S-Biack Cameo 4.
! :do--Mormon Choir 3; Day of Discovery I ; Tanniilakeshore fishing. Boat fishennen
TuKedo 6; Churdl Servlci 10; Blue Ridge' Quartet
trolllng the same type or spoon were
. 13; Sesal)'le Strnt 20.
having the best luck. Shore
8:3G--Oral Robertl 3; Yours for the Asking 4; Gospel
fishermen were having the belt
Caravan 6; Day of Discovery a: James Robison
.success wit]) spawn bags.
Pr-~ts . lp; Re• Humbard 13; Open Blb!t.15.
Ught salt .water or heavy fresh
9:00--Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Hour of Power 11 Oral
· water tackle is needed because It's
Roberts iO; Re• Humbard 6: Rev. Leonard Repan
not uncommon to latch on to a 25
8; Across the Fence 15; Mister ROQers 20.
·•
9:30-Whot Does the Bible Plainly Say? 8; Movla
pounder with 40 pounders a distinct
"The Great Race" 10; Christ Is the Answer 13;
possibility . I saw a 70-year pld .man
-~ .. Insight IS; Sesame Strnt 20.
• ·
land the first chinook of his llfe on
.. · 10 :oo--Jim Franklh\ 3; Church Service 4; Leroy
light $pinning tackle. With 10 pound
Jenklns6; ChrlstlanctnterS; Jimmy Swaggart 13;
test line, II took him 30 minutes to do
Feith for Today 15.
so - nip and tuck all the way.
10:3()-Big Blue Marble 3; Garner Ted Armstrong 1, 13;
Twenty pound test line would be a
ReK Humbard 8; Jimmy Swaggarl 6; This Is the
wise choice.
;
Life 15; Zoom 20.
You take your chances with
11 :co-TV Chapel 3; OSU Football Highlights 4; Hoi
anything lighter. .
Fudge 6; ReK Humbard IS; Rev. Henry Mahan 13;
Rebop 20 .
Allbaugh we saw plenty of fish,
11 :3()-At Issue 3; Animals, Animals, Animals 6.13;
the big run Is stU! a few weeks off.
Face the Nation 8; Once Upon • Clotslc 20.
1\lost of the run Occurs In November.
12
:1l0-Meet
the Pre" 3,4,15; Issues and Answers 6;
The locals t~ld us It's simply un·
Rev. Robert Schuler 8; Rev . Calvin Evant 13;
believable when the streal'il!l are
Boarding House 20,
literally choked with fish. There's
12 :3o--Grandstand 3,15; News Conference 4; NFL
p!enty.of state and NaUonal Forest
Today 8; The Issue 10; Lowor Llghtt)ouae 13;
land to fish from if you're a stream
Caughl I~ the ·Act 20.
.
I:oo-NFL Football 3; NFL Football 4, 15; Com·
· fishennan and charter boat service
munlque 6; NFL Football 8; Face the Nation 10; .
with everything furnished is
College
Footbllll '76 13;Adoms Chronicle• 20; In·
available !I you like that type of
flnlty
Factory
33.
angling. I tried both and enjoyed
1
:3()-Aware
6; Wlldllte In Crisis 10; Zoom 33.
both. Non-resident fishing licenses
2:oo-Polnt of VIew 6; NFL Football 10; lt~uet and
are one dollar per day including the
Answero 13( Leonard Bernstein at Harvard 20;
trout stamp.
Once Upon o Cla!llc 33.
Precise detalla can he obtained
2:31)-Formby's Antique Furniture Workshop 6: Rebop
· by writing the Ol;cnda and Harris33.
3:oo-Witnesa• to Yesterday 6; Next Generation 13;
ville Chambers of Commerce or the
Youth In trouble 33.
Michigan Drpariment of Natural
Resources at Lansing. Have a good
3:3()-Boseball Ploy-on 6,13.
day.
&lt;:oo-NFL Football J, 15; NFL Football ; ; Formby's
Antique Furniture WorkshopS; Crockett's VIctory
Garden 33.
1:3()-FIIm 8; The Othtiro 20; French Chef 33.
4:55-Pollllcal Program 10.
.
s·oo--Festlval of Ll..,ly Arts for Young PeopleB;Movle
' "The Bride• of Fu Manchu" 10; Tennis for
Everyone 33.
.
5:31l--Eiectrlc Compeny 20; Consumer Survival Kit 33.

•

•

..

Title 'Top Turkey of the Year' at st*e in

122
209
238

Grandview Heights

This is the week
that ••soon'' arrives!

~

"But we'll be back," he
promised, adding however,
·•Maybe not in this century,
u10ugh."
As for the Bengals, rookie

South Webster
Waterford
Caldwell

Team

By IIO,WARD FIEU)S
permanent secreiary ls
WASIIINGTON (UP!)
named later 'this 'year and
For the first Ume in the probably alter the electioo.
presidential debates, the
But grain embargoes also
farmer, at leaat lndlrecUy, restrain the free market and
hall been menUoned. ~lmmy farmers
don't
like
Carter mentiooed It and it embargoes. II reduces the
doeln~ bode well !CJ" his amount of foreign sales they
chances of picking up the can make while at the same
!ann vote.
time pushing m«re grain into
"I will never single out food the U.S. market place. .
88 an embargo Item," Carter
The economic law of supply
said In the foreign policy and demarrl says that the
debate In San Francisco more there· is available, the
, Wedneaday night. "If I ever cheaper it wl1l be. That Is
. decided to Impose an good lot the consumer, but
embargo, because of a crisis bad for the ianner ·who
ln lnlerpatlooal relationships, reaUzes a smaller return oo
It would Include all shi[iments his inV.sbnenl and sweat.
of equipment... ! wouldn't
When the United States
single out just food ."
placed an embargo oo beign
That means he would sales of soybellllll in 1973 and
include food in a total on grain sales to the Soviet ·
embargo as retribution Union and Potilnd in 1974 and
agalnlt, say, an Arab ·nation 1975, it incurred the wrath of
f«r hnposlng an oil embargo organizations representing
oo the United States.
the fanner.
·
But Carter's statement in
Oren Lee Staley, tresident
the debate must be tempered of the National Farmers
with position papers he Organization, le!itlfied before
previously provided which a Senate subcommittee
saY .hiB policy woUld be to .. earlier this year. that the
"lncr~ opportunities in the embargo on i;raln sales wthe
world market for our Soviets cost the American
agricultUral commodities farmer between $6 billion and
through an innovative, $10 billion.
aggressive foreign sales
program. I•
And, during a news cooference at Plains, Ga., after he
was ncmlnated, Carter sal( "I certainly agree with the
fact that we should not use
thewltliboldlng or the boycott
· of shl[lllents of food overseas
to try to effectuat.e some sort
of lntematonal pulley ·as it
relates to other coimtrles.
CUERO, Tex. (UP!) - A based on. the first heat at
President Ford shouted at coupla ql real tUrkeys are Worthington's King Turkey
the !lepubllcail cooventlon, going to have It out. No more Day' last Sept. 11, Paycheck
"No more embargoes," and bragging or wild tales, lt'sall could be considered the beit
although the admlnlstratioo going to be settled on main bet.
.
posltim, like· Carter's, has street urrler the hot Texsa
Paycheck dld the three
been muddied somewhat by sun.
blocks distance in one minute
statements since then, the
The wimer will get the tiUe 14.9 secmds, while Ruby
administration· policy oltopturkeyoltheyear.The ·covered the same dlatance In .
remains antlembargo.
loser, well, may end up u
two minutes and 35 seconds,
But that may be only a someone's guest lor ThanksMrs. Ernster, however,
temporary policy. Ford's giving.
emphasized FridaY one heat
running mate, Robert Dole,
Tbe event is the Great does not a cmnplete race
has told audiences that Ford Gobbler Gallop and the make. She said other factors
really didn't mean that favQI'Ites are the long~egged are just as important. as
statement, .since embargoes Ruby Begonia IV from Cuero , .~ed and ' ooce the two
might have to be Imposed In and Paycheck, a highly frightened birds are beiDg
case of a food shortage. •
touted
runner · from . shooed down the street by
Former Agriculture Worthington, Minn.
their trainers anything could
Secretary Earl Butz Insisted
At stake in the grudge happen.
on a policy of letting the free match Sunday Is the title of
M«e than 38,1100 Jl8rtisan
market place deterinine the Tui'key Capital of the W«rlcl, Ruby backers are expected to
price of grain. Thus he which both Cuero and be m hand, while only 10
opposed price supports Worthington lay claim to.
Minnesotans wW be available ·
despite pleas from the
"Last year 1 ·raced Ruby w 1D'ge their turkey on w·
farmers.
·
down the street in Cuero ln viclllry.
• In posiiloo papers, carter 38.3 seconds," said owner
J.luby Begonia IV was
has
criticized
the Sherre Ernster. "That waa selected from a field of three
admlniatratioo policy; "Wiwm aD seconds. No . minut~. The Cuero tiU'keys .who raced In
they say, 'free market,' they people were sorta behind the the Houston A$trodome
realjy mean 'high-risk turkey.
bJ)wee .n
baseba II
market.' The· farmer takes
"Last year she was behind dOUbleheaders last August.
the rlaks; the ~tors get almost five minutes. She got
BeSides the great gobbler
the rewards," he said.
In a crowd and started eating gallop, there
other
Butz' acting successor, popcorn one year. Their turkey races Saturday with
John A., Knebel, worked (Worthington's) turkey new the llnala of the turkey trot
dlrecUy under. Butz and has up m top of a building and r.aces scheduled Sunday.
endoraetl Butz' views ln many watched the lace me year." Other events Include gunspeeches and ·statements.
It will be the fourth year slingers, mariachis, a rodeo,
Agriculture pollcy is not Cuero am Wbrthingtm have arts and crafts and dancing.
likely to change until a held the grudge races and,

·Television Log

446-4554

Gallipolis, Ohio

.,

CatUemen have strongly requested such quotas to protect
dolneitic prices of beef.
"You- can say that t11e of beef imports, and allo'VS
matter of quotas Ia being the President to .adjust the
worked oo at the highest quotas . ~ .n_eeded to protect
level," White House ofllclals domestic pniducers.
The meat Industry 10urces
·quoted the President as
llll)'ing. "If a few details can sald the prime purpose of the
be worl!ed out, lhere.la a high quotas would be to • block
degree of likelihood of Australia from
clrcumvenUng the volWllary
afflnnative actioo."
lhnlt
on Its el[lOI'ls oo the
Ford, however, d~~elined to
United States by operating
Ill)' whether that meant he
definitely would approve through I"'OC"5Slng plants ln
IIIICh quotas. The President Puerto Rico.
U.S. catUemen, clUng a
"1181d be eKJ)tCied 110111e actloo
would be tllken In the next 24 drop In prices f«r domestic
meat, have been pressing the
hoiD'I,
White HoUle offtclala said administration lor several
there were several different weeks to impose the quotas.
Carter , · campaignipg
~ble acU01111 Ford could
Friday
ln El Paso, Tez.,
ta1r1 oo beef . imports, but
called
on
Fll'd to 1mpOae the
would not 10 beyond F«d's
quotaa,
remuU 00 the BUbjecl.
"For the last three years,
Ford's .deputy preu seCI'IIIIIr1, Jciu! Carlaon, saki In catUe producers have been
WllbiJI&amp;Ion the 1184 Meat losing $50 to f]OO on each
lqlort Quail Act requires animal they sell," Carter
the Agriculture Department sald, "Many cattle [l'aducers
to llllb quarterly estimates are being forced out of
,

I

business.
"Consumers, too, will
suffer In the long run If the
present condltlons are
allowed to CCJnlinue. As fewer
and fewer cattle are railed
Ill' market, beef prices may
once agiln slcyrocket to their
1973 levels." ·
"While catUe fanners have
suffered, PrelldenrFord and
former
Secretary
of
Agriculture (Earl) Butz have
hesitated to · protect cattle
raisers from meat lmporla
that exceed t.he legally
perrnlaalble amount,'' Carter
sald.
.
"'lllls admlnlatraUon hu
apparenUy perlllllted beef
import. 111 l!liCI!IIi of the
trigger .level for quotas,"
Carter uld.
Erporllng cowdrlea haw
increasingly turned to the
U.S.. IIIU'ket becauae the
European Onnmccl Markel
has barred
llll!llt lmporla
and Japan has !mpoeed a oneyear cutoff.
· The collbtries exportlna
. meat to the United State&amp;, In
add!Uon to Allltnlla, art
New Zeat.nd, Canada, Costa
Rica,
the - Domlnlcari
Republic, El Salvador,
Gualimala, HalU, H~,
Inland, Mexico, Nicarqua
and Panama.

an

6 : ~To

8e Announced 8; Sesame Street 20i Wnll

Street Wnk 33.
6:30--News 6: 30 Minutes 8; World Press 33: Fran
Curci : Football 13.
J:oo-World of Disney 3,4,15; Bill Cosby 6,13; 60
Minutes a,10; Crockett's ' VIctory Gardens 20;
Onedln Line 33.
7:30-Antlques 20.
' 7:55-Polltlcal Program 6,13.
8:oo--&lt;:olumbo 3,4, 15; Baaeball Plily·off 6,13; Sonny &amp;
Cher 8,10; Evening at Symphony 20,33 .
9:oo--Kojak 8, 10; Masterpiece Theatre 20.33.
9:3ir-Oulncy 3,4,15.
lO :oo-Oelvecchlo 8,10 ; Great Performances 20,33.

11 :oo-News 3,4.8, 10, 13, 15,20; Peter Marshall6; Jonakl
33.
11 :15-CBS News 8,10; Music Holl America 15.
11 :3()-Star Trek 3; Movie "Torbruk" 4; Movies
"Career" 8; Hawaii Flve·O 10; Ironside 13 . .
12:3()-ABC N6ws 6.13.
1:30--Peyton Pia" 4. ·
MONDAY,OCTOBI;R 11.1976
6:oo--Sunrlse Semester 10.
6:15-Engllsh 3; Form Report 13.
6:20-Not For Women Only 13.
,
6:3()-Columbus Today 41 News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
· Ounro of Prevention 10.
·
6:45-Mornlng Report 3.
·
6:50--Good Morning, West VIrginia t3,
6:55-Good Morning, Trl State 13.
7:oo-- Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Chuck White Reports 10.
7:05-Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10 .
7:3()-Schoolles 10.
7:45-Sesame St. 33.
8:oo--Lassle 6; Copt. Kangaroo 8,10.
8:3()-Biq Valley 6.
?;QII-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15; Luc~ Show 8:·
Mike Oouglu 10.
9:30-Cro!S.Wits 3; One Life to Live 61 Good Day! a.
IO:oo--Sanford &amp; Son.3,4, 15; Price Ia Right ,a, 10; Mlka
Douglas 13 .
10: 15-General Hospital 6.
10:30-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15.
11 :co-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Weekday 4; Edge of
Night 6; Gambit 8.10; Morning wllh D.J. 13.
11 : 3()-Stumpen 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13; Lovo of Life
8,10; Sesame St. 33.
•
11 :55-Take1&lt;err8; Ms. FIKit 10.
12 :oo-News 3.6,8,10; Hot Soot 13; Bob Broun 4; 50
Grand Slam 15.
12:3()-Gong Show 3, 15; All My Children 6, 13; Search
for Tomorrow 8, 10..
12:55-NBC News ~.15; Political PrOjlram 8,10.
1:oo--Someroet 3; Ryan's Hope 6.13; Concentration 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:30--Deys of Our Lives 3.4. t5; Family Feud 6,13; As
The World Turns 8,10.
2:0()-$20,000 Pyramid 13; Dinah 6.
2:30-Doctors 3,4,15; One Lite to Live 13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3:oo--Another World 3.4,15; All In The Family a,10;
Woman 20.
3:15-Gellerol Hospital 13.
3:30-4.\aK B. Nimble 6; Match Game 8,10; Llllat,
Yoga &amp; You 20.
&lt;:co-Mister Cartoon 3; Somerset 15; Marcus Welby,
M.D. 4; Howdy Doody 6; Mickey Mouse CIIJb 81
Sesame St. 20,33; Movie" Along Come o Spider" 10;
Olnah 13
·
4:3()-My Thrn Sons3; Emergency One I 6; Partridge
Family 8; Fllntstones 15.
S:oo--Big Volley 3; Mer-v Griffin 4: Mister Rogers
20,33; Star Trek 15.
·
5:3()-News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co. 20,33; Adam·
12 13.
6:oo--News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Education In Tran,~lbn 33.
•
6:30-NBC News3,4,t5; ABC News 13; Andy ·Grlfflth 6;
H~epod!le LI&gt;Cige ·20.

'·

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7:00:: ruth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bownng tor
Dollars 6; Buck Owens 8; To Tetl the Truth 13;
Family Affair 15; The Vet 20; Know Your Sch!JO(s
33.
7:30-That Good Ole Nashville Music J; Bobby VInton
41 Muppet Show 6; Gong Show 8; MacNeil Report
20,33; Candid Camera 13; Friends of Man 15.
8:oo-Little House on the Prairie 3,4,15; Captain &amp;
Tennille 6.13; Adams Chronicles 20,33.
8:3Q-S128,000 @uestlon 8; Phytllt 10.
9·:oo--Movle "Jesus Christ Superstar" 3.4.151' NFL
· Football 6.13; Maude 8, 10; In Performance at Wolf
Trap 20,33.
,
·
·
9:30-Country Music Association Awards 1.10.
10:30--Newa 20; Catch.33 33.
· ·
n :oo--Newa 3,4,1,10,15; MacNeil Report 33.
11: :tO-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; McCiouct. 8; Mary Hart. mon 10; sp(&gt;tlto 33.
12:00:....News 6, 13; Movie "Thunder Atley" 10; Jsnakl
33.
12:30-College Football '76 6; Ironside 13.
1:co-Tomorrow 3.•.
1:30-News 13.
•

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�.

~eigs farm products w~rth

$5,838,000 says Ag census
POMEROY - The market
value of all agricultural
producll aold by the 638
fanns in Meigs County 1n 197t
amounted to 15,838,000, according to a preliminary
report of the 1974 Censua of
Agriculture • released today
by the U. S. Department ·or
Commerce's Bureau .of the

Census. Productloo expenses
on these farms tota led
$4,948,000 1n 1974.
The figures !Ire for !anru
qualifying
under the
definition first used for the
1959 Census of Agriculture ' A
.!ann Includes all agricultural ·
operations conducted at. any·
time during the census year

under the control of an ln·
dl v ldual management,
provided that sales of
agricultural products
amounted to, or normally
would amount to, at least $250
for places of less than 10
acres or $50 for places of 10
acres or mor~.
Figures for fanns with
sales of $2,500 or more are

shown lor 1974 and ID'a.
These fa~ accoWited lor
$1i,438,000 of aU aiiJ'lcullural
producll 110ld In 1974 and
$3,588,000 In lttlt.
··There were 252 of these
farms In 197t compared with
~ 1n 1llllll. The averll8e """
1ncreaaed from 234 to 231
acres during the live yeal'l!.
The value per acre lncreaaed
from $172 to $3~ raising the
av~age value per farm from
$40,330 to $76,525.

The market value of
Uvettoct and u.tr products
.., farma o1 ~500 ar more of
¥lea - $2,881,000 In Jrft;
poultry and tbelr produd.l,
$185,000 ; and crop aalea,
Including nursery products,
bay and forest products,
$1,854,000.

ID-TheSunday Timea&amp;ntinel. Sundav. Oct.I0.1976

Farm ·festival's .
second day s~ut ·

Farms reporting leta than

$1,000 1n salea numbered 571n
1974.
The · value of
agricultural producll aold on
these fa~ totaled $10,000.

.

••

down by rain

.

FALL FILL~UJ;' TIME
With every fillup of Mol Mix liquid feed, you
receive a

Farmers getting yowtger

rr WOUtD TAKE MORE than two hands 1D handle this whopper. Comparing her
conventlooal version to the eight-foot long fraJtiurter, even Tltia Robinson of New York
city Is dwarfed by this patriotic hotdog. It welgha 1,778 ounces; that's Ill pounds. Nearly 18
Inches In diameter, the mammoth hotdog Is draped acrosa a 5 feet, 9lnch roll. An annual
hotdog cookout for handlcappad children held In New York's Central park was the site of
unvelllng for this creation of the Hygrade Food Products Corp. ·

.I

.corner

•

and with Japan (19751

~ - communist Countr.s

,...---,

4000

llli-TS

I

IEXPORTS I

'"""

•

2000

+

' - - - - Textiles

t::;;;.' -

0
0

oitw/l'll(\jfiC1ufl$

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

•

20oo

•coo

ltMPOIITS

1000

I

1000

-

c'"'

By John Cooper
R. King of SCS recommended
Soil CoDB. Service
that he take care of
POINT PLEASANT - We sedimenlatlon and erosion
attended the state meeting of control on some newly
the Soil Conservation Society disturbed ground and to delay
of America where the the pond construction another
program ·was, "Critical year or so. He made plans
Conservation Choices - A with Hart to reseed by using
Bicentennial LoOk."
lime, fertilizer and mulch on
The speakers talked about the disturbed soil. Hart hopes
forestry and timber har- to get this land stabilization
vesting In West Virginia, the completed thiB fall.
gas Industry, coal Industry
Lawrence Powell of
and electricity._
Palestine Ridge is working on
The sjJeakers on gas, coal a spring development. It will malize."
and electricity emphasized ronsiBt of lnstalllng a catch
Though specific details are
that "things were looking basin at the spring and Jacking, the reasons for the
rather bleak." For Instance, pouring a 500-gallon (!9ncrete age droJKlq !Pay be tied to
Both Benefits at No Extra Cost in
Donald Hallen, vice president · watering tank below the better profits from farmlhg,
of Monongahela Power spring. Water is furnished at . the irilproved attitude of fann
Com(Jany, said It was the spring by a single vein of youth toward agriculture and
lnevitable that the price of water and It will be caught In rural life, and an entry· of
electricity will increase. In · the catch ·basin by means of urban-reared young adults
the 1960s be expects brown· about 15 feet of four-inch tile Into fanning. Too, the trend
outsf and to see utilities en- behind the catch basin. The may have been buttressed by
Get "Lucky".Go Liquid!
couraging people not to use water will be carried from · the large number of young
electricity. ·
the catch basin to the lank by adults In the population Roy Clarkson of West using 50 feet of IY•·inch pipe. "baby boom" children have
Virginia University
We helped James B. Slone grown up.
presented the forestry in· plan the use of his land which
"Whatever the details to
dustry story. He had pictures he bought on Poplar Fork of be tilled in," Bealeeootinues, GRAPE &amp; FOURTH
GAWPOLIS, OHIO
documenting its early history . Thirteen •Mile Creek. The
"lhe existence
and brought it up to date. He Stones plan to use their land trepd
is deflnite."of the new - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
was the only speaker who was mostly to develop grass,
cheerful about the future.
fruits and nuts. There iB some .
The speakers brought out
landplan
o.n the
he &lt;t:;:::=::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::=::::;::::::=1~
that we 1n America have been forest
does not
to do!ann
anybut
wood·
taught that there will be land work at the present
alternative sources of energy time. The Stones live In St.
developed when the need Albans, but Mr. Stone isoflow
arises. However, ·they a professor at Marshall
mentioned that such sources University and teaches exof energy as solar energy and tension classes in the
atomic energy are extremely Kanawha Valley. They exexpensive and there are peel to build a. house and
many other problems move to the farm In the
delaying their development. )future.

Communi&amp;! COU'IIriH

0000

I·

:,SIVE • ALL ..........

coming Oct. 13

.

.

Gas, coal, electricity

early seventies ana the
census surveys which showed
'7.00 VALUE
:•
the iong decllne ln numbers of
Check your tank now! It 's time to refill
young fanners had rome to a
during our Fall Flllup Time.
halt.
The average age of self· . 1 ~
~
employed
persons
in•
. \ V
"A/~~
agriculture has been Inching
...L
~t~~lower since 1970. By 1975, it ~ ~,.
""'
had dipped to 50 years, or
V
.r
nearly three years less than
in 1970.
.
More significantly,
workers under 35 years rose
from 205,000 to 358,000 - a
gain of 35 percent. The
number of fanners fell from
601 ,000 to 461,000, a decrease
of 23 percent.
Says
Calvin
J;leP.le
Economic Research Service
demographer: "One can only
~ with a new combination ~
conjecture about the cir·
cumstances that have finally
.~ of Power-Packed Ingredients~
halted the rise In the age of
.
• GRAIN DISTILLERS SOLUBLES ·
.
fanners. · But it was known
AMMONIUM.
POLYPHOSPHATE
•
that the aging process could
e CONDENSED FERMENTED CORN EXTRACTIVE
not go on forever. It was
simply golng through a tran·
sition. That had to rome when
the number of workers
So what????
reached some slabilization
Recent College Resea rch Showed
level and whe.n the age
composition began to nor·

inspire dour speeches

ATHENS - . A gigantic
multi-media show - employIng 29 projectors, eight
POMEROY - Feeder ci.lf sales are In full swl.ng with public address systems,
Galllpolls just flnlah!ng its first graded feeder calf sale.
· thousands of fleet of film, and
The results are as follows : Choice s!eers, yearlings and 6,000 slides - will tell the
calves aver~ged ~.52 per hundred with an average weight of si&lt;Jry of the Beatles Oct. 13
500 poWIIIB and overall average for all steers was $32.14 with an for two shows in Memorial.
Field.
average weight of ~.14.
The 90-mlnute presenla·
Choice heifers weighing 434 pounds averaged $23.16 with
an overall average of $23.43. Sales coming up are at Athens, lion, controlled by a comOctober It; Chlllirothe, October 19; ChiWrotbe, Oct. 26; putor system, follows a
Galllpolls on Oct. 28, Chllllcotbe, November 9; Athens, roughly chronological pal·
tern in the Beatles developNovember II, and !)llllicothe, NQv. 16.
.
ment. The presentation
REMEMBER,·'rAKE CARE of that machinery before you covers the period between
Jill lt away this fall. Use used motor oU along with diesel fuel 1960and 1971.
Producers of the ,multi·
« keroaene miXed hall and hall. Put this In a knack sack
lljl'ayer and ln a few mlnuoos you can have your machlnery media show are famed
.well oili!d. Be sure tO oU dlalns, all "moving parts, and hard ID . European ·cinematographer
Ian Baker and American proget to places.
· Oulllge oU of mot ora before putting away. Change oU after ducer Earl Jarred. The
engine has been run and the oU is warm or hot. Replace with shows will be presented at 8
new on.
.
and 10 p.m. Tickets are
Remove 3park plugs, apply several drops or squirts of oil, available from Memorial
Auditorium box office and
turn over engine, and replace the spark plugs.
DO NOT leave englnea or machlnery outside and covered Down the Rabbit Hole.
with plastic unleiiB you put plaatic down underneath also. With
a plaatic cover and no plastic underneath, moisture will rise
·~the ground and be trapped underneath the plastic.

8000
$m

years, but by 1965 that figure
had climbed to 51 years. In
the same span, the proportion
of farmers under 3li dropped
from 29 percent to about 1i
percent.
Where wo4id it ail end?
Who would take over when
· fanners died or retired' The
ar.swjrs had to wait till the

Tuwporl

Trldt t.a.nc:t lm

-

l-110 I +110 I dso I -170 I ·975 I ·100 I

Chilla's trade with the nonCommunist world is Increasing at a laster rate than with its
Commualst partners, particula.rly SiJICt Peking' s emergence or i'eceot years rrom

dlploniiltlo semi-iootalion. Major trade partner by"far is neighboring Japan. !Economist

Grapll)

contest. Members of the team
are Denver Cotterill, Patty
Dyer, Clay Marcum,s, and
Gary Holliday with Everett
Holcomb as advisor.
Later, the entire chapter
met to disc:uss the annual

Gallia Roller Mills Inc.

NOW YOU KNOW
Thomas Jefferson was an
ance
in
some
land expert on the prehistoric
management problems ground sloth, extinct for
concerning his new location 11,000 years, and discovered
there. He was primarily the bones of a species named
concerned about a pond that . after him, megalonyx jefhe wanted to build, but Okey ferson!.
ELMER HART
OF
Fiatrock asked us for assist·

___,..c..~t

'.

o.

•

~I

I

m

&lt;XJAL BANK MINE _ The Coal bank mine on Bob Evans Fann attracllld numerous
visitors before the rainll came Friday.

r;

CHOW TIME- Visitors siDod in Une for chow at the Bob Evans Fanns Sausage.Shop

into the rush ol haying season. To

Fall membership
•
campmgn opens
•

Property

Transfers

• THIS old momahlne still of.J. R. Hill's is a festure attraction at the Bob Evans Fann
Festival near Rlo Grande.

$J.00refuncl

when you buy
2 gallons of PEAK" I
for '3" ~:r,on

the two silver inner liners from both
caps, and the refund coupon to
Northern Petrochemical Company. .
Offer expires December 1. 19.76.

'

DISCOUNT
1 MAR . 1977- '
.~..:c
30:.;_APR. 1977

336 and 346 Balers :
15A and 16A Choppers;
100 Stack Mover: 25 and
34 Forage Harvester s

$195

$90

1207 . 1209,and 12t4
Mower / Cond ilioners :
800 and 83~nd~ower s :

. $390

5195

------.---·-----'""---- ---

•

466 Baler: ~ o u "tf3 a l ers .
35 and 38 Forage Harvesters

-----

·--~~--

~·

100 Slack Wa!lon____ ~~

200 an d 300 Stack Movers
~--

Hydrostatic Wi nd r'owers , •

---·- ··-5520 .

-

--·'----~·

Seii-P"ropelled Forage

Pick up your refund couJ)on today at

Feeder

230 Slack Shredder/

$260

$650

$325

$1 .040

$520

$1 .950

$975

200 and 300·Stack Wagons

Harvesters

'tl;all, Olllt

DI SCOUNT
UNTIL
26 FEB. 1977

MACHINES

~ We 'li send you $1 .00 within 6 weeks,

IDTUI.IIJA
If lillie, lie.,

Ray asks review, tells

cash di scount for acting early ... from
$195 to $2.600 depend ing on the
machines you want.

$2.600

-·-·---·-·- ·•
$2,600 .

---·---

. - ----~·- ··-·
--No Firi1nc; Osar9eslmioosed until next UH season. Ask us for dtlolls.

II

Sw.isher Implement cO.
•

Upper River Rd.

Kanauga, Ohio

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. - First Class, Star, Ufe, or
Area boys are Invited to join Eagle progrw awards.
Scout troopa or Cub Scout
Additional information
pscks as a part of the annual about the Scout and Cub
fall membership program of Scout program is avallable
the Tri-State Area Council, from the Tri-State Area
Boy Scouts of America .
Council service center, 733
The Cub Scout program iB a Seveath Avenue, Huntington,
family-centered program lor W. Va. 25702, or bY calllng ·
boys who have completed the (304) ~23-3408.
second grade of Who will be 8
through 10 years of age. They
meet weekly aa a den under
the suP.,r'lision of a den
leader, and all the dens come
together for a monthly pack
meetingled by a Cubmaster.
Boys start as Bobcats and ·
through achievements earn
Wolf, Bear, and Arrow of
Ught awards.
Edfn D. Marklnl, Ullle M.
The Scout program is for
Mar
kina to '· Michael B,
boys who ,have completed .the
fifth grade or who are II Martina, Parcela, Columbia.
JohnS. Codner, Beverly L.
through 17 years of age. The
·program I~ designed to Codner to-Pavid D. PII'IOIII,
develop cha racier, mental · Linda S, Persona, 11.721 A.,
·
and physical ·fitness, · and Sutton. .
Farmers Home Adm. ID
Citizenship training. The
focus Is on one's physical and Bernice C. McKinney, Lot,
.
mental fitness through a Middleport.
Charlea R. Findley . Sr.,
vigorous program· of ac·
tiviUes. As ScouiB, boys join Clella Findley, Mary Joyce
patrols and elect their own Flndley to Charles Michael,_
patrol leader. They usually Patricia Michael, lit Lot;··
meet once a week as a troop Letart.
Danny R. Tillll, Saundra
under the guidance ol a
Tillll
to Fred W. Klein,
Scoutmaster. Ahoy joinll as a
Scout and can achieve Martha E. Klein, Loll,
Tenderfoot, Second Class, Middleport.
Joaephlne F. Goodlllle, Ira
C. Go0dnlle, Charles F.
Smith, Betty Smllh, Ger\I'Ude
D. Morrll, Walter E. Morrll,
George K. Hadtlos, Tberelia
Haddox by George. HaddoK.
to Luther P. Smith, Mltry E.
Smith, Lot, Mlddlepoti.
· VIrginia E, Vltatoe 1o Jack
B. Freeman,\.43 A., Rut!end
Eugene Erlewine, Mary
Eriewine to Mononllhtla ·
A'rHENS - Over 850 Power Co., EaR., OliVe.
aoutheast Ohio high school
Ray E. Adami, FOITIII T. I
students have registered ID Adame to Monon1ahela i ·
attend College Day, Oct. 'll, Power Co., EaH., OUve.
hosted by Ohio University
Ralph D. Alhley lo Doll R.
and featuring repreeen· .mu, Mary E. mu, lUI A.,
tatives of 60 eoueges. Ohio Letart.
._;..
University staff members
wi\1 ~lso present a seriea of · . Chariea C. Lewia, clec'd., lo '
~tudent
workshops on Margaret Ella Lewis, Cert. '
flnancial aids and career Trans., Sallabury.
planning.
'
· Bobby W; Vance, Yvonne
Instltution.s sending Vance to Larry Vance, '
repr~ntatives lnciude most Sharon Vance, Int. ln • A., · •
of Ohio's state uiiiversities, Scipio.
several private colleges,
Cly~ J. Morlan, Ethel
technical colleges, the U. S. Marte Morlan lo Ropr A.
Air Force Academy in Spencer, Jean E. Spencer, '
Colorado and the U. S. Naval Lot, . Or~nge.
Academy ln Mary,land.
I•

Meigs

' ONE OF NUMERQUS booths at the Bob Evans Farm Festival is this apple hull~
cmcessioo stand near the headquarters bulldlng.
.

.gel top dollar discounts now th rough
February 28 on mach ines lisled
below. So acl fast and earn the extra

Frktay alt.ernoon as the mth

annual fall festival got underway·

• AHORsE is used to turn ancient machinery to crush sugar cane for the sorgoom at Bob
· Evans Fann Festival.

[c+c•---

encoUrage pre-seaSor1 ordering, you

~ Send your circled sales receipt. wilh

... your farm operation!

~~trapped"

the GaiJla County Junior
Fairgrounds due to high
water in that area. Most ol
the campers had planned to
attend festival activities thiB
weekend.
'
Weather permitting,
to day's &amp;clivi ties are
scheduled to begin at 9:3Q
a.m. with religious services.
The program runs through
5:15p.m.
Activities Include field
demonstrations, water
demoostrations, horseshoe
pitching and performances
·.by several country music
performers.

machines now ... before we both get

Super Sweepstakes entry form.

Thursday
R,acine
.
...Elementary, 9:30·noon;
Partiaad Elernent.ary, 12:»
With a long-term, reasonable cost loan from
• SuuLI!:RINREFORGER
· LANGSVILLE - Army the Federal Land Bank you can finance a
Private .Finl Claas D~vid L. wide variety of farm needs , . : such as new
Shuler, It, 1011 of Mr. and
Mrl. Rou ·Shuler, Route I, building$ and land improvements-and al·
Lllnpville, is one of the most anything else that can make your farm
lllolllllldl of American and · operation more profitable.
'
Allled troopoi who IDok part In
NATO Excise Reforger 76
228 Upper River Road
In Germany. He Ia regularly
p,
Box 207, Gallipolis
aalgned •• a grenadierPttone 446-0203
rlffeman with the !Olst
Clyde 8. W1lktrd~r .
Airborne Division at Ft.
C.mpMIJ, Kl.
.

campers were

'i,

We'll pay yo u lo order hay and forage

~ Buy 2 gallons of PEAK anl'i(reeze &amp;
coolant.
·
~Pick up your refund coupon and

1:45.

.

Get top doljar discount now
thru,February 28, during
John Deere's Preseason Roundup of Hayma.king ~argains

Bookmobile schedule
POMEROY - Meigs •
Jacklon • VInton Counties
Bookmobile Schedule for
Meip County, Oct. 12-16.:
Monday, Holiday, Book·
mobile closed.
Tueaday ·Cheater
Elementary, 9-11:30 a.m.;.
12:30-Z: 30 p.m.;. Syracuse,
Trailer Park, 3 '30-3:45;
Syracuse, Baer's. t-4:1~:
Syracuse, Lisle's, 4:ll0-4:45;
· Syracuse, Rustic llills, ~
6:30; SyrsCUie, John Street,
I:IU:30; Syracuse, DriveIn, 8: t6-7' !5; Syracuae,
Larry's Grocery, 7,30-7,45;
Mlneraville, Brown's Trailer
Court, &amp;.a:li; Nacml, 8'30-

.

parked autos . out of those
fields ,".
.
.
It Is the firSt time In the
event's history activltie3
have been cancelled due ID
rain .
Meanwhile, It was learned
Saturday more . than 200

+ 12.8% ·Weight Gains!
+ 5% Feed Efficiency!

fruit sale which will begln
soon, the making of a new
attendance chart and
. replacement of .officers who
have been unable to attend
meetlngs.

FEES RETURNED
· State Audiior Thomas E.
Ferguaon's office reported
2:30 p.m.; Reedsville Store, the third advance distribution .
3 ' 1~'30; Long Bottom, 4:4~ of 1976 ·slate motor vehicle
5:15; Success Road, 5:~; registration fees totaling
Texas Road, 6' ~ : 45; State $4,581,177 to Ohio counties,
Route 7-Houalng, 7'30-7:45; cities, townships and
County Road 26-Five Points- villages. Meigs County's
Whipple Road, 8:1H:30.
share
was _
$4,730.08.
_ _ _""!"'_ _ _ _ _
__
_ _ __

.

'

"'· KEITH Brandeberry is pictured at festival headquarters reglt&lt;\erlng guests Friday
during the sixth anilUal Bob Evans Fann Festival.
.

RIO GRANDE ~ Heavy
rain ·late .Friday and early
Saturday morning cancelled ·
aecond day activities of the
sixth annual Bob Evans
Fann Festival.
OfficiaiB said late Saturday.
afternoon it .was doubtful if .
thlfllili'd . and llnai day of.
events will be held today , due
ID wet grouns.
Bob Woods, in charge .of
activities, estimated 15,000
people were &lt;111 hand for the
opening day. Friday.
.
Bob Evans, host f!lf the,
annual .event, said, "People
are here from as far away as
New Jersey, Washlngton, D.
C. and pa~ of Virginia. We
~hate to disappoint them, but
the fields are soaked. If we
continue Sunday, individuals
will have o park at their own
risk and no doubt there will
be plenty of problems getting

FORTIFIED

Soil judging team finished in sixth place
POMEROY - The soil
juc181ng team of the Meigs
High School Future Fanners
of America placed sixth
recently wben U traveled
recently ID New Lexington,
Ohio,, lor a aoU judging

PAIR OF LEArnER .
~RK GLOVES

Beatlt:s' story
ByJohnC.Rice
County Ext. Agent, Agriculture

China's trade with the world . ..

By Boyd A. Ruth
SoU Co03ervatioll.lat
··
POMEROY - Accordlng to
surveys by the Bureau of the
Census, there -ar e fewer
wrinkles on the faces of
American Agriculture,. ·Our.
fanners are actually younger
nowadays.
In 1910 the age of all !ann
operatorl averaged out to 4t

FREE

.

why, how he was framed
WASHINGTON (UP!)
James Earl Ray Friday_
asked the Supreme Court to
review his conviction for the
assassination of Martin
't.uther King, charging he was
:;set up ID take the rap" for a
.srtme be didn't commit.
. In his petition for review,
Ray argued that he was
denied an effective defense at
.!lis trial becauae of a cooOict
of · . interest among his
atiDrneys; that his guilty plea
·was coerced and not made
'viliuntarlly; and that he was
'denied the right to call key
'!I'Jtn......SID his trial because
ill a court ruUng that perm
restdlng more than 100 rnllea
II'Om the hearing could not be
SUbpoenaed.
. · ·:Ray's petition, flled b)' his
.attorney, James H. U!sar of
Wublngton, D.C., urged tbe
Sllpreine Court to review the
cgnvictlon because of its
I'Jiatlooal importance, both
joolltlcally ancl legally."
·The petition claimed that
Ray ''was oet up to take the
1111 for a crime be didn't
CEIIllt, framed by the FBI
ll'td local pollee, and then
taerced by hill &lt;iwn attorney
lliW plelldirig gullty against

..

his will."
''The cllSrge is that tho.se
who did kill Dr. King are still
at large, protected in part by·
the unwilling!lells of the
!

Old books.
.

wUl b~ offered
at

library sale

MASON, W. Va. -A book
sale at the Mason City J?ublic
Ubrary beginning October 16 ·
·at noon will feature some
books published ln the !BOOs.
A 1965 Collier's E~·
cyclopedia, In . excellent
condition, will be sold to the
highest bidder. .
Also, there will be
duplicate copies of newer ·
books, ar.d paper hacks for
sale. Librarian Evelyn Prof·
!itt said donations of hooks
are welcomed. Those ·
desirable for circulation will
be put on the shelves. Others
will be sold to secure IWIIIB to
purchase things needed for
the Library., A good
typewri~er Ia badly needed.

-'

~~;,;;.~~ ~

courts to face these
unpleasant facts;" the
petition said. ,
It said Ray's case
"demands the Intervention of
this court in order that justite
will be done and ID prevent
this natiOn •s legallnstltutiOIII
from falllng heir to the same
klnd of shame and dlagrace
wltich France experienced ln
U)e Dreyfus affair at the tum .
of the century."
King was sasassin.ated in
Memphis, Tenn., April 4,
1968. Ray was arrested June
.8,1968, and 111 March 10, 1968,
en~ a· plea of gullty ID
killing the civil rlghtJ leader.
HEARING SET
MAYSVILLE, Ky. (UPI)A public hearing was
expected 1o be held tbe end of
this
year
on
the
environmental Impact-' of a
power plant to be bullt by
Dayton Power a. Ught Co.
and Cincinnati Gas II Electric
Co. on the Ohio River, about
15 miles east of Maysville.
· The two Ohio utllltlea have
begun site prepiratlon for the
plant's first unit, which Ia
scheduled to be completed In
1981.

-· -

host students

on Oct. 27th

"iJVERALL VIEWOiFESTIVALSITE-Kelth wilson shot this overall view ci the Bob,·
Evans Farm Festival site on top·of the nature trall overlooking Bob.Evans Fqnna nea~ Rlo
Grande shortly after 'activitiea ~ot ~y Friday mornlng.

NOT LADYLIKE, ROSE
LONDON (UPI) - Lady
Rose Delbray, 25, the
mistress of convi~ted
American narcotics
smuggler Herman Fine and
daughter of the late Earl of
Hardwlcke, has !Je!!n lined
$17o and f:lven a two year
SU3pentjed jail sen~nce. for

her part ln a plot to smuggle
$1.7 million in hashish fron\
Morocco to the United States.
The defense said the
convent:educated Lady Rose,
who met 1i'lne when she was
17, was under his dunlnaUm
and could not end the
· relationship, despite
opposiUon from her famlly.

DIDN'T FALL DOWN
.
LAKE HAVASU, Arl~ .
(UP!) - What was the Lord
Mayor of London doing 01) a
lake"ln Arizona? Looklng at
Lond(m Bridge, of courae.
Slr Undsay Ring, arrived
Friday for ceremonies
marking
the
fifth
anniversary of the reopening
of Lnndon Bridge.

'·

�.

~eigs farm products w~rth

$5,838,000 says Ag census
POMEROY - The market
value of all agricultural
producll aold by the 638
fanns in Meigs County 1n 197t
amounted to 15,838,000, according to a preliminary
report of the 1974 Censua of
Agriculture • released today
by the U. S. Department ·or
Commerce's Bureau .of the

Census. Productloo expenses
on these farms tota led
$4,948,000 1n 1974.
The figures !Ire for !anru
qualifying
under the
definition first used for the
1959 Census of Agriculture ' A
.!ann Includes all agricultural ·
operations conducted at. any·
time during the census year

under the control of an ln·
dl v ldual management,
provided that sales of
agricultural products
amounted to, or normally
would amount to, at least $250
for places of less than 10
acres or $50 for places of 10
acres or mor~.
Figures for fanns with
sales of $2,500 or more are

shown lor 1974 and ID'a.
These fa~ accoWited lor
$1i,438,000 of aU aiiJ'lcullural
producll 110ld In 1974 and
$3,588,000 In lttlt.
··There were 252 of these
farms In 197t compared with
~ 1n 1llllll. The averll8e """
1ncreaaed from 234 to 231
acres during the live yeal'l!.
The value per acre lncreaaed
from $172 to $3~ raising the
av~age value per farm from
$40,330 to $76,525.

The market value of
Uvettoct and u.tr products
.., farma o1 ~500 ar more of
¥lea - $2,881,000 In Jrft;
poultry and tbelr produd.l,
$185,000 ; and crop aalea,
Including nursery products,
bay and forest products,
$1,854,000.

ID-TheSunday Timea&amp;ntinel. Sundav. Oct.I0.1976

Farm ·festival's .
second day s~ut ·

Farms reporting leta than

$1,000 1n salea numbered 571n
1974.
The · value of
agricultural producll aold on
these fa~ totaled $10,000.

.

••

down by rain

.

FALL FILL~UJ;' TIME
With every fillup of Mol Mix liquid feed, you
receive a

Farmers getting yowtger

rr WOUtD TAKE MORE than two hands 1D handle this whopper. Comparing her
conventlooal version to the eight-foot long fraJtiurter, even Tltia Robinson of New York
city Is dwarfed by this patriotic hotdog. It welgha 1,778 ounces; that's Ill pounds. Nearly 18
Inches In diameter, the mammoth hotdog Is draped acrosa a 5 feet, 9lnch roll. An annual
hotdog cookout for handlcappad children held In New York's Central park was the site of
unvelllng for this creation of the Hygrade Food Products Corp. ·

.I

.corner

•

and with Japan (19751

~ - communist Countr.s

,...---,

4000

llli-TS

I

IEXPORTS I

'"""

•

2000

+

' - - - - Textiles

t::;;;.' -

0
0

oitw/l'll(\jfiC1ufl$

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

•

20oo

•coo

ltMPOIITS

1000

I

1000

-

c'"'

By John Cooper
R. King of SCS recommended
Soil CoDB. Service
that he take care of
POINT PLEASANT - We sedimenlatlon and erosion
attended the state meeting of control on some newly
the Soil Conservation Society disturbed ground and to delay
of America where the the pond construction another
program ·was, "Critical year or so. He made plans
Conservation Choices - A with Hart to reseed by using
Bicentennial LoOk."
lime, fertilizer and mulch on
The speakers talked about the disturbed soil. Hart hopes
forestry and timber har- to get this land stabilization
vesting In West Virginia, the completed thiB fall.
gas Industry, coal Industry
Lawrence Powell of
and electricity._
Palestine Ridge is working on
The sjJeakers on gas, coal a spring development. It will malize."
and electricity emphasized ronsiBt of lnstalllng a catch
Though specific details are
that "things were looking basin at the spring and Jacking, the reasons for the
rather bleak." For Instance, pouring a 500-gallon (!9ncrete age droJKlq !Pay be tied to
Both Benefits at No Extra Cost in
Donald Hallen, vice president · watering tank below the better profits from farmlhg,
of Monongahela Power spring. Water is furnished at . the irilproved attitude of fann
Com(Jany, said It was the spring by a single vein of youth toward agriculture and
lnevitable that the price of water and It will be caught In rural life, and an entry· of
electricity will increase. In · the catch ·basin by means of urban-reared young adults
the 1960s be expects brown· about 15 feet of four-inch tile Into fanning. Too, the trend
outsf and to see utilities en- behind the catch basin. The may have been buttressed by
Get "Lucky".Go Liquid!
couraging people not to use water will be carried from · the large number of young
electricity. ·
the catch basin to the lank by adults In the population Roy Clarkson of West using 50 feet of IY•·inch pipe. "baby boom" children have
Virginia University
We helped James B. Slone grown up.
presented the forestry in· plan the use of his land which
"Whatever the details to
dustry story. He had pictures he bought on Poplar Fork of be tilled in," Bealeeootinues, GRAPE &amp; FOURTH
GAWPOLIS, OHIO
documenting its early history . Thirteen •Mile Creek. The
"lhe existence
and brought it up to date. He Stones plan to use their land trepd
is deflnite."of the new - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
was the only speaker who was mostly to develop grass,
cheerful about the future.
fruits and nuts. There iB some .
The speakers brought out
landplan
o.n the
he &lt;t:;:::=::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::=::::;::::::=1~
that we 1n America have been forest
does not
to do!ann
anybut
wood·
taught that there will be land work at the present
alternative sources of energy time. The Stones live In St.
developed when the need Albans, but Mr. Stone isoflow
arises. However, ·they a professor at Marshall
mentioned that such sources University and teaches exof energy as solar energy and tension classes in the
atomic energy are extremely Kanawha Valley. They exexpensive and there are peel to build a. house and
many other problems move to the farm In the
delaying their development. )future.

Communi&amp;! COU'IIriH

0000

I·

:,SIVE • ALL ..........

coming Oct. 13

.

.

Gas, coal, electricity

early seventies ana the
census surveys which showed
'7.00 VALUE
:•
the iong decllne ln numbers of
Check your tank now! It 's time to refill
young fanners had rome to a
during our Fall Flllup Time.
halt.
The average age of self· . 1 ~
~
employed
persons
in•
. \ V
"A/~~
agriculture has been Inching
...L
~t~~lower since 1970. By 1975, it ~ ~,.
""'
had dipped to 50 years, or
V
.r
nearly three years less than
in 1970.
.
More significantly,
workers under 35 years rose
from 205,000 to 358,000 - a
gain of 35 percent. The
number of fanners fell from
601 ,000 to 461,000, a decrease
of 23 percent.
Says
Calvin
J;leP.le
Economic Research Service
demographer: "One can only
~ with a new combination ~
conjecture about the cir·
cumstances that have finally
.~ of Power-Packed Ingredients~
halted the rise In the age of
.
• GRAIN DISTILLERS SOLUBLES ·
.
fanners. · But it was known
AMMONIUM.
POLYPHOSPHATE
•
that the aging process could
e CONDENSED FERMENTED CORN EXTRACTIVE
not go on forever. It was
simply golng through a tran·
sition. That had to rome when
the number of workers
So what????
reached some slabilization
Recent College Resea rch Showed
level and whe.n the age
composition began to nor·

inspire dour speeches

ATHENS - . A gigantic
multi-media show - employIng 29 projectors, eight
POMEROY - Feeder ci.lf sales are In full swl.ng with public address systems,
Galllpolls just flnlah!ng its first graded feeder calf sale.
· thousands of fleet of film, and
The results are as follows : Choice s!eers, yearlings and 6,000 slides - will tell the
calves aver~ged ~.52 per hundred with an average weight of si&lt;Jry of the Beatles Oct. 13
500 poWIIIB and overall average for all steers was $32.14 with an for two shows in Memorial.
Field.
average weight of ~.14.
The 90-mlnute presenla·
Choice heifers weighing 434 pounds averaged $23.16 with
an overall average of $23.43. Sales coming up are at Athens, lion, controlled by a comOctober It; Chlllirothe, October 19; ChiWrotbe, Oct. 26; putor system, follows a
Galllpolls on Oct. 28, Chllllcotbe, November 9; Athens, roughly chronological pal·
tern in the Beatles developNovember II, and !)llllicothe, NQv. 16.
.
ment. The presentation
REMEMBER,·'rAKE CARE of that machinery before you covers the period between
Jill lt away this fall. Use used motor oU along with diesel fuel 1960and 1971.
Producers of the ,multi·
« keroaene miXed hall and hall. Put this In a knack sack
lljl'ayer and ln a few mlnuoos you can have your machlnery media show are famed
.well oili!d. Be sure tO oU dlalns, all "moving parts, and hard ID . European ·cinematographer
Ian Baker and American proget to places.
· Oulllge oU of mot ora before putting away. Change oU after ducer Earl Jarred. The
engine has been run and the oU is warm or hot. Replace with shows will be presented at 8
new on.
.
and 10 p.m. Tickets are
Remove 3park plugs, apply several drops or squirts of oil, available from Memorial
Auditorium box office and
turn over engine, and replace the spark plugs.
DO NOT leave englnea or machlnery outside and covered Down the Rabbit Hole.
with plastic unleiiB you put plaatic down underneath also. With
a plaatic cover and no plastic underneath, moisture will rise
·~the ground and be trapped underneath the plastic.

8000
$m

years, but by 1965 that figure
had climbed to 51 years. In
the same span, the proportion
of farmers under 3li dropped
from 29 percent to about 1i
percent.
Where wo4id it ail end?
Who would take over when
· fanners died or retired' The
ar.swjrs had to wait till the

Tuwporl

Trldt t.a.nc:t lm

-

l-110 I +110 I dso I -170 I ·975 I ·100 I

Chilla's trade with the nonCommunist world is Increasing at a laster rate than with its
Commualst partners, particula.rly SiJICt Peking' s emergence or i'eceot years rrom

dlploniiltlo semi-iootalion. Major trade partner by"far is neighboring Japan. !Economist

Grapll)

contest. Members of the team
are Denver Cotterill, Patty
Dyer, Clay Marcum,s, and
Gary Holliday with Everett
Holcomb as advisor.
Later, the entire chapter
met to disc:uss the annual

Gallia Roller Mills Inc.

NOW YOU KNOW
Thomas Jefferson was an
ance
in
some
land expert on the prehistoric
management problems ground sloth, extinct for
concerning his new location 11,000 years, and discovered
there. He was primarily the bones of a species named
concerned about a pond that . after him, megalonyx jefhe wanted to build, but Okey ferson!.
ELMER HART
OF
Fiatrock asked us for assist·

___,..c..~t

'.

o.

•

~I

I

m

&lt;XJAL BANK MINE _ The Coal bank mine on Bob Evans Fann attracllld numerous
visitors before the rainll came Friday.

r;

CHOW TIME- Visitors siDod in Une for chow at the Bob Evans Fanns Sausage.Shop

into the rush ol haying season. To

Fall membership
•
campmgn opens
•

Property

Transfers

• THIS old momahlne still of.J. R. Hill's is a festure attraction at the Bob Evans Fann
Festival near Rlo Grande.

$J.00refuncl

when you buy
2 gallons of PEAK" I
for '3" ~:r,on

the two silver inner liners from both
caps, and the refund coupon to
Northern Petrochemical Company. .
Offer expires December 1. 19.76.

'

DISCOUNT
1 MAR . 1977- '
.~..:c
30:.;_APR. 1977

336 and 346 Balers :
15A and 16A Choppers;
100 Stack Mover: 25 and
34 Forage Harvester s

$195

$90

1207 . 1209,and 12t4
Mower / Cond ilioners :
800 and 83~nd~ower s :

. $390

5195

------.---·-----'""---- ---

•

466 Baler: ~ o u "tf3 a l ers .
35 and 38 Forage Harvesters

-----

·--~~--

~·

100 Slack Wa!lon____ ~~

200 an d 300 Stack Movers
~--

Hydrostatic Wi nd r'owers , •

---·- ··-5520 .

-

--·'----~·

Seii-P"ropelled Forage

Pick up your refund couJ)on today at

Feeder

230 Slack Shredder/

$260

$650

$325

$1 .040

$520

$1 .950

$975

200 and 300·Stack Wagons

Harvesters

'tl;all, Olllt

DI SCOUNT
UNTIL
26 FEB. 1977

MACHINES

~ We 'li send you $1 .00 within 6 weeks,

IDTUI.IIJA
If lillie, lie.,

Ray asks review, tells

cash di scount for acting early ... from
$195 to $2.600 depend ing on the
machines you want.

$2.600

-·-·---·-·- ·•
$2,600 .

---·---

. - ----~·- ··-·
--No Firi1nc; Osar9eslmioosed until next UH season. Ask us for dtlolls.

II

Sw.isher Implement cO.
•

Upper River Rd.

Kanauga, Ohio

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. - First Class, Star, Ufe, or
Area boys are Invited to join Eagle progrw awards.
Scout troopa or Cub Scout
Additional information
pscks as a part of the annual about the Scout and Cub
fall membership program of Scout program is avallable
the Tri-State Area Council, from the Tri-State Area
Boy Scouts of America .
Council service center, 733
The Cub Scout program iB a Seveath Avenue, Huntington,
family-centered program lor W. Va. 25702, or bY calllng ·
boys who have completed the (304) ~23-3408.
second grade of Who will be 8
through 10 years of age. They
meet weekly aa a den under
the suP.,r'lision of a den
leader, and all the dens come
together for a monthly pack
meetingled by a Cubmaster.
Boys start as Bobcats and ·
through achievements earn
Wolf, Bear, and Arrow of
Ught awards.
Edfn D. Marklnl, Ullle M.
The Scout program is for
Mar
kina to '· Michael B,
boys who ,have completed .the
fifth grade or who are II Martina, Parcela, Columbia.
JohnS. Codner, Beverly L.
through 17 years of age. The
·program I~ designed to Codner to-Pavid D. PII'IOIII,
develop cha racier, mental · Linda S, Persona, 11.721 A.,
·
and physical ·fitness, · and Sutton. .
Farmers Home Adm. ID
Citizenship training. The
focus Is on one's physical and Bernice C. McKinney, Lot,
.
mental fitness through a Middleport.
Charlea R. Findley . Sr.,
vigorous program· of ac·
tiviUes. As ScouiB, boys join Clella Findley, Mary Joyce
patrols and elect their own Flndley to Charles Michael,_
patrol leader. They usually Patricia Michael, lit Lot;··
meet once a week as a troop Letart.
Danny R. Tillll, Saundra
under the guidance ol a
Tillll
to Fred W. Klein,
Scoutmaster. Ahoy joinll as a
Scout and can achieve Martha E. Klein, Loll,
Tenderfoot, Second Class, Middleport.
Joaephlne F. Goodlllle, Ira
C. Go0dnlle, Charles F.
Smith, Betty Smllh, Ger\I'Ude
D. Morrll, Walter E. Morrll,
George K. Hadtlos, Tberelia
Haddox by George. HaddoK.
to Luther P. Smith, Mltry E.
Smith, Lot, Mlddlepoti.
· VIrginia E, Vltatoe 1o Jack
B. Freeman,\.43 A., Rut!end
Eugene Erlewine, Mary
Eriewine to Mononllhtla ·
A'rHENS - Over 850 Power Co., EaR., OliVe.
aoutheast Ohio high school
Ray E. Adami, FOITIII T. I
students have registered ID Adame to Monon1ahela i ·
attend College Day, Oct. 'll, Power Co., EaH., OUve.
hosted by Ohio University
Ralph D. Alhley lo Doll R.
and featuring repreeen· .mu, Mary E. mu, lUI A.,
tatives of 60 eoueges. Ohio Letart.
._;..
University staff members
wi\1 ~lso present a seriea of · . Chariea C. Lewia, clec'd., lo '
~tudent
workshops on Margaret Ella Lewis, Cert. '
flnancial aids and career Trans., Sallabury.
planning.
'
· Bobby W; Vance, Yvonne
Instltution.s sending Vance to Larry Vance, '
repr~ntatives lnciude most Sharon Vance, Int. ln • A., · •
of Ohio's state uiiiversities, Scipio.
several private colleges,
Cly~ J. Morlan, Ethel
technical colleges, the U. S. Marte Morlan lo Ropr A.
Air Force Academy in Spencer, Jean E. Spencer, '
Colorado and the U. S. Naval Lot, . Or~nge.
Academy ln Mary,land.
I•

Meigs

' ONE OF NUMERQUS booths at the Bob Evans Farm Festival is this apple hull~
cmcessioo stand near the headquarters bulldlng.
.

.gel top dollar discounts now th rough
February 28 on mach ines lisled
below. So acl fast and earn the extra

Frktay alt.ernoon as the mth

annual fall festival got underway·

• AHORsE is used to turn ancient machinery to crush sugar cane for the sorgoom at Bob
· Evans Fann Festival.

[c+c•---

encoUrage pre-seaSor1 ordering, you

~ Send your circled sales receipt. wilh

... your farm operation!

~~trapped"

the GaiJla County Junior
Fairgrounds due to high
water in that area. Most ol
the campers had planned to
attend festival activities thiB
weekend.
'
Weather permitting,
to day's &amp;clivi ties are
scheduled to begin at 9:3Q
a.m. with religious services.
The program runs through
5:15p.m.
Activities Include field
demonstrations, water
demoostrations, horseshoe
pitching and performances
·.by several country music
performers.

machines now ... before we both get

Super Sweepstakes entry form.

Thursday
R,acine
.
...Elementary, 9:30·noon;
Partiaad Elernent.ary, 12:»
With a long-term, reasonable cost loan from
• SuuLI!:RINREFORGER
· LANGSVILLE - Army the Federal Land Bank you can finance a
Private .Finl Claas D~vid L. wide variety of farm needs , . : such as new
Shuler, It, 1011 of Mr. and
Mrl. Rou ·Shuler, Route I, building$ and land improvements-and al·
Lllnpville, is one of the most anything else that can make your farm
lllolllllldl of American and · operation more profitable.
'
Allled troopoi who IDok part In
NATO Excise Reforger 76
228 Upper River Road
In Germany. He Ia regularly
p,
Box 207, Gallipolis
aalgned •• a grenadierPttone 446-0203
rlffeman with the !Olst
Clyde 8. W1lktrd~r .
Airborne Division at Ft.
C.mpMIJ, Kl.
.

campers were

'i,

We'll pay yo u lo order hay and forage

~ Buy 2 gallons of PEAK anl'i(reeze &amp;
coolant.
·
~Pick up your refund coupon and

1:45.

.

Get top doljar discount now
thru,February 28, during
John Deere's Preseason Roundup of Hayma.king ~argains

Bookmobile schedule
POMEROY - Meigs •
Jacklon • VInton Counties
Bookmobile Schedule for
Meip County, Oct. 12-16.:
Monday, Holiday, Book·
mobile closed.
Tueaday ·Cheater
Elementary, 9-11:30 a.m.;.
12:30-Z: 30 p.m.;. Syracuse,
Trailer Park, 3 '30-3:45;
Syracuse, Baer's. t-4:1~:
Syracuse, Lisle's, 4:ll0-4:45;
· Syracuse, Rustic llills, ~
6:30; SyrsCUie, John Street,
I:IU:30; Syracuse, DriveIn, 8: t6-7' !5; Syracuae,
Larry's Grocery, 7,30-7,45;
Mlneraville, Brown's Trailer
Court, &amp;.a:li; Nacml, 8'30-

.

parked autos . out of those
fields ,".
.
.
It Is the firSt time In the
event's history activltie3
have been cancelled due ID
rain .
Meanwhile, It was learned
Saturday more . than 200

+ 12.8% ·Weight Gains!
+ 5% Feed Efficiency!

fruit sale which will begln
soon, the making of a new
attendance chart and
. replacement of .officers who
have been unable to attend
meetlngs.

FEES RETURNED
· State Audiior Thomas E.
Ferguaon's office reported
2:30 p.m.; Reedsville Store, the third advance distribution .
3 ' 1~'30; Long Bottom, 4:4~ of 1976 ·slate motor vehicle
5:15; Success Road, 5:~; registration fees totaling
Texas Road, 6' ~ : 45; State $4,581,177 to Ohio counties,
Route 7-Houalng, 7'30-7:45; cities, townships and
County Road 26-Five Points- villages. Meigs County's
Whipple Road, 8:1H:30.
share
was _
$4,730.08.
_ _ _""!"'_ _ _ _ _
__
_ _ __

.

'

"'· KEITH Brandeberry is pictured at festival headquarters reglt&lt;\erlng guests Friday
during the sixth anilUal Bob Evans Fann Festival.
.

RIO GRANDE ~ Heavy
rain ·late .Friday and early
Saturday morning cancelled ·
aecond day activities of the
sixth annual Bob Evans
Fann Festival.
OfficiaiB said late Saturday.
afternoon it .was doubtful if .
thlfllili'd . and llnai day of.
events will be held today , due
ID wet grouns.
Bob Woods, in charge .of
activities, estimated 15,000
people were &lt;111 hand for the
opening day. Friday.
.
Bob Evans, host f!lf the,
annual .event, said, "People
are here from as far away as
New Jersey, Washlngton, D.
C. and pa~ of Virginia. We
~hate to disappoint them, but
the fields are soaked. If we
continue Sunday, individuals
will have o park at their own
risk and no doubt there will
be plenty of problems getting

FORTIFIED

Soil judging team finished in sixth place
POMEROY - The soil
juc181ng team of the Meigs
High School Future Fanners
of America placed sixth
recently wben U traveled
recently ID New Lexington,
Ohio,, lor a aoU judging

PAIR OF LEArnER .
~RK GLOVES

Beatlt:s' story
ByJohnC.Rice
County Ext. Agent, Agriculture

China's trade with the world . ..

By Boyd A. Ruth
SoU Co03ervatioll.lat
··
POMEROY - Accordlng to
surveys by the Bureau of the
Census, there -ar e fewer
wrinkles on the faces of
American Agriculture,. ·Our.
fanners are actually younger
nowadays.
In 1910 the age of all !ann
operatorl averaged out to 4t

FREE

.

why, how he was framed
WASHINGTON (UP!)
James Earl Ray Friday_
asked the Supreme Court to
review his conviction for the
assassination of Martin
't.uther King, charging he was
:;set up ID take the rap" for a
.srtme be didn't commit.
. In his petition for review,
Ray argued that he was
denied an effective defense at
.!lis trial becauae of a cooOict
of · . interest among his
atiDrneys; that his guilty plea
·was coerced and not made
'viliuntarlly; and that he was
'denied the right to call key
'!I'Jtn......SID his trial because
ill a court ruUng that perm
restdlng more than 100 rnllea
II'Om the hearing could not be
SUbpoenaed.
. · ·:Ray's petition, flled b)' his
.attorney, James H. U!sar of
Wublngton, D.C., urged tbe
Sllpreine Court to review the
cgnvictlon because of its
I'Jiatlooal importance, both
joolltlcally ancl legally."
·The petition claimed that
Ray ''was oet up to take the
1111 for a crime be didn't
CEIIllt, framed by the FBI
ll'td local pollee, and then
taerced by hill &lt;iwn attorney
lliW plelldirig gullty against

..

his will."
''The cllSrge is that tho.se
who did kill Dr. King are still
at large, protected in part by·
the unwilling!lells of the
!

Old books.
.

wUl b~ offered
at

library sale

MASON, W. Va. -A book
sale at the Mason City J?ublic
Ubrary beginning October 16 ·
·at noon will feature some
books published ln the !BOOs.
A 1965 Collier's E~·
cyclopedia, In . excellent
condition, will be sold to the
highest bidder. .
Also, there will be
duplicate copies of newer ·
books, ar.d paper hacks for
sale. Librarian Evelyn Prof·
!itt said donations of hooks
are welcomed. Those ·
desirable for circulation will
be put on the shelves. Others
will be sold to secure IWIIIB to
purchase things needed for
the Library., A good
typewri~er Ia badly needed.

-'

~~;,;;.~~ ~

courts to face these
unpleasant facts;" the
petition said. ,
It said Ray's case
"demands the Intervention of
this court in order that justite
will be done and ID prevent
this natiOn •s legallnstltutiOIII
from falllng heir to the same
klnd of shame and dlagrace
wltich France experienced ln
U)e Dreyfus affair at the tum .
of the century."
King was sasassin.ated in
Memphis, Tenn., April 4,
1968. Ray was arrested June
.8,1968, and 111 March 10, 1968,
en~ a· plea of gullty ID
killing the civil rlghtJ leader.
HEARING SET
MAYSVILLE, Ky. (UPI)A public hearing was
expected 1o be held tbe end of
this
year
on
the
environmental Impact-' of a
power plant to be bullt by
Dayton Power a. Ught Co.
and Cincinnati Gas II Electric
Co. on the Ohio River, about
15 miles east of Maysville.
· The two Ohio utllltlea have
begun site prepiratlon for the
plant's first unit, which Ia
scheduled to be completed In
1981.

-· -

host students

on Oct. 27th

"iJVERALL VIEWOiFESTIVALSITE-Kelth wilson shot this overall view ci the Bob,·
Evans Farm Festival site on top·of the nature trall overlooking Bob.Evans Fqnna nea~ Rlo
Grande shortly after 'activitiea ~ot ~y Friday mornlng.

NOT LADYLIKE, ROSE
LONDON (UPI) - Lady
Rose Delbray, 25, the
mistress of convi~ted
American narcotics
smuggler Herman Fine and
daughter of the late Earl of
Hardwlcke, has !Je!!n lined
$17o and f:lven a two year
SU3pentjed jail sen~nce. for

her part ln a plot to smuggle
$1.7 million in hashish fron\
Morocco to the United States.
The defense said the
convent:educated Lady Rose,
who met 1i'lne when she was
17, was under his dunlnaUm
and could not end the
· relationship, despite
opposiUon from her famlly.

DIDN'T FALL DOWN
.
LAKE HAVASU, Arl~ .
(UP!) - What was the Lord
Mayor of London doing 01) a
lake"ln Arizona? Looklng at
Lond(m Bridge, of courae.
Slr Undsay Ring, arrived
Friday for ceremonies
marking
the
fifth
anniversary of the reopening
of Lnndon Bridge.

'·

�~·

-

Oct.

maintained market share for . elsewhere 10· tiJe oomJ)IDY, ;: ·
cranes and waS able to locate are receiving financial lid to :
new markets for ll.s monorail supplement unemplo)'llltllt :
produ~ts . Moyna Pump compensation, ... edendec!.:
Division reflected a slow-but· . insura nee co veras e .- .
sleady · improvement retrailling for new jobs, 8llil:':
throughout the year and is placement . · aaslstance~
now seeing good im- Similar benefits !Or alfectf\1, :;
provement • In present hourly jJersonnel are atm~
markets aild excellent Ol&gt;' being negotiated with Local.;:
SPRiNGFIELD, Ohio - . proper perspective, about $12 million in new portunitles In ne,w markets. 902, with agreement expected ,:
Hunter Division operations mthe near future.
....:.
RobbinB a~ Myers, Inc., last however.," he continued, We equipment and facilities in
the
past
four
year$.'
'
·
saw
moderate
sales
imWall
mada..the
comment
week reported ita net income . still earn less than 5 percent
"Backlogs
at
year
end
were
provement
througj10ut
ttie
that
"Our
rate
of
progress
for
:
rose 35 percent on a 3 per&lt;.10nt net on· each sales ·dollar, and.
increase in sales for the fiscal is · below . the industrial lower than .at tbe same time year,tiedtothesamegalnsin thecurrentyearWUJhlngeon ::
year ended August 31; 1976 average for firms such as last year .at Moyno Pump and the residential coniltruc)ion how :our remailling moiC~f :
Material .Handling market, but profitability lines fare and how qulckJ3 ~
resulting fro!ll continuing ot~rselves."
operations, or. stated without
In further coriunenting on Pivjsions," ·wall said. A Improved significantly. · industry starts makln,g .:;
two recently · sold motor the company's improved lower levej of shipments was E.lect!'ic Motor (}roup, which sizable capital purchases. As an
extremely for the longer term," he salQ,-;:
divisions. ·· '
profitability, Wall attributed planned at these two faced
.
operations
In
the
fourth
depressed
market
at the start '1he company has a good :
Ssles for the year; from much of the success to the
quarter
to
adjust
production'
of
the
year,
saw
a
dramatic base of existing businesa wtttr :.
continuing operations, inched now-completed four-year
to
the
present
.
rate
of
in.
tulilllround
in
sulrfractlonal
. iinproving· profitability." If' :
up to 176,054,000 from program aimed at upgrading
coniing
orders.
This
resulted
motors
business
(located
in
addition, t he financial "'
f73,576,000 for ftscall975 and and · revamping the com.·
in
slightly
lower
fourth
•
GalllpoUs
and
Memphis)
as
poSition
of the finn has beell ::
net Income advanced to pany's
products aQd
·
quarter
profit
lor
the
com,
demand
improved
in
the
lailt
greatlY
strengthened,
·which...'.;
$3,682,1100, equal to $3.26 a facilities. "We a.re now ex·
pany,
·
half
of
the
year..
will
allow
Robbin.~
&amp;
Myers
to :
share, from 12,733,000, or periencing the concrete
The
Material
Handling
As
previously
reported,
the
quickly
take·
advantage
of
:
$i.42 a share. A charge ·in the benefits. &lt;(I a planned
Division
was
able
to
match
sale
of
the
two
electric
motor
new
opportunlti~s.
Dividends
~
fourth quarter, related to the rebuilding program," he
earnings
of
last
year,
despite
deivisions
I
!~§a
ted
in
decl~red
in
1976
'
!
Vere
74&lt;.1!nl.s
::
.
divestiture ol the two sold said, "that has seen us invest
a
capital
goods
market
Springfield
affected
about
:roo
a
share,
compared
to
50
cents
:
motor divisions , r~duced
reluctant to invest. The employees. Salaried per- in fiscaU975, and the present :
final net income tq $3,558,000;
"Divisi
0n, on lower sales,' sonnelaffectedby this action, regular dividend rate is 1!.,:
or $3.15 a share. The two
BRAVO,
BUMBRY
who ·were not placed cents pel' quarter.
locally based. motor units MOSCOW
(UPI)
~~~~~~~_,.;.;;,;,,.jj~llilfii;;..;;,;;.,;__;;;;;;,.;~~~~~
..:
the AC fractional horsepower
and DC universal motor American mezzo-soprano
u·
divisions - were sold for Grace Bumbry got raves In
cash August 31, 1976.
her Moscow debut Friday
'
SERI·E
~
S
Fred G. w.au, president, night, singing the role of
t THE CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA..... ~ .......... OCT. 25
said; "Our ability to sub- Princess Eboli in a
tantially Increase our net prodUction of Verdis "Don
EOUUS .•.•.. •.•••....•.•.•..•.•..••. ~··· · ····•\ •••••••• NOV . 11
income for 1976, in what was Carlos" in Italian while the
* PHYLLIS LAM HUT DANCE CO ............. NdV.
' essentially a flat sales per· rest olthe cast used Russian.
Anearcapacityaullteo(.1!in
· *MUSICAL MIME ............. , ................ :... JAN. 20
lorrnance, Is a r!JSult of our.
planned efforts since 1~72 to the6,000-seatKremlin Palace
*THE INTIMATE P.D.Q. BACH .. _.............. FF;B, 23
reStructure Virtually every o!Congressesintertuptedthe
*THE TOKYO STRINGS ... .... ;................ MAR. 9 .
facet of Robbins &amp; Myers. In finalactforfiveinlnuteswlth
cheers and applause as Miss
' ·
·
·
·•
Bumbry made tier final
*THE CINCINNATI BALLET (0 ............... APR. 6
. G"llipolis, service ma'hager, appearance in the Oi&gt;era. .
*GARRICK OHLSSON, PIANIST, &amp; THE OHIO
has been moved mto WilderThen they brought her and
UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA .... APR. 29

:Robbins -&amp; Myers net
is·'up ·by 3~per cent

retirement given by his employer, the M~n County Motor Co. of Point PlellSilnt. His wife,
Kathryn, is seated at his right.
·

THE 1976;.77_OHIO
ARTIST

Wildermuth. honored by
Masori County Motor Co.

.

MODEU ARE HERE

.-.m

blames CIA

I

Register For A

for its ruin ·

i." 75 DODGE DART CUSTOM

,

~

cyl., auto.
.P..S., P.B, , air

$3495

' Or.

GEMINi' .(Moy . 21-J~nt 201
Whether you hav_e problems
today targely ·depends on your
own altitude. If you· s~ek the

·75 MUSTANG II MPG

'

Sharv

~:

$2095

13,000

:: 111iles

splendid sense .of humor to

.

Work for you tod a:y Instead of
taking yourself and e~Jeryt hl ng
. you do too S~ rioi.J &amp;Iy . .

$2695

4 Dr.
Brougham

.74 AM~ 14ATADOR-

VIRGO (Au,.

23·So~l.

221

Owei ll ng · on $~1f · de.leat l ng
thaug hts will Whip you be fore
yoU' even gel. sti:lrted lo·day, It' s
just as easy. lo see yourself a
winner.

TWO

CA~LOS

.

•

•

•

---

YOUR CH.OICE .

$1895

-

4 Speed

At our tent display near the West Fair ve.

••

'

$1495

--.

2 dr : HT 1 cJark ;br9wn w it h
w hite vlny.l roo f and white
Inter ior·, full power a~r ,

AM·FM

.. -1

•
"•

••

•••

..••

.

*499

Regular Price

-' ..•
•

,.
••
•

Time
Payments
Availab le.
Reasonltble Depo sit . Convenient

$SOO.OO

Low

'

76 Dodge Charger SE
76 Dodge Coronet 4 Dr.

75 Dodge·Charger SE

FAIR SPECIAL

'399 .

Monthly Payments.

lf .xou can't come to the Fair, just :
marl the coupon and you .will be ~
automatically registered for the free ~
$300.00 memorial.
· ·•

r

CBS News Correspondents Mike Wallace,
Morley Safer ond Dan Rather probe for
a fresh slant oriwhat's happening
behind ihe headlines.

••

'IHE SONNY,CHER SHOW

•
....... '41

~

•

•
•••
•
•

Choose From The Largest
Selections In Southeastern Ohio ...

8:0Cti:C'
:
.rlt/'
J
4S,IC·
CHER HAVE GOT rr

-.
•
•

.

• Stone Eternal

They're the hosts IMth the most
Dishing out bount1ful seJVings of gags,
glamour and gu ests.

75 P~mouth Green FuiY-4 Dr.

75

P~mouth

'

----.
"'..-"'
·~

• Ruby' Red

~

'·

FuiJ 4 Dr•.

;75 Dodge Dart Sport
· 15· P~mouth Duster

AS.:PS-AC

STUCCO p lo~ tering and plaster
repair . Textu red ceiling', swirl ,
flmat .or brush design, 32 yr. ex ·
p. Work by the hour or. 6y the
jab , 25 6, 1182. All work
guaranteed.

A8-PS.AC

TAYLOR 'S Air Co11ditioning and
Refrigera tion. Co m"lercial and
domestic , -446·2247.
------~~--"~--

AS-P S-AC

AS-PS-Ac·

.

AS-P S-AC

A6-P~C
A&amp;PS-AC .
AS.:PS-AC

74 AMC Hornet 2 Dr.

A&amp;-Ps-AC .

Carroll Norris Dodge
. Gqlllpolls, Ohio
Charlie WebSTer, Buster· Sprague, Dan
Harden, Tom Norris. ·

..

·

. 1

1HAT'nnl~'=rMuRDER

Convenient·
Credil .Terms Available - We. Cany Qur Own Accounts
.

NEWSHOWI

DELVECCHIO

-'

~-· ......-a&amp;~1~Y'
IN mE lAME .
AGAINSfCRIME.-

Meet the cop who's unsi'terving in h.is
dedication, unorthodox in 'his rnethods,
unbeatable at his game! Judd Hirsch
is Delvecchio. Charles Haid is his sid(·kick.

·--~----.---:--------"'!"---,

. 1 1 Loaan Mon"!mentCo., Pomeroy,Ohio

Logan Monument Co., Inc.
. Pomeroy, Ohio
Meigs County Display Yard
Near Pomeroy-Mason Bridge ·
leo L: Vau!Jhn, M!lr.
· Phone 992-2$88

..--.

I

Phone 388-8603
•

OPEN EV~NINGS and SUNDAYS BJ APPOINTMENT .

1-Pieilse

send

details

on

"Fair'•

Specials.

I

NOW

~

I home.
1 _Piease selld me details about Mausoleums L.::
f without obligation.
.
.
L .,;

1

'4800

~7'12 ft. Sleeps 6, innerspring mattress. f.ully
. ~elf contained. ·
·
'

.

SMITH HONDA SALES

Rt.,l

1,..,.;.
I .

II '"""
I -·I a;~or. .
I

I 1

.

•

'' ' . '

II
·I
I

t .,,
. ,,,
1.~:-. . ,

~

.

12995

1973

1974 BUICK

MONTE CARLO

RIVIERA

Dr. Hi da r~ green, light
beige top, beige Interior,

2 dr . HT, lul l power, Air,

V8 , aut o ., · PS. PB, eir sun
r oo f, w ire w heel covers ,
super ni ce .

cl dth Interior .

2

--------------~----

THOMAS FAIN

EXTERMINATING
Termite Pest Control
Wheelersburg, Ohio

.... --

. ..:..:.....,...~" ~-:-.CONCRETE
WORKi ,
patios ,
sidewalks . ba sement. etc :
. l ou I$ Cox 4-46·3398.
_.._

-

· FOR thC best it"! arch it ectural
design and buildi ng C"l new
homes. sm all com merciqi
buildings, opt ., Or remodeli ng
with st at e ,approva l of pio ns,,
. Bill , Walker , 446·2146 or 446·

06S2.

SAND and Beever losuro nce Co.
has offered services far Fire Insurance co11erage in Gcllia
County for almoSt a century .
Forms, homes and personal
pcoper ty , cove rages ore
QIIOiloble .to meet individual
needs . Contact Charles Neal,
your neighbor and ageS --~

3595

.

SEPTIC Ta'nk s Cleaned . Plonts.
Septic Tank Service .· Ph. 446·
'·
1972or675·?/:l47

1

Plymouth •• .You can't

4.o0o

8595

1

afford to miss these specials.
.

MOUNTAIN STATE
CHRYSLER-PLY MOUTH
SHA~LE

AND SILVER BRIDGE_$

. The c~~ listed below have exceptionally
low mileage. Previous owners nCimes
are available. Mileage Is verified.

d•.

TIM E TO · CHECK AIR CONOI TIONERS. RESIDENTIAL ANO
COMM ERCIA L. CALL 0. OAY
TRAINED . PHONE 388·8274.
TV REPAIRS ·RENTALS
Picture Tube Speciali sts

HARTWELL ELECTRONICS
245 -5365
.

100% Warranty.

SOMMERS.GM C
TRUJ: KS , INC
13:tP ine 51.
446 -2532

REFRIGERATION 1 18 YRS . EX PER IENCE
AND
S&lt;;HOO L

1976 PONTIAC
GRAN PRIX

69 FORD Pi ckup one -half T.. 446-

3712.

'72 Chev. custom com p.~ r . th ree ·
fourfh T PU , 350, 4 barrel.
stock , $.11?Gq ,-.ca'II 379·2AOC! .

BOROER:.SGARAGE

-

1976 CHEV. IMPALA

STA. WAGON .

LJ. silver with leather
interior, 5,000 miles.

2 seater, air,

~

1975
MUSTANG II

ture designs. Other dry wa ll ,, 1976 Dodge Von : PS. std . shil t. 6
repair : vlnyl wallpapering , new .
cyl . P~ 4 ~· 2379. .
baths, new kitch~m~ . ,A nythin9 1
od 1
·
76
Chev_. Pickup , ,9._.'h fl. bed, '350
in re':" e ing or repa 1r .
cu. in. 3 spd . 388 -8304 .
.
~'6- 2~~·~-~-~ COUGHENOUR Woter Deli very,
69 VW . $600, good cand ., 367·
BACKt-10~ . dozer, ditcher and
46-3962, 446·4262 any time.
7303.
dump truck . Wfit ins tall water OOZIER work , exqwoting, land
69 Bui~;k Stoti~~ Wogqn, 'call 4
lines, footers, drains. seplic
c e~rin_~ · Ph. 4~6 -0051 . _
-p,m . 245-9572 ,.
systems, concrete work. Heit·
lieli:l Back hoe Ser :, RuHand. 0 .
Ph. 7.42-2008 or 4.46·2796.-'
--;-.,.._..

J,poo miles.

1975 DODGE
CORONET CUSTOM

~

2 Dr. hdtp., air cond., 3,000

Autoi'hatic, air cond., 5,000

miles. ·

miles.

·'

-

AUCTION SALE

ARE YOU COOL MAN? lhEtn ypu
need the i n~ ulati n g 'experts ot
,lAWREN CE HEAHNG AND
ElECTRIC TO. give you a free
es timat e on blown. \n i'rh ulo·
'
, , lion , Coli 675·3099. .

On Wed., October 13, 1976 at 10 A.M.

· Will sell the personal property of Geo. W.
Knapp, located at Leon, W. Va·. on Leon
Baden Rcj., turn · right on Dunham Rd.,
follow sign to O.llie Rawnes lium.

~-~ -~~-- · ·- -. -.-c-

DON 'T BE inconvenienced by ,
lettirig your trash pi le up, _ .
'
becau se of undeperiable ser~
vice. Co li A &amp; R Trash
Ser..,.ice . Ph. 446 ·~0

One Oliver Cle Trac. bulldozer ;;th blade, M.F. 50

-~-,-~.

1975 AMX PACER X
autor:natic, air

i:ond .,

AM· F M,

miles . ·

..

7,OOQ

1974 MGB-GT ·
.
4 speed, 24,000 miles, riew
· radials.
·

'

traCtor, boom pole. disc, one Oliver 70- tractor , side

delivery rake, mowlrig machine 7 fl. cut, hay wagon,
.Bolen tractor a. attachmentl. 15-30 McCormick tractor

SANOY AND BEAVER Insurance
Co. has off~red serviCes for
Fir_e l':lsurance coverage in ,
G~a ll io ( dunty.for almost Q
·
century, Farms. · homes and
personal property , Coverage s
Ore o~ailoble tO meet individual needs,. Contact l ewis
Hugh ~s your · n~ lg hb_o r and "
oqrt nl ,
r

steel wheels, One lot qf horse-drawn equipment, New
Ideal manure spreader / chain saw, wheelbarrel, dr jll :
pr.:~ss, bench g'rinder, ground stcine, platform scales,
saw mandrel with saw, elect. mot or s, steel drums, one

lot' log chains, one tot hand tool; milk cans, cut.oll saw

w11h mandrel, O)( yoke Iron bed; t;.ak s1and, tab,e ,
chalr.s, one coa l or wood heater, one desk top. oak chest
of drawers, washing mEichlnes, r efriger ator , gas
heater ,1maple bed. one lot used lumber, o.ne lot new
lumber . O.,e lot of old coins consisti ng Qf lead pennies,
sflver halves, quar1ers, dimes a nd nick-els.

PA~ NTlNG BV BRUSH, 'earn
roof!&gt; and sides also houSes.
Ca ll
245·560 1 fnr
fr ee ·

Many, many -items too numerous to mention , Not
accidents .
Sole Cond~cted by

,t'uf'fiale or Tradt•

responsible for

440 JOHN DEERE Ooie•.' Ph. ~46t 0168 .

M.URRAY &amp; D.URST AUCTION SERVICE
. 372-3458-Coftagevllle, W. Va ,

196'7 Ford .~u s tom 500, ph . 446:
.. '·
.__ _"""..;_ _..,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
· 36'l,5,nny Ur nc

·-

,... . ..

For the best buys in the
area shop ·Mountain State

Coupe DeVille, full power·;
air , AM- FM st ereo, si l ver
wl lh sli ver vinyl · roOf , red
leather interior , show room
condition . less than
mil es.

19751 Ton Chcv, Siak e
1972 ~~, T ( hev . pickup

gl,laronteed. Ph . 245-9131 , 446·
3100.
~--,-~------.,.....,---;;-··
_____._
AllEN "S Constructi on. _remodel ·
ing, old or new, building. Ph .

'

4995

1

75 CADIUAC

oooRSer - 1969 Chavell e SS, 396 cu . In eng.,
4 sp., exc. co nd. Ph'. 446·0648
vice. Commercial ond Res·idGn after 5 p.m.
tie l . Specializing in operators,
Loca l . 256·6472. ·
1976 Chev role t Cheyen ne, hea"y
BOB 'S
~B -·: Rad io
Et~ulp . .
duty , 4,000 miles. 1939 Ford ,
everything in Two·Woy Radio. PASQUALE Insulating . 103 C~dar ·
good to nd . Ph . 446-21b6 ·ofter
AntennqS and acces. Geor ges
St., Gall ipol is. Ph . .446·2716 or·
3,30
.•
C ree~ Rd., Gallipoli s, 446 --4: _2!: _c4':"
46::_·~
109
~2~.----'-.c.;.,.K6TAI..I C La ndsca ping, residential CUSTOM REMODELING , 20 years . 69 Camara, foc.tory , derna :. lor-s
of ewtras, real sharp. bes t of .
&amp; Commercia l, s~rubs, . trees ,
experie!l&lt;;e, 3~ - 8308 . New ~ ry ·
fer . 245 ·.5329.
rack gardens. all installed &amp;
woll .celling with swfrl or tex -.

__ .....___________

\lark blue. while vinyl root, ·

-

-

~ igh~.' ------

-----

LIST '6059

""

I ::.,.

Gallia County Display Yard
James 0 : Bush, Manager

· ·-. ·(

1 _PI,ase send me· FREI; booklets iliowing 1 -·
1 ,memorials ~rlnted in full color with sizes I· :
1 and prices listed. .
.
1 ~
1-Kindly have · an authorized Logan I ' •
I Monu~:nent Co •. rtpresentativ.• call at mv

VInton, Ohio

.

1976.PROWLER

N

ON LAWBREAKERS.

Detec;live Theo Kojak's methods·are
unorthodox. But no ohe·gets away with
murder (or anything elset) when h e '~-around.. Telly $avalas stars.
,

DEMO SPE€IAL

~

HpWARD Pe.ck Water · Deliv~~;.
2-45·93 15 or 388·8262 day or

r e du c ed

NEW GMC

Truck ·Headquar te rs
1974 1/ 1 T. GMC Pi ckup
1974 1/ 1 T. GMC'P ickop
STA~OARD
. 1974 1! 1 T. t hev . PU 4 WD
Piumbin g · Heating
1975 1h T.'Chev. PU
--215 Third
. . Ave. .. 446-3782
.,..
1971' Chev. Impala
GENE PlANTS 8. SON
1973 ~~, Chv11. Pi ckup
PLUMBING - Heating - Air 1906 If) T. GMC Pll
Condi tioni ng, 300 Fourth Ave. 1974 1/ 1 l. GMC PU
Ph . 446.· 1637 .
197 5 Ch evrolet lu v PU
"
1972 IT f ord StoK e Bod y
OEWITT'S PLUMBING
J-975 Ford Mu stbng ll ,
A ND HEATif',IG
1975 three·fourth Che\1 . PU , 4 w .
Route 160 a t ~11e rgr een
d r.
Phone 446·2735
1975,thrce-fo urth T. GMC PU 4 w .

742-2409: We

P.S., P.B. .

'w'lnyl root. air, Unt&amp;d glass,
bronte fini sh , tobacc o
brown interior . :

Auto Safes

AND HEATING
Co r. Fou rth.&amp; Pine
Phorie 446·3888 ar 44 6·44777

___

4 Dr :, V-8, auto.,

th l&gt;

~ --::-~-

CARTER 'S PlUMBING

-~

HUFFINES and Sons Fix -it Shop.
Pl umbing, elec trical , · sma ll
·appl .. washer and dryer. corp:
repairs and general repairs.
.-- Caff"388·88-47, oVer 15 yrs ..~x p .

w

t:OOKOJAK UMS

1~ 14)

..

P.In~a~d:tl..i~ • . ,

Soulh~?ostern Ohio Tru ss Rafter
Co. Box 28 A. Rutland, 0 .

A8·PS-AC

• Georgi a Ma.rb le • and many others ;:

~A~

-

.

TRUSSED RAFTERS
Any
·pit c h ,
any s i ze,

74 Pontiac Catalina 4 Dr.

••

....!1. Barre Guil,d

ALL 'IOGEI'HER.

c:vl. engine. auto. 1rans.,
power steer i ng _. radio, w -S·
w ti r es. low mllesage .

FOOT OF THE

-...., _,-:,

deli ver,

. -....,.• '

.

ECONOMY Tractors and Equipment , Carroll's Sa les and Se"r ·
vice. 2 rnileS West on 588. Ph .
,.4A6·2923 ,
.

45775. Ph .

·.·. -~... *· WI
LKIE
~~ .
.

(

ELECl ... CAL lnslollolion, Reg .: .
Comm ., lndusti"ial , 256·6855,
CrQwn Cit~. Ohio.
_

AU. WITH LOW MILEAGE

75 Dodge Charger SE

ONLY

•
•

60MINUTES
'W:OOBIG NEWSSMRIES
• •
YOU CAN'T GEl'
ANYPlACE ELSE.
.

Late Model
Sharp Used Cars

. ..""•

.NOW

'699

. •"

•.
•"
••
•

•

"

OR MELVIN MOONEY

FORD GALAXIE
500

2895

Nova, 4 door . white with
black al l viny l Interior. 6

4295

SEE PETE DAVIS

. '

1974

,._..

1

1974 CHEVROLET

'1

•

REGIStER
PRICE

~2295

73 FORD
THUNDERBIRD

;

•
•
•
•

REGULAR

5295

Check

unbeli e vable
price.

•

to

'

found.

throughou t .

1

--

·•••OR REGISTER IN OUR SHOWROOM
AT LOGAN "·CIRCLEVILlE · POMERoY · VINTON OR WEu.sTO"
'

rad io. car pet, exc ellent

.... "'•

ON DISPLAY AT THE LANCASTER FAIR

.

tk

Dart SWi ng ~·r . 2
H.T.,
maroon with blat k all vinyl
interior, Standa r d transmission on . l he co lumn,

v iny l r oof, 350 v.a, au to ..
P .S., P . B., air , t inted glasS,
AM &amp; fape pla yer . power
w l ridows ,
r oad
siV Ie
whe els,
2, 300
ml le s,
show .r oom cond itl on.

. ..:

·

2dr fiT , VB, P.S., P.B.,

with black conv . top a nd
blaj:k leatherette Inferior , 41
speed, radiQ, local owner·,
, who purc hased it new , a
sharper on e can not be

2695

~------~~~--~----~~--------~~----------~~

;.·

1974 VOLKSWAGEN

1

Air
P.S.

.

Con vertible, bright orange

Dr., baby blue, dark blue

73

73 DATSUN PICKUP

-

CHARGERSSE

med. green, g reen

cloth intef lt&gt;r, P.B., Ve.

1974 DODGE

73 PONTIAC CATALINA
Air
P.S., P .B.

•
•

~

·. _ . ..

2

doo'r: Capr ice. medium
green with m-atc;:h lng green
interior, V8 , auto. tran s.,
power steeri ng , radio , sol id
car, ver y few flemis~es.

73 MUSTANG GRANDE

1975 DODGE"

$1295

1975 OLDS
CUTlASS

~

•

4 dr ..

P.S.,. ali"

1970 CHEVRO~ET
4 Wheel
Di-ive

va .auto .. p s.. ro dlo

$5295

liP-

LEO (July 23•Aug. 221 Pul your

360

lWQ _

69 QtRYSI.ER
NEwPORT

72 DOOOE DEMON

Vin y l roof .

not ·likelY that ypur generosity
to.,...ard cer tain pals Will be
matched today. Wh en -th e tab
comes, see th l;ll every one

74. FORD LID
.

re d \llnyl
V-8, auto.,
P. S-.; P. fLair, q11adr asOn ia
r adio, CB

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22111's

antes

:, 74 PLYMOUTH. DUSTER
,,

Wh it e wit h
ln1er ior , 400

, sun shi ne, it's there.

$2995

4 Speed.

·

(April 20·Moy 20)
Even th ough you .wilr ha ve to
contend with opposition today
you 're ~p t to be th e one wh o
lucks out in the long run.

PLYMOUTH DUSTER ......;..............:..... 3200
4 DR........:..... s3600

-.
--

FlU! •·3 00 MONUMENT
~t~~~-, OF

with something -of value.

·75 PONTIAC
TRANS AM

TAUR.US

5

:::
"'
rep•l•ac.em•e•m-=~:ri:~:~:~:l1!~ th•re•e•~o•u•r~::::::~:~:::61:4;):59;~:~:7:1:F:O:R:B:R:OC:H:U:R:E:IN:F:OR:M:A:TI:O:N:·;;:::·~.~

~~:und:j~~b

DEMO CWRANCE

·I

191

There's a possibility you could
tre~t a Seriou.s m§lter far too
lightly tod ay. Don't play games

19

GALLIPO).lS · - Millard CoLinty Motors in.Point Plea- - known everywnere as
Wild.ennuth of Middleport, 35 san!, made his . retirement Bill-is general manager of
/
years down the road from official Friday evening at a thePoin(agency. ·
Wildermuth has no definite
starting to work in the parts Holiday Inn dinner.
Over 40 nersons attended plans lor his retirement. He
. department of the Mason
. the retirement party with . and his wife, Kathryn; expect
~~:~~~od.;~~:o~~~
SEASON SUBSCRIPTIONS AVAILABLE NOW .....WRITE
· ·William Knight as master of · to visit more often their C'~~;~ i~ot~~ UC:eo. ~~~r~
ceremonies. Guests from daughter , Judy, wife of someone can be trained for thusiaiitlc ovation at the end
MEMORIAL AUDITORIUM, ATHENS, 0. 45701 OR
G&amp;J Auto Parts were in- school administrator .
troduced by Harold G. Allensworth in Tiffin, .and
. or•a
. ..
. ..
Robinson, manager from the son, Jim, a Kroger employee
G&amp;J Auto Parts Store in Pl. in Columbus.
Pleasant.
"Jim has some carpentry
LoGAN MoNur..e,Nr co. sAYs,
..
There were remarks about work to do at his place. I ex'
the good and bad times peel to 'help him," MUiard ·
(when the fire burned them said.
WASHlNGTN (UP!)
out) .
Millard llnd Kathryn have
Claims that could total $75
Wilderrnuth.was presented two
grandchildr.en,.
million were filed against the a Polaroid earners from G&amp;.J daughter s · of lhe AliensCIA by an American aircraft Auto parts, aijd luggage was worths. Mrs. Wildercorpqration that says the giveil by _the Mason County moth · retired last January
agency used its planes for Motors.
from her job as a .checker at
secret 'actions . - including
Saturday Wildermuth told Kroger in Pomeroy. '
murder - and ruined it by the Sunday Times-Sentinel:
The kind of treatment the
,..,
(OR CAN BE APPLIED TO ALARGER MONUMENT OF YOUR CHOICE) ·
· taking over the, comp..:ny
. "They (the knights r ·have ",. Kllights gave Wildermuth
name and illegally manufac- been Wonderful people. to has not gone unrewarded.
turing its products.
work for." He was speaking Said Wildermuth:
(4.
ent~nce.
General Aircraft Corp. o( of A. R. Knight, Pomeroy,
"I always tried to do a good
Bedford; Mass., said in a 22- and his son, William, Point jobfor them."
page claim 1elter'sent to CIA Pleasant. The senior Knight
OCT. 5-ll
He went on: "They turned
Director George Bush, with a owns . the. Mason County me loose to run the pans
.
'
copy to the White House, that Motor Co. (together with the department the way I wanted
its aircraft business had been Pomeroy Motor Co. and the to, and always hacked me
••
wiped out and its reputation Gallipolis Motor Co. in up."
•
ruined by alleged· CIA ·Gallipolis) and William
Jimmy Evans, who lives in ·
machinations.
NO
PURCHASE
NECESSARY AND NO " NEED TO BE PRESENT AT DRAWING
WIN.
.
.

Aircraft firm

Bernice !lode Ooot ·

.

A~IES (lhrch 21 ·'~prll

NIVERSITY :
.
-

*

AstraGraph

GALLIPOLIS
HRYSLER-PLYMOU

11

GIFTS UNWRAPPED - Millard (Millie) Wlldennuih of Middleport happUy prepares
ID unwrap gifts re&lt;.10lved Friday following a dinner at the Holiday Inn in honor of his

1976

..

.;.;._,_..J

60

CARS IN STOCK

. Sunday Shoppers Welcome,
Come In and Browse. Around '

GMAC &amp; BANK

I

�~·

-

Oct.

maintained market share for . elsewhere 10· tiJe oomJ)IDY, ;: ·
cranes and waS able to locate are receiving financial lid to :
new markets for ll.s monorail supplement unemplo)'llltllt :
produ~ts . Moyna Pump compensation, ... edendec!.:
Division reflected a slow-but· . insura nee co veras e .- .
sleady · improvement retrailling for new jobs, 8llil:':
throughout the year and is placement . · aaslstance~
now seeing good im- Similar benefits !Or alfectf\1, :;
provement • In present hourly jJersonnel are atm~
markets aild excellent Ol&gt;' being negotiated with Local.;:
SPRiNGFIELD, Ohio - . proper perspective, about $12 million in new portunitles In ne,w markets. 902, with agreement expected ,:
Hunter Division operations mthe near future.
....:.
RobbinB a~ Myers, Inc., last however.," he continued, We equipment and facilities in
the
past
four
year$.'
'
·
saw
moderate
sales
imWall
mada..the
comment
week reported ita net income . still earn less than 5 percent
"Backlogs
at
year
end
were
provement
througj10ut
ttie
that
"Our
rate
of
progress
for
:
rose 35 percent on a 3 per&lt;.10nt net on· each sales ·dollar, and.
increase in sales for the fiscal is · below . the industrial lower than .at tbe same time year,tiedtothesamegalnsin thecurrentyearWUJhlngeon ::
year ended August 31; 1976 average for firms such as last year .at Moyno Pump and the residential coniltruc)ion how :our remailling moiC~f :
Material .Handling market, but profitability lines fare and how qulckJ3 ~
resulting fro!ll continuing ot~rselves."
operations, or. stated without
In further coriunenting on Pivjsions," ·wall said. A Improved significantly. · industry starts makln,g .:;
two recently · sold motor the company's improved lower levej of shipments was E.lect!'ic Motor (}roup, which sizable capital purchases. As an
extremely for the longer term," he salQ,-;:
divisions. ·· '
profitability, Wall attributed planned at these two faced
.
operations
In
the
fourth
depressed
market
at the start '1he company has a good :
Ssles for the year; from much of the success to the
quarter
to
adjust
production'
of
the
year,
saw
a
dramatic base of existing businesa wtttr :.
continuing operations, inched now-completed four-year
to
the
present
.
rate
of
in.
tulilllround
in
sulrfractlonal
. iinproving· profitability." If' :
up to 176,054,000 from program aimed at upgrading
coniing
orders.
This
resulted
motors
business
(located
in
addition, t he financial "'
f73,576,000 for ftscall975 and and · revamping the com.·
in
slightly
lower
fourth
•
GalllpoUs
and
Memphis)
as
poSition
of the finn has beell ::
net Income advanced to pany's
products aQd
·
quarter
profit
lor
the
com,
demand
improved
in
the
lailt
greatlY
strengthened,
·which...'.;
$3,682,1100, equal to $3.26 a facilities. "We a.re now ex·
pany,
·
half
of
the
year..
will
allow
Robbin.~
&amp;
Myers
to :
share, from 12,733,000, or periencing the concrete
The
Material
Handling
As
previously
reported,
the
quickly
take·
advantage
of
:
$i.42 a share. A charge ·in the benefits. &lt;(I a planned
Division
was
able
to
match
sale
of
the
two
electric
motor
new
opportunlti~s.
Dividends
~
fourth quarter, related to the rebuilding program," he
earnings
of
last
year,
despite
deivisions
I
!~§a
ted
in
decl~red
in
1976
'
!
Vere
74&lt;.1!nl.s
::
.
divestiture ol the two sold said, "that has seen us invest
a
capital
goods
market
Springfield
affected
about
:roo
a
share,
compared
to
50
cents
:
motor divisions , r~duced
reluctant to invest. The employees. Salaried per- in fiscaU975, and the present :
final net income tq $3,558,000;
"Divisi
0n, on lower sales,' sonnelaffectedby this action, regular dividend rate is 1!.,:
or $3.15 a share. The two
BRAVO,
BUMBRY
who ·were not placed cents pel' quarter.
locally based. motor units MOSCOW
(UPI)
~~~~~~~_,.;.;;,;,,.jj~llilfii;;..;;,;;.,;__;;;;;;,.;~~~~~
..:
the AC fractional horsepower
and DC universal motor American mezzo-soprano
u·
divisions - were sold for Grace Bumbry got raves In
cash August 31, 1976.
her Moscow debut Friday
'
SERI·E
~
S
Fred G. w.au, president, night, singing the role of
t THE CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA..... ~ .......... OCT. 25
said; "Our ability to sub- Princess Eboli in a
tantially Increase our net prodUction of Verdis "Don
EOUUS .•.•.. •.•••....•.•.•..•.•..••. ~··· · ····•\ •••••••• NOV . 11
income for 1976, in what was Carlos" in Italian while the
* PHYLLIS LAM HUT DANCE CO ............. NdV.
' essentially a flat sales per· rest olthe cast used Russian.
Anearcapacityaullteo(.1!in
· *MUSICAL MIME ............. , ................ :... JAN. 20
lorrnance, Is a r!JSult of our.
planned efforts since 1~72 to the6,000-seatKremlin Palace
*THE INTIMATE P.D.Q. BACH .. _.............. FF;B, 23
reStructure Virtually every o!Congressesintertuptedthe
*THE TOKYO STRINGS ... .... ;................ MAR. 9 .
facet of Robbins &amp; Myers. In finalactforfiveinlnuteswlth
cheers and applause as Miss
' ·
·
·
·•
Bumbry made tier final
*THE CINCINNATI BALLET (0 ............... APR. 6
. G"llipolis, service ma'hager, appearance in the Oi&gt;era. .
*GARRICK OHLSSON, PIANIST, &amp; THE OHIO
has been moved mto WilderThen they brought her and
UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA .... APR. 29

:Robbins -&amp; Myers net
is·'up ·by 3~per cent

retirement given by his employer, the M~n County Motor Co. of Point PlellSilnt. His wife,
Kathryn, is seated at his right.
·

THE 1976;.77_OHIO
ARTIST

Wildermuth. honored by
Masori County Motor Co.

.

MODEU ARE HERE

.-.m

blames CIA

I

Register For A

for its ruin ·

i." 75 DODGE DART CUSTOM

,

~

cyl., auto.
.P..S., P.B, , air

$3495

' Or.

GEMINi' .(Moy . 21-J~nt 201
Whether you hav_e problems
today targely ·depends on your
own altitude. If you· s~ek the

·75 MUSTANG II MPG

'

Sharv

~:

$2095

13,000

:: 111iles

splendid sense .of humor to

.

Work for you tod a:y Instead of
taking yourself and e~Jeryt hl ng
. you do too S~ rioi.J &amp;Iy . .

$2695

4 Dr.
Brougham

.74 AM~ 14ATADOR-

VIRGO (Au,.

23·So~l.

221

Owei ll ng · on $~1f · de.leat l ng
thaug hts will Whip you be fore
yoU' even gel. sti:lrted lo·day, It' s
just as easy. lo see yourself a
winner.

TWO

CA~LOS

.

•

•

•

---

YOUR CH.OICE .

$1895

-

4 Speed

At our tent display near the West Fair ve.

••

'

$1495

--.

2 dr : HT 1 cJark ;br9wn w it h
w hite vlny.l roo f and white
Inter ior·, full power a~r ,

AM·FM

.. -1

•
"•

••

•••

..••

.

*499

Regular Price

-' ..•
•

,.
••
•

Time
Payments
Availab le.
Reasonltble Depo sit . Convenient

$SOO.OO

Low

'

76 Dodge Charger SE
76 Dodge Coronet 4 Dr.

75 Dodge·Charger SE

FAIR SPECIAL

'399 .

Monthly Payments.

lf .xou can't come to the Fair, just :
marl the coupon and you .will be ~
automatically registered for the free ~
$300.00 memorial.
· ·•

r

CBS News Correspondents Mike Wallace,
Morley Safer ond Dan Rather probe for
a fresh slant oriwhat's happening
behind ihe headlines.

••

'IHE SONNY,CHER SHOW

•
....... '41

~

•

•
•••
•
•

Choose From The Largest
Selections In Southeastern Ohio ...

8:0Cti:C'
:
.rlt/'
J
4S,IC·
CHER HAVE GOT rr

-.
•
•

.

• Stone Eternal

They're the hosts IMth the most
Dishing out bount1ful seJVings of gags,
glamour and gu ests.

75 P~mouth Green FuiY-4 Dr.

75

P~mouth

'

----.
"'..-"'
·~

• Ruby' Red

~

'·

FuiJ 4 Dr•.

;75 Dodge Dart Sport
· 15· P~mouth Duster

AS.:PS-AC

STUCCO p lo~ tering and plaster
repair . Textu red ceiling', swirl ,
flmat .or brush design, 32 yr. ex ·
p. Work by the hour or. 6y the
jab , 25 6, 1182. All work
guaranteed.

A8-PS.AC

TAYLOR 'S Air Co11ditioning and
Refrigera tion. Co m"lercial and
domestic , -446·2247.
------~~--"~--

AS-P S-AC

AS-PS-Ac·

.

AS-P S-AC

A6-P~C
A&amp;PS-AC .
AS.:PS-AC

74 AMC Hornet 2 Dr.

A&amp;-Ps-AC .

Carroll Norris Dodge
. Gqlllpolls, Ohio
Charlie WebSTer, Buster· Sprague, Dan
Harden, Tom Norris. ·

..

·

. 1

1HAT'nnl~'=rMuRDER

Convenient·
Credil .Terms Available - We. Cany Qur Own Accounts
.

NEWSHOWI

DELVECCHIO

-'

~-· ......-a&amp;~1~Y'
IN mE lAME .
AGAINSfCRIME.-

Meet the cop who's unsi'terving in h.is
dedication, unorthodox in 'his rnethods,
unbeatable at his game! Judd Hirsch
is Delvecchio. Charles Haid is his sid(·kick.

·--~----.---:--------"'!"---,

. 1 1 Loaan Mon"!mentCo., Pomeroy,Ohio

Logan Monument Co., Inc.
. Pomeroy, Ohio
Meigs County Display Yard
Near Pomeroy-Mason Bridge ·
leo L: Vau!Jhn, M!lr.
· Phone 992-2$88

..--.

I

Phone 388-8603
•

OPEN EV~NINGS and SUNDAYS BJ APPOINTMENT .

1-Pieilse

send

details

on

"Fair'•

Specials.

I

NOW

~

I home.
1 _Piease selld me details about Mausoleums L.::
f without obligation.
.
.
L .,;

1

'4800

~7'12 ft. Sleeps 6, innerspring mattress. f.ully
. ~elf contained. ·
·
'

.

SMITH HONDA SALES

Rt.,l

1,..,.;.
I .

II '"""
I -·I a;~or. .
I

I 1

.

•

'' ' . '

II
·I
I

t .,,
. ,,,
1.~:-. . ,

~

.

12995

1973

1974 BUICK

MONTE CARLO

RIVIERA

Dr. Hi da r~ green, light
beige top, beige Interior,

2 dr . HT, lul l power, Air,

V8 , aut o ., · PS. PB, eir sun
r oo f, w ire w heel covers ,
super ni ce .

cl dth Interior .

2

--------------~----

THOMAS FAIN

EXTERMINATING
Termite Pest Control
Wheelersburg, Ohio

.... --

. ..:..:.....,...~" ~-:-.CONCRETE
WORKi ,
patios ,
sidewalks . ba sement. etc :
. l ou I$ Cox 4-46·3398.
_.._

-

· FOR thC best it"! arch it ectural
design and buildi ng C"l new
homes. sm all com merciqi
buildings, opt ., Or remodeli ng
with st at e ,approva l of pio ns,,
. Bill , Walker , 446·2146 or 446·

06S2.

SAND and Beever losuro nce Co.
has offered services far Fire Insurance co11erage in Gcllia
County for almoSt a century .
Forms, homes and personal
pcoper ty , cove rages ore
QIIOiloble .to meet individual
needs . Contact Charles Neal,
your neighbor and ageS --~

3595

.

SEPTIC Ta'nk s Cleaned . Plonts.
Septic Tank Service .· Ph. 446·
'·
1972or675·?/:l47

1

Plymouth •• .You can't

4.o0o

8595

1

afford to miss these specials.
.

MOUNTAIN STATE
CHRYSLER-PLY MOUTH
SHA~LE

AND SILVER BRIDGE_$

. The c~~ listed below have exceptionally
low mileage. Previous owners nCimes
are available. Mileage Is verified.

d•.

TIM E TO · CHECK AIR CONOI TIONERS. RESIDENTIAL ANO
COMM ERCIA L. CALL 0. OAY
TRAINED . PHONE 388·8274.
TV REPAIRS ·RENTALS
Picture Tube Speciali sts

HARTWELL ELECTRONICS
245 -5365
.

100% Warranty.

SOMMERS.GM C
TRUJ: KS , INC
13:tP ine 51.
446 -2532

REFRIGERATION 1 18 YRS . EX PER IENCE
AND
S&lt;;HOO L

1976 PONTIAC
GRAN PRIX

69 FORD Pi ckup one -half T.. 446-

3712.

'72 Chev. custom com p.~ r . th ree ·
fourfh T PU , 350, 4 barrel.
stock , $.11?Gq ,-.ca'II 379·2AOC! .

BOROER:.SGARAGE

-

1976 CHEV. IMPALA

STA. WAGON .

LJ. silver with leather
interior, 5,000 miles.

2 seater, air,

~

1975
MUSTANG II

ture designs. Other dry wa ll ,, 1976 Dodge Von : PS. std . shil t. 6
repair : vlnyl wallpapering , new .
cyl . P~ 4 ~· 2379. .
baths, new kitch~m~ . ,A nythin9 1
od 1
·
76
Chev_. Pickup , ,9._.'h fl. bed, '350
in re':" e ing or repa 1r .
cu. in. 3 spd . 388 -8304 .
.
~'6- 2~~·~-~-~ COUGHENOUR Woter Deli very,
69 VW . $600, good cand ., 367·
BACKt-10~ . dozer, ditcher and
46-3962, 446·4262 any time.
7303.
dump truck . Wfit ins tall water OOZIER work , exqwoting, land
69 Bui~;k Stoti~~ Wogqn, 'call 4
lines, footers, drains. seplic
c e~rin_~ · Ph. 4~6 -0051 . _
-p,m . 245-9572 ,.
systems, concrete work. Heit·
lieli:l Back hoe Ser :, RuHand. 0 .
Ph. 7.42-2008 or 4.46·2796.-'
--;-.,.._..

J,poo miles.

1975 DODGE
CORONET CUSTOM

~

2 Dr. hdtp., air cond., 3,000

Autoi'hatic, air cond., 5,000

miles. ·

miles.

·'

-

AUCTION SALE

ARE YOU COOL MAN? lhEtn ypu
need the i n~ ulati n g 'experts ot
,lAWREN CE HEAHNG AND
ElECTRIC TO. give you a free
es timat e on blown. \n i'rh ulo·
'
, , lion , Coli 675·3099. .

On Wed., October 13, 1976 at 10 A.M.

· Will sell the personal property of Geo. W.
Knapp, located at Leon, W. Va·. on Leon
Baden Rcj., turn · right on Dunham Rd.,
follow sign to O.llie Rawnes lium.

~-~ -~~-- · ·- -. -.-c-

DON 'T BE inconvenienced by ,
lettirig your trash pi le up, _ .
'
becau se of undeperiable ser~
vice. Co li A &amp; R Trash
Ser..,.ice . Ph. 446 ·~0

One Oliver Cle Trac. bulldozer ;;th blade, M.F. 50

-~-,-~.

1975 AMX PACER X
autor:natic, air

i:ond .,

AM· F M,

miles . ·

..

7,OOQ

1974 MGB-GT ·
.
4 speed, 24,000 miles, riew
· radials.
·

'

traCtor, boom pole. disc, one Oliver 70- tractor , side

delivery rake, mowlrig machine 7 fl. cut, hay wagon,
.Bolen tractor a. attachmentl. 15-30 McCormick tractor

SANOY AND BEAVER Insurance
Co. has off~red serviCes for
Fir_e l':lsurance coverage in ,
G~a ll io ( dunty.for almost Q
·
century, Farms. · homes and
personal property , Coverage s
Ore o~ailoble tO meet individual needs,. Contact l ewis
Hugh ~s your · n~ lg hb_o r and "
oqrt nl ,
r

steel wheels, One lot qf horse-drawn equipment, New
Ideal manure spreader / chain saw, wheelbarrel, dr jll :
pr.:~ss, bench g'rinder, ground stcine, platform scales,
saw mandrel with saw, elect. mot or s, steel drums, one

lot' log chains, one tot hand tool; milk cans, cut.oll saw

w11h mandrel, O)( yoke Iron bed; t;.ak s1and, tab,e ,
chalr.s, one coa l or wood heater, one desk top. oak chest
of drawers, washing mEichlnes, r efriger ator , gas
heater ,1maple bed. one lot used lumber, o.ne lot new
lumber . O.,e lot of old coins consisti ng Qf lead pennies,
sflver halves, quar1ers, dimes a nd nick-els.

PA~ NTlNG BV BRUSH, 'earn
roof!&gt; and sides also houSes.
Ca ll
245·560 1 fnr
fr ee ·

Many, many -items too numerous to mention , Not
accidents .
Sole Cond~cted by

,t'uf'fiale or Tradt•

responsible for

440 JOHN DEERE Ooie•.' Ph. ~46t 0168 .

M.URRAY &amp; D.URST AUCTION SERVICE
. 372-3458-Coftagevllle, W. Va ,

196'7 Ford .~u s tom 500, ph . 446:
.. '·
.__ _"""..;_ _..,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
· 36'l,5,nny Ur nc

·-

,... . ..

For the best buys in the
area shop ·Mountain State

Coupe DeVille, full power·;
air , AM- FM st ereo, si l ver
wl lh sli ver vinyl · roOf , red
leather interior , show room
condition . less than
mil es.

19751 Ton Chcv, Siak e
1972 ~~, T ( hev . pickup

gl,laronteed. Ph . 245-9131 , 446·
3100.
~--,-~------.,.....,---;;-··
_____._
AllEN "S Constructi on. _remodel ·
ing, old or new, building. Ph .

'

4995

1

75 CADIUAC

oooRSer - 1969 Chavell e SS, 396 cu . In eng.,
4 sp., exc. co nd. Ph'. 446·0648
vice. Commercial ond Res·idGn after 5 p.m.
tie l . Specializing in operators,
Loca l . 256·6472. ·
1976 Chev role t Cheyen ne, hea"y
BOB 'S
~B -·: Rad io
Et~ulp . .
duty , 4,000 miles. 1939 Ford ,
everything in Two·Woy Radio. PASQUALE Insulating . 103 C~dar ·
good to nd . Ph . 446-21b6 ·ofter
AntennqS and acces. Geor ges
St., Gall ipol is. Ph . .446·2716 or·
3,30
.•
C ree~ Rd., Gallipoli s, 446 --4: _2!: _c4':"
46::_·~
109
~2~.----'-.c.;.,.K6TAI..I C La ndsca ping, residential CUSTOM REMODELING , 20 years . 69 Camara, foc.tory , derna :. lor-s
of ewtras, real sharp. bes t of .
&amp; Commercia l, s~rubs, . trees ,
experie!l&lt;;e, 3~ - 8308 . New ~ ry ·
fer . 245 ·.5329.
rack gardens. all installed &amp;
woll .celling with swfrl or tex -.

__ .....___________

\lark blue. while vinyl root, ·

-

-

~ igh~.' ------

-----

LIST '6059

""

I ::.,.

Gallia County Display Yard
James 0 : Bush, Manager

· ·-. ·(

1 _PI,ase send me· FREI; booklets iliowing 1 -·
1 ,memorials ~rlnted in full color with sizes I· :
1 and prices listed. .
.
1 ~
1-Kindly have · an authorized Logan I ' •
I Monu~:nent Co •. rtpresentativ.• call at mv

VInton, Ohio

.

1976.PROWLER

N

ON LAWBREAKERS.

Detec;live Theo Kojak's methods·are
unorthodox. But no ohe·gets away with
murder (or anything elset) when h e '~-around.. Telly $avalas stars.
,

DEMO SPE€IAL

~

HpWARD Pe.ck Water · Deliv~~;.
2-45·93 15 or 388·8262 day or

r e du c ed

NEW GMC

Truck ·Headquar te rs
1974 1/ 1 T. GMC Pi ckup
1974 1/ 1 T. GMC'P ickop
STA~OARD
. 1974 1! 1 T. t hev . PU 4 WD
Piumbin g · Heating
1975 1h T.'Chev. PU
--215 Third
. . Ave. .. 446-3782
.,..
1971' Chev. Impala
GENE PlANTS 8. SON
1973 ~~, Chv11. Pi ckup
PLUMBING - Heating - Air 1906 If) T. GMC Pll
Condi tioni ng, 300 Fourth Ave. 1974 1/ 1 l. GMC PU
Ph . 446.· 1637 .
197 5 Ch evrolet lu v PU
"
1972 IT f ord StoK e Bod y
OEWITT'S PLUMBING
J-975 Ford Mu stbng ll ,
A ND HEATif',IG
1975 three·fourth Che\1 . PU , 4 w .
Route 160 a t ~11e rgr een
d r.
Phone 446·2735
1975,thrce-fo urth T. GMC PU 4 w .

742-2409: We

P.S., P.B. .

'w'lnyl root. air, Unt&amp;d glass,
bronte fini sh , tobacc o
brown interior . :

Auto Safes

AND HEATING
Co r. Fou rth.&amp; Pine
Phorie 446·3888 ar 44 6·44777

___

4 Dr :, V-8, auto.,

th l&gt;

~ --::-~-

CARTER 'S PlUMBING

-~

HUFFINES and Sons Fix -it Shop.
Pl umbing, elec trical , · sma ll
·appl .. washer and dryer. corp:
repairs and general repairs.
.-- Caff"388·88-47, oVer 15 yrs ..~x p .

w

t:OOKOJAK UMS

1~ 14)

..

P.In~a~d:tl..i~ • . ,

Soulh~?ostern Ohio Tru ss Rafter
Co. Box 28 A. Rutland, 0 .

A8·PS-AC

• Georgi a Ma.rb le • and many others ;:

~A~

-

.

TRUSSED RAFTERS
Any
·pit c h ,
any s i ze,

74 Pontiac Catalina 4 Dr.

••

....!1. Barre Guil,d

ALL 'IOGEI'HER.

c:vl. engine. auto. 1rans.,
power steer i ng _. radio, w -S·
w ti r es. low mllesage .

FOOT OF THE

-...., _,-:,

deli ver,

. -....,.• '

.

ECONOMY Tractors and Equipment , Carroll's Sa les and Se"r ·
vice. 2 rnileS West on 588. Ph .
,.4A6·2923 ,
.

45775. Ph .

·.·. -~... *· WI
LKIE
~~ .
.

(

ELECl ... CAL lnslollolion, Reg .: .
Comm ., lndusti"ial , 256·6855,
CrQwn Cit~. Ohio.
_

AU. WITH LOW MILEAGE

75 Dodge Charger SE

ONLY

•
•

60MINUTES
'W:OOBIG NEWSSMRIES
• •
YOU CAN'T GEl'
ANYPlACE ELSE.
.

Late Model
Sharp Used Cars

. ..""•

.NOW

'699

. •"

•.
•"
••
•

•

"

OR MELVIN MOONEY

FORD GALAXIE
500

2895

Nova, 4 door . white with
black al l viny l Interior. 6

4295

SEE PETE DAVIS

. '

1974

,._..

1

1974 CHEVROLET

'1

•

REGIStER
PRICE

~2295

73 FORD
THUNDERBIRD

;

•
•
•
•

REGULAR

5295

Check

unbeli e vable
price.

•

to

'

found.

throughou t .

1

--

·•••OR REGISTER IN OUR SHOWROOM
AT LOGAN "·CIRCLEVILlE · POMERoY · VINTON OR WEu.sTO"
'

rad io. car pet, exc ellent

.... "'•

ON DISPLAY AT THE LANCASTER FAIR

.

tk

Dart SWi ng ~·r . 2
H.T.,
maroon with blat k all vinyl
interior, Standa r d transmission on . l he co lumn,

v iny l r oof, 350 v.a, au to ..
P .S., P . B., air , t inted glasS,
AM &amp; fape pla yer . power
w l ridows ,
r oad
siV Ie
whe els,
2, 300
ml le s,
show .r oom cond itl on.

. ..:

·

2dr fiT , VB, P.S., P.B.,

with black conv . top a nd
blaj:k leatherette Inferior , 41
speed, radiQ, local owner·,
, who purc hased it new , a
sharper on e can not be

2695

~------~~~--~----~~--------~~----------~~

;.·

1974 VOLKSWAGEN

1

Air
P.S.

.

Con vertible, bright orange

Dr., baby blue, dark blue

73

73 DATSUN PICKUP

-

CHARGERSSE

med. green, g reen

cloth intef lt&gt;r, P.B., Ve.

1974 DODGE

73 PONTIAC CATALINA
Air
P.S., P .B.

•
•

~

·. _ . ..

2

doo'r: Capr ice. medium
green with m-atc;:h lng green
interior, V8 , auto. tran s.,
power steeri ng , radio , sol id
car, ver y few flemis~es.

73 MUSTANG GRANDE

1975 DODGE"

$1295

1975 OLDS
CUTlASS

~

•

4 dr ..

P.S.,. ali"

1970 CHEVRO~ET
4 Wheel
Di-ive

va .auto .. p s.. ro dlo

$5295

liP-

LEO (July 23•Aug. 221 Pul your

360

lWQ _

69 QtRYSI.ER
NEwPORT

72 DOOOE DEMON

Vin y l roof .

not ·likelY that ypur generosity
to.,...ard cer tain pals Will be
matched today. Wh en -th e tab
comes, see th l;ll every one

74. FORD LID
.

re d \llnyl
V-8, auto.,
P. S-.; P. fLair, q11adr asOn ia
r adio, CB

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22111's

antes

:, 74 PLYMOUTH. DUSTER
,,

Wh it e wit h
ln1er ior , 400

, sun shi ne, it's there.

$2995

4 Speed.

·

(April 20·Moy 20)
Even th ough you .wilr ha ve to
contend with opposition today
you 're ~p t to be th e one wh o
lucks out in the long run.

PLYMOUTH DUSTER ......;..............:..... 3200
4 DR........:..... s3600

-.
--

FlU! •·3 00 MONUMENT
~t~~~-, OF

with something -of value.

·75 PONTIAC
TRANS AM

TAUR.US

5

:::
"'
rep•l•ac.em•e•m-=~:ri:~:~:~:l1!~ th•re•e•~o•u•r~::::::~:~:::61:4;):59;~:~:7:1:F:O:R:B:R:OC:H:U:R:E:IN:F:OR:M:A:TI:O:N:·;;:::·~.~

~~:und:j~~b

DEMO CWRANCE

·I

191

There's a possibility you could
tre~t a Seriou.s m§lter far too
lightly tod ay. Don't play games

19

GALLIPO).lS · - Millard CoLinty Motors in.Point Plea- - known everywnere as
Wild.ennuth of Middleport, 35 san!, made his . retirement Bill-is general manager of
/
years down the road from official Friday evening at a thePoin(agency. ·
Wildermuth has no definite
starting to work in the parts Holiday Inn dinner.
Over 40 nersons attended plans lor his retirement. He
. department of the Mason
. the retirement party with . and his wife, Kathryn; expect
~~:~~~od.;~~:o~~~
SEASON SUBSCRIPTIONS AVAILABLE NOW .....WRITE
· ·William Knight as master of · to visit more often their C'~~;~ i~ot~~ UC:eo. ~~~r~
ceremonies. Guests from daughter , Judy, wife of someone can be trained for thusiaiitlc ovation at the end
MEMORIAL AUDITORIUM, ATHENS, 0. 45701 OR
G&amp;J Auto Parts were in- school administrator .
troduced by Harold G. Allensworth in Tiffin, .and
. or•a
. ..
. ..
Robinson, manager from the son, Jim, a Kroger employee
G&amp;J Auto Parts Store in Pl. in Columbus.
Pleasant.
"Jim has some carpentry
LoGAN MoNur..e,Nr co. sAYs,
..
There were remarks about work to do at his place. I ex'
the good and bad times peel to 'help him," MUiard ·
(when the fire burned them said.
WASHlNGTN (UP!)
out) .
Millard llnd Kathryn have
Claims that could total $75
Wilderrnuth.was presented two
grandchildr.en,.
million were filed against the a Polaroid earners from G&amp;.J daughter s · of lhe AliensCIA by an American aircraft Auto parts, aijd luggage was worths. Mrs. Wildercorpqration that says the giveil by _the Mason County moth · retired last January
agency used its planes for Motors.
from her job as a .checker at
secret 'actions . - including
Saturday Wildermuth told Kroger in Pomeroy. '
murder - and ruined it by the Sunday Times-Sentinel:
The kind of treatment the
,..,
(OR CAN BE APPLIED TO ALARGER MONUMENT OF YOUR CHOICE) ·
· taking over the, comp..:ny
. "They (the knights r ·have ",. Kllights gave Wildermuth
name and illegally manufac- been Wonderful people. to has not gone unrewarded.
turing its products.
work for." He was speaking Said Wildermuth:
(4.
ent~nce.
General Aircraft Corp. o( of A. R. Knight, Pomeroy,
"I always tried to do a good
Bedford; Mass., said in a 22- and his son, William, Point jobfor them."
page claim 1elter'sent to CIA Pleasant. The senior Knight
OCT. 5-ll
He went on: "They turned
Director George Bush, with a owns . the. Mason County me loose to run the pans
.
'
copy to the White House, that Motor Co. (together with the department the way I wanted
its aircraft business had been Pomeroy Motor Co. and the to, and always hacked me
••
wiped out and its reputation Gallipolis Motor Co. in up."
•
ruined by alleged· CIA ·Gallipolis) and William
Jimmy Evans, who lives in ·
machinations.
NO
PURCHASE
NECESSARY AND NO " NEED TO BE PRESENT AT DRAWING
WIN.
.
.

Aircraft firm

Bernice !lode Ooot ·

.

A~IES (lhrch 21 ·'~prll

NIVERSITY :
.
-

*

AstraGraph

GALLIPOLIS
HRYSLER-PLYMOU

11

GIFTS UNWRAPPED - Millard (Millie) Wlldennuih of Middleport happUy prepares
ID unwrap gifts re&lt;.10lved Friday following a dinner at the Holiday Inn in honor of his

1976

..

.;.;._,_..J

60

CARS IN STOCK

. Sunday Shoppers Welcome,
Come In and Browse. Around '

GMAC &amp; BANK

I

�...

••

,

..
M

-

40-The Surwlav Tlmes-SenUnel,SWlday. Od 10.1976

DAN THOMPSON
FORD

FORD

~

• ••

'

-

G
THE
PENCIL
10 GIVE YOU SOME OF THE SHARPEST BUYS lfl TOWN

aD-TbeSulldly TinJee.llelltln,&amp;lnday, UCl.lO,lV111

For Fast·Results Use The Sunday..Times-Sentinel Classifi~ds

'" *"T YOUINIXT
CARorTIUCK
from

POMERGY ADD

IN Momory of Tllomoo Lu!Mron
Ocl 11 , 1973
• THE RACINE Fire Ptpartmtnt wilt THUNDERBIRD hubcap, brown oc
hove a gun thoot Saturday ot ctnts, betwten Middleport
In my heart I like to 1trcy
and Heck • on Stat• Route 7
6
30 p m ot tt..lr building In
Along lho road ol y.,torl~Gy
Reward Phone 992 7354
loshan
l'o livt again In mtmary
WOULD
the porty who found o
'tho haPf&gt;y days lhal uoed fo bt
POE and Gtn•'s Garage l• now In
billfold belongmg to Gtlbert k
To hear you talk and ' " you
~rot lon , Mechanic and body
tmlle
Smith pleost call (614) 44 6
work North S.Cond. StrHt In
01 10
And 11t and talk with you o whtlt
Middleport. Form.,ly Bran·
I love to linger on the woy
1'1011 • Goroge. Phone 992 5450
That takes me bade to y.. terday
orcollofter5p m 992-7135
Treo•urtd thoughts of one so
OPEN AGAIN - after belng clo1·
dear
ed for vacation. We ore open 14 ft tro11e l troller three. woy
Ofttn bring• o silent tGar
ogoln with our usual • good
hghts , furnoce tarpeted spar&amp;
God'• retum to tctnts long pou·
quality knlt1 and low price•
lire , 1l"ps 6 Excell ent condt
Od
Hour. Monday fhrough Friday,
t1on and prrc~ to sell Phone
Tlmt roll• on but memone1last
9 a m tlll 7 p m Clottd Satur·
9927210
elsel I do
days Corolhla Fabrics on St
Rt. 7 Vt mile ,N of Chester,
Ohio Henry and Mary Hunter,
owners

1976 AMC HORNET·········· 13995
Sporlabout. 6 cyl , automatic, power steer ing , delu•e
equipment, whitewall tires, luggage rack, da rk oreen
Unlsh , less than 9,000 miles, showroom clel'n

1972 FORD PINTO WAGON............ 1 1~95

1975 NOVA HATCHBN:K CPl 13095

• cyl .. aulo lrans

1971 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR...........11695

'

Locall owner. 6 cyl { automa tic, power steet rng, clean
Interior , radio, good w-w tires. rally wheels , spOrt
.mirrors, white &amp; green finish

'

•

6 cyl, auto trans , very cltan

1970 Olds Della Cpe••••••••• .'1295

1

1973 CHEVY VEGA ....................... 1495

Rad io, automal1c, P S , P B , good tires Clean

" cyl , auto trans

1974 CHEVROLET MONTE CARL0$3995

1
1971J:HEVELlE
4
DR
....................
1295
4 cyl .. aUto Iran•

2102 door ,local car. 4 speed tr•n• , 44,200 miles, good
tires, dark green finish, rea l economy

1972 GAlAXIE 500 ........................ 1495
1

Air .. p •·· p b

1973 FORD PIN10 ........................ 11895

1/1. Ton ....... 12995
1973
Chevrolet·
8' Fleetslde V8englne, dUTomanc rrans ,
.elr , p.

" cyl std , trans

steering &amp; brakes. local , 1 owner. low mileage truck,
good t ires. rad•o

1971 I'LYMOUTii VALIANT. ............. 11495

1973 Vega Gl Cpe........;••••$1895

6 cyl , auto. trans

1

1972 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX .......... 2995
Air , auto trans , very clean

1972 GRAND TORINO SPORT..........11995
Black finish, air, auto trans . . -

1974 CHEVY 1h TON PICKUP. .......... 13295
6 cyl std trllns., low mileage

1974 CHEVY lt4 TON PICKUP......... ..l3595
V-8, 4 sp trans

MANY MORE
Save Now on a 1976 Pinto, Mustang, or Maverick.
See: Pat Hill, Rocky Hupp
or Melvin Utile
For a good deal on a new or used veh1cle
Open Evenings Til7 :00
Except Thurs. and Sat.
Closed Sunday

TaCT" ' ~·

Before you buy any car new

Local owner, 4 cyl , automatic, p steering , radio, air
conditioned. good tires

or used you owe It to
yourself to check with us.
We are the friendly

1972 Chevelle Malibu, •••••••••• 1495
1

H T cpe , good t1res, rad io, V8 , automatic, P ~ , P B ,
bucket seats, runs good, needs pa int

dealer, We have the
sharpest pencil In
town. See one of

Runs good , new tires. radio

1972 VOLKSWAGEN 2 DR••••11595
Red finish, good tires, c1ea.;-lnterlor , automatic trans ,
QOOd economy

1971 FORD 8' PICKUP •••• '1850
302 V 8, automatic tra.t:;, good tires, sport custom cab,
sliding R glass . de luxe mldgs, green lin ISh, radio &amp;
healer Clean

,...,..,..,..~-SPECIALS-~-""'~
1970 Ply. 2 Door,6 cyl., auto"matic
$599.00
1971 Chevrolet 4door 6 cyl., auto.
$899.00
1967 Musta
$250

DAN .THOMPSON FORD

...

NEW

The sharpest pencil in town

CHEVY VAN IN STOCK

THE 1977

CANADAY REALTY
·-------------------------······-··
Now Showing
The Leader of
Luxury Cars.

Visit Our
Showroom
And See For
Yourself

f

I

I

,.

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
'92 5342

Cadillac-Oldsmobile
GMC Fononc1ng Avooloble

Pomero

"You' ll Like Ovr Quality Wav ol Doing Bus111ess"

____

Open Eves. Til6-Til 5 D.m . Sat.
~ee one oY mese courteous salesmen.
f&gt;ete Burris
Lloyd. Me Laughlin
Mar.vin Keebaugh

.__

BOB LANE

BRAN.CH MANAGER
855 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Office·
Home

446·7900
446-1049

LISTINGS NEEDED NuW
TO FIT OUR BUYERS '

NEEDS

GALLIPOLIS
AREA LISTINGS
PRICED FOR
IMMEDIATE SALE'
Excellen tly constru cted 3
bedroom on appro x 31~ of
an a cre In a very pleasa nt
nei ghborhood rn Ky ger
Creek School District You
can own th1S beautr t ul
home r ro ht now for the
unbel iev able pr iCe of
$13 500 00
Vacant Land
J2 Acres
J us t off Route 160 on
Thompson Road Be.!l ut rful
burl drng sr tes w ith wooded
ereas Burld yo ur home
here and gel away from rl
all• Prr ced welt below fair
marke t value at $10 000
Select Nerghborhooel
Near shOpp ing center and
hospital Very well kepi 3
be droom , Ph ba..!J' on one of
th e nicer lots in lh rs erea
Don 't let lhrs bargain pass
you byl
In Town
Near the corner of Th ird
and Vr ne Streets Thrs Is a 2
story , 3 bedroo m home that
lia s
been
remodel ed
re cen tl y Just think of the
ease In getting to the
shopping drstrlct schools ,
chur ches , etc offered to
you at a very reasonable
pr•ce of S29 000

25117 Locust St. , Ga llipohs. OhiO

REALTY

446-3636

25 LOC~U l&gt; f ;:,J

Howilrd Brannon , Broker
Off1ce 446-2674

Lucille Brannon
Eve 446 1226

or~46

2674

Wal1tng &amp; Hoping
For th at grand old home?
Here 1S a terrif iC buy for a
couple w1th sk•l lful hands
and a green thumb , loca ted
In the heart of town , 4 br ,
t wo st'orv home wdh for m al
drK. country kitc hen and

storage roo m, J por ches ,
dry' bsm With gas fur and

fru•t

ro om,

alumtnum

S1d1ng lind storm doors and
w 1ndows , deep lo t with

garden space and m 8 lure

sh ade
trees
ch •l dren would

Sc hool
love lh1s

location

WOW!
What A Vrew
And loca ted in town Large
two story 3 br home , eat 11'1
krlc he n and formal dr wtth
an open stairway An
outstandtng vrew fr om the
lr
extra large hobby
room ntce basement wrt h
gas fur , large Porches An
overs rzed lot for the gard
ner
Don't Hesitate !
A truly lovely ren ch style
home 3 br, ww car pet
spacious krlchen gas fur
in fu ll bsm , gerage Well
landsc aped she de d lawn ,
loca ted ''• m ! to to wn
Lots
3 good butldlng lot s in
e:oc.ce llen t location Pnced
$2 000 each
Incl udes
streets rura l water , un
dergro und e lectnc and
telephone
Klng Size Farm
190 .!ICre far m wrth 6 yr old
home 4 br , co unt ry kit
che n with range and oven ,
Clr , f~r eplace 1n lr ., full
bsm garage spr ing water
and 2 ponds, tobac co base ,
3 bar ns , some timber , 60 a
ltllable and 70 a pasture
Attenfton Homeowners!
We want lr sttngs In all
locations we
will give
yo ur
property
the
necesse r y amount of ad
verttsrng e nd the best of
our abrlrly to promo te a
sale Ca ll us now - 446 267 4
CALL 446· 2674 NOW
FOR A BETTER
WAY OF LIVING

NEW ON THE MARKET

1

66 acr e farm - 20 ac res
ti ll ab le, 15 acres nr ce
t mber , JO' ac res pastur e 3
BR 2 s tory farm ho me, 2
barns
hog ba rn an d
chrcken hous e 1970 tra ctor
bush ho g hay rake ba ler
plow
drsc ,
mowrng
machrne 200 bales hay , 6
co ws an d 2 calv es
num erous sma ll tools, th1s
farm won I be on the
marker long at SJS ooo
Better ca ll so on

CHEAPIE - 3 r m hom e
on 3 acres wooded land , one
o u tburl drn g , some fur
nlt ure f rr ep lace rn LR
$5 000
RENTAL INVESTMENT 2
fully fu rn ished , a 1r cond
trai ler s on lg lot , George's
Creek Rd s u 500
j::INANCING
PROB
LEMS?
Owner
wdl
help frnan ce 3 BR new
bnck &amp; fr ame full y ca r
peted , P 1 ba th , beaulrful
modern ktlche n, SJS,OOO
Call for mor e detar ls 1

COLONIAL RANCH w1th
large family room , 3 BR
11,2 baths , mo dern krtchen
la rg e leve l lot , rn one of the
ar ea s nrcest subdlv rsrons
crty scnoo ls 11 s brand new
and only S36 000

NEAR VINTON 40
acr es 5 BR home, lg barn
fe nced
go od pa s t ure
severa l good buildrng srtes
on black top rd $4 0,000

MINI FARM Id eal for
hor ses , JJ• ac r es near ly a ll
fe nced, good large barn
land leve l to ro lli ng a ll
clear ed Good 3 BR wr th
balh fr ame home , S18 000

COZY 2 BR nearly new
home, 5 m ties from c1ty all
e l ectr~c. ful ly car pe ted
krt chen
lo ve ly
m od
cou ntry
settr ng
c rty
SChOO lS $23,500

ADDISON, Very well kept 2
BR full basement wrth
ga rag e hardwood floors
ca rp eted LR an d hall, fuel
oil furn ace . ra ng e washer
and dr yer on 2112 ac res
PRIC E D LOW' $20 200

"LIVIN IS EASY " rn lhrs
wel l marntarn ed co untry
home on beautrful one acr e
lot J BR 11/1 baths , e lec tr rc
f urnace heat ce n a rr,
ex Ira lg k•tchen SJ7 900

DOUBLE WIDE - 1970 24
:oc. 50' mobtl e ho me w range
an d r efng erat or , 1J x 33
aw nmg rn e:oc.ce ll ent co nd
$10 1600

~ KEMPER

HOLlOW - 7
miles from crty 3 BR
fram e r an ch on lg lot ,
ftnt sh th rs yourself an d
save r $21,000

GREEN ACRES SUB·
LOTS OF ROOM at a
CHIMNEY Blocks W Va &amp; Ohro
BOARDING &amp; AKC PUPPIES
DIVISION - Brand new 3
prrce,
4
BR
reas
onable
lum p Cool Go lll polrs Block
BR
11/J ba th s , comb
K &amp; P Kennels 388 8274 Rt
on
2
A acres
crty
home
Co o&amp;ol6 2783
kllch en . famrl y room ,
SS.., % mrle east ol Porter
5
mr
les
from
town
schoojs,
~~-r ange , hood , drshwasher,
on blacktop road, S20 500
FOR SAlE
Ntee 3 Bedroom
BOARDING , Sromese Ktltens Crr
dr sposa l, ove n, cen air
With one ca r garag e on
LIMESTONE FOR DRIVEWAYS
constructi on
Qu alrty
cle L Kennels 2 mrles from
COMMERCIAL SITE or
approx. 1h acr e lot lust off
thr oug hout. 534 000
CARLWINTERS PH 245 5115
town .of46-.of82ol
suit
a
ble
tor
resrdent
ra
l
38
Bulavrll e Road near Route
acres, 400 ' frontage on R t
CENTENARY Woods Kennel Pet ALL TYPES of ~ltdmg mote~rols
35 Only 5 yea rs old and
MAKE AN OFFER' J BR
7 .100' Ohro R lver frontage
block, bnt k sewer prpes wr n
mo,de s tl y pnced &amp;I 522,000
groomrng foc• lr tres Ha ve your
home
barn garag e other
4 water taps 525, 000
out bu •ldr ngs
a ll nee d
dews lmtels etc Claude
pet groomed undeer son rtory
r eparr 3 2 acr es , 500' rd
Need a 4 be''·"'om1?
Wrn t&amp;rs, Rlo Grande 0 Phone
cond All breeds aCCI&amp;pted.
SEVENTY FIVE ACRE
Large
we
ll
fro nta ge crty water gas,
245 5121 offerS
446 0231
FARM 2 s tory 3 BR w bat h
rh acre lot
C11y sc ho ols
barn,
other
home,
good
tow n and near
1
U SED APPLIANCES DRAGONWYND Cattery-Kenne l outburld.ng s, good pa stur e
shoppmg center etc
48 ACRES beaut rfull y
RE FRIG ERA TOR S washers
A.K C C.F A Hlmoloyon (Per
fenced, po nd , tobacco base ,
hom
e
offers
a
lot
mo
re
wooded . -.evcr~ l good
dryer,
ranges
Gene
Skaggs
'
sran) and S•o mese .of46 3644
lrmber
,
on
blacktop
road
the money than most '" n
bur ld rng srt es Bl ecktop
1294 Easern Ave Ph 446 7396
after 1 p m
sso.oo
o
ma rk et today
road , r ura l wa ttr St 0,500
RISING STAR KENNEL Boordrng ROWE Lrvmg room surtes Sosself
RIO GRANDE AREA OTHER
COUNSELORS
6 24
ACRES ,
perfe ct
Bedroom su•tes Sealy mot
Indoor outdoor runs AKC
Ju st ott Rt 35, blOck ran ch
GALLIPOLIS
butldmg Sr tes p cturesqu t
tresses all or pnces you co n
type
home
feat
ures
20'
x
2.1'
Shetlond Sheep dogs (Shellles
Den 'o'er K Hrgtev 4~6 0001
counlr'y sur roundings clly
LR witt'! f~r ep l ace all mod
·aff ord Rrce'l New and Used
mlnloture collies) Ckes hrre
CROWN CITY
schools , rural wate r ,
30
x
40
barn
25
acres
conv
Ph 307 0292
Furnttu re B54 2nd Ave 446
75 6 1456
Joe Crans
$10000
PROWLER
level to rolling pas tur e
9523
TRAVEL tro rlers see th e No 1 fenced pond SJ7 .SOO
BRIAR PATCH Kennels Boarding
NATIONAL
selle r In Ihe USA Sm rth s Hon
AKC Gordan Setters Englrsh
ADVERTI SI NG wllh lhe
do Sales St Rt 7 Gallrpohs
Cocker Spaniels .of.of6 .ofl9i
Galle
r
y
of
Hom
es
,
FOR SALE
Ohro 446 2240
'
----'
Sealed bids wtll be
AKC Rtg.. Sornt Bernard pupptes
STARCRAFT
2 male, 1 female 3 moa old
received on 1 "" Elcono
BEAT the loll pnce rncreose All
strong healthy Ph 30.of·77;J( Mobile Home 40 t.ot by 10
Audrey Canaday
1976 tro llers fold dow n! reduc
S.05 or 675 2310 Pf P,[!'O~'
!HI by Robert S Bell,
Saleswoman
for sofa chorr . ed to bollom 1977 Mm 1 motor
W Vo
E•ecutor of lht Estate of
cush•ons moflresses paddrng
trai lers fold downs tn stock
446·3636
FREE KITTENS 2 calicoat females
Lena B. Wood, Decu•ed .
rdeol for campers Vorrety of
We sell serviCe and , qual ity
Any
Hour
2 orange mole~ also free lllrough October 15, lf76.
mes Drrec t Fabnc and Foam
Open Sunday Camp Conley
~brodar puep~ c~ll ~4_6 .ot569
Soles
Morn
St
PI
Pleoson
t
The right is ruerved to
Star Croft Soles Rt 62 N Pt Ph 675 3469 9 5 datly 1111 8
Pleasant W Vo
reject ony ond 111 bids.
Frrdoy
ENGLISH SETTERS pu p• Rog 4
Robert S. Betz
1971 SHASTA 22 It self cont rn
mo old good
197 4 NOVA Ph 388 8586
Extcutor of the Estate
AlUMINUM burldrngs with wrn
cludmg A C Eco nonw Motor 1976 Sto rao lt Cam per
G~O_I!I!d~.·
Ph 2•5 5617
dow$ floors ana electric
of lena B Wood, Deceo..d
Soli' 446 1•25
E!x tra clean $1 700 Ph 256
blocks rrle ceri'tcn morta r,
1972 VOLKSWAGON orange
of locust Street
6620
21 FT CA\1\PE~ E!'lfC cond Ph
POODLE GROOMING Ph. &lt;•6
ch•mney
bloc k v.oll lpolrs
wrth block slrtpe one
Gallopolos, Ofuo 45631
446 0403
66
Block 446·2783 /r
ow ner Ph 367 0376

--

Ca~~pg]'9~fp;fi'fn~~
-

RON CANADAY R£ALTOR

S30

f ·- "

v

POMEROY MOTOR
I

"Your Chevy Dealer"
992·2126

I.

Pomeroy
Open

Evenin~~ unt1ih.m.

•'

1976 Electro loaded wrth oil ex•
tros 4~6 0774

72 Monte Corio , 2 dr HT V 8 orr ;
PS $1800 367 0250 Coli before ...
12 30p m
n Plymouth Duste r, rn good 1974 Dodge Dort Sport, Hot ...
cond Ph 256 noa,~~~chb ock PS powe r drs c
brakes auto low mrl eage '
' call afte r 5 30 p m 256 1243
NOVA 72-one owner 8 dy ,
48 Wrlly Jeep good cond 446
bl ue ond whrte good
3960
co nd Ph 256 1988

..

HOLSTEIN. HEIFER
SALE
WEDNESDAY,· OCTOBER 13, 1976 - 1:00 PM
at the JACKSON ,COUNTY LIVESTOCK SALE CO.
localed- 40- MILES SOUTH of PARKERSbURG I
W. Vl 1 MILE OFF J.77 at the FAIRPLAIN EXIT
or 36 MILES NORTH of CHARLESTON, W. VA. 1
5 MILES SOUTH of RIPLEY, W. Vl

120 - HOLStEIN HEIFERS - 120

..

Aucuoneer; H. C. Dawkins
Tel. 304 273·9664 ·
Charles" Bud" Spires. Sales Manager
Tel . 614·373-0887

mo

WALNUTS are Cosh I Storflng Oc·
tober .. we ore buy mg Block
Walnuts ot $4 00 per hundred
'pou nds Brrng your walnuts to
bcelsror Salt Works Pomeroy
Ohto

BOWLING

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Early Sunday Mixed
Oct 3, 1976
Standing•
Team
Pfs.
~ Tom ' s Carry Ovl
34
Jack's Dairy Bar
32
Town Kiln
2B
Cline's Const Co
20
Mark V
1B
Pomeroy Flower S~op
.12
High Individual game Larry Hendricks 19B, Betty
Smith 17B, larry Dugan 195,
Helen Phelps 172, Jerry Cline
194, Mary Voss 169.
High series- larry Dugan
541, Marlene Wilson 457 , Ed
Voss 537, Mary Voos 452.
Larry Hendricks 509, Helen
P , Betty S 436
Team high game- Cline's
WE wish to thank olt those who Construction Co. 721
Team high series- Tom's
helped In any way otthe d&amp;oth
of Mrs Mary Reed Specrol Carry Out 1920
thanks to the friends and
nerghbors who vrsrted sent
flowers and food
WE wish to thank olt those who
helped In ony way at the death
of Mrs Mary Reed Specro l BABYSITTER 1needed to lrve in or
stay days wrth small chrldren
thanks to the frtends and
Phone 992 6025
nerghbors who VIsited sent
flowers and food Spectol BRANCH MANAGER TRAINEE
tt,anks to the Loduu Auxtlrory
Unusua l opportun rtr, to become
of the Chester Ft[e Department
assocloted w1th a eacfrng fast
who passed and served drnner
growing consumer frnonce
the Post Councilor Club of
company doing busr ness rn 20
Chester Council, the cliurch
stoles We tram you In all
members ond for the D of A
phases of work rnv.olvrng con
\,odge members tho t visited rn
sume r crecht You will co ntac t
~rsup ot the funeral home To
our customer!, both rn and out
~tiRussell , Sr Mtnrster
s1de the otflce and learn to
~ ~rM;.Funerol Home, to !he
work •wtth merchants In o
orgarj~oll expressrons of
fnendly way you wrll help peo
sympathy ·~ d,~eplv op
pie with fherr persona l
prectated The ~"ONr;J,t of Mrs
frnonces 1 Stortrng salary wil l
Mary Reed
,
meet the need5 of you and your
fomrly now In a few short
wish to express my srncere
years you con eorn well obove
thank• to all my nvrghbors
overage Our company pro
friends and reloth1es who sent
motes from wlt htn Prevrous
cords , flowers and took food to
eJCpenence not necesSary
the homtt whtle t was o patient
Must be o hrgh ' school
at Pleasant' Valley ond Holzer
gradua te have car and be will
Medrcol Center I espectOII)I
rng to relocate lnttlotrve and
thank the nurses and doctors
ombrtron pay off b cephonal
for thetr spec1ol core and allen
employee benefits Pf'rolle Mr
t10n I needed. God bl~ a II
Snodgr.ou _JJt
992 2111
Ruth Steele
.J/
CAPITAL F.IHliNCE SERVICES
THE family of Dayton Bl
wish
300 VfJt(rf SECONO STREET.
to express our..lhan to the
POo\tfROY. OHIO AN EQUAL
Rocm• Emergency Squad Ew
OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
rngs Funera l Home
Dr
Rrdgway Dr Telte and nurses
at Vetet"ons Memonal Hosprtol
WE ' RE LOOKING FOR
AN INDIVIDUAL WHO
Dr Walker and nurses of the
WANTS TO
BE
IN·
second floor of Holze !i~ Hosp1tal
DEPENDENT
AND
Thanks goes to Rev Norris , and
SECURE .
the neighbors for the beautiful FINANCIALLY
ASSOCIATED
flowers, and foods, and anyone
INDUSTRIES
who helped In onywoy Vaur I is expanding and looking
kindness w1ll nevet _be forgot
for qualif ied Individua ls In
len
this area to manufa ctu re
1 ~lghly merketabte plastic
1 rtems If you qualify, we
Will provide
Com plete
on the site - l
•
training
•
TIMBER, Pomeroy Forest Pro
Company secured re t a t1
ducts Top prtc&amp; far standing
.outlets
sowtrmber. Coli K&amp;nf Hanby,
All necessary eq~rpmeQt ,
1·4·6 8570
'-5uppiiU and machinery for
th! Initial start
$$CASH$$ for tunk ed oulos
You must provtde am
Phone 742 2081 Fry&amp;s Truck &amp;
bttlon, approximately 200
Auto Part• Rutland
sq ft of operating room ,
and capital of SS,975 oo No
COINS 1929 and older currency
selling necessary No age
gold and silver, scrap Will buy
or
experience
sell, or trod&amp;, for a good selecrequ irements
tion of coins Hove t upplles for
Cali or write for full detail
Include phone number
metal. detectors
Roger
Associlttd Industries
Wom1ley on Leadmg Creek
'57 W Brower
and Rutland Rood Phone 7.of2·
Springfield, MiiSDUri65102
2331 for on offer

IF VOU hove a service to
wont to buy or sell SOI~Oflhin,a:
oe loo&amp;ung for work
whateve r
you II get results
foster wtlh a Sentinel Wont Ad
Coll992 2156
PORCH So le at Lau rel Clrff Oct
11 and 12th Sonia depress1on
gloss large 2 bowl steel sink,
Moxtntt M1chael
PORCH Sale Long 8oftom Ohto,
9 om hi I 6 p m Oct II 12
13th Harold Brewer res1dence
turn at post offrce fourth house
on left New an d used clothrng
g lassware ontrques tools, fu r
ntture
GARAGE Sole Monday and
Tuesday 9 am tr ll 3 p m 158
Lmcoln Hrll. T 0 P S ,Club
2 Fami ly Garage Sole, ftrs t house
beyond brrdge In Langsvrlle
930trll5pm Oct 13 14and
15th
BACK Porch So le held rnstde rorn
or sh me Stortmg Monday, Oct
11 runs weekly from 10 o m
1111 5 p m Came out 124 tur n
left on 325 to Donvt lle and
follow srg ns Clothrng tool s
depress ro n gloss and mrsc Co li
142·2481
GIGANTIC ga rage sale October
13th th rough 16th Frrst hous e
past Methodrsl Church tn
Chester
Frig idair e
refngero tor
ond range
mower rotottl ler hedge clip
p1trs
small electncol op
pllonces tools clothes baby
to adults, boby furmt ure toyli
drshes barbecue grrlls Lots of
mrscelloneous Opal Hollon
resrdence
A YA RD Sole ot the home of
Roderrck Gnmm son Broadway
St Rocme Ohto Tuesdoy and
Wednesday Oct 12ond 13

3 AND -4 R:M furm5hed and un
furnr shed op ts Phone 992
5434

•..

Spoclollzlng In cuytom built
rafters for commercial
resd , pole buildings
'

....' ,,

HOOVER spm drye r washer Ex
cellent condrtron reasonable
Phone 949 2523

..••• •
•

•

SHOOTING Ma tch just off Rt 7
near Rock Spnng ~ Cemetery
Lucky 7 Gun Club Sunday 12
pm
ONE good used porcela in top 42
1n sink w•th bose cobmels
Phone 992 5492
PORTABL E Hoo\ler wo~her new
Hot Point tabl e top elec trrc 32
gallon water heater Hot Pomt
gas dryer older hvrng room
sut le 3 cushrons Breakfast
table Phone 992 2969 or
Rrchord Stewart 3 mdes south
of Mtdd leport
APPLES FITZPATRICK ORCHARD
STATE ROUTE 689 PHONE
WILKESVIL LE 1614) 069 3785
1974 Vego H hbock G T
outomot rc s Cro rg 4 chon
ne l tope" with speakers
rodrdls; shag Also Amen
Savro (soft tal frame 4AI M C
Ports Phone 992 2327

Phone Coolville
667-3 166
or
667·3876
"For Free Estimate
9-10-1 mo

POLY-FOAM

UPHOLSTERY

FABRIC
sofa. chaff cushtons ,

For
mattre$ses, padding. Idea I
for campers Variety of
SIJ.eS.
Velvets , nylon pnots ,
herculons, vinyl solids , and
fancy prints, acce ssories

DIRECT FABRIC SALES""
328 Main Street
Pt Pleaunt
Ph. 675· 3469
9 30·S 00 Dally
Ttll8 :000 Fnday•

---

CHAROLAIS
SALE
SAT., OCTOBER 16

WESTON LIVESTOCK
YARDS

•a PER TON

TON

OHIO PALLET CoMPANY
IIIIZ-2889

-

'

-----.,...-...

--

-· ---

-

FREE ESTIMATeS!
•

LOCUST POSTS rou nd or spl1!1
Phon e 949 2774
COAL hm:_
es"fo;_n_:e:__a_n_dc-c"a 'I-CI-u-m
111 tlll· u lt'IP r
chlonde an d colq um brltJ e for
Ptrone
•~•
2114
du st con tr ol ond speclol tn l;oo: rng
hmlo 5 pm
so l ~ lor fa rme r ~ Morn Stree t
Ewenlngs tn 7llO
Pomeroy Oh 10 or phone 992
9 1 ~ h nt)
3891
c::--c---'...,.---1971 HONDA Cl &lt;50 12 000 CARP ENTER floonng cerl mg
mrl es SI\5Y bar crash bars
pa ne ltrrg Phone 99'1 2759
pull bock ha ndle bo n new ftre
and seal5 Scramb ler side DOZER wo rk -;!nd weldmg Con
ta ct Ja mes Porsons Rt 1
ptp es $650 Co lt 949 2480
Rocme on Carmel Rood
KENNEBEC pota toes SO lb $3 50
or 100 lb $6 00) llrrrtg can EXCAVATING BACKHOES AND
DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL
larners Phone 667 3737 or
SEP1 1C TANKS INSTALLED LOW
~66
~7~39~7~4--~-~- __,_
SOY AND DUMP TR UCKS BILL
POTATOES and pump kins C W
PU LLINS PHONE 992 2478 DAY
Proff rtt Portland Oh ro Ph one
OR NIGHT
843·2254
HOCt&lt;ING RIVER Trodtng Com
COALfor sole $22 pe~l'&amp;n Open
pony GU NS- OVER 250 IN
6 doys per week ond evenrngs
STOCK Buy soli tr ade 478
Fo r further lnformotr on coil
Richland Alhens Oh1o 4570 1
• (014)3677338
Pho neJ.614) 593 8906 _
1966FordP rt kupt ruck $500 Also WILL tnm or cu t trees and shrub
hors e troller $450 Phone (614)
be ry Phone 949 2545 or 7'42
69lj 3290
3167
SWEET potatoes R W Lewis Rt MOBILE Home Repor r Elec
124 , Ra crne Ohro Phone 843
plumbtn g ond heot rng Pho ne
2432
992-5856
GREEN beans for sol e pre~ rour GAS and Oil Soles and Servtce 24
own
2 miles b e ow
hourS Pho ne 843 2165 or 8~3
Ravenswood Ferry, Dovrd Vest
2341
-~or De lbert Patterson Portland,
BUSINESS buildrng plus hvrng
OhiO
quorters ocreoge a vodoble
TWO corn grovrty beds w1re corn
Must see to opprecrote For op
cnb 48 ft elevator Andr ew
porntment call985 3306
Cross Letart Falls Phone 247
NEIGLER 8u1 ldl ng Supp lras lor
2852
bu•ldrng houses
cobrn ots
-~
HAV Pho ne 985 427 1 olter6p m
plum bmg Phone 949 2508
Ra crne Olilo
1976 M C F Gypsey tryhoul boot
wrth 1976 Chrysler 75 h p
motor To pay off or lo~e over
payments Reason for selhng
•llness tn fo mr ly Phon'e 992 MORNING Stor Hgts Buy 1 acr e
5126
. tract of land Writ arr ange lor
1975 Duster 6 cylinder oulomotrc
ftnan ctng ond small down poy
ment to bu1ld, o horne of your
p s , vr nyltop 15 000 miles eJC
choice
Lee Constr uctr on
cellent condition $2500 Two
Ph one 992 3454 or (614) 446
twrn srze mattresses excellent
9568
condit io n Portable Fr lgtdo1re
dishwasher rn work rng cond r TUPPERS Ploms new 3 bed room
han $10 Con be seen ot 7.of8
ho me's burl! In krtche ns tried
Htg h St Mrddleporl alter 5
baths, carpeled w•lh oltoched
pm
ga rage I cere lot $22 900
Phone (614) 667 630&lt;
65 000 BTU Worm Mornmg Stove
Used I wrnte r hke new $175
Phone 992 7354

COUNTRY Mob rle Home Park Rt LADIES coat, me 12 Navy blue
33 ten mrles north of Pomeroy
lrke new Phone 992 7048
Lorge lots with concrete petros, TWO quohty cross-bred calves
srdewalks ru nners ond off
Phone 843 2653
street porkrng Phone 992-7479
FULLER Brush Products for sole
ONE bedroom apartments at
Phone992 3410
VILLAGE MANOR In Mrddleport · ::-:=:c::..:.:.::.::c:=;:-:c:-:-c~-,....,
lor $104 mon thly plus elec or 2NtceFinn roms Coll992 2630
$130 tncludlng electrrc LOWER H &amp; N day old started leghorn
RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS
pullets Both floor or cage
Co nve nrent lo shopp mg on
1 bl p 1 c
Thrrd and Mill Streets m Mrd
grown ovat o e ou try rrous
mg and outomotr on Modern
dleport Brand new hrgh quoit·
Poultry 399W Morn PQmeroy
1y apartments See Ihe
Phone 992-2164
manage r at Apl 16, or call
992 7721
AVAILABLE ot Rr verslde Apar t
~ent s,
1 bedroom apartments, $100 per month , 2
bedroom apartments $133 per
month Phone 992·3273
PLEASURE HORSES and pon res
also wrl l buy horses and
ONE bedroom mobtl&amp; home
pontes Phone (614) 698 3290
odul h only Phone992-5535
Ruth Reeves
2 Be&lt;lroom tro ller Brown s Trader
AkC Regi stered Sornl Berna rd
Pork Phone 992 3324
Pupptes 2 mole 1 female , 3
3 Bedroom trarler Furnished or
mont hs old
Str ong and
unfu rnrshed Phone 7.of2·3122
healthy Phone (304) 773 540S
or (304 ) 675 2310 PI Pleasant
2 Bedroom mobile home furms h
W Va
ed ut tlttres patd to responsr
ble porty only Phone 992 AKC Reg Beegle pups $40
7666
•
Phone 992·3717
USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT APPALOOSA more bred to Ap SUPER C Fartn aU Ford heavy duty
Tlmbeqock 2300 Skldder John
loader
lnternoi Jo nal corn
poloo'o 5 yrs o ld $300
Deere 440B Skrdder Pettibone
planter Phone (6 i"') 667 3652
Phone (304 ) 882 3262
Super 8 Cory L1ft Morborli: 48
Coolville
tn Chrp Poe Contact Don BEAGLE rabb tt dogs al l ages
DASH 23 Channel CB om lm
IN
started ond trorned Phone
Groves or Lyons Equtpment
mpx
rodro 8 track stereo Call
742
2521
Co. Inc Crrclevrlle Oh ro
992 3965
43113 Phone (614) 596-4769 or GENTLE mar e pony 35 mches 5
(614)474 6028
year! old F rst $15 Phone 992 GRAIN fed beef 35c lb Phone
985-4198
7210
NICE completely furn•sh,_
r
bedroom opt wrth wosXer and
drye r Located ot N9flh Sec;ond
St Mrdd leport ~ults only
Phone 992 26(
1970 Buick Rlvrero good cond•· •
EFFICIENCY opt .;"'oeal for s1ngle
Iron ~ew tires $900 Phone f
Mu lberry Kve
references
742·2796
Phone 992,i030 or992 7760
Tht71h Annuli
19'TS MONTE CARLO, automotr ~.
power steering, power brakes
West Vn•91nie Charolol•
air conditioning AM rodlo and
Association 5ale
stereo, rally wheels wrll sell
reasonable Phone 992 7036
SENIOR Crtrzens rnterested m
buying or trading, old trar ns 1969 Nova eiCiro "sharp, new
SALE AT 1:00 P.M.
Ltonel Amerrcon Firer etc:
parnt bucket seats, orr shocks
Sta ndard or 0 gouge any con
mags Phone949·2.of80
drt ron cons1dered Call 992; (411) 169-4,06
1973 VW THING 35 mpg near
7735
SOUTHERN Yellow Pine Post Poyperfect
cond1t1on
Rrck
lni Premium prlcft Past to be
Weston, W. Va
Gi
lmore,
Rt
1
Re&amp;dsvl
lle
(Sue
delivered to our yard at Brll·
cess
Rood)
or
phone
992-5323
lngs W Vo Species Virglnro
Pitch and Shorfleaf For size• OLD furn itu re, ke boxes brass
1957 Chevy 2 door wagon Phone
and prices 1nqulre at The
992 3397
bedl wall telephones ond
15 Bulls·80 Femoln
Burkt·Porsons ·Bowlby Cor
pOf'ts or complee house hold s 1971 Merc ury Montego MX low 1973 Copn .of speed rodtal ltres
25 4· H &amp; FFA Club Calveo
mrleoge p s p b a c very
poratlon , P 0
Box 39 ,
Wrrte M D Miller. Rt 4
FEATURING
·
J. J
good
c6ndthon
toke
over
good cond llion Phone 9.of9
Spennr, W Vo Phone . 927
Pomeroy, Ohro Call 992 7760
payments Call 992 5831 or
combinations; ~ Bred
2801
1250 Night call Ted Jocks 6n
9923914ofter5pm
females; Open helters ;
354 7694 or Jim Lohner. 9'1.7· CASH pold for all makes and 1966 Rqmbler Ambassador rn
models
of
mob
ile
hQ
mes
Lorge •election of herd
1466
1973
V
W
Super
Bug
2
new
tir
es
good cond rtron Phone 992
Ptlone oreo code 614--423·9531
• 4 speed Phone 992·5875
bulls
'
7730
"A
selecf,.well-bred
quality
1973 Bukk Clilnturion leSabre
offertng''
one
owner,
38
000
mtles,
brr
Reg . lmh Setter for sole 8 mon
'N ANTrD
F0111ntormation contact
condition tilt wheel tnJnk
ths old with shots $75 Phone
JIM COLLIVER
rel ease 60·40 front sea t rodtol
992 3661
trres, 455 engm e v1nyl top
SALES MANAGEMENT
Phone. 742·2211 before 5 00 or
1112 Grandview Ave
;
THE undersigned wlll sell at
742 2025 after 5 00
COlumbus, OH. 41212
Poles maximum dlam~er IU inches on
publrc sole for cosh the fallow·
Ph : 114·486·1243
1971 Dodge Charger 318 motor 2
tng
motor
v~
hicle
to
be
taken
largest -~Jid.
•
door automatrc Phon!! 985from George Johnson, B•ech
&lt;111
Street Apartments, Middleport,
Ohio .of5760 1969 Ford LT0-4 • 1968 Chevy C 20 three four th 1on
dr HT, Serial No 'f'N66Y 167·
V 8 4 speed, keavy duty, good
~PER
578 The ale w1ll be held at if're
condrtron $900 Phone after 6 MOBI LE home for sole or ren t 3
bedrooms al uttl rt ies pold
Farmers Bonk and Sovrngs
p m 992·7727
DeUverTo '
Phone 992 77S I
Co mpa ny, ' 711 We1 t Second
Streer Pomeroy Ohto at 10 00 1966 Mustang $290 P~lrce radar LECHALET trorler $2000 James
d&amp;lector, $25 See ot 247C
AM on the 16th doy of GcAppleby on Rt 143 mile posl
Mulberry ~ om &amp;roy
tober 1976 The undersrgned
HornerHrll
Rt. 2 Pomeroy, Ohio
re1erve1 the nght to ~id THE 1969 Dodge Cornet runs good, -.....---...
TRAILER
for sole Phone 992 61J7f
FARMERS
BANK
;..No
SAVINGS
good condtllon $450 Phone
Ph.
COMPANY Pomeroy Ohio
or 992 3333
992 5524 '

BUNDLED SLAIS

,

You ean lftVt hundr~s
oven lhousonds of dolloro
with aluminum or vinyl
siding
CON'rti\CT

GLEN R. BISSELL

AI 949·2101
Or
949· 2100
PLEASE
NO SUNDAY CALLS
9 Jll 1 m&lt;&gt;

FREE S IM ES

$10!11

~

Great Need
of Listings.

To Sell
Call Us Now
114

w. Mlln

992·2298

Pom•roy

. After Hours C. II

992-7133

, __

•

~-,..

-

~

··--·-----

5 room house with bath 1 acre of
land Phone 142 2769
6 room 1 ;, UOty on 11/, ceres
Close to Enterprise Church Ap
poln tment only' Phone 992
5901
GEORGE Hobsletter, Real Estate
Broker, Pomeroy Ohro 2 43
cere of land 6 roorn house 3
bedrooms bath fr ont porch
central olr wall to wal l
co rpEthnt;t 1 stove ond ref , clo$e
to school and church Prrced To
sell $16 800 Hil ton Wolfe
_ ~les"t~n _Phone 949 2589
PARTIAU Y flms hed houhl 3
bedrooms 2 half baths loco ted
rh Rae me on a 62x 119 lot,
$.t200 Phone992-7081
3 Bedroom, 1 bath utility room I
car garage .tctal rtlec trrc 115X·
115 lot , Hutchuon Sub
D•vlsron Rutlond Phone 742
2869

'"

Box II-A
Rutlona. Cillo 4'175
Ph. 1614) 742 · 2~
We Dtllvtr
728&lt;moo -

BIU PUWNS

GU1JE!S.~NINGS

LARR~..~V~~DER
410 I ntp

Pomeroy, Cillo
99HU8
9· 12·1 mo pd

-

EXPERIENCED

NOTICE
Open tor Fall &amp; Wlntfr
Seuon , Mondly thru
Sa tu rdly 10 to S
We hiv e one vreen hoult
full of Florldl toll19e
planh Ov•r SO varl1tle1 In
a ll From 4" t o I ' poll &amp; ' ' 1
to 10" hinging buk eU. 7Sc
to 5' 00.

HUBBAMDS •
GREENHOUSE
9~ · 577'

9 2 1 mo

Syracuse, o ,

_E XC AVATING do1er backhoe
and dltcher C horl e~ A Hatho ld Bo ck Hoe So r ~Jic o
Rutla11d Ohto Ph onv7 42 2008
SEP fiC Systorn s ln stollod by
l o ce u ~ed
•n ~ t o ll e t
Shapord
Controcto•s Ph one 742 2409
SEPTI C rAN KS d eonod Modetn
Sonltotlon 992 J954 or 992
2428
WILL do rooh119, (Onst• ucllon
plumbrng ond hentrng No jnb
too Iorge or too ~ m o ll Phon e
742 2348

-=

-=

Real E•tate .lor Sale-

Reviv e the
ot your YUgs I
your ow n home
by Von Sc hrader
dry.foam method
No muss No fu ss
No odor Use the

same day.
All wortl
guoYantood,

Abbott &amp;

--=-

SMALL lorrn for sole 10% down
owne r fmo nced Monroe Coun
ty W Vo Phono (304) 772
JI0 2 or [304 ) 772-3227

BRAD FORD, Auctionee r Com
plate Service Phone 9.of9 7487
or 949 2000 Racine Ohio Crltt
Bradford

-----

COUNTRY far mland with sedud
od woods wa ter and good ac•
cess tn Monroe County W Vo ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepe rs , toosters Irons, otl
$1 000 down toll (304) 772
r;ma ll apphonce5 law n mower
3102 or (304 ) 772 3227
next lo Stal e Hi ghway Garag e
on Route J Phone (614) 985
3825

TEAFORD

VtrgtiB. Sr ., R~!altor
llOMechant c Pomeroy,tJ
Phone 992 3315
IN TOWN Beautifu l
ol der hom e near shop
VIew of river, 3 bedroo m s.
l 'h baths, hot wa ter heat
$29.500
NEW liSTING - I'll ecres
of level land In Tupper s .
Plains Old 7 room house,
lh bath garage, cellar, for
on ly $12,000
NEW LISTING - 2 or 3
bedroom
hom e
In
Syracuse Modern kl lchen,
gas F.A furna ce lroot and
side porches Nice corner
lot 115 000
15,500 oo - 2 bedroom
frame home wl1h nke gas
FA furnace, modern ba1h
end kitchen Paneling one
full basement ""

We Are In

Southeateril Ohio
Truss RJfter Co.

From 6" 1o II" wldo oncl up
10 5 II dHP wllll or wllllout
pip. furnished Uncltr rood
borts up to 12" pipe 111 ..

WJIIIlOW$&amp; OOO!S
1£PlAC[IIU1
WINDOWS
!LUMINUM
SIDING sOITI1l

Ph 99139'll

ANY PITCH
ANY 51ZE

TRENCHER
M)RK

Blown

ln"!ial1on Se!Yicll$
Flnlftclna Avallabll
Blown mto Walls &amp; A"lts

GUTT£R SERVICE

CHIPWOOD
--

••

M&amp;GTruss-Ratters

95 HEAD SELLING 95

•.80 HEIFERS - 18 months to 22 months old '
'30 HEIFERS 1 year to 16 months old
•"
•10 HEIFERS 7 months lo 1 year old
T. B. and Bangs Tested. Most of these
Heifers are from Artificial Breeding. All
Heifers selling open .
,
Tllese are good top quality grade
Heifers raised from the herd of cows that
was dispersed from the McCoy farm on
March 10 of this year. This is a rare
opportunity to get good quality replacement
heifers.
Terms of Sale CASH
McCoy Farms, Owner
Tel. 304 273-9668

NOW accepting pia no students
begrnners , Intermediates ad
vanced students Call 992

IN memory of Henry R Beach who
passed owoy October 9 , 1964
who rs sadly missed by
daughter Mrs ~Clifford Jacobs
Against my sky there stood
A mighty oak and lirgh
And when It fell It left
A blank 1poce m the sky
But I consoled myself
To frnd beneath ahve ,
A hundred tiny oaks
Where once the gtanl oak tlmv
ed
Andotorns that 11 cost
Produced from ferltl e ground
For hoff a century, oaks,
For hoff a mtle around
Always ook trees that great
Leove blank spots rn th v sky,
' And It's not wrong to mtss them
And it's not wrong to Cry..
But I retolte rn thts
Although my g1an t tree broke
Thrs countr~srde rs blessed
And springing up with oaks

1969 V.W. 2 DR~ ............. 1595

these friendly
salesmen. ·
Ceward
Calvert,
J, D. !Otorw

Portable Hoover Washer Reg . 1169.95 Sale
$139.95
20" Green Electric Range Reg . 1129.95 Sale
$99.95
Wood Table and 4 chairs. Reg . $239.95 Sale
$166.00
New Bunk Beds. Reg. 5169.95 Sale $119.95
3 Pc. Bedroom Suite. Reg . $169.95
Sale'$139.95
New 2 Pc. Liying Room Suite. Reg.
'
1299.95
Sale $239.95
Rocker Recliner Reg. $69.95
Sale $39.95
New 5 Pc. Breakfast Set. Reg. $79.95
Sale
$69.95
Automatic Washer. Reg. $169.95 Sale $149.95
Several Chest &amp; Dressers.
129.95 &amp; up
New Box Springs &amp; Mattress lrr. $29.94 &amp; up

2333

die
and hi•
on earth
I• a short span of years
beginning w1th blrttl
And like pilgrims we wander
unt il death tokes our hand
And we start on our jOUrney
to Gods Promised land
A place where we Jl find
no suffering nar teor1
Where TIME •s not counted
by doy1 months or yean
And In this fatr c1ty
that God has prepared
An unending joys
' lobo hoppllyohored
With oil of our loved ones
who pati&amp;ntly walt
,On death s other 11de
to open ' THE GATE ' I

1974 DATSUN ................ $2295

Air , auto tfans , P.. s , p b

Continues At
Rutland Bargain Center

BEGINNER S ana 1mmrKhate coke
decorating claues For more
rnlo rmotlon call Joana Petty
742 ~818 or lors Walker 742

Locall owner car. green finish , green viny l roof, radial
w w t ires, air cond, V 8, with automatic P steering &amp;
brakes

1972 CHEVY CAPRICE ....................11995

Business SerVices

NEW LISTING - I yr old
3 bedroom home Ni ce
balh large eal ln kitchen,
therm -o pane wind ows,
garage and lot 95x115
Aoklng $23 ,000

REMODELING Plum bing heat ing
and all ty pes of general rupolr
Wor k gua ranteed 20 yoors ex
perlenc&amp; Phone 992 · ~ .. 09
D&amp;D TREE Tr rmm lng 20 yea rs ex
pe r le nce
ln•u red fr ee
tiSirm ote• Coli 992 2384 or
(61&lt;) 6~257~Ai bany
SEWIN G MACHINE Rttpa lrs, ser
vlco al l makes 992 228A The
Fabrr c Shop
Pomeroy
Aut horll.a d Si ng er Soles and
Servrce We sharpen Scissors
EXC AVATING,dozer 1;;;i;~nd
backhoe w o r ~ dump trucks
and lo boys lor hire will hou l
llli drrt to soil llme1tone an d
grove l Coli Bob or Roger Jef
fers day phone 992-7089
night phone 992·3525 or 992
5232
,__._
....

---

---

HOMESITES for sole , I acre and
up Middlepor t, near Rutland
Coll992 7&lt;BI
NEW 3 bedroom house 2 ba th 1
all e lec I acre Ml~eporl
clout to Rutland Phone ~
7&lt;81

I

WOODS - 29 acres Good
site lor lake, T P waler, J
bedroom trailer, l'h baths
A real h ide awa y lor
522 ,500
NEW LI'STING In
Middle por t 2 bedrooms,
modern balh, dining and
firep lace 2 porc hes and
level lot a t $16.500
FRE;E GAS - 15 acres tor
the children 3 bedrOom
re nova ted
home
A-1
Inside, wife kitchen , gas
F A furnace and gas well.
NEW ~I STING - 2 lots In
restric ted
subdivis ion. '
Partly wooded wl lh T. P ,
weler $5,000
NEW LISTING - 2 acres
In the country, ne w garage
with extra room .and 1/1
beth A J bedroom air
conditioned mobile homF
with Ph ba ths 124,000.
NEW LISTING
2
bedrooms. ba th nal~ral gas
heal. ga ra ge . utility anc
garden $11 ,000
HAVE
PROP·
• WE
ERTIES FOR YOU TO
SEE . COME IN WHERE
YOU CAN DO YOUR
REAL
ESTATE
BUSINE'SS

l

o.NearFr,ee gas and
Income from well, timber. stocked pond, frull
tree$, barn &amp; other
building• . nice home has 5
bedroom•. bat h, dining.
carpeted, paneled. garage.
JUST $42,000.00.
GRI\C IOUS 2 story older
home • bedroom•, belll,
nice ~lichen, carpeting,
paneling, 2 car garage, .69
acre 118,000 00
NICE RANCH TYPE small yard, 3 BR, belll.
large living, full bestment.
H W. floors, corp.ltd, new
steel siding I!B,OOO 00.,
DON'T PAY high rent Buy
this 2 •tory frame Roof.
s id ing &amp; carport like new.
Small yard 7 rooms. N.G.
heat S7,500 00
CLOER 2 stor'y brick
home 5 bedrooms, 2 baths.
ult ra modern kllchen,
fireplace , N.G hot water
he•t. 2 corner lots close to
shopping . ASKING
$20,000.00.
L!ET US SELL YOUR
PROPERTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER

9f2-22lf

l

�...

••

,

..
M

-

40-The Surwlav Tlmes-SenUnel,SWlday. Od 10.1976

DAN THOMPSON
FORD

FORD

~

• ••

'

-

G
THE
PENCIL
10 GIVE YOU SOME OF THE SHARPEST BUYS lfl TOWN

aD-TbeSulldly TinJee.llelltln,&amp;lnday, UCl.lO,lV111

For Fast·Results Use The Sunday..Times-Sentinel Classifi~ds

'" *"T YOUINIXT
CARorTIUCK
from

POMERGY ADD

IN Momory of Tllomoo Lu!Mron
Ocl 11 , 1973
• THE RACINE Fire Ptpartmtnt wilt THUNDERBIRD hubcap, brown oc
hove a gun thoot Saturday ot ctnts, betwten Middleport
In my heart I like to 1trcy
and Heck • on Stat• Route 7
6
30 p m ot tt..lr building In
Along lho road ol y.,torl~Gy
Reward Phone 992 7354
loshan
l'o livt again In mtmary
WOULD
the porty who found o
'tho haPf&gt;y days lhal uoed fo bt
POE and Gtn•'s Garage l• now In
billfold belongmg to Gtlbert k
To hear you talk and ' " you
~rot lon , Mechanic and body
tmlle
Smith pleost call (614) 44 6
work North S.Cond. StrHt In
01 10
And 11t and talk with you o whtlt
Middleport. Form.,ly Bran·
I love to linger on the woy
1'1011 • Goroge. Phone 992 5450
That takes me bade to y.. terday
orcollofter5p m 992-7135
Treo•urtd thoughts of one so
OPEN AGAIN - after belng clo1·
dear
ed for vacation. We ore open 14 ft tro11e l troller three. woy
Ofttn bring• o silent tGar
ogoln with our usual • good
hghts , furnoce tarpeted spar&amp;
God'• retum to tctnts long pou·
quality knlt1 and low price•
lire , 1l"ps 6 Excell ent condt
Od
Hour. Monday fhrough Friday,
t1on and prrc~ to sell Phone
Tlmt roll• on but memone1last
9 a m tlll 7 p m Clottd Satur·
9927210
elsel I do
days Corolhla Fabrics on St
Rt. 7 Vt mile ,N of Chester,
Ohio Henry and Mary Hunter,
owners

1976 AMC HORNET·········· 13995
Sporlabout. 6 cyl , automatic, power steer ing , delu•e
equipment, whitewall tires, luggage rack, da rk oreen
Unlsh , less than 9,000 miles, showroom clel'n

1972 FORD PINTO WAGON............ 1 1~95

1975 NOVA HATCHBN:K CPl 13095

• cyl .. aulo lrans

1971 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR...........11695

'

Locall owner. 6 cyl { automa tic, power steet rng, clean
Interior , radio, good w-w tires. rally wheels , spOrt
.mirrors, white &amp; green finish

'

•

6 cyl, auto trans , very cltan

1970 Olds Della Cpe••••••••• .'1295

1

1973 CHEVY VEGA ....................... 1495

Rad io, automal1c, P S , P B , good tires Clean

" cyl , auto trans

1974 CHEVROLET MONTE CARL0$3995

1
1971J:HEVELlE
4
DR
....................
1295
4 cyl .. aUto Iran•

2102 door ,local car. 4 speed tr•n• , 44,200 miles, good
tires, dark green finish, rea l economy

1972 GAlAXIE 500 ........................ 1495
1

Air .. p •·· p b

1973 FORD PIN10 ........................ 11895

1/1. Ton ....... 12995
1973
Chevrolet·
8' Fleetslde V8englne, dUTomanc rrans ,
.elr , p.

" cyl std , trans

steering &amp; brakes. local , 1 owner. low mileage truck,
good t ires. rad•o

1971 I'LYMOUTii VALIANT. ............. 11495

1973 Vega Gl Cpe........;••••$1895

6 cyl , auto. trans

1

1972 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX .......... 2995
Air , auto trans , very clean

1972 GRAND TORINO SPORT..........11995
Black finish, air, auto trans . . -

1974 CHEVY 1h TON PICKUP. .......... 13295
6 cyl std trllns., low mileage

1974 CHEVY lt4 TON PICKUP......... ..l3595
V-8, 4 sp trans

MANY MORE
Save Now on a 1976 Pinto, Mustang, or Maverick.
See: Pat Hill, Rocky Hupp
or Melvin Utile
For a good deal on a new or used veh1cle
Open Evenings Til7 :00
Except Thurs. and Sat.
Closed Sunday

TaCT" ' ~·

Before you buy any car new

Local owner, 4 cyl , automatic, p steering , radio, air
conditioned. good tires

or used you owe It to
yourself to check with us.
We are the friendly

1972 Chevelle Malibu, •••••••••• 1495
1

H T cpe , good t1res, rad io, V8 , automatic, P ~ , P B ,
bucket seats, runs good, needs pa int

dealer, We have the
sharpest pencil In
town. See one of

Runs good , new tires. radio

1972 VOLKSWAGEN 2 DR••••11595
Red finish, good tires, c1ea.;-lnterlor , automatic trans ,
QOOd economy

1971 FORD 8' PICKUP •••• '1850
302 V 8, automatic tra.t:;, good tires, sport custom cab,
sliding R glass . de luxe mldgs, green lin ISh, radio &amp;
healer Clean

,...,..,..,..~-SPECIALS-~-""'~
1970 Ply. 2 Door,6 cyl., auto"matic
$599.00
1971 Chevrolet 4door 6 cyl., auto.
$899.00
1967 Musta
$250

DAN .THOMPSON FORD

...

NEW

The sharpest pencil in town

CHEVY VAN IN STOCK

THE 1977

CANADAY REALTY
·-------------------------······-··
Now Showing
The Leader of
Luxury Cars.

Visit Our
Showroom
And See For
Yourself

f

I

I

,.

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
'92 5342

Cadillac-Oldsmobile
GMC Fononc1ng Avooloble

Pomero

"You' ll Like Ovr Quality Wav ol Doing Bus111ess"

____

Open Eves. Til6-Til 5 D.m . Sat.
~ee one oY mese courteous salesmen.
f&gt;ete Burris
Lloyd. Me Laughlin
Mar.vin Keebaugh

.__

BOB LANE

BRAN.CH MANAGER
855 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Office·
Home

446·7900
446-1049

LISTINGS NEEDED NuW
TO FIT OUR BUYERS '

NEEDS

GALLIPOLIS
AREA LISTINGS
PRICED FOR
IMMEDIATE SALE'
Excellen tly constru cted 3
bedroom on appro x 31~ of
an a cre In a very pleasa nt
nei ghborhood rn Ky ger
Creek School District You
can own th1S beautr t ul
home r ro ht now for the
unbel iev able pr iCe of
$13 500 00
Vacant Land
J2 Acres
J us t off Route 160 on
Thompson Road Be.!l ut rful
burl drng sr tes w ith wooded
ereas Burld yo ur home
here and gel away from rl
all• Prr ced welt below fair
marke t value at $10 000
Select Nerghborhooel
Near shOpp ing center and
hospital Very well kepi 3
be droom , Ph ba..!J' on one of
th e nicer lots in lh rs erea
Don 't let lhrs bargain pass
you byl
In Town
Near the corner of Th ird
and Vr ne Streets Thrs Is a 2
story , 3 bedroo m home that
lia s
been
remodel ed
re cen tl y Just think of the
ease In getting to the
shopping drstrlct schools ,
chur ches , etc offered to
you at a very reasonable
pr•ce of S29 000

25117 Locust St. , Ga llipohs. OhiO

REALTY

446-3636

25 LOC~U l&gt; f ;:,J

Howilrd Brannon , Broker
Off1ce 446-2674

Lucille Brannon
Eve 446 1226

or~46

2674

Wal1tng &amp; Hoping
For th at grand old home?
Here 1S a terrif iC buy for a
couple w1th sk•l lful hands
and a green thumb , loca ted
In the heart of town , 4 br ,
t wo st'orv home wdh for m al
drK. country kitc hen and

storage roo m, J por ches ,
dry' bsm With gas fur and

fru•t

ro om,

alumtnum

S1d1ng lind storm doors and
w 1ndows , deep lo t with

garden space and m 8 lure

sh ade
trees
ch •l dren would

Sc hool
love lh1s

location

WOW!
What A Vrew
And loca ted in town Large
two story 3 br home , eat 11'1
krlc he n and formal dr wtth
an open stairway An
outstandtng vrew fr om the
lr
extra large hobby
room ntce basement wrt h
gas fur , large Porches An
overs rzed lot for the gard
ner
Don't Hesitate !
A truly lovely ren ch style
home 3 br, ww car pet
spacious krlchen gas fur
in fu ll bsm , gerage Well
landsc aped she de d lawn ,
loca ted ''• m ! to to wn
Lots
3 good butldlng lot s in
e:oc.ce llen t location Pnced
$2 000 each
Incl udes
streets rura l water , un
dergro und e lectnc and
telephone
Klng Size Farm
190 .!ICre far m wrth 6 yr old
home 4 br , co unt ry kit
che n with range and oven ,
Clr , f~r eplace 1n lr ., full
bsm garage spr ing water
and 2 ponds, tobac co base ,
3 bar ns , some timber , 60 a
ltllable and 70 a pasture
Attenfton Homeowners!
We want lr sttngs In all
locations we
will give
yo ur
property
the
necesse r y amount of ad
verttsrng e nd the best of
our abrlrly to promo te a
sale Ca ll us now - 446 267 4
CALL 446· 2674 NOW
FOR A BETTER
WAY OF LIVING

NEW ON THE MARKET

1

66 acr e farm - 20 ac res
ti ll ab le, 15 acres nr ce
t mber , JO' ac res pastur e 3
BR 2 s tory farm ho me, 2
barns
hog ba rn an d
chrcken hous e 1970 tra ctor
bush ho g hay rake ba ler
plow
drsc ,
mowrng
machrne 200 bales hay , 6
co ws an d 2 calv es
num erous sma ll tools, th1s
farm won I be on the
marker long at SJS ooo
Better ca ll so on

CHEAPIE - 3 r m hom e
on 3 acres wooded land , one
o u tburl drn g , some fur
nlt ure f rr ep lace rn LR
$5 000
RENTAL INVESTMENT 2
fully fu rn ished , a 1r cond
trai ler s on lg lot , George's
Creek Rd s u 500
j::INANCING
PROB
LEMS?
Owner
wdl
help frnan ce 3 BR new
bnck &amp; fr ame full y ca r
peted , P 1 ba th , beaulrful
modern ktlche n, SJS,OOO
Call for mor e detar ls 1

COLONIAL RANCH w1th
large family room , 3 BR
11,2 baths , mo dern krtchen
la rg e leve l lot , rn one of the
ar ea s nrcest subdlv rsrons
crty scnoo ls 11 s brand new
and only S36 000

NEAR VINTON 40
acr es 5 BR home, lg barn
fe nced
go od pa s t ure
severa l good buildrng srtes
on black top rd $4 0,000

MINI FARM Id eal for
hor ses , JJ• ac r es near ly a ll
fe nced, good large barn
land leve l to ro lli ng a ll
clear ed Good 3 BR wr th
balh fr ame home , S18 000

COZY 2 BR nearly new
home, 5 m ties from c1ty all
e l ectr~c. ful ly car pe ted
krt chen
lo ve ly
m od
cou ntry
settr ng
c rty
SChOO lS $23,500

ADDISON, Very well kept 2
BR full basement wrth
ga rag e hardwood floors
ca rp eted LR an d hall, fuel
oil furn ace . ra ng e washer
and dr yer on 2112 ac res
PRIC E D LOW' $20 200

"LIVIN IS EASY " rn lhrs
wel l marntarn ed co untry
home on beautrful one acr e
lot J BR 11/1 baths , e lec tr rc
f urnace heat ce n a rr,
ex Ira lg k•tchen SJ7 900

DOUBLE WIDE - 1970 24
:oc. 50' mobtl e ho me w range
an d r efng erat or , 1J x 33
aw nmg rn e:oc.ce ll ent co nd
$10 1600

~ KEMPER

HOLlOW - 7
miles from crty 3 BR
fram e r an ch on lg lot ,
ftnt sh th rs yourself an d
save r $21,000

GREEN ACRES SUB·
LOTS OF ROOM at a
CHIMNEY Blocks W Va &amp; Ohro
BOARDING &amp; AKC PUPPIES
DIVISION - Brand new 3
prrce,
4
BR
reas
onable
lum p Cool Go lll polrs Block
BR
11/J ba th s , comb
K &amp; P Kennels 388 8274 Rt
on
2
A acres
crty
home
Co o&amp;ol6 2783
kllch en . famrl y room ,
SS.., % mrle east ol Porter
5
mr
les
from
town
schoojs,
~~-r ange , hood , drshwasher,
on blacktop road, S20 500
FOR SAlE
Ntee 3 Bedroom
BOARDING , Sromese Ktltens Crr
dr sposa l, ove n, cen air
With one ca r garag e on
LIMESTONE FOR DRIVEWAYS
constructi on
Qu alrty
cle L Kennels 2 mrles from
COMMERCIAL SITE or
approx. 1h acr e lot lust off
thr oug hout. 534 000
CARLWINTERS PH 245 5115
town .of46-.of82ol
suit
a
ble
tor
resrdent
ra
l
38
Bulavrll e Road near Route
acres, 400 ' frontage on R t
CENTENARY Woods Kennel Pet ALL TYPES of ~ltdmg mote~rols
35 Only 5 yea rs old and
MAKE AN OFFER' J BR
7 .100' Ohro R lver frontage
block, bnt k sewer prpes wr n
mo,de s tl y pnced &amp;I 522,000
groomrng foc• lr tres Ha ve your
home
barn garag e other
4 water taps 525, 000
out bu •ldr ngs
a ll nee d
dews lmtels etc Claude
pet groomed undeer son rtory
r eparr 3 2 acr es , 500' rd
Need a 4 be''·"'om1?
Wrn t&amp;rs, Rlo Grande 0 Phone
cond All breeds aCCI&amp;pted.
SEVENTY FIVE ACRE
Large
we
ll
fro nta ge crty water gas,
245 5121 offerS
446 0231
FARM 2 s tory 3 BR w bat h
rh acre lot
C11y sc ho ols
barn,
other
home,
good
tow n and near
1
U SED APPLIANCES DRAGONWYND Cattery-Kenne l outburld.ng s, good pa stur e
shoppmg center etc
48 ACRES beaut rfull y
RE FRIG ERA TOR S washers
A.K C C.F A Hlmoloyon (Per
fenced, po nd , tobacco base ,
hom
e
offers
a
lot
mo
re
wooded . -.evcr~ l good
dryer,
ranges
Gene
Skaggs
'
sran) and S•o mese .of46 3644
lrmber
,
on
blacktop
road
the money than most '" n
bur ld rng srt es Bl ecktop
1294 Easern Ave Ph 446 7396
after 1 p m
sso.oo
o
ma rk et today
road , r ura l wa ttr St 0,500
RISING STAR KENNEL Boordrng ROWE Lrvmg room surtes Sosself
RIO GRANDE AREA OTHER
COUNSELORS
6 24
ACRES ,
perfe ct
Bedroom su•tes Sealy mot
Indoor outdoor runs AKC
Ju st ott Rt 35, blOck ran ch
GALLIPOLIS
butldmg Sr tes p cturesqu t
tresses all or pnces you co n
type
home
feat
ures
20'
x
2.1'
Shetlond Sheep dogs (Shellles
Den 'o'er K Hrgtev 4~6 0001
counlr'y sur roundings clly
LR witt'! f~r ep l ace all mod
·aff ord Rrce'l New and Used
mlnloture collies) Ckes hrre
CROWN CITY
schools , rural wate r ,
30
x
40
barn
25
acres
conv
Ph 307 0292
Furnttu re B54 2nd Ave 446
75 6 1456
Joe Crans
$10000
PROWLER
level to rolling pas tur e
9523
TRAVEL tro rlers see th e No 1 fenced pond SJ7 .SOO
BRIAR PATCH Kennels Boarding
NATIONAL
selle r In Ihe USA Sm rth s Hon
AKC Gordan Setters Englrsh
ADVERTI SI NG wllh lhe
do Sales St Rt 7 Gallrpohs
Cocker Spaniels .of.of6 .ofl9i
Galle
r
y
of
Hom
es
,
FOR SALE
Ohro 446 2240
'
----'
Sealed bids wtll be
AKC Rtg.. Sornt Bernard pupptes
STARCRAFT
2 male, 1 female 3 moa old
received on 1 "" Elcono
BEAT the loll pnce rncreose All
strong healthy Ph 30.of·77;J( Mobile Home 40 t.ot by 10
Audrey Canaday
1976 tro llers fold dow n! reduc
S.05 or 675 2310 Pf P,[!'O~'
!HI by Robert S Bell,
Saleswoman
for sofa chorr . ed to bollom 1977 Mm 1 motor
W Vo
E•ecutor of lht Estate of
cush•ons moflresses paddrng
trai lers fold downs tn stock
446·3636
FREE KITTENS 2 calicoat females
Lena B. Wood, Decu•ed .
rdeol for campers Vorrety of
We sell serviCe and , qual ity
Any
Hour
2 orange mole~ also free lllrough October 15, lf76.
mes Drrec t Fabnc and Foam
Open Sunday Camp Conley
~brodar puep~ c~ll ~4_6 .ot569
Soles
Morn
St
PI
Pleoson
t
The right is ruerved to
Star Croft Soles Rt 62 N Pt Ph 675 3469 9 5 datly 1111 8
Pleasant W Vo
reject ony ond 111 bids.
Frrdoy
ENGLISH SETTERS pu p• Rog 4
Robert S. Betz
1971 SHASTA 22 It self cont rn
mo old good
197 4 NOVA Ph 388 8586
Extcutor of the Estate
AlUMINUM burldrngs with wrn
cludmg A C Eco nonw Motor 1976 Sto rao lt Cam per
G~O_I!I!d~.·
Ph 2•5 5617
dow$ floors ana electric
of lena B Wood, Deceo..d
Soli' 446 1•25
E!x tra clean $1 700 Ph 256
blocks rrle ceri'tcn morta r,
1972 VOLKSWAGON orange
of locust Street
6620
21 FT CA\1\PE~ E!'lfC cond Ph
POODLE GROOMING Ph. &lt;•6
ch•mney
bloc k v.oll lpolrs
wrth block slrtpe one
Gallopolos, Ofuo 45631
446 0403
66
Block 446·2783 /r
ow ner Ph 367 0376

--

Ca~~pg]'9~fp;fi'fn~~
-

RON CANADAY R£ALTOR

S30

f ·- "

v

POMEROY MOTOR
I

"Your Chevy Dealer"
992·2126

I.

Pomeroy
Open

Evenin~~ unt1ih.m.

•'

1976 Electro loaded wrth oil ex•
tros 4~6 0774

72 Monte Corio , 2 dr HT V 8 orr ;
PS $1800 367 0250 Coli before ...
12 30p m
n Plymouth Duste r, rn good 1974 Dodge Dort Sport, Hot ...
cond Ph 256 noa,~~~chb ock PS powe r drs c
brakes auto low mrl eage '
' call afte r 5 30 p m 256 1243
NOVA 72-one owner 8 dy ,
48 Wrlly Jeep good cond 446
bl ue ond whrte good
3960
co nd Ph 256 1988

..

HOLSTEIN. HEIFER
SALE
WEDNESDAY,· OCTOBER 13, 1976 - 1:00 PM
at the JACKSON ,COUNTY LIVESTOCK SALE CO.
localed- 40- MILES SOUTH of PARKERSbURG I
W. Vl 1 MILE OFF J.77 at the FAIRPLAIN EXIT
or 36 MILES NORTH of CHARLESTON, W. VA. 1
5 MILES SOUTH of RIPLEY, W. Vl

120 - HOLStEIN HEIFERS - 120

..

Aucuoneer; H. C. Dawkins
Tel. 304 273·9664 ·
Charles" Bud" Spires. Sales Manager
Tel . 614·373-0887

mo

WALNUTS are Cosh I Storflng Oc·
tober .. we ore buy mg Block
Walnuts ot $4 00 per hundred
'pou nds Brrng your walnuts to
bcelsror Salt Works Pomeroy
Ohto

BOWLING

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Early Sunday Mixed
Oct 3, 1976
Standing•
Team
Pfs.
~ Tom ' s Carry Ovl
34
Jack's Dairy Bar
32
Town Kiln
2B
Cline's Const Co
20
Mark V
1B
Pomeroy Flower S~op
.12
High Individual game Larry Hendricks 19B, Betty
Smith 17B, larry Dugan 195,
Helen Phelps 172, Jerry Cline
194, Mary Voss 169.
High series- larry Dugan
541, Marlene Wilson 457 , Ed
Voss 537, Mary Voos 452.
Larry Hendricks 509, Helen
P , Betty S 436
Team high game- Cline's
WE wish to thank olt those who Construction Co. 721
Team high series- Tom's
helped In any way otthe d&amp;oth
of Mrs Mary Reed Specrol Carry Out 1920
thanks to the friends and
nerghbors who vrsrted sent
flowers and food
WE wish to thank olt those who
helped In ony way at the death
of Mrs Mary Reed Specro l BABYSITTER 1needed to lrve in or
stay days wrth small chrldren
thanks to the frtends and
Phone 992 6025
nerghbors who VIsited sent
flowers and food Spectol BRANCH MANAGER TRAINEE
tt,anks to the Loduu Auxtlrory
Unusua l opportun rtr, to become
of the Chester Ft[e Department
assocloted w1th a eacfrng fast
who passed and served drnner
growing consumer frnonce
the Post Councilor Club of
company doing busr ness rn 20
Chester Council, the cliurch
stoles We tram you In all
members ond for the D of A
phases of work rnv.olvrng con
\,odge members tho t visited rn
sume r crecht You will co ntac t
~rsup ot the funeral home To
our customer!, both rn and out
~tiRussell , Sr Mtnrster
s1de the otflce and learn to
~ ~rM;.Funerol Home, to !he
work •wtth merchants In o
orgarj~oll expressrons of
fnendly way you wrll help peo
sympathy ·~ d,~eplv op
pie with fherr persona l
prectated The ~"ONr;J,t of Mrs
frnonces 1 Stortrng salary wil l
Mary Reed
,
meet the need5 of you and your
fomrly now In a few short
wish to express my srncere
years you con eorn well obove
thank• to all my nvrghbors
overage Our company pro
friends and reloth1es who sent
motes from wlt htn Prevrous
cords , flowers and took food to
eJCpenence not necesSary
the homtt whtle t was o patient
Must be o hrgh ' school
at Pleasant' Valley ond Holzer
gradua te have car and be will
Medrcol Center I espectOII)I
rng to relocate lnttlotrve and
thank the nurses and doctors
ombrtron pay off b cephonal
for thetr spec1ol core and allen
employee benefits Pf'rolle Mr
t10n I needed. God bl~ a II
Snodgr.ou _JJt
992 2111
Ruth Steele
.J/
CAPITAL F.IHliNCE SERVICES
THE family of Dayton Bl
wish
300 VfJt(rf SECONO STREET.
to express our..lhan to the
POo\tfROY. OHIO AN EQUAL
Rocm• Emergency Squad Ew
OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
rngs Funera l Home
Dr
Rrdgway Dr Telte and nurses
at Vetet"ons Memonal Hosprtol
WE ' RE LOOKING FOR
AN INDIVIDUAL WHO
Dr Walker and nurses of the
WANTS TO
BE
IN·
second floor of Holze !i~ Hosp1tal
DEPENDENT
AND
Thanks goes to Rev Norris , and
SECURE .
the neighbors for the beautiful FINANCIALLY
ASSOCIATED
flowers, and foods, and anyone
INDUSTRIES
who helped In onywoy Vaur I is expanding and looking
kindness w1ll nevet _be forgot
for qualif ied Individua ls In
len
this area to manufa ctu re
1 ~lghly merketabte plastic
1 rtems If you qualify, we
Will provide
Com plete
on the site - l
•
training
•
TIMBER, Pomeroy Forest Pro
Company secured re t a t1
ducts Top prtc&amp; far standing
.outlets
sowtrmber. Coli K&amp;nf Hanby,
All necessary eq~rpmeQt ,
1·4·6 8570
'-5uppiiU and machinery for
th! Initial start
$$CASH$$ for tunk ed oulos
You must provtde am
Phone 742 2081 Fry&amp;s Truck &amp;
bttlon, approximately 200
Auto Part• Rutland
sq ft of operating room ,
and capital of SS,975 oo No
COINS 1929 and older currency
selling necessary No age
gold and silver, scrap Will buy
or
experience
sell, or trod&amp;, for a good selecrequ irements
tion of coins Hove t upplles for
Cali or write for full detail
Include phone number
metal. detectors
Roger
Associlttd Industries
Wom1ley on Leadmg Creek
'57 W Brower
and Rutland Rood Phone 7.of2·
Springfield, MiiSDUri65102
2331 for on offer

IF VOU hove a service to
wont to buy or sell SOI~Oflhin,a:
oe loo&amp;ung for work
whateve r
you II get results
foster wtlh a Sentinel Wont Ad
Coll992 2156
PORCH So le at Lau rel Clrff Oct
11 and 12th Sonia depress1on
gloss large 2 bowl steel sink,
Moxtntt M1chael
PORCH Sale Long 8oftom Ohto,
9 om hi I 6 p m Oct II 12
13th Harold Brewer res1dence
turn at post offrce fourth house
on left New an d used clothrng
g lassware ontrques tools, fu r
ntture
GARAGE Sole Monday and
Tuesday 9 am tr ll 3 p m 158
Lmcoln Hrll. T 0 P S ,Club
2 Fami ly Garage Sole, ftrs t house
beyond brrdge In Langsvrlle
930trll5pm Oct 13 14and
15th
BACK Porch So le held rnstde rorn
or sh me Stortmg Monday, Oct
11 runs weekly from 10 o m
1111 5 p m Came out 124 tur n
left on 325 to Donvt lle and
follow srg ns Clothrng tool s
depress ro n gloss and mrsc Co li
142·2481
GIGANTIC ga rage sale October
13th th rough 16th Frrst hous e
past Methodrsl Church tn
Chester
Frig idair e
refngero tor
ond range
mower rotottl ler hedge clip
p1trs
small electncol op
pllonces tools clothes baby
to adults, boby furmt ure toyli
drshes barbecue grrlls Lots of
mrscelloneous Opal Hollon
resrdence
A YA RD Sole ot the home of
Roderrck Gnmm son Broadway
St Rocme Ohto Tuesdoy and
Wednesday Oct 12ond 13

3 AND -4 R:M furm5hed and un
furnr shed op ts Phone 992
5434

•..

Spoclollzlng In cuytom built
rafters for commercial
resd , pole buildings
'

....' ,,

HOOVER spm drye r washer Ex
cellent condrtron reasonable
Phone 949 2523

..••• •
•

•

SHOOTING Ma tch just off Rt 7
near Rock Spnng ~ Cemetery
Lucky 7 Gun Club Sunday 12
pm
ONE good used porcela in top 42
1n sink w•th bose cobmels
Phone 992 5492
PORTABL E Hoo\ler wo~her new
Hot Point tabl e top elec trrc 32
gallon water heater Hot Pomt
gas dryer older hvrng room
sut le 3 cushrons Breakfast
table Phone 992 2969 or
Rrchord Stewart 3 mdes south
of Mtdd leport
APPLES FITZPATRICK ORCHARD
STATE ROUTE 689 PHONE
WILKESVIL LE 1614) 069 3785
1974 Vego H hbock G T
outomot rc s Cro rg 4 chon
ne l tope" with speakers
rodrdls; shag Also Amen
Savro (soft tal frame 4AI M C
Ports Phone 992 2327

Phone Coolville
667-3 166
or
667·3876
"For Free Estimate
9-10-1 mo

POLY-FOAM

UPHOLSTERY

FABRIC
sofa. chaff cushtons ,

For
mattre$ses, padding. Idea I
for campers Variety of
SIJ.eS.
Velvets , nylon pnots ,
herculons, vinyl solids , and
fancy prints, acce ssories

DIRECT FABRIC SALES""
328 Main Street
Pt Pleaunt
Ph. 675· 3469
9 30·S 00 Dally
Ttll8 :000 Fnday•

---

CHAROLAIS
SALE
SAT., OCTOBER 16

WESTON LIVESTOCK
YARDS

•a PER TON

TON

OHIO PALLET CoMPANY
IIIIZ-2889

-

'

-----.,...-...

--

-· ---

-

FREE ESTIMATeS!
•

LOCUST POSTS rou nd or spl1!1
Phon e 949 2774
COAL hm:_
es"fo;_n_:e:__a_n_dc-c"a 'I-CI-u-m
111 tlll· u lt'IP r
chlonde an d colq um brltJ e for
Ptrone
•~•
2114
du st con tr ol ond speclol tn l;oo: rng
hmlo 5 pm
so l ~ lor fa rme r ~ Morn Stree t
Ewenlngs tn 7llO
Pomeroy Oh 10 or phone 992
9 1 ~ h nt)
3891
c::--c---'...,.---1971 HONDA Cl &lt;50 12 000 CARP ENTER floonng cerl mg
mrl es SI\5Y bar crash bars
pa ne ltrrg Phone 99'1 2759
pull bock ha ndle bo n new ftre
and seal5 Scramb ler side DOZER wo rk -;!nd weldmg Con
ta ct Ja mes Porsons Rt 1
ptp es $650 Co lt 949 2480
Rocme on Carmel Rood
KENNEBEC pota toes SO lb $3 50
or 100 lb $6 00) llrrrtg can EXCAVATING BACKHOES AND
DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL
larners Phone 667 3737 or
SEP1 1C TANKS INSTALLED LOW
~66
~7~39~7~4--~-~- __,_
SOY AND DUMP TR UCKS BILL
POTATOES and pump kins C W
PU LLINS PHONE 992 2478 DAY
Proff rtt Portland Oh ro Ph one
OR NIGHT
843·2254
HOCt&lt;ING RIVER Trodtng Com
COALfor sole $22 pe~l'&amp;n Open
pony GU NS- OVER 250 IN
6 doys per week ond evenrngs
STOCK Buy soli tr ade 478
Fo r further lnformotr on coil
Richland Alhens Oh1o 4570 1
• (014)3677338
Pho neJ.614) 593 8906 _
1966FordP rt kupt ruck $500 Also WILL tnm or cu t trees and shrub
hors e troller $450 Phone (614)
be ry Phone 949 2545 or 7'42
69lj 3290
3167
SWEET potatoes R W Lewis Rt MOBILE Home Repor r Elec
124 , Ra crne Ohro Phone 843
plumbtn g ond heot rng Pho ne
2432
992-5856
GREEN beans for sol e pre~ rour GAS and Oil Soles and Servtce 24
own
2 miles b e ow
hourS Pho ne 843 2165 or 8~3
Ravenswood Ferry, Dovrd Vest
2341
-~or De lbert Patterson Portland,
BUSINESS buildrng plus hvrng
OhiO
quorters ocreoge a vodoble
TWO corn grovrty beds w1re corn
Must see to opprecrote For op
cnb 48 ft elevator Andr ew
porntment call985 3306
Cross Letart Falls Phone 247
NEIGLER 8u1 ldl ng Supp lras lor
2852
bu•ldrng houses
cobrn ots
-~
HAV Pho ne 985 427 1 olter6p m
plum bmg Phone 949 2508
Ra crne Olilo
1976 M C F Gypsey tryhoul boot
wrth 1976 Chrysler 75 h p
motor To pay off or lo~e over
payments Reason for selhng
•llness tn fo mr ly Phon'e 992 MORNING Stor Hgts Buy 1 acr e
5126
. tract of land Writ arr ange lor
1975 Duster 6 cylinder oulomotrc
ftnan ctng ond small down poy
ment to bu1ld, o horne of your
p s , vr nyltop 15 000 miles eJC
choice
Lee Constr uctr on
cellent condition $2500 Two
Ph one 992 3454 or (614) 446
twrn srze mattresses excellent
9568
condit io n Portable Fr lgtdo1re
dishwasher rn work rng cond r TUPPERS Ploms new 3 bed room
han $10 Con be seen ot 7.of8
ho me's burl! In krtche ns tried
Htg h St Mrddleporl alter 5
baths, carpeled w•lh oltoched
pm
ga rage I cere lot $22 900
Phone (614) 667 630&lt;
65 000 BTU Worm Mornmg Stove
Used I wrnte r hke new $175
Phone 992 7354

COUNTRY Mob rle Home Park Rt LADIES coat, me 12 Navy blue
33 ten mrles north of Pomeroy
lrke new Phone 992 7048
Lorge lots with concrete petros, TWO quohty cross-bred calves
srdewalks ru nners ond off
Phone 843 2653
street porkrng Phone 992-7479
FULLER Brush Products for sole
ONE bedroom apartments at
Phone992 3410
VILLAGE MANOR In Mrddleport · ::-:=:c::..:.:.::.::c:=;:-:c:-:-c~-,....,
lor $104 mon thly plus elec or 2NtceFinn roms Coll992 2630
$130 tncludlng electrrc LOWER H &amp; N day old started leghorn
RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS
pullets Both floor or cage
Co nve nrent lo shopp mg on
1 bl p 1 c
Thrrd and Mill Streets m Mrd
grown ovat o e ou try rrous
mg and outomotr on Modern
dleport Brand new hrgh quoit·
Poultry 399W Morn PQmeroy
1y apartments See Ihe
Phone 992-2164
manage r at Apl 16, or call
992 7721
AVAILABLE ot Rr verslde Apar t
~ent s,
1 bedroom apartments, $100 per month , 2
bedroom apartments $133 per
month Phone 992·3273
PLEASURE HORSES and pon res
also wrl l buy horses and
ONE bedroom mobtl&amp; home
pontes Phone (614) 698 3290
odul h only Phone992-5535
Ruth Reeves
2 Be&lt;lroom tro ller Brown s Trader
AkC Regi stered Sornl Berna rd
Pork Phone 992 3324
Pupptes 2 mole 1 female , 3
3 Bedroom trarler Furnished or
mont hs old
Str ong and
unfu rnrshed Phone 7.of2·3122
healthy Phone (304) 773 540S
or (304 ) 675 2310 PI Pleasant
2 Bedroom mobile home furms h
W Va
ed ut tlttres patd to responsr
ble porty only Phone 992 AKC Reg Beegle pups $40
7666
•
Phone 992·3717
USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT APPALOOSA more bred to Ap SUPER C Fartn aU Ford heavy duty
Tlmbeqock 2300 Skldder John
loader
lnternoi Jo nal corn
poloo'o 5 yrs o ld $300
Deere 440B Skrdder Pettibone
planter Phone (6 i"') 667 3652
Phone (304 ) 882 3262
Super 8 Cory L1ft Morborli: 48
Coolville
tn Chrp Poe Contact Don BEAGLE rabb tt dogs al l ages
DASH 23 Channel CB om lm
IN
started ond trorned Phone
Groves or Lyons Equtpment
mpx
rodro 8 track stereo Call
742
2521
Co. Inc Crrclevrlle Oh ro
992 3965
43113 Phone (614) 596-4769 or GENTLE mar e pony 35 mches 5
(614)474 6028
year! old F rst $15 Phone 992 GRAIN fed beef 35c lb Phone
985-4198
7210
NICE completely furn•sh,_
r
bedroom opt wrth wosXer and
drye r Located ot N9flh Sec;ond
St Mrdd leport ~ults only
Phone 992 26(
1970 Buick Rlvrero good cond•· •
EFFICIENCY opt .;"'oeal for s1ngle
Iron ~ew tires $900 Phone f
Mu lberry Kve
references
742·2796
Phone 992,i030 or992 7760
Tht71h Annuli
19'TS MONTE CARLO, automotr ~.
power steering, power brakes
West Vn•91nie Charolol•
air conditioning AM rodlo and
Association 5ale
stereo, rally wheels wrll sell
reasonable Phone 992 7036
SENIOR Crtrzens rnterested m
buying or trading, old trar ns 1969 Nova eiCiro "sharp, new
SALE AT 1:00 P.M.
Ltonel Amerrcon Firer etc:
parnt bucket seats, orr shocks
Sta ndard or 0 gouge any con
mags Phone949·2.of80
drt ron cons1dered Call 992; (411) 169-4,06
1973 VW THING 35 mpg near
7735
SOUTHERN Yellow Pine Post Poyperfect
cond1t1on
Rrck
lni Premium prlcft Past to be
Weston, W. Va
Gi
lmore,
Rt
1
Re&amp;dsvl
lle
(Sue
delivered to our yard at Brll·
cess
Rood)
or
phone
992-5323
lngs W Vo Species Virglnro
Pitch and Shorfleaf For size• OLD furn itu re, ke boxes brass
1957 Chevy 2 door wagon Phone
and prices 1nqulre at The
992 3397
bedl wall telephones ond
15 Bulls·80 Femoln
Burkt·Porsons ·Bowlby Cor
pOf'ts or complee house hold s 1971 Merc ury Montego MX low 1973 Copn .of speed rodtal ltres
25 4· H &amp; FFA Club Calveo
mrleoge p s p b a c very
poratlon , P 0
Box 39 ,
Wrrte M D Miller. Rt 4
FEATURING
·
J. J
good
c6ndthon
toke
over
good cond llion Phone 9.of9
Spennr, W Vo Phone . 927
Pomeroy, Ohro Call 992 7760
payments Call 992 5831 or
combinations; ~ Bred
2801
1250 Night call Ted Jocks 6n
9923914ofter5pm
females; Open helters ;
354 7694 or Jim Lohner. 9'1.7· CASH pold for all makes and 1966 Rqmbler Ambassador rn
models
of
mob
ile
hQ
mes
Lorge •election of herd
1466
1973
V
W
Super
Bug
2
new
tir
es
good cond rtron Phone 992
Ptlone oreo code 614--423·9531
• 4 speed Phone 992·5875
bulls
'
7730
"A
selecf,.well-bred
quality
1973 Bukk Clilnturion leSabre
offertng''
one
owner,
38
000
mtles,
brr
Reg . lmh Setter for sole 8 mon
'N ANTrD
F0111ntormation contact
condition tilt wheel tnJnk
ths old with shots $75 Phone
JIM COLLIVER
rel ease 60·40 front sea t rodtol
992 3661
trres, 455 engm e v1nyl top
SALES MANAGEMENT
Phone. 742·2211 before 5 00 or
1112 Grandview Ave
;
THE undersigned wlll sell at
742 2025 after 5 00
COlumbus, OH. 41212
Poles maximum dlam~er IU inches on
publrc sole for cosh the fallow·
Ph : 114·486·1243
1971 Dodge Charger 318 motor 2
tng
motor
v~
hicle
to
be
taken
largest -~Jid.
•
door automatrc Phon!! 985from George Johnson, B•ech
&lt;111
Street Apartments, Middleport,
Ohio .of5760 1969 Ford LT0-4 • 1968 Chevy C 20 three four th 1on
dr HT, Serial No 'f'N66Y 167·
V 8 4 speed, keavy duty, good
~PER
578 The ale w1ll be held at if're
condrtron $900 Phone after 6 MOBI LE home for sole or ren t 3
bedrooms al uttl rt ies pold
Farmers Bonk and Sovrngs
p m 992·7727
DeUverTo '
Phone 992 77S I
Co mpa ny, ' 711 We1 t Second
Streer Pomeroy Ohto at 10 00 1966 Mustang $290 P~lrce radar LECHALET trorler $2000 James
d&amp;lector, $25 See ot 247C
AM on the 16th doy of GcAppleby on Rt 143 mile posl
Mulberry ~ om &amp;roy
tober 1976 The undersrgned
HornerHrll
Rt. 2 Pomeroy, Ohio
re1erve1 the nght to ~id THE 1969 Dodge Cornet runs good, -.....---...
TRAILER
for sole Phone 992 61J7f
FARMERS
BANK
;..No
SAVINGS
good condtllon $450 Phone
Ph.
COMPANY Pomeroy Ohio
or 992 3333
992 5524 '

BUNDLED SLAIS

,

You ean lftVt hundr~s
oven lhousonds of dolloro
with aluminum or vinyl
siding
CON'rti\CT

GLEN R. BISSELL

AI 949·2101
Or
949· 2100
PLEASE
NO SUNDAY CALLS
9 Jll 1 m&lt;&gt;

FREE S IM ES

$10!11

~

Great Need
of Listings.

To Sell
Call Us Now
114

w. Mlln

992·2298

Pom•roy

. After Hours C. II

992-7133

, __

•

~-,..

-

~

··--·-----

5 room house with bath 1 acre of
land Phone 142 2769
6 room 1 ;, UOty on 11/, ceres
Close to Enterprise Church Ap
poln tment only' Phone 992
5901
GEORGE Hobsletter, Real Estate
Broker, Pomeroy Ohro 2 43
cere of land 6 roorn house 3
bedrooms bath fr ont porch
central olr wall to wal l
co rpEthnt;t 1 stove ond ref , clo$e
to school and church Prrced To
sell $16 800 Hil ton Wolfe
_ ~les"t~n _Phone 949 2589
PARTIAU Y flms hed houhl 3
bedrooms 2 half baths loco ted
rh Rae me on a 62x 119 lot,
$.t200 Phone992-7081
3 Bedroom, 1 bath utility room I
car garage .tctal rtlec trrc 115X·
115 lot , Hutchuon Sub
D•vlsron Rutlond Phone 742
2869

'"

Box II-A
Rutlona. Cillo 4'175
Ph. 1614) 742 · 2~
We Dtllvtr
728&lt;moo -

BIU PUWNS

GU1JE!S.~NINGS

LARR~..~V~~DER
410 I ntp

Pomeroy, Cillo
99HU8
9· 12·1 mo pd

-

EXPERIENCED

NOTICE
Open tor Fall &amp; Wlntfr
Seuon , Mondly thru
Sa tu rdly 10 to S
We hiv e one vreen hoult
full of Florldl toll19e
planh Ov•r SO varl1tle1 In
a ll From 4" t o I ' poll &amp; ' ' 1
to 10" hinging buk eU. 7Sc
to 5' 00.

HUBBAMDS •
GREENHOUSE
9~ · 577'

9 2 1 mo

Syracuse, o ,

_E XC AVATING do1er backhoe
and dltcher C horl e~ A Hatho ld Bo ck Hoe So r ~Jic o
Rutla11d Ohto Ph onv7 42 2008
SEP fiC Systorn s ln stollod by
l o ce u ~ed
•n ~ t o ll e t
Shapord
Controcto•s Ph one 742 2409
SEPTI C rAN KS d eonod Modetn
Sonltotlon 992 J954 or 992
2428
WILL do rooh119, (Onst• ucllon
plumbrng ond hentrng No jnb
too Iorge or too ~ m o ll Phon e
742 2348

-=

-=

Real E•tate .lor Sale-

Reviv e the
ot your YUgs I
your ow n home
by Von Sc hrader
dry.foam method
No muss No fu ss
No odor Use the

same day.
All wortl
guoYantood,

Abbott &amp;

--=-

SMALL lorrn for sole 10% down
owne r fmo nced Monroe Coun
ty W Vo Phono (304) 772
JI0 2 or [304 ) 772-3227

BRAD FORD, Auctionee r Com
plate Service Phone 9.of9 7487
or 949 2000 Racine Ohio Crltt
Bradford

-----

COUNTRY far mland with sedud
od woods wa ter and good ac•
cess tn Monroe County W Vo ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepe rs , toosters Irons, otl
$1 000 down toll (304) 772
r;ma ll apphonce5 law n mower
3102 or (304 ) 772 3227
next lo Stal e Hi ghway Garag e
on Route J Phone (614) 985
3825

TEAFORD

VtrgtiB. Sr ., R~!altor
llOMechant c Pomeroy,tJ
Phone 992 3315
IN TOWN Beautifu l
ol der hom e near shop
VIew of river, 3 bedroo m s.
l 'h baths, hot wa ter heat
$29.500
NEW liSTING - I'll ecres
of level land In Tupper s .
Plains Old 7 room house,
lh bath garage, cellar, for
on ly $12,000
NEW LISTING - 2 or 3
bedroom
hom e
In
Syracuse Modern kl lchen,
gas F.A furna ce lroot and
side porches Nice corner
lot 115 000
15,500 oo - 2 bedroom
frame home wl1h nke gas
FA furnace, modern ba1h
end kitchen Paneling one
full basement ""

We Are In

Southeateril Ohio
Truss RJfter Co.

From 6" 1o II" wldo oncl up
10 5 II dHP wllll or wllllout
pip. furnished Uncltr rood
borts up to 12" pipe 111 ..

WJIIIlOW$&amp; OOO!S
1£PlAC[IIU1
WINDOWS
!LUMINUM
SIDING sOITI1l

Ph 99139'll

ANY PITCH
ANY 51ZE

TRENCHER
M)RK

Blown

ln"!ial1on Se!Yicll$
Flnlftclna Avallabll
Blown mto Walls &amp; A"lts

GUTT£R SERVICE

CHIPWOOD
--

••

M&amp;GTruss-Ratters

95 HEAD SELLING 95

•.80 HEIFERS - 18 months to 22 months old '
'30 HEIFERS 1 year to 16 months old
•"
•10 HEIFERS 7 months lo 1 year old
T. B. and Bangs Tested. Most of these
Heifers are from Artificial Breeding. All
Heifers selling open .
,
Tllese are good top quality grade
Heifers raised from the herd of cows that
was dispersed from the McCoy farm on
March 10 of this year. This is a rare
opportunity to get good quality replacement
heifers.
Terms of Sale CASH
McCoy Farms, Owner
Tel. 304 273-9668

NOW accepting pia no students
begrnners , Intermediates ad
vanced students Call 992

IN memory of Henry R Beach who
passed owoy October 9 , 1964
who rs sadly missed by
daughter Mrs ~Clifford Jacobs
Against my sky there stood
A mighty oak and lirgh
And when It fell It left
A blank 1poce m the sky
But I consoled myself
To frnd beneath ahve ,
A hundred tiny oaks
Where once the gtanl oak tlmv
ed
Andotorns that 11 cost
Produced from ferltl e ground
For hoff a century, oaks,
For hoff a mtle around
Always ook trees that great
Leove blank spots rn th v sky,
' And It's not wrong to mtss them
And it's not wrong to Cry..
But I retolte rn thts
Although my g1an t tree broke
Thrs countr~srde rs blessed
And springing up with oaks

1969 V.W. 2 DR~ ............. 1595

these friendly
salesmen. ·
Ceward
Calvert,
J, D. !Otorw

Portable Hoover Washer Reg . 1169.95 Sale
$139.95
20" Green Electric Range Reg . 1129.95 Sale
$99.95
Wood Table and 4 chairs. Reg . $239.95 Sale
$166.00
New Bunk Beds. Reg. 5169.95 Sale $119.95
3 Pc. Bedroom Suite. Reg . $169.95
Sale'$139.95
New 2 Pc. Liying Room Suite. Reg.
'
1299.95
Sale $239.95
Rocker Recliner Reg. $69.95
Sale $39.95
New 5 Pc. Breakfast Set. Reg. $79.95
Sale
$69.95
Automatic Washer. Reg. $169.95 Sale $149.95
Several Chest &amp; Dressers.
129.95 &amp; up
New Box Springs &amp; Mattress lrr. $29.94 &amp; up

2333

die
and hi•
on earth
I• a short span of years
beginning w1th blrttl
And like pilgrims we wander
unt il death tokes our hand
And we start on our jOUrney
to Gods Promised land
A place where we Jl find
no suffering nar teor1
Where TIME •s not counted
by doy1 months or yean
And In this fatr c1ty
that God has prepared
An unending joys
' lobo hoppllyohored
With oil of our loved ones
who pati&amp;ntly walt
,On death s other 11de
to open ' THE GATE ' I

1974 DATSUN ................ $2295

Air , auto tfans , P.. s , p b

Continues At
Rutland Bargain Center

BEGINNER S ana 1mmrKhate coke
decorating claues For more
rnlo rmotlon call Joana Petty
742 ~818 or lors Walker 742

Locall owner car. green finish , green viny l roof, radial
w w t ires, air cond, V 8, with automatic P steering &amp;
brakes

1972 CHEVY CAPRICE ....................11995

Business SerVices

NEW LISTING - I yr old
3 bedroom home Ni ce
balh large eal ln kitchen,
therm -o pane wind ows,
garage and lot 95x115
Aoklng $23 ,000

REMODELING Plum bing heat ing
and all ty pes of general rupolr
Wor k gua ranteed 20 yoors ex
perlenc&amp; Phone 992 · ~ .. 09
D&amp;D TREE Tr rmm lng 20 yea rs ex
pe r le nce
ln•u red fr ee
tiSirm ote• Coli 992 2384 or
(61&lt;) 6~257~Ai bany
SEWIN G MACHINE Rttpa lrs, ser
vlco al l makes 992 228A The
Fabrr c Shop
Pomeroy
Aut horll.a d Si ng er Soles and
Servrce We sharpen Scissors
EXC AVATING,dozer 1;;;i;~nd
backhoe w o r ~ dump trucks
and lo boys lor hire will hou l
llli drrt to soil llme1tone an d
grove l Coli Bob or Roger Jef
fers day phone 992-7089
night phone 992·3525 or 992
5232
,__._
....

---

---

HOMESITES for sole , I acre and
up Middlepor t, near Rutland
Coll992 7&lt;BI
NEW 3 bedroom house 2 ba th 1
all e lec I acre Ml~eporl
clout to Rutland Phone ~
7&lt;81

I

WOODS - 29 acres Good
site lor lake, T P waler, J
bedroom trailer, l'h baths
A real h ide awa y lor
522 ,500
NEW LI'STING In
Middle por t 2 bedrooms,
modern balh, dining and
firep lace 2 porc hes and
level lot a t $16.500
FRE;E GAS - 15 acres tor
the children 3 bedrOom
re nova ted
home
A-1
Inside, wife kitchen , gas
F A furnace and gas well.
NEW ~I STING - 2 lots In
restric ted
subdivis ion. '
Partly wooded wl lh T. P ,
weler $5,000
NEW LISTING - 2 acres
In the country, ne w garage
with extra room .and 1/1
beth A J bedroom air
conditioned mobile homF
with Ph ba ths 124,000.
NEW LISTING
2
bedrooms. ba th nal~ral gas
heal. ga ra ge . utility anc
garden $11 ,000
HAVE
PROP·
• WE
ERTIES FOR YOU TO
SEE . COME IN WHERE
YOU CAN DO YOUR
REAL
ESTATE
BUSINE'SS

l

o.NearFr,ee gas and
Income from well, timber. stocked pond, frull
tree$, barn &amp; other
building• . nice home has 5
bedroom•. bat h, dining.
carpeted, paneled. garage.
JUST $42,000.00.
GRI\C IOUS 2 story older
home • bedroom•, belll,
nice ~lichen, carpeting,
paneling, 2 car garage, .69
acre 118,000 00
NICE RANCH TYPE small yard, 3 BR, belll.
large living, full bestment.
H W. floors, corp.ltd, new
steel siding I!B,OOO 00.,
DON'T PAY high rent Buy
this 2 •tory frame Roof.
s id ing &amp; carport like new.
Small yard 7 rooms. N.G.
heat S7,500 00
CLOER 2 stor'y brick
home 5 bedrooms, 2 baths.
ult ra modern kllchen,
fireplace , N.G hot water
he•t. 2 corner lots close to
shopping . ASKING
$20,000.00.
L!ET US SELL YOUR
PROPERTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER

9f2-22lf

l

�..
.

•

11&gt;-TIIe~T!Jnet.Sentinei,SWlday,Oc\ 10 1!176

~t..d _~~
IN MlMOftY of Edw n Mayo
Oct 9 1971 Sadlyml11odby
wife children grandchildren
ond daughter In low
In a gra¥eyard softly siHplng
where the gentle

brHz.et wove lies the oht we
lov.d so d.arly

htn

though we could not save

mower and rotot llers

lAWN

ror.'''' 1159 S~ttond Ave For

so • mowers and tllers 446
2531

SEWING Mach nt repair ,.,vice
All molcts French C ty Fabric
Shoppe 5$ Court Gal lipolis
Ohio
Donner So~:

A Rose by Any Other
N•mt is Still NPT A
Republican Rose

BRANCH
MANAGER
TRAINEE

VOTE DANNER ·
Republocen

Co Commissioner
Pd Pol. Ad,.

Unu sua l oppor tu n ty to be
asso c ia te d wllh a le~dlng
fa st grow no const.!Mer
'F nanc e Com pany do no
bus iness In 20 state! We
Iran you n a phases ot
work Invo lvin g consumer
cred t You w II contact our
customers both in and
au s de the off ce and learn
to work w lh merchants

SWEEPER and sew ng machme
repair ports and suppl as P ck

up and del very Oov s Vacuum
Cleaner ~ m le up Georges
Creek Rd Ph ~~6 0294
THURMAN Hou se Ant ques Fur

ntlure strlpp ng
epa r a nd
ref1ntstung County Rd . B off 35
Centerv lit V llage 2-4S 9479

PASQUALE

Electncal

In a fr endl y way you w II
he p peop l e w1t h thl! r
per sonal f nance Start no
salary w II be be to meet
th e nee ds of vou and vour
fam •I Y now I.P' a few short
yea r s you On earn well
above averag e

Service

446 2716 day or n ght

BEGIN you spr ng cleon ng by
hav1ng your carpets cleaned by
best method Known Remove
all the dirt MoMe your carpet
looM new ago n For free
e1flmate co 1379 2682

Our company promo es
fr om w th n
Pr e\1 ous
e)( per ence no necesst~ry
mus t be a H gh SchOol
gradua te ha ve ca r and be
w lng to r e o~e
n
ce nllv e lind emb I on pay
off Except ona emp loyee
benef Is

DEAD Stock removed No charge
Call 245 5514
MAGGIE Brothers 1160 At 2nd
Ave under new management
owner Fronk W Fowler w I
pay h ghest pnce s for scrap
ron and ol k nds of m"ttols for
sale angle ron channel ron
and p pes 44b 0137 Open
but~nen hrs
8 5 Mon Fn
So t 84

Ph Mr Snograss
,,2 2111

CAPITAL
FINANCIAL
SERVICE INC.

THUNDE'RBIRO hub cap b ~own oc
cent11 between M ddleport and
Heck s on Rt 7 reward Ph
614 992 7354

•
2nd Sf

(

BACKHOE DOZER TRENCHER
WORK DONE AT REASONABLE
RATE
Con fact Sm1th Ex
ccwot ng Ph 446 3981

JOO W
Pomeroy Oh10
An Equal Opporfuntty
Employer

All TYPES of dozer work Ph
379 2621 Allen Rutherford
ECONOMIZE on fuel w1th our
special dn stone Hreploces
Logue Contracting block and
brlck work Ph 388 9939
BACKHOE &amp; Oo:a:er work also top
soli and fill d rt avai lable 379

2258
BICENTENNIAL
SPECIAL
Complete auto pant job one
color only $761;WJ 2 tone $100
Month of July only Stop ln at
Penon 1 Body Shop 26 Ro I road
St Middleport Oh o or call
367.0165
GENERAL Contractors Do all
motonary carpenter &amp; plumb
lng Install and repo r all
drlvewayo Ph ~46 9587
CONCRETE block work poho
steps porches walks retqln
lng wall. trailer underp nnlng
complete garages built 30 yrs
exp Free est motes 367 0488
or367 0295

Ph. 446-0008
514 2nd Ave .
SUIUIItiAN
SETTING
Adds - 1
room to breathe
at
mo$phere to fhl1 fine 3
bdrm rench lnllde you II
enjoy a fireplace In the
living room formal dining
room 112 btlhl leundry
room and a full bu.ement
with a fireplace All this
plus a tarat well land
sca~ed 101 3 ml out
AT
LAST
YOUR
OR EAM HOME - 1 yr old
brick ranch offers 2 1_.0 SQ
ft of modern living Don t
welt to see th ls 3 Br and 2
beth home The ki tchen Is
complete wlfh dishwasher
d isp mlcrowavt ov en and
range
Othtr
special
f eatu res are the fargt
formal dlnlng rm quali ty
carpet heat pump 2 se ts
patlodoors 12x51patlo .. nd
2 car garage with electric
door opener

BVDYBODY
Shops the

WAIT AD WAY

1'2 x !Q KIRKWOOD mob le
home awn ng porch unde
plnmng
10 x 12 alum
build ng and a r co nd n
Johnson M H Ct $5 SOO Ph
446 "231 ofte 5

ESTATE AUCTION
OCT. 11, 1976
1h00 A.M.

n Smith lawiiiiCt Donohue James Carnahan
Mt-2033 742-3041
Nell r

949·2701

slble fnr accldenll or loss of property 1

o

GAWA COUNTY'S lARGEST

RfAL ESTATE MiENCY

VS REALTY

7

BUILDING OR

MOBILE
Approx S
acres about 13 m
from
town Land ls flat wlth
frontage on a BT rd and
county water available
$5 000

New listing located wllhln the city of Galllpoll• 3
bedrooms llh baths city water &amp; sewer natural gas
F A furnace Call for appointment Price S26 900

MOBILE HOME PARK
small close to town good
Inc. om e easy to take care
of call for more n
for mation
VACANT
LAND
IN
RACCOON TWP
100
acre! prked at $275 per
ecre Very pr vete about
1.11 t liable and h woods
with frontage on Raccoon
Creek

FOR SALE BY OWNER
Business bulld1no on Broadway In Jackson Ohio BO
Per cent loc•tlon &lt;:entra I a1r gas heat carpeted In
good condttton Call owner between ' p m &amp; 11 p m
Sorry no pr1ce on phone Wtll show by appointment
anytime and gtve price to mterested party

PHONE 216·5261
REMMINGTON
Sportsman
Auto Model 58 12 go 30 nch
fu ll choke bar el $)~ PI
4-46 2089

19 nch PORTABlE block and
wh te TV axe co 1d $35
Ph 446 0212

4 X 8 UTiliTY TRAtLEft $100 4 X
1t It b!Ki tro le
$100 newly
bu It cor hauler trol ler $400
Ph .440 7406
NEW WHITE FARM troctor s
New Hollend Equ1p Free In
ere'!
on hQv tools Ill 3 I 77 Jus
orr 11ed load of Klng Kutters
Bush Hogs 5 f Save $$ used
roctor and equlp of all
k nds JIM S FARM EQUIPMENT
INC 588 Jackson P ke Ph
446 9777

JUNK auto and scrap metal Ph
388 8776

•

LOGS WANTED top pr ce pod for
quolty logs delive ed to our
yard Indus tria l T mber and
Land Co Oqk H II A11e" State
Rt 93 3 miles N of Oak H1ll
682 6909 682 7687

-------TIMB~R

Top pr ces pad for. stan
d ng 11mber lnduslr ol T mber
and Land Co Oak Hill D v St
Rt 93 3m les N ofOok HII
682 6909 682 7687

-

S5 00 or SI 0 gold p ece 446 2840
~
NEED tronsm n1on for 67 Dodge
Dart Slant 6 3 spd auto 446
7478or446 13.46

--

USED MOBILE HOMES
CALL576 2711
TO ECONOMIZE on fuel unde p n
your mob1lt home and Onchor
for safety FosJtr Mob le Home
ServiCe 446 2783 or Elmer Sk d
more -446 3-479

COAL -- $22 per ton open 6 days
o week end even ngs For fur
~her nformot•on ca!l367 7338
1970 TRIUMPH 650 Chopper new
pont tob good cond . Ph m
6192
FREEZER BEEF-SALE
USDA CHOICE s do 7Sc lb h nd
qt 89c fore qt 59c Coli Com
Sands B II Crawford C sco
Stalnokef Ronnte McCoy ot
your Kroger Store 446 3923
anytime cut wrapped &amp; frozen
free

Dellnalely Worth Your ConslderaHon
It ts our pleasure to show you th is beoullful Dutch
Colonial located In
quiet beautiful counlry just
north of the hospital Drive down country lane and look
at this 4 bedroom 212 bath dream home large living
room form ale dining extra nice kitchen family room
wllh w b fireplace Carpel throughout plus • full
basementand 2 car garage Jh acres of rolling and flat
la11d affords a great garden spot Get moma and the
kids and hove a look at your fulure

1..,

CHAIN LINK
PRIVACY &amp; WOOD FENCE
Fo Home Bu s1ness end In
dustry
HOUCK FENCE
CENTER
Call 446 04 12 or
I 776 2237

rAY

FOR SALE 1967 GMC Von Ins de
nsulo ted &amp; paneled Coli 596
4427

Existing building and business opportunity on Court
Street tn Gallipolis Includes 2 furn ished and rented
apparlments all equipment and l icenses priced for
quick sa le $42 500 Call for more nformat lon

FOR
THE
LARGE
FAMILY we have a 9 room
4 bedroom 2 story home In
B dWell only 20 minu tes
LAND Bu ld ng or mob le from coat mlnes storm
ho me lots n Eureka area
w ndQws and doors F A
Buy as m any as 8 acres for f ue l oil fur na ce
nice
only
SS 300 00' Ha s r ural garden area can be yours
water and we
w thl.n 30 days for only
S22 000 Ca I tor an etp
LAND Buy approx mately PO nt m ent
l acr es along S Rt 160
3 BEDR ooM CARPETED
between C tv of Gall pols
HOME located ln Ha rrison
and Holzer Hosp ta t CitY
Twp Macedon a R.d F A
water and sewer An c.x
furna ce modern k tc hen
ce lent buy fQr only $1 500 r ural water and clsterns a
peaceful home 10 a rural
LAND 35 acres at evel to
sett ing Pr ice S21 000
ro ng ground on bO th s1des
4 BEDROOM CARPETED
of 5 a e R t
160 nea
Por ter Ru r a l W'aler front s HOME ne111r Clay Sc hool
c ty S 0
Ga t poll s
on F loyd c ark Rd and Rt
si tuated on 1 acre lot ¥1 b
60
f replace un lque I Yl ng lnd
LAN 0
56 acres f enced dining roo m Call for mere
lnform..JJIQn
w fh 20 at;res of rnber
BUILDING
close o North Ga I a H gh BU SINESS
Sc hool
lo ca ted
on locllle d on upper Second
Thompson Rd lots of roa d Avenue Ga poll s Nlce
Buy for lo c tv wa te r and sewer
f ro n age ..
$25 000 00
Pr ce S26 000 00
THR EE
BEDROOM
LAND 20 acres Loca ed n car pe ed a I e ec tr c home
Morgan Twp to ea ed w th s uated on 12 0x75 lot
road frontag e on Row l es front ng on Twp b acktop
v le Rd Sp r ng water,.,. Rd CoUnty water &amp; sewer
ava tabl e
Buy for Pr ce $22 SOO 00
Sl1 000 00
BUSIN ESS Pr ce reduced
on 2 bay bus ness bu ld ng
LANO
150
x 96
o
and and ocaled on R t
toea ted on L ddy Hollow
160 n Ew ngton Buy now
BOy for U 000 00
for S15 000 00
New L s1 ng NEAR RIO
DWELLING and 26 x 32
blocK bu ld ng s luated on GRANDE New modular 3
bedroom home cathedra
40 JC 132 Jot n Galllpo s
v ng room
fnclu d ng
content s of ce m g n
dwe I ng
Buy
for storm w ndows and doors
Pr ced for q u ck sale
120 000 00
s 7 sa o
NOW S20 000 00 w 1J buy a THIS CORNER LOT n
mode r n
one floor
3 Coun v A r Su bd v son
bed r oo m a I efectr c herr\ e
ke new Home ca r peted
n Ga ll POl s C l y sc hoo
hro ugh out fam ly room
d str ct S tua ted on 120 JC 22JC 12 uti! t y room ria ura l
75 ot Carp eted elCcept for ga s h eat
m eta
out
lc. chen and ba th
new bu ld ng Pr ced for qu ck
co nd ton
rura l water
sate
cen tr a sewage co llect on
FIVE BE DROOM car
blacktops reels
Call for
peted home located 4 m les
more ntorm a on Can be
from down own Ga ll po l s
v A and F H A f nan ced Two
w b f rep aces
wo
baths w show er s beau fu l
GRACIOUS 2 stor y br ck
wooded 3 acre tot hea ted
hom e e la rge rooms
and coo ed w h heat
k !chen and bath up and
pu mp
Cal polls C ty
down has been used as
Schoo l D s r ct Call for
renta apa rt me nt l arge
more nforma on
fran porch c 1ty water and
IF YOU RE PLANNING
sewer Ca I for appo nt
TO SELL CALL US WE
men! today
Buy fo r
HAVE
A
LIST
OF
$30 ~0 0 00
PROSPECTIVE BUYERS
PRICE REDUCED on
ANO WERE ANXIOUS
c;toubl e wlde hom e
J
TO SERVE YOU
bedro oms
carpeted
F YOU DON T SEE THE
modern k tchen
rur &lt;"J
PROPERTY YOU WANT
w&lt;'lter Includes retr g
IN THIS AD CALL WE
ra nge v ng &amp; d nmg room
MAY BE ABLE TO FINO
fu rn lure washer dryer T FOR Y OU
cent ral air Pr ce Sl9 SOD
Call Wood ln ~ura nc e &amp;
BUILD A HOME Along
Real Esta1e4 46 1066
Rt 1 Crown City we have
E11enlngs Russell Wood
2 lots w th &amp; total of 91
446 4618
frontage Buy both for only
Ken Morgan446 0971
ss 000

41186

·~--~~

MODERN home Kyge r Creek
School Chesh re school bus
ural p_h_
36_
773~ - - - - NEW Mob le Home n Gall pol s
one or 2 adults on ly house fur
n shmgs central o r Ph 446
0038

2 Saddle ho ses one Reg Ten
nessee Walke r
one port
Quarter Ho se Ph 367 7303
UGHT we ght ch mney blocks
Go II pols Block Co Ph o446
'2783
-r-"

FOR SALE 20 head of cattle
p ~o~~56 b035
GRAVElY T oc o
phone 446

2925
USEQ Furn lure Duncan Phyfe d
ng room su te full s ze foam
moll ass one d nette table
one co I spr ngs full s ze Cor
b n and Snyder Furn 995 2nd
Ave 4461171

TARA
TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townhouses
1112 Baths
Pay Only One Ut1hty
Addison, Oh10
For lnformahon
Cali Shirley Adkms

367-7250

MUST sell I ke new 2 pc Span sh
I v ng room su te exc cond
FURN Apt $160 ut ht es po1d
4463712
I rst floor near Method st Chur
ch adults -446 4416 after 1
FIREWOOD Ca ll 388 9930 even
pm
ngs

HAY
T MONTHY
clo11 e
olla Jfo m lCed Als o Tlmonthy
hoy o ge bole s never got
wet Ph 367 7350

CARPETS and hfe too con be
beauhfullf you use B ue
Lu s A Ren electr c shompooer
$1 Central Supply

Co

MASSIE
REALTY
32 Slate Street
Ph 446 1998

A A N1bert Broker
Cr ou se BecK Noaa
Nea r ly new bnck an d
fr ame spl t level home on a
large 1 3 a tot Th s hom e
offer s .4 br
'l baths lg
f rep ace
v r m 15x2.4
carpet 1drapes bu I t n
double Oven and range
d shwasher
comb ned
r etr g fr eezer and n
tercom Must see to ap
preCiale
Keller Yale College Road
- 4 year old bri ck ranch er
J bedrooms carp e ng ex
msu a ion n wa ll s a nd
ce lt ng lg f rep lace
fanta stlc f a m y room
elec baseb oard heat bu t
m d shwasher and ra nge
spit r a fen ce and a 10lC 12
block storage room
Centerpoint
Stor e
bul d mo
w ttl
1 v ng
quar te r s and equ pment to
put you n bus ness for
vourse f
Add ls~n
0 der
3
bedro om home on fa r ge ot
A lso two ad(o nlng lots
Th s property hCis fron tage
on Route 7
Mob le Hom e Lot - A l
un I t es In place for your
mo b I e home Located 5
mi les trom Gal Ipolls on
Route 141

l:..;;;:.;,~;..;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;:,.""

32 GOOD USED TRACTORS

Several usf!d Co n P ckers
New Grav y 80JCes
Bush Hogs Sole Pnced
65JC 12 HOME excel cond 3 or 2
New Masse Ferguson Tre e ors
pr ced
th ~ mo
br pr ced to st I Economy Sole
Mob1leHomes 446 1425
I GALLIPOLIS TRACTOR INC
YOUR MASSIE FERGUSON
50.x 10 2 b mobile home good
DEALER
cond fu n $2 100 t~ o phone
~ R 7 Galhpol s Ph -4.46
calls
1403 Eoste
AvP
1044
Economy Mob 1&lt;.: l lo e' So les

LOVELY BRICK RANCH
Thl• attractive home has 3 bedrooms 2 baths fam ily
room wlth one firep lace n ice kitchen with built In
range an d dishwasher beaullful carpet throughout
located on a 1% acre land on Rl 160 Only 539 BOO
LISTING - N ce 3
RIO GRANDE
•k•·rl• oom
home
w th
12x60 mob e home
n den
full
bedrooms
bath
bo•serriEtni lovely k1tchen 1
with
range
Located ln
refr gerator has a
Call today for
bu ld ng
suitab l e
en I
garage or ot h er
mere al busmess w l
apar)ment over head
$27 500
IN TOWN
home has

basenlein~~~~\:~·s;~~.i~~~

full
lot mm
good buy
w II help

LAND
Bu1 d ng ot n
Port er Ca today for more
Information

MOBILE home
small
8•35
Hlltop D Coli of er 6 675

GOOD USED FURN
2 Bdr SUites 1 sofa ('2) sofa
bed &amp; cho r 3 reel ners 2
refr g white and go! range
(Ike new) 3 wa shers 2 dryers
wood toble 4 cho~rs 5 t:ho rs
round maple loble &amp; 4 c~o lr s 3
beds 2 color TVs 2 block &amp;
wh1te TVs m1sc other tems
Coll.(46' 03n ~yt me
I

BUD McGHEE Manager

THERE IS NO SIGN In
front of this llll br ick home
located In Covntry A re
Esti!l tes however ll' ls easy
to spot Look tor a law
p'rot le L snaped hom e
s tuated on an acre tot well
tandS;caped and flat Look
ft over es you dr ve by and
the n call for an ap
po ntm ent for a personal
our of ts modern nter or

HOME SITE -

RANNY BLACKBURN,
BRANCH MANAGER

Tile porsantl property of lilt ulole of tilt lolo Purl
KMII..,. will be sold of 1 7 mile 5ovlh of Tuppers
Plains Olllo 001 State Route 7
ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR'S ITEMS
7 It gloss door oak cupboard dinner bell slone jars
and jugs 3 apple peelers grain cradle 2 corn •hellers
Iron sklllel pols and lea kettle small brass and large
lard kettles Matund Captain trunk oak wood buckel
broom making machine clots! picture frames 24 In
wood bowl 2 sewing rockors 1900 youth woOden sled
woOd wlltelbarrow hall tree plank bottom chairs
youth rocking and slrolghl chairs 2 wood beds 1 with
high head-d 2 stands chairs 461n kraut culler 2
!roadie sewing machines Clark spool cabinets wood
rockers 2 oak dressers complete socket set w'!Pden
lawn chair earn jobber wll~ plate sausage sluffer
Burc:e record player wooden pulleys fool boxes hair
clippers fireplace ppt hangor
Ma l l Pouch
lhormomel1r tin coffee and com6 boxes mise wood
box colltcllon wicker baskel scales shaving mirror
Canl!'ey laundry Iron stov~ shingle culler and other
Items we don I know about
HOUSEHOLD - MISC
Table and~ chalra Coleman fuel oil healer cupboard
lamp tree chest of drawers cedar chesl 3 pc
bookcase bedroom sulle rollaway bed glider lawn
chairs mise dl5hes linen small appliances what nol
sl!elf 12ft extension and 16 It ladder sweeper 3 H P
rotofll(er platform scales wood boxes and bin mise
harld tools and saw
Cash
lunch

AG~NCY

.. ' ..
.... .

z...rm

l 973 CASTLE mob1l e home 1-4 ~e
65 2 br 2 ba ths o r
cond fully ca rpe ted Ph 367
0160

1975 12 x 60 2 8R otol elec
c a r cond metal
bulld ng underp nnlng $400 00
do wn tak v oY er poym en ts
$10.o62 Ph 446 9S28

WISEMAN

--=

Ph

1974 K rk woad J4JC65 2 b 01r
ccnd 10JC7 me at bldg fu n
shag carpel double 011en exc
ccnd $7800 Ph 446 10'2

THE

For Fast Results Use The SundJJy,Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Branch

CITY- QUIET STREET
- Comtortebte 6 rm 5 and
bath with a fa r ge ba ck Slt5 PEA ACRE - 6S A
porch and garaoe located hill farm lsloce~ted about 11
on Fifth Ave Priced to se ll m1tes SW of ci ty Abou lA
cleared w th the balance
$18.000
wooded
VINTON AVE
N ice
older 1 h story hom e sits CAN YOU AFFORD A
on a arge le\le t lot and HOME &amp; FARM OVER
offers 1 r ms and bath SIOO 000? We ll we M~e
downstairs plus 2 up f one f you qual fy make
needed Th fs hOme ha s an appotntment to see th iS 4
been per tta lty remodeled
vr o d bnck located about
and has carpeted floors
7 ml from HMC Th s
new furnact and slnlc.
beauty s s tuated on 104
basement
garage and acres of and n the c ty
large shade trees
school dlst with J• m
front ege
on
Reccoo n
CITY - VACANT LAND Creek
0 her
special
Approx 51:1 acre1 running
features are 4 BR:s 3 1
from Fourth Ave
to
baths fem ly r m w th WB
Chickamauga
Cre ek
f re p lace formal dinlng
S6 500 Don t wall to buy
rm
formal ent ra nce
buy and wa t
com pl e e k !chen
arge
large
BAR BUSINESS &amp; HOTEL L R laundry rm
Be your own boss w th scre ened n patio attache d
2 ca r garage plus another
th•s once n a lifeti m e tn
ves tment LOCI! ed on a new 24 x 36 concrete bl ock
garag e
No s ghtseers
corn er lot n M ddleport
plea se
Ca ll for more nformat/ on
PRICE REDUCED - Near
LOTS FOR S ALE
Located on Neighbor hood
V nton -41 A c eanroll no
p&amp; sture Good fen ces larg e
Rd L ncoln Pike George
Creek Rd
and Rodney
pond old home w tM 7 rms
Harr sburg Rd Finane ng
and b&amp;th and ee l llr house
Ia''" lloblo
$22 500
-COMMERCIAL SITE - 5
&lt;BEDROOMS IN TOWN lots and older home on
Nlc:e comfortable 1 2 story
State Route 7 n Kana uga
home on Evens Heights
Lots of pot enl a for SJ.4 000
offer s room to spare for
your orowlng family
CLOSE TO MIN,-ES 116
Where else can you get ll
ac fa r m moStl y clean
fu ll basement family rm
level and roll no land Good
wlth gas f repla ce large
home
_ _
kitchen end dlnlno are a for
PIZZA BUSINESS An
only S25 SOO
elCce llent opportun ty for
some bus ness m nd ed
LAND CONTRACT
person Th s lll rge corner
Almost 12 A of level end
lo t w th a modern br ck
r o 1 ng land w th e sm a I 2
bu td ng s a good place to
BR and bath home pond
start Can be bouoht with
and lots of pnva cv located
or w thout equ pm ent Call
n Morgan lwp
for appo ntmt:~nl

FALL SAL E
197'2 I '2x 65 Cas tle 3 Br
lq60 10JC50 Von Dyke
1959 1OJCSO R cho dson
1960 10x50 Regal
1977Sofor 18ft lravel trole
2 used tra11eltro11e s
T Sole
Mobile Homes Corp
1220 Eoste nAve
Gall pol s Ohio
Bonk Finane :"c9
.__,_ _~-~

~--'---1976 Shultz Mob le Homft lved n
5 mas new cenlr•o l a r metal
bu ldmg nduded pnce $7 000
Ph 446 3769 of er 4

RUSSELL WOOD
REALTOR
446-1066

World's largest, the leader
since 1900 in serving the
notion's buyers and sellers.

LPN 1 neede-d for nursing home
coli $32 0288 con I ve n If
deshed
BURGER Chef hos opening n PI
Pleasant R+pl.y Ckarleston
W Vo and Gall fpoll1 Oh o for
manager at pos I ons 1nclud+ng
manager tro nee• au Slant
noge rs and anoc ate
nager If you ore look ng for
ong term career n the tost
food busll'l8U w1th eJCcallent fr
nge benef1ta pleas• coH Miss
W lma Blane for an nterv1ew
appt at or•o code 304 7'1.7
2217 Mondo~ thru Frl 9 om
o 5 p m An eque1l opportun ty
i mploye

'

STROUT REAL TV

Med col Technologist
FOR LABOR)IITORY WO k EKG
ond aula(" w th pol enb and
phys1c~ off1ce Wr te PO Box
834 J.funhngton W Va

RENTAL ovo loble I rst of October
now occup ed by Certro l Soya
of the north s de of Sycomo e
S ee be ween Second and
; 11d Avenue reosonoble rent
Ia ge porklr g area co li for on
oppo n men

EUREKA - Look
ovc v old er home
v ew of the nver
bedrooms
arge
room f~r ep ace n l fv l
room garage Goo d buy
52 1 700

WE NEED LISTINGS

Evenmgs Call
Dou g weth erholt 446 112~4
Lee Jahnson 256 6140
Earl Wmters 446 3828

10 ACRES - L ook ng for
tha per feci bu ldmg s te'
Th s land s clear on the
f ont and n•ce woods n the
back
Locate d
on
Ebenezer Car mel Rd fr om
Rlo Grande Calf today for
mo re nfor ma 10n

--................._.........,.

noo

New Ltsttng -2 Fireplaces for a Cozy Wmter
Tht s ts a roomy J or 4 bedri'V',.. home with formal
dining hug e family roon f'nl null basement 2 car
garage excellent kttche ~~ '2 m le from town
You II absolutelv lovP t Price d under $50 000 00
GREAT GRANDFAtHER BUILT IT
And lived In tf Gr andmother used t for a restaurant
and now Mother and Dad have one of the very n cest
anftque stores tn the area At present tt s used for
residential and com mercial You can use tf to su t
yourse lf Thts really ts a fine old home wt1h a most
spectacular f replace You II love tt and love t
Includes 27 76 acres of prime development land w ith
water and sewer Don t let th s one sltp away from you
On Raccoan Creek
N ce year old one story
fr ame on 75JCJOO foot ot
w h 75 foo t fron age on
Ra ccoon Creek Pane l ng
and dr y wan carpeted
thr oug hout
a lu m num
s dmg centra l elect r ic hea t
an d a r new k tchen n
1915 c tv Schools
th th s
home you wlll n e~er need a
summ er or weekend hom e

w

1 1 Acre
Four yea r old 1344 sq fl
frame home near Add son
ca rp eted throughout
3
be drooms n ce k tchen
range oven re fr gera tor
cen tral heat and a r
natural gas two stor y
garage 24x36 co uld have
n1 ce apartment upsta irs
Spa claus &amp; Spo11ess
Yo u have admired th s
custo m bu It J be droom
hOme and now you can
make
t your s for male
d 1'1 ng beaut ful k !chen 2
ba ths 2 car gar age an d
large landscaped ol
A Ntce Home In Town
1/'J blocks from clt y park 3
bl ocks to schoo l We don t
often have th s n1 ce of a J
bedroom home n town
Larg e 1 v no room w th
f replace La rge dl n1ng
mod ern
ki tchen
and
heat ng system 2 baths
and u t I t y room
new
s d ng and small lot
Restore Th s On e
And make yourself a
bundle owner will make
you the bes t barga in you
eve r he~d on l h1 s e room 2
bath hom e Its ol d but ''
was one of those rea good
on es when bu It Modern
kU and he;\t no sys tem

Somethmg Ntce
You ll agr ee For SJJ 900
th s pleasa n moder n 3
bedroom
2 stor y wilt
please vou Includes large
fam ly room fo rm al d n ng
and garage
On Ga.rfteld Extension
One stor y ranch st y e
th r ee bedroom fr ame hom e
n excellent cond t on Dry
wall
and
panelmg
plumb ed for washer and
drye r fo r ced a r gas heat
carpo rt c ty wale
Ex
ce len appearance

L ofs Lots Lots
We ha ve a good select on of
bu ld ng lots Lake frof'lt
rura l or subd v son your
choic e $4 ooo oo up
A Spec al Place
brand
ne w
3
L arge
bedroom ranch on 10 acre
lot 15 m n from c ty Tt) s
beauhfuf br ck and ce dar
home w It thr II the most
d ist nna te buyer Space
age k tchen 3 very fanc.y
baths
handsome -w b
f rep ace bea ut fu.l car
pet ng Th s on e w II take
your brea th away Owner
tr ans f erred

ONUS 3S near HMC Th s
roomy th r ee bedroorn
hom e has a very n ce
k !chen hardwood floor s
ba se m en t w th fam ly
r oom
ut lil y room and
garage 521 900

measure
79 Acrimonious
8 1 Otlopr lng
1 Courteous
82 Wire nail
7 Altteslva
83 Narcotic
aubatam:e
12 SumptuCll&amp; meat 84 Wllhered
85 Tlbolan gezelle
17 Nulrlment
8 7 Putln
21 Avoids
safekeeping
22laal
89 Grasp
23 Tree ot birch
90 Glossy lab&lt;lc
fomtly
24 Heraldic bearing 92 Frolic
94 Footwear
25 Note of scale
95 Shrad
28 Propostllon
96 Jogs
28 Hindu gutllr
91 tmprove
30 t.tolh ad olsell
99 1naane
dltenae
32 Negative prellx 100 Toward shelter
101Tears
33 A11ampl
102 Wagers
35 Narrate
103 Bow
37 Jury I tal
106 Unit of currency
39Bebome
107 Note at sca le
40Eggs
109Worm
41 lll ln
1 1D Deities
conjunct on
111 Nul
43 Disturbance
113 Form
45Aepulse
47 Compass polnl 114 Prohibit
115 Pronoun
48Commll
116 Evergreen trees
doprada!IMa
49leadlng player s 117 Smalla"'ount
118 Encountered
52 Egg shaped
120 Exist
!54 Instructs
121 Tlbelan prleat
58 Lock ot hair
122 Distance
57 Calling

NEW

THE LOCAL
MARKET house detached
26K37
concrete
block
garage and ol6x411 barn
w th stall s located on y l
m les trom M eigs M ne No
1 call today or you ma y be
too late 35 acres

meaaure

61 Brother at Jacob 123 Condeocendtng
look
82 Body ot water
t 24 Toll
63 Partner
126 Showered
64 Prcpos111on
86 Anernoon parly 128 Ftsh tram
moving boat
67 Wa1W1t ollndla
130 Easllnd an
68Pinochte term
981101'
69 A alate labbr I
132 Letlall
71 Man sname
134 Cloaslly
72Mix
135 Repelltlon
74 Spirited horse
136 Noteofsca le
78 Ward off
137 Surgical thread
77 Sunburn
139 Frog
78 Prlnler s

1 Saucy
2 Above
3 Note or scale
4 Arllflcal
languege
5 Temporarv
shelter
6 Chemical
compound
7 Pfennig (abbr I
6 Three loed
sloths
9 Cut
10 Turk lc
tnbesman
1 1 K1te
12 Nolo of scale
13 Antlered animal
14Hebrewmonth
15 European finch
(pi I
16 Barter
17 Enemy
1B ConJUnC tlon
19 Fru11 (pi I

31ACIII.._SIIICIIII'ICI UNO
O•rner will l!elp finance qualified buyer This home
musl sell this week 11 Is e Rul Est ale Bargain let s
move In you II be the one lhat ga ins Nice modern 6
rooms home forced air furnace S2S monthly on budget
9 acres woods 10 aeres pasture land with h &amp;ere good
I
fed pond stocked wllh fish round concrete
I ~iatrWlr1a I rough 10 acres good tillable land small
garden spact Very nice If you have been
llclclklng, here II Is call now 525 000
ALMOST NEW
Been lived n a short llrne
3 bedroom home toea teo n
Fa lrf eld Acres
Subd
Modern eat tn k tcti en w ith
all buil t Cabs Nlce bath
electr c heat Ttlermopllne
w ndows
slng e
Ci!lt
garage New llsltnO do n 1
walt to 'See Pri ced to se t

FIREPLACE
1 2 baths
thr ee bedr oom s ots of n ce
carpet and much more all
~n a very pretty br ck C ty
sch ool s Calf soon It won I
l11st long
We have other I st ng s 1f
you are buylng or selling
ca ll VS Rulty to day

Alt of
shown
only

SMALL FARM
LIVING
Toda y s c ho ce ap
proximately 75 acres of
pasture and fa r mlng and
Ni ce
1
rooms
full
basement g bedrooms
good barn
two other
outs de bu ld ngs fences
falr pl ent y water for
c(tlt fe
sma I tobacco
acreage we are r eady to
sell

our I s1tngs are
by appotntment

GAU.IPOLIS, OHIO

8R00MS 2ACRES
Th s s a very attract ve J
bedrooms ham.e,~ built in
k1t chen melds gar bage
d1Sposa1,~h\er. top s ave
wall oV'@ll refr gere tor with
lee
maker
F lnl shed
~asernent
Beaut ful larg e
trees In background Th e
comfor t of c ty I fe th e
beau ty and entoym en t of
country I v ng a lith s close
to Gall pot son State High
way

/
20 Procrlltlnelea
98 Fabulous bird
27Mixlure
102 Unlnternllng
29 TI/PIIIOS
per ton
31 Symbol lor
104 Wet
tellurium
1011 T. .nllllrOke
34 Annually
107 Dcmeatlctted
36 Affecl on
108 T~rkllh dlcrM
38Rented
110Liquldmuauro
40 Clly In Ru1111
11 1 Fragmenll
42 Ploylng card
ol 1 12 Wanl
44 Frull coke
114 Fru II
46 Falelfler
116 Abrnlvo
46 Ur110 on
lnt1rument
49 Frlgl1ton
1 17 Woman a
50 Anlmola clow
nld&lt;name
51 Ctrnpasapolnt 119Frul1cake
53 Falsehoods
121 Unltolllallan
55 GrtOk letter
currency
58 Related
122 Speck
56 Decayed
123 Note of scale
60 Household pela 125 Booly
82 Awallsetlltm.,l 127 Symbol fill allvor
85 Sulllbla
128 Dellnnl•
68 Fotm.,teddrlnk 129 Man a name
89 Thin
t30 New•I
lronsporent
131 Wonderars
motorial
133 Ache
70 Ire
136 Old musical
72 Fathers
Instruments
73 Rues
138 Slllrw11 posl
7 5 Down goddasa
140 VIa ton
76 Liberty
143 Roman numbor
77 Ctrnmonplace
1 050
79 Vegeteble lpl l
Gaelic
144
80 Underground
14B Rock IIIII
parlo o1 plont
82 Wide
146 Grool Lake
83 Hinder
150 Walk unsllldlly
84Coasos
151 Femslah«oe
8B Danish lend
153 Snoke
dlvlalon
154 Observe
68 Unll ol electrical 156 Roden!
meaaurement
89 Otnner course
158 Worthless
90 Sce11er
IMvtng
91 Gel up
181 Flfotlalanda
93 Pierces
wlllrlwlnd
95 HIW1er
t63 Spanllh lobbr l
97 Arlie lea ol
185 French article
lurntture
187 Pronoun

BRICK CONSTRUCTION
-GALLIPOLIS
We are p1ehed to offer for
sale lhts 8 room s nice older
home n one of the bes t
locattons of Gall palls 4
bedroom basement Nat
gas forced air turM ce
Th s home has had a
Beauty Salon operati on n
It for years Own lh s n ce
home and
your own
bus ness now
3 BEDROOM BRICK
tmmedtale
possession
owner has moved to a
farm Be the f rst to look at
th s n ce br lclc. home near
the hospltal Has a large
living room modern eat n
kltcflen w1th all buut ln
cabinet$ and range Iaroe
bath
In Gallipolis Cl1y
School Olstrlcl Won t Jnt
lona Priced to sell
LOOK THIS OVER
70 Acre Farm modern six
room home good barn
new tool shed utility bldg
Line fences al wo~en wire
42 acl'les B G pasture 10
acres wood s " 22 acr es
meadow and
tillabl e
plenty of locust trees 1200
lb to bacco base ThiS f11 rm
s In the Gatllpolls ScMo l
Dlstr ct Call Now

110 ACRES PLUS
Vacant A wgodland
wonderlal'ld
some
pasture and tillable land
L.ess than $160 per ecrt

VA FHA 30 yr finonc ng lr&amp;land
Mortgage 77 E State Athens
592 3051

PRICE REDUCED
Call oday for new low
pr ce on thls f ine 3 BR:
hom e
located
w hin
walk ng
d1stan ce
of
schools
churches and
stores Ea sy ma nt enance
wUh a Ul'l;l s1dmg and Nu
Sash window s All ap
p ances
to
sel
up
housekeeping Call today
for your appo ntment

Call us nght no¥' ,

Offfce 446 1694
EVENING$
Charles M Nnl
446 1546
J Michael Ntal
446 I SOl
Slm N.JII
446 1358

SlEEPING Rooms weekly rates
~Ce ntro! Hotel

6 ROOM house ln c ly Wrlte to
8 o~e "27 n care of Gall pol s
T bune
9 room ouse 4 br 1 \1. bat hs full
basement
garage
1 ocre
g ound outbu fd1ng
Phone
3888.,83Qr6 t4 4711472
2 x 60 MOB! t JiOME 2
oea oom rurn shed on Bob
McCormick Rd S m n dr ve
fro town no pels adults
only DE:'"' ll"'-t Ca11446 2543

'l

·'-""---

SPRIN!i_.VA.U,EY
GREEN APTS.
1 &amp; 2 Br Unfurn

Apts
446 1599

4
~~

J.

J s

4

~iiOJIHI·J~~SISIJJ.

--

SLEEPING
Hotel

BEA UTIFUL
COUNTRY HOME
PLUS70A LAND
This home ts vt:rv at
tractive modern n every
way
6 roorr s
J
bedrooms s c ose t t
2
ba th s shower kl chen
Ia rge a ld pretty Monv
more desirabl e fea tur es
nc udlno
co rn er
to
blacktop r \)!ld
J ca r
garage 2 porches pel/o
sm all Qtecn Muse w th
furna ce barn 70 A limed
and
f ertUlzed
B G
posture
o s of we nut
trees Check w h us today
12 ACRES RT 32S
Near Meigs M ines has
bo rn storage bu lt dlng
fllr m pond Presentty has
one trai l er ren tal spl\ce
tllJ! ca n be developed nto
a nlce Income propertv
168A CRES
NEAR PORTER
New house v der constr
plus 6 r oom tern ho use
bar 8. oth er oulbulldlngs
Approx
140 ac r es of
pastv tl and
Imber &amp;
appr o&gt;&lt; 28 acres of ~ liabl e
land A ll m nere rig ht s
goes some good tences All
la nd &amp; hOuses tor only
555 DOO Now
148ACRES
GOOD CAT TLE FARM
Lots of posslbltf lles 2 eroe
stock berns good concret e
round s tock water I n
trough
JO acres
In
cu 1 ve t on 1200 ft toba cco
b11se Lot s of new tenc ng
Pl enty water ln field s 10
acres 1 mber owner re.,lly
anx lous to se
can be
bou gMI liS &lt;'I singe un t or
smatter a moun s
TARA ESTATES
ONLV$48 000
Beaut fut B room hou se
1811 1 sq ft 11\t lng spece
Featuring 3 B R wUh de uxe
walk In cl ose t s 2 baths g
at ractlve F R beautlru l
roc k fleld stone fireplace
Formal OR Bulll In kit
chen Im por ted llght fix
lures and pew er door
hardwar e .« lso enjoy the
use of Clu b House &amp;
Swimming Pool
Price
Reduced to S"ij 00 0

HIDOEN CHALET
One of Gel lie Countys most
unique homes
0 roo m s
plus 2 battls featur ing 2
bedroom s 6n tl'l e..ma n eve!
and the ma st er bedroom on
th e sec ond teve t w th
Slid ng g an doors l ~ad lno
toll blllco ny Has a sunken
pit with wood bu rn ng
fireplace d ining room and
mod ~r n kitchen com plete
w lth all buill ln cabinets
d shw.asher dlsposaf and
range
Hom e Is tot a l
efeclrlc w th centra ! air
The Int er or of this s very
rustle
with
bea med
Cilthedral celllnos This
could be your dream hom e
st t tln g on 6 acres ot
woodland ApproM 3 rnlfes
trom Gall polls No slgh t
seers please
7 ROOM~
4 BEDROOMS
Gallipolis School Olstrlcf
ba se m ent
1 ,_
baths
modern kit chen co m plete
with blrch ca binets F A
furnac e ca r por t 2 w oad
burn ng f repleces femlly
r oo m large tot wlth fruit
trees
and
a s torage
building W thln 5 m les of
Gallipolis N ice hom e 111 a
oood price
COMMERCIAL
BUILOING &amp; SITE
Sta te Hlghwav 1 Nort h
Masonry Building wit h
brick front bulldlno !Ike
new ..,pprox :o ze 30 x24 2
story Le¥el lot tronts 175
ft on State H tgt"iway 7 Call
now
2 STORY
COUNT~Y HOME
11. acres s m les from
Galllpolls
7 rooms
4
bedrooms
partial
basement fue l all forced
alr furne ce rural wate r
Gall polls School Dlst
Garden space frontage on
Ra ccoon Creek
MIDDLEPORT
BUSINEiSINCOME
PROPERTY
Up to S660 00 per mon th
Rentals plus a beautiful 7
room (J bedrooms) home
to lfve In yourself alum
sidlno good grade nice
front por ch ots of bu11t n
cabinets table top rang e
wall oven laundry tubs
nat gas forced a r furna ce
cen tral air Wood b rnlnQ
firepla ce Lots of shrub
berv level grassy lot A
beautiful place lllus a n ce
lncome Priced r loht

&lt;V

l BEDROOM
1 Acre PIus - teve ap
proM
1 ~
miles f r o m
hospltal on b acklop rd
Plenty ot garden space
rural water country llvlng
Close to Gafllpolls Priced
only S18 ooo

WANT TO OWN BUT NEED
HELP IN FINANCING?
Nice 2
bedroom form home
whiCh has been completely
remodeled recently large born
n good con d I on oil th s s I
t ng on oppro~e mately 17 acres
near town Mob l~t home en ol
spot on property Good nvest
men! rental opporlun ty Coli
.uft Hl49 after 6 o m

!BED RO OM S
RT 35 WEST
Galtlpot s Schoo f Dl st 2
car gar age 1 , batMs 5
rooms r anc h s yl e wlth
1 248 sq fl ll vl ng space
stor m door s &amp; Window s
m odern kltchen with d !h
washer L arge lo t Sec this
one now
6ROOM5 '2 ACR ES
Th s ls a very a lira ~. lve J
bedr ooms home built m
k tchen Includes garbage
dlsposa l count er top stove
wall ov en re fr ocr a tor wllh
ce
maker
F inished

MUST sell pr ce educed pr co
$14 900 by ow lit 2 b
..
m les out M II Creek Ph -446
169 1

•

lBEDROOMS
LARGE FAMilY
ROOM
Laroe lot In e nice com
munlty fr am e with brick
iront
FA
furn11cu
modern kltc l
pollO
u tltlty room n o Jorn ba th
Mu sl see: It 1$ 11011 u U s
pric ed right t'DII now
LAROE
COUNTRY HOM F.
PLUi 19 ACRES
7
room s
frame
4
bedrooms wHI Mil
ots
of buil t In cob nets good
sma ll barn bla ck top ro11d
Pr lc:e R&amp;d uccd
4BEDROOM S
ROUTE ~88
G,al ll polls S&lt;;hoo D strlct
Lol!l of room b21!C llt'llf
family room
2 h balls
ga rege n Odt:r
k tchun
wood burnir g
f repla ce
large lola d uard u11 spe cc
stora ge bu d lt u llpprox
8 x10
Coso to RoCJn oy
Pr ced rl11ht

c''

Laru e

c"rv t:o d Homo

2300 s(l ft o Hv lnn sp I C(l

4

bed roo ms 2 boll s formnl
lv ng roo
w t 11 W 0
flreptace 1e 1 lly room
c ompletely
furnls l od
k.ltc hen countur lop rru yu
bu ilt In wall uv
ll!.! t us{ l
? d shwll sher 2 Cftr y
~gt:
located o
1 a cr
1
Ga ll'l'olts C ty ~c; h o o l 01 ~ 1
See h s
DAI RY L) () V .CROWN CI TY
Going protll ab u I.Ju:&gt;h en
390 fl tr on ~Oil t n Slflh"! U I
7 A ll bu t dh g s u d sl mJ
equ i pment yOCli Lnryu
paved ereo t:8SY Access
C.ooa ln vestmunt propor tv
Th s fs a ra st dev eloping
arell Ttl l! o fy rcstourtmt
within severA l
m /l et.
lnqu re tod l'IV
LOT &amp;
MOBIL E HOME
In
Port er
10 x$0
4
bedroom $ E c:o na
N ice
lot J05 acre le¥eJ Pr iced
only $6 900
118 ACRE FARM
NEAR RIO GRAND E
Gall polls set ool District ~
barns 2 sheds appr oJC 20
acre~ of ptJsluro 110 acres
of good 1/ mbor (Oek
Pin e) Approx 20 acres or
tltlable la nd All n lncra l
rlghts goes to ba cco bas(!
s ome far m rn achln crv
livestock !hogs a d laying
hens) l Rur al wo ter taps
peld A ll crops goos 7
mob te hon cs l o e l S:
14 x 6S ) lind o s room a 'lie
house Jus 1/sl tJd

a.

,
I

213 Acn ~s
6 Room homo F A
na ce
wood b u
f replace .4 bll rns
house 500 oo llon mll,k nltroill
good fe clng a ll rr11
rlghts
lots o!ljfl
l~~\~::11
appro xgoes
25 acres
~
Off Sl ate Rout e 219

4 Bedrooms largo living roOf
d ntng room lorgo k chon 1 :h
baths ;"J 2 wood bu r no
hreploces lu ll boso ncnt 2 co
garage Located w thl' walk ng
d1ston ce of town
Vor y
(eosonobly pr ced Call 446
B575 4&lt;6 1000 or 446 2265

---

NEW mob le home tn Golhpol s
one or 2 adults only house fu
msh1ngs control a r Ph 446

0038
2 BR mab1l e home Located
Two m les from town c ty
conven ences good cond Ph

'46 1365

YliJ

IINWIOY OJ. IN O.JS IWlllJ. O I
iOYI~ I~OIOIJ¥) S Y11 ~101

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ill I ~S IOi1 101S IVO'I JIJS II

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i 1 10 IIi 0 1VI1VNt~ISl 0 W IIi

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SV41l

1

4

~OI.lll~OS

ll'llr.. VICinl
tall
tboa•lll•l homo silo•
loc.lltcl •ttlle lap of t I
on Circle Drlvo In
Plants
SuWI'vlst.n,
which
Is
ius! off
lull¥111o
Road
P,..porfy llnos •ro
marllod wllh whllt
at•ko•
Owner will

•
lit roo- - lot are oil

..

'

J

I

2 BR mobile hom e 4.t6 0756 bet
ween1_ond_!_p ~

tlli~JSI J!n Wi iiV

IIIYiil

''ID11MII)IIVJJ.I401111¥

liGHT housekeep ng roo m Pork
Central Motel
·c:....,.._ _ _

IN GALLIPOLIS--NICE HOME
BeoutiMiy wooded lot walking dlst•nce to city
schools J Bedrooms forma I dining room nice modern
k itchen large family room wllh W B firepl ace In
basement full';' carpeted finished gMage nat gas
forced 8lr furnace central air Won t last long se-e It
now

JIVI1l'IIIJVIS3S'iio;iiSO~l

H¥11 0HJ .IOJJ J.S IIIJ.SI AO I

LOW week ly qnd monthly rote;;!
L1bby Hotel 446- 1743

Fastellt Growing Real Estate Agency

Wilis T. Leadingham
Realtor

NEAL REALlY

-- -

Ph Home 379-2184

~

we need L stmgs
all th e
Wtseman Agency 446 36-43
Ga11la Co s Larg est Rea
Estate Sal es Agency
Office 446 3643
Ike W1seman 446 l7J6
E N w seman 446 4 oo

TRAILER lot one m le f om HMC
Phoneo4o4 6 3805
FURN op
1 bedroom n7;
S\75 Uti It es pd Adults &lt;t46
4A16af er6 pm

Assoc~ate

TO

THE PRICE IS REOUCED
on th s all br ck ra nch
ocated '" th e Vlllage of
Northup Three bedroo ms
(26x 15) living room Jl 2
baths plu s many other
tea ur es
C t v schools
CALL TOD AY

428 2nd AVE.

DOWN

1ssaciate

'

PHONE 446-0552 - ANmME

141 Article
142 Mans nlekname
143 Speechless
145 Cut
147 Weary
149llmb
152 Symbol lor
eerlum
153 Changes
155 Drain
157 Roman lyronl
159 Bebylonlan
dally
160 God ot love
162 Worms
1B4 Pertalnr~gto !he
kidneys
166 Beller venllleled
168 Wolk
169 Prec1p lous
17D Wrlt~ng table!
171 CCIUrage

Memll Carter

THE PRIC E s reduced on
1 32 acres lou teet four
m les from Gallipolis on
Ro ute 141

SUNDAY, Oct 10, 1976
ACROSS

Bonnte Stq
Ph. Home 446-2885
Gauu Countv~

IF WHAT YOU expect In
an all br•ck home is natural
vas central a 1r Ph baths
3 roomy bedrooms lots of
nice carpe t a mod ern
kllchen with adjoining
d nlng room an attac hed
two car garage wl1h tots of
storage a w•ll landscaped
one third acre lot plus a
pool (top of ground)?: This
cou d bt your new home

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

59 Min a name
On Wi seman Road
Br gad 1er mob e home n
excellent cond t on and 1 3
ac re s Panel walls carpet
a aver all furn lure goes
f rsl road to r ght beyond
Cadm us off SR 141 gong
sout h Pr ced to sell S1 000

AT 'rHE EOGEofthecty
on Rt sae you wlll fmd a
Iaroe br ck hO m e This
hOmes ts on a tot with 80ft
frontage and 400 ft depth
T h ~ owners are moving out
of state and would I ke o
self very qul ~lc. If you are a
qua \ fed buyer call for an
a pp today The pr ce IS
only S33 000 lmm ed Pa ss
Pr ce Reduced
ITS AN OLDER HOME
Wll h J or 4 B R natural gas
hea t c tv schOol s ots of
f ke new carpet 1• ,acre fl&amp;t
lot and the PRICE I S
R tGHT $23 000 Call VS
Rea lt y oday

CHES HIR E N ce
GR EE N ACRES Is the
bedrool'(l ho tne w th faml
for you Th1S cozy
room
love ly
ba
offers 3 Brs a larg e
basemen
natural
I ng room bu It n k I
furnace 1 car gn•a• •• chen and a full ba sement
Loca ted Qn 3 nice
Plus a ~erv fr endfy nelgh
Price $29 500
bar hood

Pul Anotlltr lot On The Fire
Yes t his one Includes w b fireplace a lamlly room 3
'lice size bedrooms lovely I vlng room large built In
kll and big lot In clly school di strict and lhe owner Is
most anclous to !el l

New Home 11 Acres Farm Pond
You can now move to the country and enjoy all the
modern conven tences
Thts beauty tn clu des 3
bedrooms family room formal dlnmg full baiement
2 car garage Jlh baths and a heat pump The picture
cant speak for this one you must see t Price will be
00
under $50

THERE 15 NO DOUBT
about lt U you lt ke plush
carpet
la rge
roomy
bedrooms modern 1c. tc hen
plus a fam1 t y room and
t v ng room larg e enough to
entertain your guests th s
s jus w hat you are look ng
fOr I S pr ced to Sell Caft
toda y for en appo ntrnen t

IF NEATNESS counts tnls
cozy two bedroom !could
be 31 w ill be at the top ot
your I st This little Duutv
Is sit uated on 2 9 acres of
clean land and Is only fl'lle
miles out Rt UJ

FOR SALE

BY OWNER
4 BR Home with 3 baths, nat gas, over 1
acre lot For appotntment for v1ewlng Ph
367 0106

•

·~.-~~·~-~~~~,7 ~4• L--------~------------~------~

�..
.

•

11&gt;-TIIe~T!Jnet.Sentinei,SWlday,Oc\ 10 1!176

~t..d _~~
IN MlMOftY of Edw n Mayo
Oct 9 1971 Sadlyml11odby
wife children grandchildren
ond daughter In low
In a gra¥eyard softly siHplng
where the gentle

brHz.et wove lies the oht we
lov.d so d.arly

htn

though we could not save

mower and rotot llers

lAWN

ror.'''' 1159 S~ttond Ave For

so • mowers and tllers 446
2531

SEWING Mach nt repair ,.,vice
All molcts French C ty Fabric
Shoppe 5$ Court Gal lipolis
Ohio
Donner So~:

A Rose by Any Other
N•mt is Still NPT A
Republican Rose

BRANCH
MANAGER
TRAINEE

VOTE DANNER ·
Republocen

Co Commissioner
Pd Pol. Ad,.

Unu sua l oppor tu n ty to be
asso c ia te d wllh a le~dlng
fa st grow no const.!Mer
'F nanc e Com pany do no
bus iness In 20 state! We
Iran you n a phases ot
work Invo lvin g consumer
cred t You w II contact our
customers both in and
au s de the off ce and learn
to work w lh merchants

SWEEPER and sew ng machme
repair ports and suppl as P ck

up and del very Oov s Vacuum
Cleaner ~ m le up Georges
Creek Rd Ph ~~6 0294
THURMAN Hou se Ant ques Fur

ntlure strlpp ng
epa r a nd
ref1ntstung County Rd . B off 35
Centerv lit V llage 2-4S 9479

PASQUALE

Electncal

In a fr endl y way you w II
he p peop l e w1t h thl! r
per sonal f nance Start no
salary w II be be to meet
th e nee ds of vou and vour
fam •I Y now I.P' a few short
yea r s you On earn well
above averag e

Service

446 2716 day or n ght

BEGIN you spr ng cleon ng by
hav1ng your carpets cleaned by
best method Known Remove
all the dirt MoMe your carpet
looM new ago n For free
e1flmate co 1379 2682

Our company promo es
fr om w th n
Pr e\1 ous
e)( per ence no necesst~ry
mus t be a H gh SchOol
gradua te ha ve ca r and be
w lng to r e o~e
n
ce nllv e lind emb I on pay
off Except ona emp loyee
benef Is

DEAD Stock removed No charge
Call 245 5514
MAGGIE Brothers 1160 At 2nd
Ave under new management
owner Fronk W Fowler w I
pay h ghest pnce s for scrap
ron and ol k nds of m"ttols for
sale angle ron channel ron
and p pes 44b 0137 Open
but~nen hrs
8 5 Mon Fn
So t 84

Ph Mr Snograss
,,2 2111

CAPITAL
FINANCIAL
SERVICE INC.

THUNDE'RBIRO hub cap b ~own oc
cent11 between M ddleport and
Heck s on Rt 7 reward Ph
614 992 7354

•
2nd Sf

(

BACKHOE DOZER TRENCHER
WORK DONE AT REASONABLE
RATE
Con fact Sm1th Ex
ccwot ng Ph 446 3981

JOO W
Pomeroy Oh10
An Equal Opporfuntty
Employer

All TYPES of dozer work Ph
379 2621 Allen Rutherford
ECONOMIZE on fuel w1th our
special dn stone Hreploces
Logue Contracting block and
brlck work Ph 388 9939
BACKHOE &amp; Oo:a:er work also top
soli and fill d rt avai lable 379

2258
BICENTENNIAL
SPECIAL
Complete auto pant job one
color only $761;WJ 2 tone $100
Month of July only Stop ln at
Penon 1 Body Shop 26 Ro I road
St Middleport Oh o or call
367.0165
GENERAL Contractors Do all
motonary carpenter &amp; plumb
lng Install and repo r all
drlvewayo Ph ~46 9587
CONCRETE block work poho
steps porches walks retqln
lng wall. trailer underp nnlng
complete garages built 30 yrs
exp Free est motes 367 0488
or367 0295

Ph. 446-0008
514 2nd Ave .
SUIUIItiAN
SETTING
Adds - 1
room to breathe
at
mo$phere to fhl1 fine 3
bdrm rench lnllde you II
enjoy a fireplace In the
living room formal dining
room 112 btlhl leundry
room and a full bu.ement
with a fireplace All this
plus a tarat well land
sca~ed 101 3 ml out
AT
LAST
YOUR
OR EAM HOME - 1 yr old
brick ranch offers 2 1_.0 SQ
ft of modern living Don t
welt to see th ls 3 Br and 2
beth home The ki tchen Is
complete wlfh dishwasher
d isp mlcrowavt ov en and
range
Othtr
special
f eatu res are the fargt
formal dlnlng rm quali ty
carpet heat pump 2 se ts
patlodoors 12x51patlo .. nd
2 car garage with electric
door opener

BVDYBODY
Shops the

WAIT AD WAY

1'2 x !Q KIRKWOOD mob le
home awn ng porch unde
plnmng
10 x 12 alum
build ng and a r co nd n
Johnson M H Ct $5 SOO Ph
446 "231 ofte 5

ESTATE AUCTION
OCT. 11, 1976
1h00 A.M.

n Smith lawiiiiCt Donohue James Carnahan
Mt-2033 742-3041
Nell r

949·2701

slble fnr accldenll or loss of property 1

o

GAWA COUNTY'S lARGEST

RfAL ESTATE MiENCY

VS REALTY

7

BUILDING OR

MOBILE
Approx S
acres about 13 m
from
town Land ls flat wlth
frontage on a BT rd and
county water available
$5 000

New listing located wllhln the city of Galllpoll• 3
bedrooms llh baths city water &amp; sewer natural gas
F A furnace Call for appointment Price S26 900

MOBILE HOME PARK
small close to town good
Inc. om e easy to take care
of call for more n
for mation
VACANT
LAND
IN
RACCOON TWP
100
acre! prked at $275 per
ecre Very pr vete about
1.11 t liable and h woods
with frontage on Raccoon
Creek

FOR SALE BY OWNER
Business bulld1no on Broadway In Jackson Ohio BO
Per cent loc•tlon &lt;:entra I a1r gas heat carpeted In
good condttton Call owner between ' p m &amp; 11 p m
Sorry no pr1ce on phone Wtll show by appointment
anytime and gtve price to mterested party

PHONE 216·5261
REMMINGTON
Sportsman
Auto Model 58 12 go 30 nch
fu ll choke bar el $)~ PI
4-46 2089

19 nch PORTABlE block and
wh te TV axe co 1d $35
Ph 446 0212

4 X 8 UTiliTY TRAtLEft $100 4 X
1t It b!Ki tro le
$100 newly
bu It cor hauler trol ler $400
Ph .440 7406
NEW WHITE FARM troctor s
New Hollend Equ1p Free In
ere'!
on hQv tools Ill 3 I 77 Jus
orr 11ed load of Klng Kutters
Bush Hogs 5 f Save $$ used
roctor and equlp of all
k nds JIM S FARM EQUIPMENT
INC 588 Jackson P ke Ph
446 9777

JUNK auto and scrap metal Ph
388 8776

•

LOGS WANTED top pr ce pod for
quolty logs delive ed to our
yard Indus tria l T mber and
Land Co Oqk H II A11e" State
Rt 93 3 miles N of Oak H1ll
682 6909 682 7687

-------TIMB~R

Top pr ces pad for. stan
d ng 11mber lnduslr ol T mber
and Land Co Oak Hill D v St
Rt 93 3m les N ofOok HII
682 6909 682 7687

-

S5 00 or SI 0 gold p ece 446 2840
~
NEED tronsm n1on for 67 Dodge
Dart Slant 6 3 spd auto 446
7478or446 13.46

--

USED MOBILE HOMES
CALL576 2711
TO ECONOMIZE on fuel unde p n
your mob1lt home and Onchor
for safety FosJtr Mob le Home
ServiCe 446 2783 or Elmer Sk d
more -446 3-479

COAL -- $22 per ton open 6 days
o week end even ngs For fur
~her nformot•on ca!l367 7338
1970 TRIUMPH 650 Chopper new
pont tob good cond . Ph m
6192
FREEZER BEEF-SALE
USDA CHOICE s do 7Sc lb h nd
qt 89c fore qt 59c Coli Com
Sands B II Crawford C sco
Stalnokef Ronnte McCoy ot
your Kroger Store 446 3923
anytime cut wrapped &amp; frozen
free

Dellnalely Worth Your ConslderaHon
It ts our pleasure to show you th is beoullful Dutch
Colonial located In
quiet beautiful counlry just
north of the hospital Drive down country lane and look
at this 4 bedroom 212 bath dream home large living
room form ale dining extra nice kitchen family room
wllh w b fireplace Carpel throughout plus • full
basementand 2 car garage Jh acres of rolling and flat
la11d affords a great garden spot Get moma and the
kids and hove a look at your fulure

1..,

CHAIN LINK
PRIVACY &amp; WOOD FENCE
Fo Home Bu s1ness end In
dustry
HOUCK FENCE
CENTER
Call 446 04 12 or
I 776 2237

rAY

FOR SALE 1967 GMC Von Ins de
nsulo ted &amp; paneled Coli 596
4427

Existing building and business opportunity on Court
Street tn Gallipolis Includes 2 furn ished and rented
apparlments all equipment and l icenses priced for
quick sa le $42 500 Call for more nformat lon

FOR
THE
LARGE
FAMILY we have a 9 room
4 bedroom 2 story home In
B dWell only 20 minu tes
LAND Bu ld ng or mob le from coat mlnes storm
ho me lots n Eureka area
w ndQws and doors F A
Buy as m any as 8 acres for f ue l oil fur na ce
nice
only
SS 300 00' Ha s r ural garden area can be yours
water and we
w thl.n 30 days for only
S22 000 Ca I tor an etp
LAND Buy approx mately PO nt m ent
l acr es along S Rt 160
3 BEDR ooM CARPETED
between C tv of Gall pols
HOME located ln Ha rrison
and Holzer Hosp ta t CitY
Twp Macedon a R.d F A
water and sewer An c.x
furna ce modern k tc hen
ce lent buy fQr only $1 500 r ural water and clsterns a
peaceful home 10 a rural
LAND 35 acres at evel to
sett ing Pr ice S21 000
ro ng ground on bO th s1des
4 BEDROOM CARPETED
of 5 a e R t
160 nea
Por ter Ru r a l W'aler front s HOME ne111r Clay Sc hool
c ty S 0
Ga t poll s
on F loyd c ark Rd and Rt
si tuated on 1 acre lot ¥1 b
60
f replace un lque I Yl ng lnd
LAN 0
56 acres f enced dining roo m Call for mere
lnform..JJIQn
w fh 20 at;res of rnber
BUILDING
close o North Ga I a H gh BU SINESS
Sc hool
lo ca ted
on locllle d on upper Second
Thompson Rd lots of roa d Avenue Ga poll s Nlce
Buy for lo c tv wa te r and sewer
f ro n age ..
$25 000 00
Pr ce S26 000 00
THR EE
BEDROOM
LAND 20 acres Loca ed n car pe ed a I e ec tr c home
Morgan Twp to ea ed w th s uated on 12 0x75 lot
road frontag e on Row l es front ng on Twp b acktop
v le Rd Sp r ng water,.,. Rd CoUnty water &amp; sewer
ava tabl e
Buy for Pr ce $22 SOO 00
Sl1 000 00
BUSIN ESS Pr ce reduced
on 2 bay bus ness bu ld ng
LANO
150
x 96
o
and and ocaled on R t
toea ted on L ddy Hollow
160 n Ew ngton Buy now
BOy for U 000 00
for S15 000 00
New L s1 ng NEAR RIO
DWELLING and 26 x 32
blocK bu ld ng s luated on GRANDE New modular 3
bedroom home cathedra
40 JC 132 Jot n Galllpo s
v ng room
fnclu d ng
content s of ce m g n
dwe I ng
Buy
for storm w ndows and doors
Pr ced for q u ck sale
120 000 00
s 7 sa o
NOW S20 000 00 w 1J buy a THIS CORNER LOT n
mode r n
one floor
3 Coun v A r Su bd v son
bed r oo m a I efectr c herr\ e
ke new Home ca r peted
n Ga ll POl s C l y sc hoo
hro ugh out fam ly room
d str ct S tua ted on 120 JC 22JC 12 uti! t y room ria ura l
75 ot Carp eted elCcept for ga s h eat
m eta
out
lc. chen and ba th
new bu ld ng Pr ced for qu ck
co nd ton
rura l water
sate
cen tr a sewage co llect on
FIVE BE DROOM car
blacktops reels
Call for
peted home located 4 m les
more ntorm a on Can be
from down own Ga ll po l s
v A and F H A f nan ced Two
w b f rep aces
wo
baths w show er s beau fu l
GRACIOUS 2 stor y br ck
wooded 3 acre tot hea ted
hom e e la rge rooms
and coo ed w h heat
k !chen and bath up and
pu mp
Cal polls C ty
down has been used as
Schoo l D s r ct Call for
renta apa rt me nt l arge
more nforma on
fran porch c 1ty water and
IF YOU RE PLANNING
sewer Ca I for appo nt
TO SELL CALL US WE
men! today
Buy fo r
HAVE
A
LIST
OF
$30 ~0 0 00
PROSPECTIVE BUYERS
PRICE REDUCED on
ANO WERE ANXIOUS
c;toubl e wlde hom e
J
TO SERVE YOU
bedro oms
carpeted
F YOU DON T SEE THE
modern k tchen
rur &lt;"J
PROPERTY YOU WANT
w&lt;'lter Includes retr g
IN THIS AD CALL WE
ra nge v ng &amp; d nmg room
MAY BE ABLE TO FINO
fu rn lure washer dryer T FOR Y OU
cent ral air Pr ce Sl9 SOD
Call Wood ln ~ura nc e &amp;
BUILD A HOME Along
Real Esta1e4 46 1066
Rt 1 Crown City we have
E11enlngs Russell Wood
2 lots w th &amp; total of 91
446 4618
frontage Buy both for only
Ken Morgan446 0971
ss 000

41186

·~--~~

MODERN home Kyge r Creek
School Chesh re school bus
ural p_h_
36_
773~ - - - - NEW Mob le Home n Gall pol s
one or 2 adults on ly house fur
n shmgs central o r Ph 446
0038

2 Saddle ho ses one Reg Ten
nessee Walke r
one port
Quarter Ho se Ph 367 7303
UGHT we ght ch mney blocks
Go II pols Block Co Ph o446
'2783
-r-"

FOR SALE 20 head of cattle
p ~o~~56 b035
GRAVElY T oc o
phone 446

2925
USEQ Furn lure Duncan Phyfe d
ng room su te full s ze foam
moll ass one d nette table
one co I spr ngs full s ze Cor
b n and Snyder Furn 995 2nd
Ave 4461171

TARA
TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townhouses
1112 Baths
Pay Only One Ut1hty
Addison, Oh10
For lnformahon
Cali Shirley Adkms

367-7250

MUST sell I ke new 2 pc Span sh
I v ng room su te exc cond
FURN Apt $160 ut ht es po1d
4463712
I rst floor near Method st Chur
ch adults -446 4416 after 1
FIREWOOD Ca ll 388 9930 even
pm
ngs

HAY
T MONTHY
clo11 e
olla Jfo m lCed Als o Tlmonthy
hoy o ge bole s never got
wet Ph 367 7350

CARPETS and hfe too con be
beauhfullf you use B ue
Lu s A Ren electr c shompooer
$1 Central Supply

Co

MASSIE
REALTY
32 Slate Street
Ph 446 1998

A A N1bert Broker
Cr ou se BecK Noaa
Nea r ly new bnck an d
fr ame spl t level home on a
large 1 3 a tot Th s hom e
offer s .4 br
'l baths lg
f rep ace
v r m 15x2.4
carpet 1drapes bu I t n
double Oven and range
d shwasher
comb ned
r etr g fr eezer and n
tercom Must see to ap
preCiale
Keller Yale College Road
- 4 year old bri ck ranch er
J bedrooms carp e ng ex
msu a ion n wa ll s a nd
ce lt ng lg f rep lace
fanta stlc f a m y room
elec baseb oard heat bu t
m d shwasher and ra nge
spit r a fen ce and a 10lC 12
block storage room
Centerpoint
Stor e
bul d mo
w ttl
1 v ng
quar te r s and equ pment to
put you n bus ness for
vourse f
Add ls~n
0 der
3
bedro om home on fa r ge ot
A lso two ad(o nlng lots
Th s property hCis fron tage
on Route 7
Mob le Hom e Lot - A l
un I t es In place for your
mo b I e home Located 5
mi les trom Gal Ipolls on
Route 141

l:..;;;:.;,~;..;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;:,.""

32 GOOD USED TRACTORS

Several usf!d Co n P ckers
New Grav y 80JCes
Bush Hogs Sole Pnced
65JC 12 HOME excel cond 3 or 2
New Masse Ferguson Tre e ors
pr ced
th ~ mo
br pr ced to st I Economy Sole
Mob1leHomes 446 1425
I GALLIPOLIS TRACTOR INC
YOUR MASSIE FERGUSON
50.x 10 2 b mobile home good
DEALER
cond fu n $2 100 t~ o phone
~ R 7 Galhpol s Ph -4.46
calls
1403 Eoste
AvP
1044
Economy Mob 1&lt;.: l lo e' So les

LOVELY BRICK RANCH
Thl• attractive home has 3 bedrooms 2 baths fam ily
room wlth one firep lace n ice kitchen with built In
range an d dishwasher beaullful carpet throughout
located on a 1% acre land on Rl 160 Only 539 BOO
LISTING - N ce 3
RIO GRANDE
•k•·rl• oom
home
w th
12x60 mob e home
n den
full
bedrooms
bath
bo•serriEtni lovely k1tchen 1
with
range
Located ln
refr gerator has a
Call today for
bu ld ng
suitab l e
en I
garage or ot h er
mere al busmess w l
apar)ment over head
$27 500
IN TOWN
home has

basenlein~~~~\:~·s;~~.i~~~

full
lot mm
good buy
w II help

LAND
Bu1 d ng ot n
Port er Ca today for more
Information

MOBILE home
small
8•35
Hlltop D Coli of er 6 675

GOOD USED FURN
2 Bdr SUites 1 sofa ('2) sofa
bed &amp; cho r 3 reel ners 2
refr g white and go! range
(Ike new) 3 wa shers 2 dryers
wood toble 4 cho~rs 5 t:ho rs
round maple loble &amp; 4 c~o lr s 3
beds 2 color TVs 2 block &amp;
wh1te TVs m1sc other tems
Coll.(46' 03n ~yt me
I

BUD McGHEE Manager

THERE IS NO SIGN In
front of this llll br ick home
located In Covntry A re
Esti!l tes however ll' ls easy
to spot Look tor a law
p'rot le L snaped hom e
s tuated on an acre tot well
tandS;caped and flat Look
ft over es you dr ve by and
the n call for an ap
po ntm ent for a personal
our of ts modern nter or

HOME SITE -

RANNY BLACKBURN,
BRANCH MANAGER

Tile porsantl property of lilt ulole of tilt lolo Purl
KMII..,. will be sold of 1 7 mile 5ovlh of Tuppers
Plains Olllo 001 State Route 7
ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR'S ITEMS
7 It gloss door oak cupboard dinner bell slone jars
and jugs 3 apple peelers grain cradle 2 corn •hellers
Iron sklllel pols and lea kettle small brass and large
lard kettles Matund Captain trunk oak wood buckel
broom making machine clots! picture frames 24 In
wood bowl 2 sewing rockors 1900 youth woOden sled
woOd wlltelbarrow hall tree plank bottom chairs
youth rocking and slrolghl chairs 2 wood beds 1 with
high head-d 2 stands chairs 461n kraut culler 2
!roadie sewing machines Clark spool cabinets wood
rockers 2 oak dressers complete socket set w'!Pden
lawn chair earn jobber wll~ plate sausage sluffer
Burc:e record player wooden pulleys fool boxes hair
clippers fireplace ppt hangor
Ma l l Pouch
lhormomel1r tin coffee and com6 boxes mise wood
box colltcllon wicker baskel scales shaving mirror
Canl!'ey laundry Iron stov~ shingle culler and other
Items we don I know about
HOUSEHOLD - MISC
Table and~ chalra Coleman fuel oil healer cupboard
lamp tree chest of drawers cedar chesl 3 pc
bookcase bedroom sulle rollaway bed glider lawn
chairs mise dl5hes linen small appliances what nol
sl!elf 12ft extension and 16 It ladder sweeper 3 H P
rotofll(er platform scales wood boxes and bin mise
harld tools and saw
Cash
lunch

AG~NCY

.. ' ..
.... .

z...rm

l 973 CASTLE mob1l e home 1-4 ~e
65 2 br 2 ba ths o r
cond fully ca rpe ted Ph 367
0160

1975 12 x 60 2 8R otol elec
c a r cond metal
bulld ng underp nnlng $400 00
do wn tak v oY er poym en ts
$10.o62 Ph 446 9S28

WISEMAN

--=

Ph

1974 K rk woad J4JC65 2 b 01r
ccnd 10JC7 me at bldg fu n
shag carpel double 011en exc
ccnd $7800 Ph 446 10'2

THE

For Fast Results Use The SundJJy,Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Branch

CITY- QUIET STREET
- Comtortebte 6 rm 5 and
bath with a fa r ge ba ck Slt5 PEA ACRE - 6S A
porch and garaoe located hill farm lsloce~ted about 11
on Fifth Ave Priced to se ll m1tes SW of ci ty Abou lA
cleared w th the balance
$18.000
wooded
VINTON AVE
N ice
older 1 h story hom e sits CAN YOU AFFORD A
on a arge le\le t lot and HOME &amp; FARM OVER
offers 1 r ms and bath SIOO 000? We ll we M~e
downstairs plus 2 up f one f you qual fy make
needed Th fs hOme ha s an appotntment to see th iS 4
been per tta lty remodeled
vr o d bnck located about
and has carpeted floors
7 ml from HMC Th s
new furnact and slnlc.
beauty s s tuated on 104
basement
garage and acres of and n the c ty
large shade trees
school dlst with J• m
front ege
on
Reccoo n
CITY - VACANT LAND Creek
0 her
special
Approx 51:1 acre1 running
features are 4 BR:s 3 1
from Fourth Ave
to
baths fem ly r m w th WB
Chickamauga
Cre ek
f re p lace formal dinlng
S6 500 Don t wall to buy
rm
formal ent ra nce
buy and wa t
com pl e e k !chen
arge
large
BAR BUSINESS &amp; HOTEL L R laundry rm
Be your own boss w th scre ened n patio attache d
2 ca r garage plus another
th•s once n a lifeti m e tn
ves tment LOCI! ed on a new 24 x 36 concrete bl ock
garag e
No s ghtseers
corn er lot n M ddleport
plea se
Ca ll for more nformat/ on
PRICE REDUCED - Near
LOTS FOR S ALE
Located on Neighbor hood
V nton -41 A c eanroll no
p&amp; sture Good fen ces larg e
Rd L ncoln Pike George
Creek Rd
and Rodney
pond old home w tM 7 rms
Harr sburg Rd Finane ng
and b&amp;th and ee l llr house
Ia''" lloblo
$22 500
-COMMERCIAL SITE - 5
&lt;BEDROOMS IN TOWN lots and older home on
Nlc:e comfortable 1 2 story
State Route 7 n Kana uga
home on Evens Heights
Lots of pot enl a for SJ.4 000
offer s room to spare for
your orowlng family
CLOSE TO MIN,-ES 116
Where else can you get ll
ac fa r m moStl y clean
fu ll basement family rm
level and roll no land Good
wlth gas f repla ce large
home
_ _
kitchen end dlnlno are a for
PIZZA BUSINESS An
only S25 SOO
elCce llent opportun ty for
some bus ness m nd ed
LAND CONTRACT
person Th s lll rge corner
Almost 12 A of level end
lo t w th a modern br ck
r o 1 ng land w th e sm a I 2
bu td ng s a good place to
BR and bath home pond
start Can be bouoht with
and lots of pnva cv located
or w thout equ pm ent Call
n Morgan lwp
for appo ntmt:~nl

FALL SAL E
197'2 I '2x 65 Cas tle 3 Br
lq60 10JC50 Von Dyke
1959 1OJCSO R cho dson
1960 10x50 Regal
1977Sofor 18ft lravel trole
2 used tra11eltro11e s
T Sole
Mobile Homes Corp
1220 Eoste nAve
Gall pol s Ohio
Bonk Finane :"c9
.__,_ _~-~

~--'---1976 Shultz Mob le Homft lved n
5 mas new cenlr•o l a r metal
bu ldmg nduded pnce $7 000
Ph 446 3769 of er 4

RUSSELL WOOD
REALTOR
446-1066

World's largest, the leader
since 1900 in serving the
notion's buyers and sellers.

LPN 1 neede-d for nursing home
coli $32 0288 con I ve n If
deshed
BURGER Chef hos opening n PI
Pleasant R+pl.y Ckarleston
W Vo and Gall fpoll1 Oh o for
manager at pos I ons 1nclud+ng
manager tro nee• au Slant
noge rs and anoc ate
nager If you ore look ng for
ong term career n the tost
food busll'l8U w1th eJCcallent fr
nge benef1ta pleas• coH Miss
W lma Blane for an nterv1ew
appt at or•o code 304 7'1.7
2217 Mondo~ thru Frl 9 om
o 5 p m An eque1l opportun ty
i mploye

'

STROUT REAL TV

Med col Technologist
FOR LABOR)IITORY WO k EKG
ond aula(" w th pol enb and
phys1c~ off1ce Wr te PO Box
834 J.funhngton W Va

RENTAL ovo loble I rst of October
now occup ed by Certro l Soya
of the north s de of Sycomo e
S ee be ween Second and
; 11d Avenue reosonoble rent
Ia ge porklr g area co li for on
oppo n men

EUREKA - Look
ovc v old er home
v ew of the nver
bedrooms
arge
room f~r ep ace n l fv l
room garage Goo d buy
52 1 700

WE NEED LISTINGS

Evenmgs Call
Dou g weth erholt 446 112~4
Lee Jahnson 256 6140
Earl Wmters 446 3828

10 ACRES - L ook ng for
tha per feci bu ldmg s te'
Th s land s clear on the
f ont and n•ce woods n the
back
Locate d
on
Ebenezer Car mel Rd fr om
Rlo Grande Calf today for
mo re nfor ma 10n

--................._.........,.

noo

New Ltsttng -2 Fireplaces for a Cozy Wmter
Tht s ts a roomy J or 4 bedri'V',.. home with formal
dining hug e family roon f'nl null basement 2 car
garage excellent kttche ~~ '2 m le from town
You II absolutelv lovP t Price d under $50 000 00
GREAT GRANDFAtHER BUILT IT
And lived In tf Gr andmother used t for a restaurant
and now Mother and Dad have one of the very n cest
anftque stores tn the area At present tt s used for
residential and com mercial You can use tf to su t
yourse lf Thts really ts a fine old home wt1h a most
spectacular f replace You II love tt and love t
Includes 27 76 acres of prime development land w ith
water and sewer Don t let th s one sltp away from you
On Raccoan Creek
N ce year old one story
fr ame on 75JCJOO foot ot
w h 75 foo t fron age on
Ra ccoon Creek Pane l ng
and dr y wan carpeted
thr oug hout
a lu m num
s dmg centra l elect r ic hea t
an d a r new k tchen n
1915 c tv Schools
th th s
home you wlll n e~er need a
summ er or weekend hom e

w

1 1 Acre
Four yea r old 1344 sq fl
frame home near Add son
ca rp eted throughout
3
be drooms n ce k tchen
range oven re fr gera tor
cen tral heat and a r
natural gas two stor y
garage 24x36 co uld have
n1 ce apartment upsta irs
Spa claus &amp; Spo11ess
Yo u have admired th s
custo m bu It J be droom
hOme and now you can
make
t your s for male
d 1'1 ng beaut ful k !chen 2
ba ths 2 car gar age an d
large landscaped ol
A Ntce Home In Town
1/'J blocks from clt y park 3
bl ocks to schoo l We don t
often have th s n1 ce of a J
bedroom home n town
Larg e 1 v no room w th
f replace La rge dl n1ng
mod ern
ki tchen
and
heat ng system 2 baths
and u t I t y room
new
s d ng and small lot
Restore Th s On e
And make yourself a
bundle owner will make
you the bes t barga in you
eve r he~d on l h1 s e room 2
bath hom e Its ol d but ''
was one of those rea good
on es when bu It Modern
kU and he;\t no sys tem

Somethmg Ntce
You ll agr ee For SJJ 900
th s pleasa n moder n 3
bedroom
2 stor y wilt
please vou Includes large
fam ly room fo rm al d n ng
and garage
On Ga.rfteld Extension
One stor y ranch st y e
th r ee bedroom fr ame hom e
n excellent cond t on Dry
wall
and
panelmg
plumb ed for washer and
drye r fo r ced a r gas heat
carpo rt c ty wale
Ex
ce len appearance

L ofs Lots Lots
We ha ve a good select on of
bu ld ng lots Lake frof'lt
rura l or subd v son your
choic e $4 ooo oo up
A Spec al Place
brand
ne w
3
L arge
bedroom ranch on 10 acre
lot 15 m n from c ty Tt) s
beauhfuf br ck and ce dar
home w It thr II the most
d ist nna te buyer Space
age k tchen 3 very fanc.y
baths
handsome -w b
f rep ace bea ut fu.l car
pet ng Th s on e w II take
your brea th away Owner
tr ans f erred

ONUS 3S near HMC Th s
roomy th r ee bedroorn
hom e has a very n ce
k !chen hardwood floor s
ba se m en t w th fam ly
r oom
ut lil y room and
garage 521 900

measure
79 Acrimonious
8 1 Otlopr lng
1 Courteous
82 Wire nail
7 Altteslva
83 Narcotic
aubatam:e
12 SumptuCll&amp; meat 84 Wllhered
85 Tlbolan gezelle
17 Nulrlment
8 7 Putln
21 Avoids
safekeeping
22laal
89 Grasp
23 Tree ot birch
90 Glossy lab&lt;lc
fomtly
24 Heraldic bearing 92 Frolic
94 Footwear
25 Note of scale
95 Shrad
28 Propostllon
96 Jogs
28 Hindu gutllr
91 tmprove
30 t.tolh ad olsell
99 1naane
dltenae
32 Negative prellx 100 Toward shelter
101Tears
33 A11ampl
102 Wagers
35 Narrate
103 Bow
37 Jury I tal
106 Unit of currency
39Bebome
107 Note at sca le
40Eggs
109Worm
41 lll ln
1 1D Deities
conjunct on
111 Nul
43 Disturbance
113 Form
45Aepulse
47 Compass polnl 114 Prohibit
115 Pronoun
48Commll
116 Evergreen trees
doprada!IMa
49leadlng player s 117 Smalla"'ount
118 Encountered
52 Egg shaped
120 Exist
!54 Instructs
121 Tlbelan prleat
58 Lock ot hair
122 Distance
57 Calling

NEW

THE LOCAL
MARKET house detached
26K37
concrete
block
garage and ol6x411 barn
w th stall s located on y l
m les trom M eigs M ne No
1 call today or you ma y be
too late 35 acres

meaaure

61 Brother at Jacob 123 Condeocendtng
look
82 Body ot water
t 24 Toll
63 Partner
126 Showered
64 Prcpos111on
86 Anernoon parly 128 Ftsh tram
moving boat
67 Wa1W1t ollndla
130 Easllnd an
68Pinochte term
981101'
69 A alate labbr I
132 Letlall
71 Man sname
134 Cloaslly
72Mix
135 Repelltlon
74 Spirited horse
136 Noteofsca le
78 Ward off
137 Surgical thread
77 Sunburn
139 Frog
78 Prlnler s

1 Saucy
2 Above
3 Note or scale
4 Arllflcal
languege
5 Temporarv
shelter
6 Chemical
compound
7 Pfennig (abbr I
6 Three loed
sloths
9 Cut
10 Turk lc
tnbesman
1 1 K1te
12 Nolo of scale
13 Antlered animal
14Hebrewmonth
15 European finch
(pi I
16 Barter
17 Enemy
1B ConJUnC tlon
19 Fru11 (pi I

31ACIII.._SIIICIIII'ICI UNO
O•rner will l!elp finance qualified buyer This home
musl sell this week 11 Is e Rul Est ale Bargain let s
move In you II be the one lhat ga ins Nice modern 6
rooms home forced air furnace S2S monthly on budget
9 acres woods 10 aeres pasture land with h &amp;ere good
I
fed pond stocked wllh fish round concrete
I ~iatrWlr1a I rough 10 acres good tillable land small
garden spact Very nice If you have been
llclclklng, here II Is call now 525 000
ALMOST NEW
Been lived n a short llrne
3 bedroom home toea teo n
Fa lrf eld Acres
Subd
Modern eat tn k tcti en w ith
all buil t Cabs Nlce bath
electr c heat Ttlermopllne
w ndows
slng e
Ci!lt
garage New llsltnO do n 1
walt to 'See Pri ced to se t

FIREPLACE
1 2 baths
thr ee bedr oom s ots of n ce
carpet and much more all
~n a very pretty br ck C ty
sch ool s Calf soon It won I
l11st long
We have other I st ng s 1f
you are buylng or selling
ca ll VS Rulty to day

Alt of
shown
only

SMALL FARM
LIVING
Toda y s c ho ce ap
proximately 75 acres of
pasture and fa r mlng and
Ni ce
1
rooms
full
basement g bedrooms
good barn
two other
outs de bu ld ngs fences
falr pl ent y water for
c(tlt fe
sma I tobacco
acreage we are r eady to
sell

our I s1tngs are
by appotntment

GAU.IPOLIS, OHIO

8R00MS 2ACRES
Th s s a very attract ve J
bedrooms ham.e,~ built in
k1t chen melds gar bage
d1Sposa1,~h\er. top s ave
wall oV'@ll refr gere tor with
lee
maker
F lnl shed
~asernent
Beaut ful larg e
trees In background Th e
comfor t of c ty I fe th e
beau ty and entoym en t of
country I v ng a lith s close
to Gall pot son State High
way

/
20 Procrlltlnelea
98 Fabulous bird
27Mixlure
102 Unlnternllng
29 TI/PIIIOS
per ton
31 Symbol lor
104 Wet
tellurium
1011 T. .nllllrOke
34 Annually
107 Dcmeatlctted
36 Affecl on
108 T~rkllh dlcrM
38Rented
110Liquldmuauro
40 Clly In Ru1111
11 1 Fragmenll
42 Ploylng card
ol 1 12 Wanl
44 Frull coke
114 Fru II
46 Falelfler
116 Abrnlvo
46 Ur110 on
lnt1rument
49 Frlgl1ton
1 17 Woman a
50 Anlmola clow
nld&lt;name
51 Ctrnpasapolnt 119Frul1cake
53 Falsehoods
121 Unltolllallan
55 GrtOk letter
currency
58 Related
122 Speck
56 Decayed
123 Note of scale
60 Household pela 125 Booly
82 Awallsetlltm.,l 127 Symbol fill allvor
85 Sulllbla
128 Dellnnl•
68 Fotm.,teddrlnk 129 Man a name
89 Thin
t30 New•I
lronsporent
131 Wonderars
motorial
133 Ache
70 Ire
136 Old musical
72 Fathers
Instruments
73 Rues
138 Slllrw11 posl
7 5 Down goddasa
140 VIa ton
76 Liberty
143 Roman numbor
77 Ctrnmonplace
1 050
79 Vegeteble lpl l
Gaelic
144
80 Underground
14B Rock IIIII
parlo o1 plont
82 Wide
146 Grool Lake
83 Hinder
150 Walk unsllldlly
84Coasos
151 Femslah«oe
8B Danish lend
153 Snoke
dlvlalon
154 Observe
68 Unll ol electrical 156 Roden!
meaaurement
89 Otnner course
158 Worthless
90 Sce11er
IMvtng
91 Gel up
181 Flfotlalanda
93 Pierces
wlllrlwlnd
95 HIW1er
t63 Spanllh lobbr l
97 Arlie lea ol
185 French article
lurntture
187 Pronoun

BRICK CONSTRUCTION
-GALLIPOLIS
We are p1ehed to offer for
sale lhts 8 room s nice older
home n one of the bes t
locattons of Gall palls 4
bedroom basement Nat
gas forced air turM ce
Th s home has had a
Beauty Salon operati on n
It for years Own lh s n ce
home and
your own
bus ness now
3 BEDROOM BRICK
tmmedtale
possession
owner has moved to a
farm Be the f rst to look at
th s n ce br lclc. home near
the hospltal Has a large
living room modern eat n
kltcflen w1th all buut ln
cabinet$ and range Iaroe
bath
In Gallipolis Cl1y
School Olstrlcl Won t Jnt
lona Priced to sell
LOOK THIS OVER
70 Acre Farm modern six
room home good barn
new tool shed utility bldg
Line fences al wo~en wire
42 acl'les B G pasture 10
acres wood s " 22 acr es
meadow and
tillabl e
plenty of locust trees 1200
lb to bacco base ThiS f11 rm
s In the Gatllpolls ScMo l
Dlstr ct Call Now

110 ACRES PLUS
Vacant A wgodland
wonderlal'ld
some
pasture and tillable land
L.ess than $160 per ecrt

VA FHA 30 yr finonc ng lr&amp;land
Mortgage 77 E State Athens
592 3051

PRICE REDUCED
Call oday for new low
pr ce on thls f ine 3 BR:
hom e
located
w hin
walk ng
d1stan ce
of
schools
churches and
stores Ea sy ma nt enance
wUh a Ul'l;l s1dmg and Nu
Sash window s All ap
p ances
to
sel
up
housekeeping Call today
for your appo ntment

Call us nght no¥' ,

Offfce 446 1694
EVENING$
Charles M Nnl
446 1546
J Michael Ntal
446 I SOl
Slm N.JII
446 1358

SlEEPING Rooms weekly rates
~Ce ntro! Hotel

6 ROOM house ln c ly Wrlte to
8 o~e "27 n care of Gall pol s
T bune
9 room ouse 4 br 1 \1. bat hs full
basement
garage
1 ocre
g ound outbu fd1ng
Phone
3888.,83Qr6 t4 4711472
2 x 60 MOB! t JiOME 2
oea oom rurn shed on Bob
McCormick Rd S m n dr ve
fro town no pels adults
only DE:'"' ll"'-t Ca11446 2543

'l

·'-""---

SPRIN!i_.VA.U,EY
GREEN APTS.
1 &amp; 2 Br Unfurn

Apts
446 1599

4
~~

J.

J s

4

~iiOJIHI·J~~SISIJJ.

--

SLEEPING
Hotel

BEA UTIFUL
COUNTRY HOME
PLUS70A LAND
This home ts vt:rv at
tractive modern n every
way
6 roorr s
J
bedrooms s c ose t t
2
ba th s shower kl chen
Ia rge a ld pretty Monv
more desirabl e fea tur es
nc udlno
co rn er
to
blacktop r \)!ld
J ca r
garage 2 porches pel/o
sm all Qtecn Muse w th
furna ce barn 70 A limed
and
f ertUlzed
B G
posture
o s of we nut
trees Check w h us today
12 ACRES RT 32S
Near Meigs M ines has
bo rn storage bu lt dlng
fllr m pond Presentty has
one trai l er ren tal spl\ce
tllJ! ca n be developed nto
a nlce Income propertv
168A CRES
NEAR PORTER
New house v der constr
plus 6 r oom tern ho use
bar 8. oth er oulbulldlngs
Approx
140 ac r es of
pastv tl and
Imber &amp;
appr o&gt;&lt; 28 acres of ~ liabl e
land A ll m nere rig ht s
goes some good tences All
la nd &amp; hOuses tor only
555 DOO Now
148ACRES
GOOD CAT TLE FARM
Lots of posslbltf lles 2 eroe
stock berns good concret e
round s tock water I n
trough
JO acres
In
cu 1 ve t on 1200 ft toba cco
b11se Lot s of new tenc ng
Pl enty water ln field s 10
acres 1 mber owner re.,lly
anx lous to se
can be
bou gMI liS &lt;'I singe un t or
smatter a moun s
TARA ESTATES
ONLV$48 000
Beaut fut B room hou se
1811 1 sq ft 11\t lng spece
Featuring 3 B R wUh de uxe
walk In cl ose t s 2 baths g
at ractlve F R beautlru l
roc k fleld stone fireplace
Formal OR Bulll In kit
chen Im por ted llght fix
lures and pew er door
hardwar e .« lso enjoy the
use of Clu b House &amp;
Swimming Pool
Price
Reduced to S"ij 00 0

HIDOEN CHALET
One of Gel lie Countys most
unique homes
0 roo m s
plus 2 battls featur ing 2
bedroom s 6n tl'l e..ma n eve!
and the ma st er bedroom on
th e sec ond teve t w th
Slid ng g an doors l ~ad lno
toll blllco ny Has a sunken
pit with wood bu rn ng
fireplace d ining room and
mod ~r n kitchen com plete
w lth all buill ln cabinets
d shw.asher dlsposaf and
range
Hom e Is tot a l
efeclrlc w th centra ! air
The Int er or of this s very
rustle
with
bea med
Cilthedral celllnos This
could be your dream hom e
st t tln g on 6 acres ot
woodland ApproM 3 rnlfes
trom Gall polls No slgh t
seers please
7 ROOM~
4 BEDROOMS
Gallipolis School Olstrlcf
ba se m ent
1 ,_
baths
modern kit chen co m plete
with blrch ca binets F A
furnac e ca r por t 2 w oad
burn ng f repleces femlly
r oo m large tot wlth fruit
trees
and
a s torage
building W thln 5 m les of
Gallipolis N ice hom e 111 a
oood price
COMMERCIAL
BUILOING &amp; SITE
Sta te Hlghwav 1 Nort h
Masonry Building wit h
brick front bulldlno !Ike
new ..,pprox :o ze 30 x24 2
story Le¥el lot tronts 175
ft on State H tgt"iway 7 Call
now
2 STORY
COUNT~Y HOME
11. acres s m les from
Galllpolls
7 rooms
4
bedrooms
partial
basement fue l all forced
alr furne ce rural wate r
Gall polls School Dlst
Garden space frontage on
Ra ccoon Creek
MIDDLEPORT
BUSINEiSINCOME
PROPERTY
Up to S660 00 per mon th
Rentals plus a beautiful 7
room (J bedrooms) home
to lfve In yourself alum
sidlno good grade nice
front por ch ots of bu11t n
cabinets table top rang e
wall oven laundry tubs
nat gas forced a r furna ce
cen tral air Wood b rnlnQ
firepla ce Lots of shrub
berv level grassy lot A
beautiful place lllus a n ce
lncome Priced r loht

&lt;V

l BEDROOM
1 Acre PIus - teve ap
proM
1 ~
miles f r o m
hospltal on b acklop rd
Plenty ot garden space
rural water country llvlng
Close to Gafllpolls Priced
only S18 ooo

WANT TO OWN BUT NEED
HELP IN FINANCING?
Nice 2
bedroom form home
whiCh has been completely
remodeled recently large born
n good con d I on oil th s s I
t ng on oppro~e mately 17 acres
near town Mob l~t home en ol
spot on property Good nvest
men! rental opporlun ty Coli
.uft Hl49 after 6 o m

!BED RO OM S
RT 35 WEST
Galtlpot s Schoo f Dl st 2
car gar age 1 , batMs 5
rooms r anc h s yl e wlth
1 248 sq fl ll vl ng space
stor m door s &amp; Window s
m odern kltchen with d !h
washer L arge lo t Sec this
one now
6ROOM5 '2 ACR ES
Th s ls a very a lira ~. lve J
bedr ooms home built m
k tchen Includes garbage
dlsposa l count er top stove
wall ov en re fr ocr a tor wllh
ce
maker
F inished

MUST sell pr ce educed pr co
$14 900 by ow lit 2 b
..
m les out M II Creek Ph -446
169 1

•

lBEDROOMS
LARGE FAMilY
ROOM
Laroe lot In e nice com
munlty fr am e with brick
iront
FA
furn11cu
modern kltc l
pollO
u tltlty room n o Jorn ba th
Mu sl see: It 1$ 11011 u U s
pric ed right t'DII now
LAROE
COUNTRY HOM F.
PLUi 19 ACRES
7
room s
frame
4
bedrooms wHI Mil
ots
of buil t In cob nets good
sma ll barn bla ck top ro11d
Pr lc:e R&amp;d uccd
4BEDROOM S
ROUTE ~88
G,al ll polls S&lt;;hoo D strlct
Lol!l of room b21!C llt'llf
family room
2 h balls
ga rege n Odt:r
k tchun
wood burnir g
f repla ce
large lola d uard u11 spe cc
stora ge bu d lt u llpprox
8 x10
Coso to RoCJn oy
Pr ced rl11ht

c''

Laru e

c"rv t:o d Homo

2300 s(l ft o Hv lnn sp I C(l

4

bed roo ms 2 boll s formnl
lv ng roo
w t 11 W 0
flreptace 1e 1 lly room
c ompletely
furnls l od
k.ltc hen countur lop rru yu
bu ilt In wall uv
ll!.! t us{ l
? d shwll sher 2 Cftr y
~gt:
located o
1 a cr
1
Ga ll'l'olts C ty ~c; h o o l 01 ~ 1
See h s
DAI RY L) () V .CROWN CI TY
Going protll ab u I.Ju:&gt;h en
390 fl tr on ~Oil t n Slflh"! U I
7 A ll bu t dh g s u d sl mJ
equ i pment yOCli Lnryu
paved ereo t:8SY Access
C.ooa ln vestmunt propor tv
Th s fs a ra st dev eloping
arell Ttl l! o fy rcstourtmt
within severA l
m /l et.
lnqu re tod l'IV
LOT &amp;
MOBIL E HOME
In
Port er
10 x$0
4
bedroom $ E c:o na
N ice
lot J05 acre le¥eJ Pr iced
only $6 900
118 ACRE FARM
NEAR RIO GRAND E
Gall polls set ool District ~
barns 2 sheds appr oJC 20
acre~ of ptJsluro 110 acres
of good 1/ mbor (Oek
Pin e) Approx 20 acres or
tltlable la nd All n lncra l
rlghts goes to ba cco bas(!
s ome far m rn achln crv
livestock !hogs a d laying
hens) l Rur al wo ter taps
peld A ll crops goos 7
mob te hon cs l o e l S:
14 x 6S ) lind o s room a 'lie
house Jus 1/sl tJd

a.

,
I

213 Acn ~s
6 Room homo F A
na ce
wood b u
f replace .4 bll rns
house 500 oo llon mll,k nltroill
good fe clng a ll rr11
rlghts
lots o!ljfl
l~~\~::11
appro xgoes
25 acres
~
Off Sl ate Rout e 219

4 Bedrooms largo living roOf
d ntng room lorgo k chon 1 :h
baths ;"J 2 wood bu r no
hreploces lu ll boso ncnt 2 co
garage Located w thl' walk ng
d1ston ce of town
Vor y
(eosonobly pr ced Call 446
B575 4&lt;6 1000 or 446 2265

---

NEW mob le home tn Golhpol s
one or 2 adults only house fu
msh1ngs control a r Ph 446

0038
2 BR mab1l e home Located
Two m les from town c ty
conven ences good cond Ph

'46 1365

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~OI.lll~OS

ll'llr.. VICinl
tall
tboa•lll•l homo silo•
loc.lltcl •ttlle lap of t I
on Circle Drlvo In
Plants
SuWI'vlst.n,
which
Is
ius! off
lull¥111o
Road
P,..porfy llnos •ro
marllod wllh whllt
at•ko•
Owner will

•
lit roo- - lot are oil

..

'

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I

2 BR mobile hom e 4.t6 0756 bet
ween1_ond_!_p ~

tlli~JSI J!n Wi iiV

IIIYiil

''ID11MII)IIVJJ.I401111¥

liGHT housekeep ng roo m Pork
Central Motel
·c:....,.._ _ _

IN GALLIPOLIS--NICE HOME
BeoutiMiy wooded lot walking dlst•nce to city
schools J Bedrooms forma I dining room nice modern
k itchen large family room wllh W B firepl ace In
basement full';' carpeted finished gMage nat gas
forced 8lr furnace central air Won t last long se-e It
now

JIVI1l'IIIJVIS3S'iio;iiSO~l

H¥11 0HJ .IOJJ J.S IIIJ.SI AO I

LOW week ly qnd monthly rote;;!
L1bby Hotel 446- 1743

Fastellt Growing Real Estate Agency

Wilis T. Leadingham
Realtor

NEAL REALlY

-- -

Ph Home 379-2184

~

we need L stmgs
all th e
Wtseman Agency 446 36-43
Ga11la Co s Larg est Rea
Estate Sal es Agency
Office 446 3643
Ike W1seman 446 l7J6
E N w seman 446 4 oo

TRAILER lot one m le f om HMC
Phoneo4o4 6 3805
FURN op
1 bedroom n7;
S\75 Uti It es pd Adults &lt;t46
4A16af er6 pm

Assoc~ate

TO

THE PRICE IS REOUCED
on th s all br ck ra nch
ocated '" th e Vlllage of
Northup Three bedroo ms
(26x 15) living room Jl 2
baths plu s many other
tea ur es
C t v schools
CALL TOD AY

428 2nd AVE.

DOWN

1ssaciate

'

PHONE 446-0552 - ANmME

141 Article
142 Mans nlekname
143 Speechless
145 Cut
147 Weary
149llmb
152 Symbol lor
eerlum
153 Changes
155 Drain
157 Roman lyronl
159 Bebylonlan
dally
160 God ot love
162 Worms
1B4 Pertalnr~gto !he
kidneys
166 Beller venllleled
168 Wolk
169 Prec1p lous
17D Wrlt~ng table!
171 CCIUrage

Memll Carter

THE PRIC E s reduced on
1 32 acres lou teet four
m les from Gallipolis on
Ro ute 141

SUNDAY, Oct 10, 1976
ACROSS

Bonnte Stq
Ph. Home 446-2885
Gauu Countv~

IF WHAT YOU expect In
an all br•ck home is natural
vas central a 1r Ph baths
3 roomy bedrooms lots of
nice carpe t a mod ern
kllchen with adjoining
d nlng room an attac hed
two car garage wl1h tots of
storage a w•ll landscaped
one third acre lot plus a
pool (top of ground)?: This
cou d bt your new home

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

59 Min a name
On Wi seman Road
Br gad 1er mob e home n
excellent cond t on and 1 3
ac re s Panel walls carpet
a aver all furn lure goes
f rsl road to r ght beyond
Cadm us off SR 141 gong
sout h Pr ced to sell S1 000

AT 'rHE EOGEofthecty
on Rt sae you wlll fmd a
Iaroe br ck hO m e This
hOmes ts on a tot with 80ft
frontage and 400 ft depth
T h ~ owners are moving out
of state and would I ke o
self very qul ~lc. If you are a
qua \ fed buyer call for an
a pp today The pr ce IS
only S33 000 lmm ed Pa ss
Pr ce Reduced
ITS AN OLDER HOME
Wll h J or 4 B R natural gas
hea t c tv schOol s ots of
f ke new carpet 1• ,acre fl&amp;t
lot and the PRICE I S
R tGHT $23 000 Call VS
Rea lt y oday

CHES HIR E N ce
GR EE N ACRES Is the
bedrool'(l ho tne w th faml
for you Th1S cozy
room
love ly
ba
offers 3 Brs a larg e
basemen
natural
I ng room bu It n k I
furnace 1 car gn•a• •• chen and a full ba sement
Loca ted Qn 3 nice
Plus a ~erv fr endfy nelgh
Price $29 500
bar hood

Pul Anotlltr lot On The Fire
Yes t his one Includes w b fireplace a lamlly room 3
'lice size bedrooms lovely I vlng room large built In
kll and big lot In clly school di strict and lhe owner Is
most anclous to !el l

New Home 11 Acres Farm Pond
You can now move to the country and enjoy all the
modern conven tences
Thts beauty tn clu des 3
bedrooms family room formal dlnmg full baiement
2 car garage Jlh baths and a heat pump The picture
cant speak for this one you must see t Price will be
00
under $50

THERE 15 NO DOUBT
about lt U you lt ke plush
carpet
la rge
roomy
bedrooms modern 1c. tc hen
plus a fam1 t y room and
t v ng room larg e enough to
entertain your guests th s
s jus w hat you are look ng
fOr I S pr ced to Sell Caft
toda y for en appo ntrnen t

IF NEATNESS counts tnls
cozy two bedroom !could
be 31 w ill be at the top ot
your I st This little Duutv
Is sit uated on 2 9 acres of
clean land and Is only fl'lle
miles out Rt UJ

FOR SALE

BY OWNER
4 BR Home with 3 baths, nat gas, over 1
acre lot For appotntment for v1ewlng Ph
367 0106

•

·~.-~~·~-~~~~,7 ~4• L--------~------------~------~

�)

&amp;lJ-'i'heSundafJ'unes.l)entinel, Suiidav. Oct. !O,l!l'/6
...,

Long succession of

Rhodes Show
.

.

newspapers in Gallia

on medicaid

(

County's first .century
•By James Sao~s
·caUls Co. ·
Hllfodcal Society
GALUPOIJS - Back ln
the earl days of Gallia
County, folks were anxious to
receive the weekly mall so
they could read ,the local
paper. The first paper in
GaUls was the American
Standard printed by A. M.
Cummings, started and
finished in 1818.
The second paper was the
Gallla Gazette edited by
Joshua Cushing started In
1818. The Ga~tte (4 pages,
each page about II" by I~" )
was printed weekly at a cost
o to subscribers of $2 a year.
The first and second pages of
the Gazette consisted mostly
· of world and national news.
Local news was not believed
noteworthy until the 1840's.
Most of the money for the
support of the paper ca me

II Clll hllp Jill!
PIJ oil Jdur lou

If you're •••bltd.
Call me.

K.SNOWDEN

_..._..290

2• Stole St., OIIHpolla
Homt~ll

from
ads
of
local
businessmen (some. merchants used the same ad lor 3 .
years), from the county for
printing dellnqueot tax lists,
sheriff's sales, and court
news, from the post office
(list of "dea~ letters"), and
from the state for printing
state laws.
Ownership of the 'Gazette
changed
hands quite
frequently , Each owner
changed .the name of the
poper. Hence, coming in
succession were, "The Free

Democrat. It was rumored
!hat Democrats In Jackson
subsidized this Infiltration
into predomioantly Whig
lerrltory. In one year the
"Mirror" had been broken. In ·
18~5 the Democrats of
Pomeroy subsidized a paper
that was printed In Pomeroy
JACK.X.: HARRIS
and Gallipolis'. This paper
COLUMBUS
lasted one year also. Finally
in 1857 under the leadership Leadenblp for !be ll!G,OOt
of Benjamin Harrison the volunteen of tbe American
"Gallipolis Dispatch" was Cancer Society, Oblo ·
established - lasting until Division, In~ .• wa1 elected
· at tbe Obl.o Division'•
1868,
Boatd of Truotees meeting
Press, ' '
'' Phoenix '',
Support of the Proposition
"B uckeye. and Journal" , · that slavery should not he bere October 10. EJected
"Gallla
Journal
and allowed, in the west was tbe for a one-,year term 11
Lawrence Advertiser" , cause ol the birth of the prOBident of tbe cancer
"Gallia Journal and Meigs Gallla · Courier in 1850 control organlzatlon was
Advertiser", and finally the (printed until !~) and the Jack L. Hams, M.D., of
He- ·· Is
"Gallipolis Journal".
Gallia Republican started in Middletown.
presently
medical
dlreetor
The Journal was mildly 1855 (printed at Vinton until
of Middletown Works,
political until the last term of !856).
Andrew Jackson , when it · Newspapers of early Ohio Armco Steel Corporation
became a bitter enemy of apparently were exempt and Ia a member of !be
Jackson, and later Van from libel laws, for no pun-· American Medical
Buren. Hardly a_ week went ches were held back when it Association, Industrial
by that the Journal did not came to a political issue. Medical AssoclaUon and
prin( a satiric poem about Probably one of the bitterest president of tbe !!outJ&gt;.
Van Bu ren . The Journal campaigns ln the history of weotern Oblo Regloual
became firmly entrenched as Ohio was ihe IMI; race for CoDDell on AlcoboUsm. In
a Whig paper allying itself governor. That year there a~di!Joo, Dr. Hams Is au
with Ohio's most famous were . three
parties assistant profe.,or at !be
Whig paper " The Ohio State ·(Democrat, Whig and University of . Clnclnn8U
Journal".
Republican). Sahnon Chase CoUege of Medicine.
Not only was the Journal was the Republican canou!Bpoken in ito opposition to didate and following Is the
the beholder with an
Democrats but was also a way the Whig Journal stamps
insincerity in the man for
bitter enemy of Abolitionists. reported Chase's speech In anything he may advocate It was because of these 2 G a I 1 i p o I I s
strong biases on the part o( "Chase in helghth Ii of rather aside from his political adthe Journal that Gallians commanding personal ap- vancement".
won and this is how
attempted five times before pearance, strong, · grating, theChase
Journal
reported it to Its
the Civil War to establish a miD-saw voice, waiulering, readers: " Ho
ye Southern
competitor to the Journal.
unsteady ·eye, repulsive bloods, just consider yourjhe first was the Gallia expression, and to take into selves rebuked, restrained
Mirror star J by C. W. Hoy consideration his past and yunished for faults you
in 1845. He was a devoted political life on the whole have commited on the wooly
· fanatics, in by-gone days now hold your nose, for Ohio
has taken the stiffest emetic
ever administered to a State,
for she has elevaled Salmon
P. Chase to the GuberIf you own or if you are
natorial Chair of this great
planning to purchase
state, and if she does not puke
or purge to the satisfaction of
savings certificates ...
the misguided men·who were
induced to join the abolition
in his support, there is no
virtue in ipecac and tartar".
The Journal'&amp; editor also said
that the editor of the Gallla .
Republican was "too foul for
buzzards to light upon".
Frdm 1858 until 1887 Gallia
had two papers. In 1887 the
"Gallipolis Bulletin" was
organized (it was Independent at first), The next
year the Dispatch folded and
the number was back to two.
In 1871 "The Locomotive was
begun, changing its name to
the Gallipolis Ledger in 1672.
In 1682 the name was changed
to the Gallia Tribune and
later to the Gallipolis Daiiy
.
Tribune.
In the year of the Cenpay you the highest
tennial (1876), Gallia had
three weekly papers bank rate of inte"st
" Gallipolis Journal ",
allowed by law?
"GaUipolis Bulletin", and the
•
"GaUipolis Ledger".

,\\

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over a four -year period ... a
giant 7Wl'o on a six-year investment, either plan requiring a minimum deposit of only
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FOUR LOCATIONS TO BETTER SERVE YOU!

Of the Bend
By Bob Hoeflich
'

POMEROY - Gayle Price cl the Portlarxl mil nu,
merely
require
the probably one of the oldest pollllcal C8rda cia local candidate.
. The card 110ught .the suppcrl Ill J. I. Andenon, PortWid,
department to go before the
legislature and justify its for the posldoo of ' 'Infirmary director" and the year waa 1902.
progrBIOS from the ground up The "Infirmary director" sometime along the way became an
'
rather .than starting 1977-'!i appointed position, no longer left tD thede&lt;;isl~ of voters. .
Gayle has come up with !IOille Interesting facta about Mr.
budget negotlitlons with IA9t
bieMlum's ~ billion figure . Anderson, 1uch' aa :
. Mr. Andel"80!l w81lield In high eSteem in his day and held .
Why not?
quite
a few public offices Including trustee arxl school board
Beciluse, according lo Rhodes, the Public Welfare membership. He served In some kind of milltary capacity
Department Is already dudng the Clvll War. It' IJI sald .thai he saw a Rebel :·
oe put to rest.
.
preparing its budget In cavalryman, during lylorgan's Raid, niD a grey .mare in1o a ·
It will be recalled that private with the Office of hlpkory tree and kill her. A wourxled ·Rebel soldier bled to:
Rhodes "grandstanded" laat Budget and Management, death in the Andert10n h1111e on Lauck's run where the soldier ·
swruner by calling a special and "should not be placed is believed ID be burled.
"Mr. Anderson had the first phonograph In Portland ud
session of the legislature to under the added burden of
get an inunediate soludon to beginning Its budget prepara- took It owr tD the Herxlerson School where he played, ''The ·
' Preacher and the Bear" Ill the delight of the students•.
th~- problefi1 just alter a lions anew In October."
"He was a crack sllot with a nuzzle loader and records In .
special legislative e&lt;mmittee
When Rhodes submitted his
had begun to take a calm, budget In March of 1975, It his dliu-y, 'Shooting match at Joseph Lawrence. Shooters '
ratiCilallook.al the situation. called for greater levels of present, Will VanCooney, D. J. Lawrenee, A. Lawrepce, J. J ••
:
Then t)le governor tried Ill spending, and there is no Bryan, A.ShaMon, J.l. Anderson. Jan. I, 1885.'
invade the · legislative reason to believe It will be
"Ow-ing the fall season Ander11011 would load his johnboat ;
chambers to bring up the otherwise the next .:time, with garden sluff aitd row all tbe way from his home on
subject again when the despite the governor's Lauck's R.un to hta daughter's place on the Uttie Kanawha. :
'hen the wind blew he used a sail. At night he camped on the
lawmakers reconvened in constant pledges to eliminate
September. He was rebuffed, waste and tighten welfare. r. verbank and said he slept Inside a coll of rope to keep snakes :
hut promoted the urgency of
With the •igning of tbe away.
"Mr. Arxlerson was burled Sept. 'll, 191~ in Mlddles.wart .
a Medicaid solution in his Medicaid
bill,
the
·
Statehouse rotunda speech. administration has scooped Cemetery."
The Democratic majority up enough money to keep
finally pieced together going until the next "crisis,"
RICHARD A. KELLY, SON of Mr. and Mrs. Don Kelly,
enough money Ill fund the or the next election Sixth Ave., Mlddlepa-t, bas been ~ffied on.. e of th.e winners of Medicaid shortage and wrote campaign, whichever comes the national 1976 Mark of E1cell~C!! Contest, recognizing
in some controls over welfare first.
outstanding work by college joUMI!ltists by The Society of
spending, all in lime tO avert
Meanwhile, legislators Professional Journalists, Sigma Delta Chi ..
a "crisis" in November, as trying Ill huil welfare down to
Winners of the contest wiU be recog~d in reglonal they said they would.
size during the next budget eeremonles ID be held Isler. Kelly scored the win wftb James
To hear the goVernor talk hearings have been left with E. Yavorclk, who also attends Ohio State University, for 1111
over the years~ you would their tongues hanging out.
article entitled "Who Old Kill Clristie Mullins?" The article
think he'd jump at the chance
was in the magazine nonfiction article class.
· The judging was conducted by four of 'the Society's .
to enact some clamps on '
welfore spending,
,
professional chapters - Miami, Bluegrass (Ky.), Eastern
Guess again.
Morning Glories
Oklahoma and Alabama. The contest was open to any full-time
Rhodes took the money
September 28, 1976
student who performed the.wor'lt: between Feb. 1, 197~ and Feb.
Pis. I, 1976
handed to him by the Demo- . Karr &amp; VanZandt
24
crals and carefully cut out of Team 4 (Gil more)
22
the Medicaid bill most of the Lou's Sears
20
AFTER MANY WEEKS OF WORK Ohio Eta Phi Chapter
provisions which would put a Team 3 !Gillian I
18 of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, will stage its Meigs County Haines
1
chec.k on spending fo r :::::~ m~~~~tel
~ Tourtodayfrcm I to 5p.m.carryingout the theme, "American
welfare.
Hig~ Ind. G~me - Rhea Homes .- Yesterday and Today."
,
·
The
governor ... even Willis 199, Linda Gillilan 168.
HomesoothetourarethoireofWalterCrooks 1 CariHorky,
accepted what is e~pected Ill
High Ind. Series - Rhea Middleporl; Richard Collins, Fennan Moore arxl Or. Lewis ·
illis 468, Thelma Osborne Telle Pomeroy· Fred Crow Jr James Guinther and Paul .
be the last possible budgetary W
425,
I
'
'
•I
gimmick to avoid a cash
Hig h Tea m Game and - Huston, Syracuse. Residents may start at any of the eight
deficit befOre new taxes are Series Lou's Sears, 790 and homes on the ll&gt;ur and tickets, $3 each, will be available at lillY
enacted next year.'
2173.
of those homes. Refreshments to all those on the tour wiU be
This was a plan, written
served at the h&lt;rne of Dr. arxiMrs. Lewis Telle.
coincidentally by an archTuesday Triplicate
rival, Democratic state
September 2s,.l976
HOPE YOU'RE SAVING your Post cereal box tops for
Pis. April Smith, secretary ot' the Pomeroy Elementary School.
Auditor
Thomas
E.
28 The box tops may ~ traded for recreational equipment for the
Ferguson, allowing the use of Shamrock Motel
N.
Y.
Clothing
House
24
seven special rotary funds for Royal Crown Btlg. Co.
24 school. April will accepl the box topa one by one or In numbers.
general govern·ment Shirts, Ltd.
22 Either way, she'll be glad to hear from you. Just send the boJ:
12 tops to the school via your favorite student.
operations for the first time TeamS
·', ·
~amJ
10
in the history of Ohio.
High Ind. Game- Beverly
The Rhodes administration Hensley
'I'IIE MEIGS COUNTY BOARD of Electi011.1 Ia
191 , Helen Phelps
had:Xot favored this part of 167.
maintaining special hours tD encourage absentee and disabled
High Series - Pat Carson voting. This has all been slmpWied In the past year or so to
the Medicaid bill, and still
questions
its
con- . 470, Helen Phelps 443,
make It easier. The'boursarefrom9a.m. to 12 noOn and I p.m.
Team High Game-Royal ID 4 p.m., Monday throug)l SAturday, until the deadline for
stitutionality. But 'the t:rown
Cola 461 .
governor a(lproved It.
such voting which Is noon on Oct. 30..
Team · High ·series
He did not, however, Shamrock Motel 1254.
approve any legislative
A DANDY CHRISTMAS PROGRAM Ia being carried out
oversight
of
welfare
. by The Farmers Bank and Savings Co.
spending.
The bilrik ~ distrlooting dolll and wooden trucks which
In 194~, Juan Peron became
In perhaps the oddest of the dictator of Argentina and ran eventually will go to needy children for Christmas. The Idea Ia
governor's 16 item vetoes, he th ' country for II years until for women Ill costume the dollS attractively and for men to
knocked out a zero-base he was overthrown.
assemble and paint the 'trucks. The dolls and trucks will be
budget for the Department of
In 197~, American scientist judged after they are rel!lmed to the bank and prizes wiU be
Public Welfare because it James Rainwater and Danish awarded to the per~Mms who've come up with the best
would be "Impossible to :tcientists Alige Bohr and Ben creations. Of course, the finished products will be displayed in
achieve."
.
,
.Mottelson shared the Nobel . the bank lobby.
A zer.o-base budget would prize for physico.
Just pop by the bank and pick up whichever toy you'd like
to get ready for some needy child for Cbrl.abnas. '

By LEE LEoNARD
UP! StatebOUJe Reporter
COLUMIIUS (UP!} - If .
anyone had any doubts thai
· Gov. James A. Rhodes was
using the ' state's Medicaid
!urlding 89 part of his political
showbqat, thoae doubts can

'\\

~hO

Candidates press
camp-a ign points

.Beat•••

PHILADELPHIA (UP!) A shorter work week, a goal
sought by . many of the
nation's biggest unions, will
increase moonlighting, nol
provide more jobs, in the
view of a Chicago-based
manageqlent consultant. .
Or. Woodruff lmbennan, of '
Imberinan and DeForest,
li&gt;ld a seminar at Drexel
University Thursday union
ddves for·shorter work weeks
are counter-productive.
"The U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics found two years ago
that a slu&gt;rter work week
leads mainly to more
moonlighting rather than tO ·
greater employment ,"
lmberman said.
" In our follow-up stu~
early this year ," he
continued, "we found among .
the rubber workers in Akron, ·
Ohio, with their 35-bour week,
· · among electrtclal\s in New
York with their 32-hour week,
and among steel workers in
Pittsburgh with their 1:1-week
sabbatical vacatl~n, that
these employes do not use
their extra time for lelaure
actJvities. They aeek and find ·
part-time jobs which could be
_ ·filled by the unemployed."
Imbennan said demands
for shorter work weeks by the
· United" Auto Workers and the
United Steelworkers "wlll
provide very few jobs lot the
current unemployed , but
would SU«eed Ill boosting car
and steel ~rices beyorxl their
present high levels."
'

United ~ IDienladoiUtl
JimmY Carter, . courting
ethnic voters .for months
reportedly to .mlled results,
Ia now trying tD ddve a wedge ·
between theD1 and the GOP
by repeatedly attacking
President Ford's description
of We In Eastern Europe.
Ford, riding the after
shock.l of his "no Russian
domination In Eastern
Europe" statement In laat
week's debate, II preparing
for a new campaign swing
alter stumping Oklahoma

Ohio politics

At left: Dr. and Mrs. Telle
greeted home tour
visitors
•

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
PRINTED VINYL
.

with
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HOME FURNISHINGS ANNEX

•

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

•
&lt;o

•

e · e

•

·

·

I e
I.

.

in ·co llis ion
Five persons were InJured
160
where vehicles collided
driven by George W. Baker,
17, Rt.l, Bidwell, and Charles
L. Stroud, 115, New CarUale.
Injured ·were Stroud and
four pi!Mengers in his car,
Linda Baldwin, 34, and
Tamers Betz, II, both Rt. S,
Galllpoll.a; Mary Stroud, 86,
New CarUale, and James

enttne

at9:1~p.ni. Sunday on Rt.

~ ~~'"="p::;:;~;;;;:;;:;;:~mmc-wl ~~t~

~~~~7E ~ g~y~~ ~~~~I.~ % ~~~
Embassy hostages given up

::~::::~da~:,~~~'l:':::~e!~'::'~v~~~~J::~ :m:=:;:;:;: .,:=:,: :;:,:;: : :; ~::: :=:• :=:•:=:=:•:•: ' ''' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' '' ' ''' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' '~' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ';' ';' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ~;:=: :=: : :;:',\} ~~r::;:~:u:'~~h=~:

:;;::;:~~~~~~~~~~:~:0!

pipHmoldug, 49-year-oldatlomey, IJ!ho served as chairman of
the Bicentennial Commission.
The couple announced Sunday they will wed "before the
endofthlsyear."MlssTaylortookthedayofffrom the filming
ofthem11vle version of "ALillie Night Music" today to he with
her latest fiance, who headed the Navy from 1972-74 under
President Nflon.
Warner gave hisl+year.old bride-to-be a diamond ring at·
a private weekend party, the ac.tress's press agent John
Springer said. "I do not know how expensive It was," Springer
said.
·
·
·
AYOIIobllln Follawlttt Sizes
Including Frlng1:

Eutem EurcpeU ei.iflca110111," anl!. "It did slow ua

Pumeroy, ••• charged with
driving left of center
following an accident at 7:45
,.,
a.m. Sunday on CR 30, Utroo
lind eight tenths miles eost of
Rt. 7, Officers said Uelt·
mire's car lddeswlped an auto
operl\ted by David n. Arnold,
Rt. I, Hacine.
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS
VOL XXVII NO. 123
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
MONDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1976 0
The first of lour Suturduy
mishaps occurred at 10 ,30
a.m. on CR 10, throe ml11111
north of SR 3:14 where • pony
ran Into the path of a Cllr
ddven by James E. Housh,
42, Racine. There wos minor
damage.
A deer WBI kUied In an
accfdent at 8:10 · p.m.
saturday on Rt. 7, two tentha
of I mJle lOuth oJ Addl.aon.
The animal rln Into tile paill
of a car oparalad by 110ter R.
The state Highway Patrol said the accident seen~ was jU9!. ;::: sectarian violence.
the lilob in the melee.
Catholic minority.
p.m. on Rt. 35, two and IHM!n Hooptir' 311, Trimble.
south of the Hocking-Fairfield County line. 1'he open cockpit, ;::: Betty Williams and Mairla
Aides helped the women from the
Brian Stewart, the 1:1-ye'ar-old boy
tenths miles west of Rl. 7.
A single car lllllhap ocyellow plane w81 sald to have veered off the power lines and :':' Corrigan, who returned four days
church Into a ~ and they were
who was the focus of the protesting
The Galila-Meigs Poll curred at t p.rn, satunlliy on
craahed Into the water of Clear Creek.
:':' ago from a speaking· tour In
driven away with the crowd shouting
meeting, died earlier Sunday fro111 . . State Highway Patrol said a SR 141, lbl tentha of a mile
:::; America, were attacked at a
Insults.
Injuries received IOdayeago from a :::= · car going weatddven by John . weal of SR ·m. According Ill
WASHINGTON - uNITED MINE WORKERS president :::: meeting Sunday called to protest the
"I have never seen such hatred
robber tiullet fired by British :;:: K. Munday, 24, Delaware, the flllrol, Robert L. Nance,
Arnold ~r says charges that he. fired two top UMW :;:; death of a 13-year-&lt;Jld boy,
before," said Mrs. Williams, still
troops.
:::: was pulllng another car on a Jr., 18, Columhul, loll control
Security forces later clashed with :::: traDer when the ch,aln broke of hil car which ran off the
employes as part of a political purge are "absurd and :;:; As the two women stood on a - badly shaken, at her home later.
totally without foundation." Miller's critics say he dismissed :::: speakers' platfonn, a man in the
"But the whole business h&amp;S simply
roving mobs and a · :JS.year-&lt;Jld ':': causing the trailer to go north side of the hlghtray,
union puhllctst Bernie Aronson and executive assistant Eddie :'::, audience snatched the microphone
strengthened our resolw.
pregnant woman was hit In the face :::: sideways. The Munday car back acroaa the roadway t!Mln
Burke -and Intends 1o fire several more employes - out of ::::: from Mrs. Corrigan and shouted
"Hour campaign against violence
by a rubber bullet.
::::: swerved, strlkin• a car off the lett aide striking a
fear !!Jeywlll not sld his re-election bid nexl year.
•:;:: abuse at her.
meansanythlng,itmeansespeclally
}l: operated by Della M. ditch. There wu moderote
·.;. 'lb
36 K Tbe
In a statement issued Sunday, Miller said: "Anyone who :;:;:
damage. No cltaUon WBI
knows me wiU understand that firing people for being .;J,,,::::::::::::•:•:::•:::,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::;::::::::::,,:•:•:•:::•:=:•:=:=:•:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=::::::::::::::::;:=:=:=:=:=:=:•:=:•:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:::=:=:•:•:•:~•::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::}::, on o:;:~~er' fe~fr~u. .,:.~~ issued.
'politically dlsloysl' would be completely out of charocter for
Afinal accident occurred at
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
turning in the middle of the
me to do," he said.
11:311 p.m. saturday on SR 7,
Wednesday lhroug•
highway. ·
·
The firings were "based on my assesament of their job
Friday, cMIIce of ra1a
Thompaon was taken to the ooe arxl seven tenlba miles
performance," he said, and not "on who they supprot for union
Wedoesday aud lair
Holzer Medical Center for north of Pomeroy where Paul
office.'; Rwnors by "unnamed sourees," he added, "are
ROME (UPl} - Three embassy employes were pollee quoted one of the
Thuraday and Friday.
treatment of Injuries. D. Abla, 11, Rt. 2, Radne,
absurd arxl totally without foundation."
Palestinians shot their way treated for shock.
attackers as saying as he
Cool with hllbJ Ia the lOt
Munday was cited to lost control of hl1 car which
into the Syrian embassy here
First reports . from the gave himself up.
ud lows 1a !be 101.
Municipal Court for lnaecure ran off the. left 1ide of the
CARSON CITY, Nev. - WHITE INMATES at the Nevada with submachlne guns today scene Indicated the attackers
One of the hostages, labor
load.
. ·
highway lllrlklng a guardraU.
Claude 0. Reltrriite, 41,
State Prison attacked black inmates in lhe dining hall Sunda~ and seized tWo hostages to may have taken as many as · attache Joseph Mlro, said the : ::::::::::::::::::~:,:,:::::::::::::;: ,,:, ::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;:
knifing two prisoners to death arxl Injuring 13 others, protest Syria's role in the five hostages, but embaBay attackerawaptedSyria to end
authorities said. Prison officials said the assault was in an Lebanese fighting , They gave officials later said only lwO its support of anti-Palestinian
apparent retaliation for a racial Incident two weeks ago.
up to police after an hpur and were taken captive.
forces In Lebanon.
Generaily clear tonight,
Administrative Officer Howard Pyles said the two inmates freed the hostages unharmed.
"OUr job Ia finished. We
"They said they wanted us lows in the mid 408. Sunny
who died were black 89 well as 12 of the 13 who sulfe~ed
One embassy oUlcial - a came to talk to • the 1D stop the massacre and to Tuesday, highs near 70.
Injuries and knife wounds. "Two weeks ago, blacks assaulted ·coUnsellor - was wourxled in 11111bassador
but
the begin helping the Palestinian- ChanCe of precipitation near
whites. Thll time, apparently,. the whites assaulted the the Initial attack. Two ambassador was not there," (('.onunued on page 12) ·
zero today through Tuesday.

:i!

Bitter wi·n ter predicted

'!ill marry former Navy Secretary John Warner, a dapper, United Press International

•

" ...WehU• bump last ftek
with the Ilu!J matte~ Ind.lhll

F zve·
· .l'n·I u_..._,. . d

Weather

~~

'

the He~ agrfJOlllenl with
the Ruaalana, and.added that
the conceaslon wu made

"Wlder presauf~ ."
"I thlnt It's time we hive a · down for a week," llllld
president who understands campeiiJI head Jalllel A.
.
the facts, about Eastern Ba~er.
Europe and the entire
Ford hlta the road llflllln
world," he said.
'1\le.day and w~ In
The President won the New York IIIII New .Ieney
backing Sunday In Dallu and Frldly 11111 sa~ 1n
from the lurxlamentallat Rev. Iowa. llllnoll tllld Mllaourt'.
W.A. Criswell, head of the
In 1 Lllk with reporters
largest Southern Baptist aboard Air Force One Qanday
night, Baker elaborated on
church In the country.
Criswell, critical of First the IIIIW Ford approach.
"I would eiQ)eCI 1D aee Uw
La~ Betty Ford ·for her
remarks lasl year about ·President get somewhat
daughter Su.san's love life, niore aggnilllve In hla
has since turned away from calliJI8lp lppNrance~, " he
• fellow Baptist carter because 11id, but he ruled out
of the· latter's remarks in . "dupel'ltlon-tnJe tlcUcl,"
wliCh hual.d Carter his been
Playboy Magazine.
Ford's aides were calling ualng.
"We feel we hive refllllned
last week "less than
. outstanding"
lor
the the JllGIIItlllltm with QUI' very
President, but forecast a ~ forays Into Ok·
lah011111 and Tua~" durbtg
~~mqoe agressive" approach
the weekend, he aald.
in the coming days.

DR. AND MRS. LEWIS TELLE stand at a fireplace In
their beautiful P&lt;rneroy home Sunday afternoon. Dr. and
Mrs. TeUe personally greeted over 350 persona who
attended the Meigs Coimty Homes Tour of the Ohio Eta
Phi Chapter held Suriday afternoon. The home of Dr. arxl
Mrs. Telle formerly that of the late Mr. and .Mrs. Oor
Shcaefer, was I or' 8 offered on the tour. Others
(Jpening their homes lor the tour were Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Collins and Mr' arxl Mr~ . Fennail Moore, also In
Pumeroy;
and Mrs, Walter
Crooks
Mr.Crow,
arxl Mrs.
Carl
Horky,Mr.
Middleport;
Mr. arxl
Mrs.arxl
Fred
Mr. . .·
and Mrs. James Guinther and Mr. and Mrs. Paul ·Huston, ·
all in Syracuse. Refres!Jments Ill those attending the tour

Local Bowling

.

and Tens during the
weekend.
Carter decried voter
apathy Sunday in a black
Chicago neighborhood and
then, to · Pullah audiences,
pictured the odmlnistratlon
as surren(lerlng the bettie for
human rights of. easlern
Europe8118.
carter heads for Wlaconiln
later today.
Sensing an opening In
Ford's defense, Darter 'said ·
Ford bad "abandoned" the
human rights provisions of

NEW YORK- CONEE BOSWELL, WHO OVERCAME a
·dlsabllngparalyslsfrompolioatagethreetobecomeasinglng
~In the 193oa, died early today of cancer· She was 88. Miss
Boswell, who Wlderwent major cancer surgery Feb. 10, died at
12:45 a.m. at Mount Sinal HoiiPitalln Manhattan,. a hospital
offiCial iald.
.
.
She always appeared on stage with a long gown hiding the ·
fact !he was in a wheelchair, according to former publ.lcist and
famUy lrlena Jim McCarthy..Her career began In New Orleans
With her two sisters, Martha and "Vet," as The BosweU
Sllters. The group was one of the most au~sslullemale vocal
groups, preceding the Andrews arxl McGuire sisters,
But their act broke up I!' 1936 whe~ the sisters left the
group tD marry. One slater aurvlves, "Vel," Mrs. Helvetia
Jones,ofWestchesterCounty.mariha ~led about 13 years ago.
HO"G KONG _ HUA KUO-FANG, PROct.AiMED. by·
...
Peking wall poslers as the successor to Mao Tse-tung, met a
vlaitln&amp; head of state In the Chinese capital today in h\9
capacity aa preml~r.
DlpomaUc sources In Peking and Hong Kong reported
·that poslera have appeared In Peking and Shanghai to
congratulate Hua on his appointment as the new party
chairman.

1

1/1

Posters will feature

haunted school program

The Meigs County Chapte_r with ail 'lllnntrl lo be anof the March of Dimes 11 nounced, 0111 for each srade
sponsoring a . county-wide . level. Each flnll winner will
·poster contest In elementary .-lve a new ~ bill.
schools to promote a
Each wlnnlntl conleltant
lhould brlnl 1111 polter to the
"Haunted School."
....._ ... ._._
The "Haunted School' ' on "Ha··~-w_. ...............
_. 12
Sunday, oet. 21, from ~:30 to noon and 2 p.m. on Oct. 31 to
10 p.m. at the old Pomeroy be ~layed.
Senior High School buDding
,
1""'1..
• on E. Main Street will feature
haunted room1, horror . .
moviei, 1po0ky cartoona, a
carnival arxl a, h!lkeaale.
•
•
The imnual meeting of the · ' Admlulon · will be Sl ' _per
'
Meigs County Farm Bureau Jll'l'800 • •
Federation has been set for
Two poJters will be cholen
7:21pm. on Tuesday at1he from each· grade wllh each
Chester Elementary School achool having 12 posters to
The Peinut i!npde, a
starting with a steak dinner. submit for final judging.
An elJ)Ian&amp;tion of the Farm After preUmJnary judging on group of 10 aupporletl of
Bureau identification for a Oct. 15, the winning polteta · Presidential candidate
crime prevention program wiU be dlaplayed In the dif· Jimmy Cuter of tile Athena
,area will be at • the
will ·be .diacuased arxl ·en- ferent communities.
tertalnment will be by the
Final jtidglng wiD be Oct. 31 Ds!toctotlc Hea•rter• In
Pomero;y at &amp;ppi'!JSimalely
Aladdin Shrine Temple
6:30
p.m. Tueada;y inllead of
Chanters, a lively group of
Tl!uraday
. u announced
singers from Columbus.
earlier.
Tickets at ,1.50 for adulta and
The gnn1p from · Georcia
lor children may be
and
other Southern lllates
secured from any board
makea up lba brigade and ·
member.
travel• .ria bus In . their
Board members include
campa1p adfvlty.
Earl Dean, Ralph Carl, Bill
AI 7:30p.m. Weclneaday the
Oarr, Eula Wolfe, Mrs. John
grand openJnc of Democratic
Colwell, Mrs. Don1ld Mora,
Headquarter~ allba corner of
Nonna WIU, Tom Hamm,
Main IIIII 8JCIIIIOI'e lila. will
Tom Sayre, Don Wilson,
ba beld. Rep. Roll Jama will
Henry Frank and Mrs.
be on hand for botb lhe visit
Harold White. ReservaUons
by the Peanut Brlpde and
also may be made at the
the opening of the
federation office: 992-2181.

;=BureAu to

include squirrels that don't weeks early, white-tailed
Sexy deer, squirrels chatter when they gather wasps are building their nests
sporting thick fur and
"I haven't seen too many In " ~tgh in the t•ees ond
gathering food without the graas" saye Mrs. Lane: raceoons' pelts are. thick chattering and "'!'oolly "there are more In the house all sure signs of of a rough
worms" decked out in thick this year than in the grass. winter.
!)lack coats have brought The last lime 1 remember
"I expect quite a bit of
predictions of a bitter winter that happening was in 1959, snow," Crane said.
from folklore enthuSiasts.
and that winter broke all· And he's a .bit WQmed
Frisky deer spell a wild records In TeMessee. We bad about the grey squlrtela. The
winter for IJpper Michlg.an. sa feet of 80,.., during the don't hibernate, he says, so
"The deer ore getting awful winter."
. ,.
it's a mystery where they've
sexy ah'eady. i can tell you
Lydel Sims, hlDllorlst and gone. But If they're seen
it's gonna be colder than it's colwnnlst for the Meniphla he8dlng south, Crane warns,
been in a long time," says Commercial Appeal, has it could be time "~. cut
Mer! Katlka, who lives near been watching woolly bear another cord of wood.
the tiny , Upper Peninsula caterpillers _ so-called
And Tom Coles of Chicago's
community of Bete Grise. "woolly
worms"
suburban Glenview, m., says
"The deer are rolling awful throughout the mld.SOuth. He fatfish In Lake Michigan and
-early. It's almost inunoral. It .says more of ' them are "Incredibly gluttonous"
means lots of snow sure.•'
sporting very black coats _ a ·bears. In northern 'W1acons1n
The winter of 199-1960 was . sign of cold weather - but presage a bUter winter In the
a rough one in the Tennesee that
reports
are Midwest, With a spring that
mountains and Helen Lane, fragmentary,
will be long In coming.
,
eas,t Tennessee's folk
"Oui- early sampling " he
Even the Old Fanner s
weather·· prophet, say~ joked "Indicates 40 pe~ cent Almanac has lltUe liolace. '
8J10ther one just like It may of ill~ surveyed woolly bears" "Abe Weatherwlae" - the
.be on Its way.
ll!'e predicting a cold winter, book's mythical long-range
"Corn shucks are real thick 20 per cent are predicting an prognostlcot?r - predicts
this year on sweet corn and average winter and 30 per 1977 will be an extremely
the fur on squirrels Ia thick, cent do not yet know what w frigid winter In the N«theut
too. we could get some make of it."
and advises: "Bett~r do your
humdingers here on this
In New Hampshire, shopping before ram or snow
mountain," she said.
Richard
crane,
an come dropping." He alao
Other indicators, she said, au ctloneer-farmer In predicts contmued droug)lt In
nuts, low.flying hawks and an Hillsborough County, is the West and Central Great
abundance of crickets. But braced for .rough winUlr. He Plains.
spiders provide the clincher. says geese went ~uth two

meet -Tuesday

Brigade

.m \. .nester

oommgm

on Tuesday

'I

headquarter~.

II

I(

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